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Tuesday, 16 December 2014

Meteor fireball photographed breaking apart over Leicestershire, 11 December 2014


© Sam Green



Sky watcher Sam Green thought he'd struck gold when he captured this incredible image of what looks like meteors speeding towards Earth.

The 27-year-old builder, from Countesthorpe, was doing a job for his boss in Kibworth when he spotted mysterious goings on high in the clear, blue sky.


He said: "Where we were is on a flight path and you often get planes and helicopters flying over from Leicester Airport, which are interesting to look at and my camera is never far away from me.


"There was this brilliant, clear blue sky on Thursday and it was about 2pm when I happened to look up and noticed these two peculiar objects with vapour trails.


"They were close together and looked like they were falling straight down.


"When I looked away and looked back they were gone. I thought 'that's strange'.


"But about half an hour later, I looked again and saw four of them, so I thought 'right, I'm going to take a picture' and grabbed my camera."


Sam managed to take three shots of the unidentified flying objects.


He said: "They seemed quite close together and it looked like two of them almost collided as they crossed paths.


"I thought these can't possibly be aircraft because of the speed and trajectory."


Sam posted his photographs on Facebook and e-mailed them to the Leicester Mercury in the hope someone could tell him what they were.


He said: "I'd been reading about a meteor show we could expect to see in the next few days and thought what else could it be.


We contacted Dr Nigel Bannister, senior lecturer at the University of Leicester's Department of Physics and Astronomy for his thoughts.


He said: "I've a fair amount of experience in atmospheric phenomena and observational astronomy.


"They are very interesting images and do look quite mysterious.


"But, for me, the streaks look very much like contrails, or vapour trails, and I suspect they are high altitude aircraft.


"They're most likely military jets - it's not unusual for a number of aircraft to be travelling together but not necessarily in tight formation.


"It's the altitude that makes the angle look strange."


He added: "It's unlikely they are meteors, or parts of a meteor, simply because the trails are not uniform.


"It's unusual to spot meteors during the daytime in a clear sky.


"They also have a very brilliant fireball and a leave a long vapour trail, just like the one filmed coming down in Eastern Russia a few years ago ."


Dr Bannister also considered the possibility of falling space hardware.


"I don't think so" he said. "I've checked the re-entry logs, and there was nothing predicted, or otherwise observed, for a space reentry for that date."


"Also, these don't look like reentering fragments in any case. Those typically have very brilliant 'heads' followed by a trail, like the recent Russian 'Progress' vehicle - so I'm pretty confident it's aircraft."


Sam said: "Whatever they were, they were fascinating to watch and it certainly sparked a bit of interest and debate."


Want something else to read? How about 'Grievous Censorship' By The Guardian: Israel, Gaza And The Termination Of Nafeez Ahmed's Blog


Listening to our emotions and learning to heed their valuable insights

Emotions

© ArtFamily/Shutterstock



Many of us dismiss our emotions. We think of them as capricious and inconvenient. We think they stall problem-solving. We think they take too much time to process, and we don't have the luxury of simply sitting and stewing.

If we grew up in a home where emotions were vilified or regularly suppressed, where good girls didn't get angry and good boys didn't cry, we might've adopted the same views and habits of repressing ourselves.


But "emotions communicate invaluable insights to us," said Katie Kmiecik, LCPC, a psychotherapist at Postpartum Wellness Center in Hoffman Estates, Ill. She thinks of emotions as signs on the highway of life. "People who pay attention to these 'signs' lead happier lives. People who ignore their emotional signs may end up 'lost.'"


According to Sheri Van Dijk, MSW, RSW, a psychotherapist in Sharon, Ontario, Canada, "emotions always serve a function." They give us information about a situation, and motivate us to act, she said.


For example, "anger motivates us to try to change a situation to make it more to our liking." Fear motives us to fight, flee or freeze in a situation that may be dangerous or life-threatening, she said.


The best approach to take with our emotions is to "acknowledge, accept, and learn from them," Kmiecik said.


Below are other lessons emotions can teach us, along with insight into what to do when emotions lead us astray and how to listen to our emotions.


