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Wednesday, 17 June 2015

Study finds eating chocolate lowers risk of heart disease, strokes, and reduces heart pressure

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© Reuters/Thomas Mukoya

A new study has found that chocolate can lower the risk of heart disease and strokes as well as reduce blood pressure and help people suffering from chronic fatigue syndrome, but the results are not definitive.

The research published in the journal used a wide sample of 25,000 volunteers who ate about 15-100 grams of chocolate a day in the form of all types, including dark, milk and hot cocoa.

This is the equivalent to about two Alpen Gold bars or about 500 calories.

"The main message is that you don't need to worry too much if you are only moderately eating chocolate," Phyo Myint, a professor at the School of Medicine at the University of Aberdeen in Scotland and one of the study's lead authors, said in an interview with the Washington Post.

Higher levels of chocolate consumption were also associated with other positive factors, such as a lower BMI, waist:hip ratio, systolic blood pressure and inflammatory proteins. Overall people who ate a lot of chocolate had an 11 percent lower risk of cardiovascular disease and a 25 percent lesser risk of associated death as well as a 23 percent lower risk of having a stroke.

Chocolate is packed with flavonoid antioxidants and previous studies have shown that this results in the improved function of the endothelium, the inner lining of the blood vessels.

The study has also shown chocolate consumption can decrease levels of LDL or"bad" cholesterol while increasing levels of HDL or "good" cholesterol. Many chocolate bars also contain nuts which are also good for a healthy heart.

The researchers also noted that participants in the study ate mainly milk chocolate, whereas dark chocolate has been considered healthier, suggesting that beneficial health effects may apply to both.

"Our results are somewhat surprising since the expectation was that benefits of chocolate consumption would be mainly associated with dark chocolate rather than the commercially available products generally used in a British population which are high in sugar content and fat," the author of the study wrote.

Even with risk factors thrown in like higher alcohol consumption, smoking, low physical activity and age the results of the study were still valid.

However, the Myint warned that the study should be taken with some caution. It only considered 39-70 year olds and mostly all of the participants were white; there were also a fair amount of people who ate a lot of chocolate and did not see any benefits at all.

The scientists were also unable to say exactly what it is about chocolate that is good for the health and that the benefits could be nothing more than a mirage.

They also cautioned against "reverse causation", meaning that people who are healthier anyway eat more chocolate whereas people who are at risk of cardiovascular disease eat less.

This is not the first study that has found that chocolate might be good for your health, but most of the others concentrated on dark chocolate.

There was also a fake study released earlier this year that found that chocolate helps weight loss. It was later revealed to be the work of a science journalist to shame media outlets that misreport scientific research.

Greece considers joining BRICS bank

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© Sputnik

The Greek government is considering whether it could get involved in the BRICS New Development Bank, Greece's Minister of Economy, Infrastructure, Shipping and Tourism Giorgos Stathakis told Sputnik Wednesday.

"We are fully supporting the BRICS initiative, and we are investigating ways for Greece to get involved in this initiative that could be beneficial for both sides," the minister said.

A source in the Greek government told Sputnik in May that Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras was likely to discuss his country's membership of the NDB, with BRICS leaders in St. Petersburg during a June 18-20 economic forum.

The five major developing economies - Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa - bill their venture as an alternative to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), one of Greece's three main creditors, to which Athens owes a $1.7-billion repayment by the end of June.

Putin: Russia will direct its military might at anyone who threatens it

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© Bohan Shen_沈伯韩 vis Flickr.com

Russian President Vladimir Putin has vowed that the country would be forced to direct its military might at anyone who might threaten it, as tensions with the Western powers refuse to subside.

Russia has been increasingly at odds with the West over the crisis in the Ukraine, which has seen a large part of its eastern territory taken over by separatist forces demanding independence from Kiev, reported.

"We will be forced to aim our armed forces ... at those territories from where the threat comes," said Mr. Putin at a press conference following talks with Finnish President Sauli Niinisto in Moscow.