Anger


Anger actually isn't one emotion, Kmiecik said. Instead, it's a of other emotions, such as sadness, insecurity and fear, she said.


"For example, a parent who is waiting on a teen who is out past curfew will experience anger with underlying fear [and] betrayal."


When we understand that other emotions accompany anger, we can handle situations authentically, Kmiecik said. "We can express and acknowledge the fear, sadness, or betrayal in a more productive way."


Frustration


Frustration may communicate that you're being stifled or unheard or you're internalizing your feelings, said Tracy Tucker, LCSW, a psychotherapist at Clinical Care Consultants in Arlington Heights, Ill. For instance, you become frustrated as you're trying to express your thoughts to someone, and they keep cutting you off, she said.


Fear


In addition to motivating us to navigate potentially risky situations, fear communicates we're unprepared for something and what we need to do in order to handle it, Kmiecik said.


"For example, a woman about to become a mother may be fearful about the unknown [of] childbirth. This may lead her to do proactive things to minimize her fear, such as to do research, ask her doctor questions, and get emotional support from people around her."


Envy


According to Van Dijk, "the original function of envy was to motivate us in our pursuit of resources to help us survive, as well as in terms of reproduction." While it doesn't serve the same survival functions today, she said, envy still motivates us. It drives us to set goals and to strive for them.


Inherently, envy isn't a comfortable or pleasant emotion, she said. But we often deepen our discomfort with our own judgments, such as: "It's not fair that I've worked so hard and don't have what he has."


What helps is to acknowledge the situation as it is so you can see what your envy is trying to tell you without experiencing the same level of anger or letting it stop you from acting effectively. As Van Dijk said, you might adjust the previous thought to: "I don't like the fact that I've had to work so hard and I don't feel I've gotten as far as I could have."


"We acknowledge the emotion of envy is there, we recognize what it is that we want that we don't currently have, and we can think about how we can get closer to that goal."


Happiness


Happiness might communicate that you're in the present savoring the moment, Tucker said. "If one wins an award, they are able to be present in the moment and ... be proud of their accomplishment instead of immediately switching focus to what's next."


"If one is able to be aware of and in the now, positive experiences and events such as a promotion at work or the reaching of a milestone can be enjoyed and celebrated," she said.


Sadness


Sadness may tell us that we've experienced a loss and are experiencing some grief, Tucker said. This may mean "the loss or death of anyone or anything, tangible or otherwise," she said.


For instance, she shared the example of getting a new car. You may be very excited about the new car but also sad because of the special memories associated with your old car.


When Emotions Lead Us Astray


Sometimes our emotions can lead us astray. For instance, you might feel guilty about taking care of yourself or feel anxious at a party.


"The thing is, with emotional problems, our 'thermostat,' so to speak, often becomes too sensitive, meaning that we start to feel these emotions when they're not warranted," said Van Dijk.


Our thoughts and judgments contribute to this, she said. For instance, we judge ourselves for carving out time for self-care (e.g., "I should be cleaning right now").


Because we judge ourselves we might assume that others are judging us, too, which may contribute to our anxiety at social events, she said.


Listening to Our Emotions


Many of us aren't very good at listening to our emotions. We simply might not have the practice or we might've internalized unhelpful messages from our family or society. For instance, our culture teaches us that sadness is a bad emotion. Because it's undesirable or uncomfortable, many people repress it, Kmiecik said.


We also might not listen because we're consumed with judging ourselves. This triggers "all sorts of secondary emotions," Van Dijk said. For instance, we get angry with ourselves for feeling anxious or sad or angry.


"[T]hese emotions then get in the way of our being able to even think straight, never mind do something about it!"


Van Dijk shared this exercise - called "The Gatekeeper" - from her book Calming the Emotional Storm: Using Dialectical Behavior Therapy Skills to Manage Your Emotions and Balance Your Life. It helps you be more accepting of your emotions, she said.




Practice this mindfulness exercise regularly in order to become more aware of your judgmental thoughts, as well as of your thoughts and emotions in a more general sense.