Mr. Putin once again raised the issue of NATO's long-running attempt to build a missile defence system in Europe, perilously close to Russian borders. Moscow has long opposed NATO's plan, saying that it could upset the balance of power in the region. Earlier this week, Mr. Putin sparked surprise in the West when he announced Russia would add 40 newly-developed intercontinental ballistic missiles to its nuclear arsenal later this year - missile which Russia claims can penetrate any modern defence system.

"It is NATO that is moving towards our border and we aren't moving anywhere," Mr. Putin reminded reporters.

Mr. Putin's comments come after NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg accused Moscow of "saber rattling" over its decision to increase its nuclear arsenal.

At the press conference, Mr. Putin had a few words of advice for his Finnish counterpart, saying that the best way for Finland to guarantee its security would be to maintain its neutral status.

With regard to the ongoing Ukraine conflict, the Russian leader repeated an earlier demand that Kiev repay a $3 billion loan made to the country under former President Viktor Yanukovych as part of a "bailout bond". Mr. Putin reminded Ukraine that Russia retains the right to demand early repayment of those funds, but hasn't yet done so because of the struggling Ukrainian economy.

When asked about the "Minsk II agreement", a package of measures designed to alleviate the ongoing Ukrainian conflict agreed upon by the leaders of Ukraine, Russia, France, and Germany, the President described the deal as "fair and balanced", saying Russia would not have signed it if it didn't agree with its contents.

BRICS central banks begin negotiating alternative to SWIFT payment system

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© RIA Novosti/Alexei Druzhinin
From left: Russian President Vladimir Putin, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, President of Brazil Dilma Rousseff, Chinese President Xi Jinping and the President of South Africa Jacob Zuma during a meeting with the heads of state and government of the BRICS member countries

The BRICS members have kicked off consultations on an alternative to the global SWIFT system that processes about 1.8 billion financial messages annually, said Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov.

The BRICS system for the transmission of financial information is expected to protect the member countries from any possible disruptions, and provide better security.

"The finance ministers and executives of the BRICS central banks are negotiating ... setting up payment systems and moving on to settlements in national currencies. SWIFT or not, in any case we're talking about ... a transnational multilateral payment system that would provide greater independence, would create a definite guarantee for [BRICS - ed.]countries on risks associated with arbitrary decisions ...made by countries that have current payment systems under their jurisdiction," Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov told RIA in an interview published Wednesday.

Ryabkov's interview comes prior to the July BRICS summit in the Russian city of Ufa.

The summit will see the launch of projects expected to solidify the group's ever growing role on the world political stage. Among them are the $100 billion BRICS New Development Bank (NDB), targeted to compliment the World Bank and bankroll the group's infrastructure projects, and a currency pool worth another $100 billion, expected to protect BRICS from exchange rate volatility.

Russia has recently joined China's Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), aimed at funding infrastructure projects in the Asia-Pacific region, and is not expected to compete with the NDB, but complement it, said Ryabkov.

Those who state the contrary are trying to pit BRICS nations against each other, he added.

"The United States and, perhaps, the European Union cannot but feel jealous about such initiatives. They see them as a reflection of the processes leading to an objective reduction of the weight of the founding fathers of the Bretton Woods system in the global financial and economic architecture," said Ryabkov, adding that the criticism will only intensify when the bank is officially launched.

A number of countries, mainly in Asia, Latin America and Africa, have expressed interest in the activities of the NDB, said the minister.

New encrypted social network that intends to rival Facebook backed by Anonymous

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© Reuters/Dado Ruvic

A new social network has been launched, vowing more transparency, security, and privacy than Facebook and other social media giants. Backed by the hacktivist group Anonymous, it will encrypt all messages, shielding data from governments and advertisers.

At first glance, Minds.com appears similar to any other social network. It provides a person's followers with the latest updates, allowing their friends to comment and promote posts.

But the major difference exists behind the scenes. Minds.com doesn't aim to profit from gathering data. In fact, its goal is the opposite - to encrypt all messages so they can't be read by governments or advertisers.

The social network will also reward users for interacting with posts. This can be done by voting, commenting or uploading.

The rewards will come in the form of points, which can be exchanged for "views" of your posts. Simply put, the more active you are, the more your posts will be promoted by the social network.

"For every mobile vote, comment, remind, swipe & upload you earn points which can be exchanged for views on posts of your choice. It's a new web paradigm that gives everyone a voice," the Minds.com website reads.