Sitting or lying down in a comfortable position, start by just noticing your breath. Breathing in, breathing out; slowly, deeply, and comfortably. Just notice the sensations you experience as you breathe - the feeling of the air as it enters your nostrils, passes down your throat and fills your lungs; and then as you exhale, notice the feeling of your lungs deflating, as the air passes back out through your nose or mouth.


After a few moments of focusing on your breathing, start to draw your attention to your thoughts and emotions. Imagine that you are standing at the door of a castle wall. You are in charge of who comes and goes through that door - you are the gatekeeper. What comes through that door isn't people, though, but your thoughts and feelings.


Now, the idea here isn't that you're going to decide which thoughts and feelings get to come in - if they come to the door, they need to be let in, or they'll just make camp outside that door and continue to bang on the door harder and harder. Instead, the idea is that you greet each thought and feeling as it enters, just acknowledging its presence before the next thought or feeling arrives.


In other words, you accept each experience as it comes - "Anger is at the door," "Here is sadness," "Here is a thought about the past," "And here comes anger again," and so on. By just noting each experience, just acknowledging what has come up for you, that thought or emotion will pass through the door rather than hanging around. The thought or emotion might come back again and again, but you will see that it doesn't stay long; it just passes through, and then the next experience arises.




(This piece has more on accepting your emotions.)

When we accept our emotions, without judgment, we open ourselves up to listening to them and really to ourselves.


Want something else to read? How about 'Grievous Censorship' By The Guardian: Israel, Gaza And The Termination Of Nafeez Ahmed's Blog


Pennsylvania shooting spree suspect Bradley Stone found dead in woods


© NBC10

State police block off Schoolhouse Road in Pennsburg on Dec. 16 after police discover the body, sources say, of Bradley Stone. The 35-year-old was wanted for the shootings of his ex-wife and six family members.



Bradley Stone, the man prosecutors say is responsible for killing his ex-wife and five of her family members and seriously stabbing one other before going on the run, has been found dead in the woods near his home, the Montgomery County District Attorney said.

His body was discovered at 1:38 p.m. Tuesday near W. 4th Street and Schoolhouse Road North Hanover Township, District Attorney Risa Vetri Ferman said. The location is about a half mile from the former Marine's home where SWAT teams have been methodically searching for the man for the past two days.


It appears Stone took his own life through "self-inflicted cutting wounds to the center of his body," Vetri Ferman said. A knife was discovered nearby, she said.


Police also found a video recorded by Stone on a cell phone on or near his person, law enforcement sources said.


Stone, 35, had not been seen since just before 5 a.m. Monday as he rushed his screaming children out of their mother's apartment in Harleysville. Moments before, neighbors and police said he gunned down the woman, Nicole Hill Stone. She was the last of seven family members he shot that morning, prosecutors said.


The children were left in his neighborhood in Pennsburg and he fled, officials said. The girls, along with Stone's current wife and infant are now in protective custody, Vetri Ferman said.


Hill Stone's mother, grandmother, sister, brother-in-law and niece were all killed in the shootings. Autopsies on the victims have begun, the DA said.


The lone survivor is her 17-year-old nephew, Anthony Flick. He remains in serious, but stable condition and is surrounded by family at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital in Philadelphia, the DA said.



© NBC10

Bradley Stone (pictured left) is suspected in the shooting deaths of six people, including his ex-wife Nicole Hill (pictured right), the Montgomery County District Attorney said. He's also accused in shooting a man.



"I cannot emphasize enough how serious his condition is, but at least at this point, we are hopeful that he will be fine," Vetri Ferman said.

A vigil will be held for the victims at 6 p.m. along Broad Street in Souderton.


Prosecutors released an updated photo of Stone, an apparent selfie, found on his personal cellphone when it was recovered along with his vehicle. Taken in November, Stone wore what appeared to be a green military jacket, red beard and a vacant expression on his face.


A digitally-enhanced version, sans-beard, was also released because prosecutors believe that it more closely depicts his current look.





Police are actively investigating four scenes in Montgomery County as part of the shooting spree involving suspected gunman Bradley Stone. Officials said shootings took place at three of the locations -- Harleysville, Lansdale and Souderton. The fourth location, in Pennsburg, is where SWAT officers are searching for Stone, near his home.