Content will be boosted using a transparent algorithm, as opposed to Facebook's method, which largely remains a mystery. In addition, Minds.com is entirely open source, allowing anyone to contribute to the social network's design and upkeep.

"Our stance is the users deserve the control of social media in every sense," Minds.com founder Bill Ottman told Business Insider.

The open-source code keeps Minds.com accountable, as any programmer can check the code to make sure no one can access data - and that makes the social network stand out, according to Ottman.

"A lot of companies will claim privacy and say they're encrypted," Ottman said, as quoted by CNET. "But it's not real encryption because we have no way of inspecting the code to see if there are backdoors."

The business model has attracted the attention of hacktivist group Anonymous, which is calling on programmers and designers to help develop the social network.

"Anonymous is initiating a call to hackers, designers, creators and programmers to unite worldwide. Let us collaborate on the code of Minds.com and build a top site that is truly of the people, by the people and for the people," Anonymous ART of Revolution posted on its Facebook page.

The site, which was launched with desktop and mobile apps on Monday, was gaining traction even before the official unveiling.

Before the formal launch, the site had gained 60 million visits, Ottman said. Many of those users were people "interested in alternative media," with interests like online freedom and citizen journalism.

Russia and China to exclude dollar from natural gas payments

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© Reuters/Laszlo Balogh

Russia and China expect to use the ruble and yuan in payments for gas supplied using the western Altay pipeline. When it and the eastern Power of Siberia pipeline is open Beijing will become the biggest consumer of Russian gas.

"As a sales contract is not signed, then, of course, the currency of payment has not yet been determined. However, the Chinese side and the Russian side are discussing [] today and are in intricate negotiations on the possibility of paying in yuan and rubles,"Gazprom Export CEO Elena Burmistrova said Tuesday.

Gazprom says it's not going to disclose the pricing formula for gas supplied to China via the western route because negotiations are underway, and pricing is a commercial secret, she added.

The western Altay route is expected to supply 30 billion cubic meters (bcm) of gas a year to China. A basic agreement on the supply was signed by Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese leader Xi Jinping on May 8.

The western route is an addition to the eastern route ratified last year, which will deliver 38 bcm of gas to China annually.

Russia-China blooming cooperation

Russia and China have accelerated their attempts to move away from the US dollar in mutual settlements and bring their economies closer since the West imposed sanctions against Russia last year.

In October 2014, Beijing and Moscow signed a 3-year national currencies' swap deal worth up to $25 billion in an attempt to strengthen yuan and ruble and reduce dollar and euro dependency. This collaterally resulted in yuan-ruble trade in Russia growing 800 percent between January and September 2014.

The two countries also have a number of huge projects. China will provide $5.8 billion for the construction of the Moscow-Kazan High Speed Railway, said Putin in May. The railway is expected to extend to China through Kazakhstan, becoming the part of the route of the new Silk Road project.

In April, Russia officially joined the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) established by China to fund infrastructure projects in the Asia-Pacific region.

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Massachusetts police the most secretive in the nation

Massachusetts police the most secretive in the nation

 

Massachusetts was once at the forefront of liberty

 but sadly it's now at the forefront for having some of the most secretive police in the country.

The Mass. State Police are the most secretive department in the country! 

They make it extremely difficult for the public to access any information.

It normally takes months or longer to respond to news media FOI requests. Requests for basic documents routinely produce refusals, large portions of blacked out documents or demands for tens of thousands of dollars in unjustified fees. Among them, a $42,750 fee for the log of its public records requests and a $62,220 fee for records of crashes involving police cruisers sought by the Boston Globe. A Bay State Examiner reporter was told to pay a $710.50 “non-refundable research fee” to get an estimate of the fee he would have to pay to obtain copies of internal affairs reports.  

The Mass.State Police asked the 

Bay State Examiner

 to 

pay a $710 non-refundable fee

—in order for the agency to come up with an estimate for the actual fee to fulfill the records request. (Examiner co-founder Andrew Quemere shared documents with Boston.com showing that the state’s supervisor of public records later ruled the fee invalid, though State Police asked for more than $9,000 to process the originally requested records.)