Stone served eight years in the U.S. Marine Corps Reserve and was briefly deployed to Iraq in 2008. Fellow Marines who served with him described the man as odd and said that he had a tumultuous relationship with his ex-wife. Hill Stone's neighbors and friends told NBC10 the woman warned Stone would kill her.

Vetri Ferman said eight SWAT teams searched many locations known to Stone during their first day effort. However, none turned up clues about his whereabouts. Detectives did find some forensic evidence, but didn't elaborate as to what was found.


A supposed sighting of a man that fit Stone's description involved in an attempted carjacking in Doylestown Monday night "did not appear to be valid," she said.


Police, bolstered with help from Pennsylvania State Police, the FBI and U.S. Marshals, focused their efforts on Tuesday in the northwest part of the county where he lived and frequented, Vetri Ferman said.


The district attorney thanked the public for their assistance and patience. Schools in Upper Perkiomen, where Stone lives, were closed Tuesday and other districts - Souderton and Pennridge - were under lockdown.


Want something else to read? How about 'Grievous Censorship' By The Guardian: Israel, Gaza And The Termination Of Nafeez Ahmed's Blog


Keeping colonialism in place: Haitian police and UN 'peacekeepers' fire on protesters

Haiti protesters

© AFP

A government-appointed commission has recommended that the country's prime minister resign



Haitian police and UN peacekeepers have clashed with protesters as several thousand opposition supporters tried to march on the presidential palace, demanding new leadership.

The Associated Press reported that UN troops fired in the air as police used tear gas to disperse protesters. The demonstrations started off peacefully but shots were fired after protesters burned tires and threw rocks at police.


Friday's march in the capital, Port-au-Prince, was only the latest in a series of demonstrations by opposition supporters demanding the resignation of President Michel Martelly and Prime Minister Laurent Lamothe.


It came just days after a government-appointed commission recommended that the country's prime minister resign.


As the protests were still going on, the president said on Friday evening that Lamothe was ready to step down to help end the country's political impasse.


"The prime minister is ready to resign," Martelly said in a national address.


"I acknowledge this decision he is making to help find a solution to the crisis. I commend him for his courage and determination to help Haiti."


Quake-hit capital


The impoverished Caribbean nation is still reeling from a devastating earthquake that killed more than 220,000 people in January 2010 and flattened much of the capital.


Journalist Amelie Baron told Al Jazeera from Port-au-Prince that many of the protesters came from poor areas of the capital that have not seen much progress being made since the disaster nearly five years ago.


"They cannot see any progress in their lives, while the prime minister and president are travelling to foreign countries telling the world that Haiti is moving on after the quake," she said. "There are a lot of accusations of corruption and bribery."


Martelly's foes accuse him of preparing to return Haiti to dictatorial rule. He was supposed to call elections in 2011 for a majority of Senate seats, the entire Chamber of Deputies and local offices.


The Chamber of Deputies approved legislation in 2013 that would authorise elections. But six opposition senators have blocked the measure.


Want something else to read? How about 'Grievous Censorship' By The Guardian: Israel, Gaza And The Termination Of Nafeez Ahmed's Blog


First dead Irrawaddy dolphin located after Bangladesh oil spill, more deaths expected


© Dhaka Tribune



The salvage of the wrecked oil tanker took more than two days, while authorities in Bangladesh failed to contain or clean up the oil. Now, the first of what is expected to be a myriad of deaths of a rare Irrawaddy dolphin has occurred.

The first dead dolphin surfaced yesterday. The oil spill in the Sela River has now spread over more than 80 km. The Sela River is a sanctuary for two different species of dolphins.


Dolphins are extremely sensitive creatures, and more than 350,000 liters of oil was spilled into their environment.

According to the , there have been sightings of other dead wild animals in the region.


"I have discussed with the experts and they said that there will be no major damage," said Shajahan Khan, Bangladesh's Shipping Minister said shortly after the spill. "It will not affect dolphins and other animals as the oil has not spread that much."


Khan's predictions have been proven wrong, and there is no way to even estimate what the death toll of wildlife may be.