The Mass. State Police have foiled public records requests in other ways too—such as by redacting entire pages of documents, delaying their release, or plainly refusing to release them.

Reporter Tom Wollack nominated the agency out of “a combination of both my own experience and talking to other people: attorneys, bloggers, and other journalists,” he said. “Everyone I know who has filed a public records request with State Police has a horror story about State Police.”

In January the Mass. State Police 

released redacted Stingray usage documents

 which are for all intents and purposes are useless.

Police across the country want to keep Stingray surveillance a secret, the FBI is commanded

police to ignore court orders and sabotage criminal cases rather than reveal information about Stingrays

.

The Boston police taking a cue from the State Police on how to stall FOI requests, were ordered to

stop issuing template FOI rejection notices regarding Stingray usage.

It took the Boston Police a few months to come up with another B.S. argument claiming that revealing Stingray information 

would make them "essentially useless."

The Worcester Telegram & Gazette concluded:

 “The Massachusetts State Police is a habitual offender – verging on a career criminal – when it comes to breaking a state law intended to ensure government is accountable to the people it serves.” 

West Boylston private investigator John M. Lajoie, who recently took the unusual step of filing a misconduct complaint against current state police Chief Legal Counsel Michael B. Halpin over the issue, said in an interview: 

“What really frosts me the most is when the people who are supposed to enforce the law violate the law.”

Here's another example of police secrecy, 

Mass. law enforcement agencies claimed they're private mercenaries'

 and are exempt from FOIA requests. Click 

here

 to read more.

In January of this year the Northeastern Massachusetts Law Enforcement Council (NEMLEC) said it's immune from the disclosure requirements of the Public Records Law because it is not among the types of entities covered by the law. The law names only entities created by the state and its political subdivisions, such as cities and towns, NEMLEC said."

“That claim is wrong,” the Civil Liberties Union responded in its motion asking the Suffolk Superior Court to keep the suit alive. “Controlled by an executive board of police chiefs and substantially funded by taxpayer dollars, NEMLEC possesses equipment and conducts operations that are lawful only when possessed or conducted by public entities. The police officers who participate in NEMLEC operations do so under the color of law, with the full privileges and immunities of a law enforcement agency.” 

No one is monitoring police 1033 weapon's acquisitions:

The Mass. State Police are supposed to oversee police militarization in the state. Police departments across the state have been receiving tanks, assault weapons, grenade launchers etc., However they claim they don't know (won't divulge) which police departments have acquired them.

“The State Police clearly haven’t been providing the required oversight, which is just one of many problems with the 1033 program’s implementation in Massachusetts,” Crockford said. “The Department of Defense in past years put the program on hold because of non-compliance with the program’s rules in the states, and it seems like that might need to happen again” said Kade Crockford from the ACLU.

The Mass. State Police want almost 

$600 to release redacted 1033 documents

.

Police departments statewide have taken cues from the State Police and the Boston Police by ignoring redacting or charging HUGE fees for FOI requests.

Mass. public records law is a joke and police openly ignore FOI requests. Under Mass. law police departments can deny public records requests without any consequences.

Secretary of State William Galvin’s office has established the police as the arbiters and censors of arrest records. Galvin’s office ruled that Boston police can withhold the names of five police officers who were caught driving drunk. 

The state’s supervisor of public records, Shawn Williams, ruled in favor of the State Police, finding that police had “the discretion to withhold records”

It will cost you 

hundreds if not thousands of dollars to find out about police misconduct in Mass

.

Recent examples of secretive Massachusetts police departments:

Watertown Police Chief 

defends SWAT secrecy

 (2014)

However, we are [currently keeping the records confidential] to protect our officers and our citizens. I would think most people would support us on that," Chief Edward Deveau said.

Quincy Police 

ignore FOI drone requests

 (2013)

Harvard and Cambridge Police 

wanted $200 dollars to release officer emails

 (2014)

Cambridge Police 

refuse to release use of deadly force policy

 (2015)

Somerville Police 

deny weapons [1033] request

. (2013)

Mass. MIT and Harvard Police 

denied Aaron Swartz's FOI request

 (2013)