"Generally, dolphin corpses do not come to the water surface. The fact that one of them has floated to the surface should mean a number of dolphins have been directly affected," Monirul H. Khan, professor of zoology at Jahangirnagar University, told the .


"If large creatures such as dolphins could not survive, then smaller ones like otters and fish are in much bigger danger," Monirul Khan added.


Divisional forestry officers claim that they have only discovered the dead bodies of small fish and crabs that can be directly linked to the oil spill.


There are three dolphin sanctuaries on the Sela River in the area where the spill took place: Chandpai, Dhangimari, and Dudhmukhi sanctuaries.


The oil tanker was carrying 357,664 liters of furnace oil when it was struck by another vessel. It took two days to salvage, and by then, nearly two-thirds of the tanker's oil had been spilled into the river. The oil was pushed along by the forces of high and low tides.


Authorities in the region had no real experience dealing with a spill, leaving them with two options: using a chemical dispersants, or oil consuming bacteria. They remained unsure of the environmental impact of the dispersants, and the bacteria had to be imported. As a result, they have taken no real steps to remove the oil. Concerned local people have suggested that they manually collect the oil from the water.


"Chemical dispersants should not be used without consulting international experts with oil spill experience in mangrove forests. Dispersants are typically used in oceanic waters to prevent the slick from reaching the shore," said Brian Smith of the Wildlife Conservation Society.


The toxic effect on wildlife can lead to death or reduced reproductive fitness, reports CBS News.


Experts predict a die-off of small mangrove trees near the waterline in the next few months, and the loss of larger trees in the next few years as they become exposed to the oil as it seeps out of the sediment.


"Short-term impacts of the oil spill will be severe as the habitat of the affected areas will be damaged. Animals and fish species will lose their breeding grounds," former director of Water Resources Planning Organization Engineer Inamul Haque said.


Want something else to read? How about 'Grievous Censorship' By The Guardian: Israel, Gaza And The Termination Of Nafeez Ahmed's Blog


Wal-Mart ordered to pay $188M to employees for failure to compensate for breaks and hours worked

walmart

© unknown



The Pennsylvania Supreme Court ordered Wal-Mart Stores Inc to pay $188 million to employees who had sued the retailer for failing to compensate them for rest breaks and all hours worked.

Wal-Mart said on Tuesday that it might appeal the decision, which upheld lower court rulings, to the U.S. Supreme Court.


Monday's ruling on the class-action lawsuit will reduce Wal-Mart's earnings for the quarter ending on Jan. 31 by 6 cents a share, the company said in a securities filing. That amounts to roughly 4 percent of its profit forecast of $1.46 to $1.56 for the period.


Wal-Mart shares were up 0.5 percent at $84.39 in midday New York Stock Exchange trading.


The Pennsylvania Supreme Court upheld a 2007 lower court ruling in favor of the workers, who said Wal-Mart failed to pay them for all hours worked and prevented them from taking full meal and rest breaks.


Wal-Mart spokeswoman Brooke Buchanan said the company did not believe the claims should be grouped together in a class-action suit. "Walmart has had strong policies in place to make sure all associates receive their appropriate pay and break periods," she said.




The decision, which affects about 187,000 Wal-Mart employees who worked in Pennsylvania between 1998 and 2006, marks the second unfavorable ruling in a week for the retailer, the largest private employer in the United States.

On Dec. 9, a National Labor Relations Board administrative law judge found Wal-Mart had threatened employees trying to organize workers at two stores in California.




That ruling was seen as a victory for workers' rights groups who have been challenging the retailer to boost wages and benefits.

A Wal-Mart spokesman said the company did not agree with some of the judge's decisions in that case and was evaluating its next steps.


Want something else to read? How about 'Grievous Censorship' By The Guardian: Israel, Gaza And The Termination Of Nafeez Ahmed's Blog


Pneumonia outbreak kills 10 bighorns near Gardiner, Montana


© Brett French/Gazette Staff

Ten bighorn sheep in the Gardiner area have died from an outbreak of pneumonia.



Ten bighorn sheep have died over the past two weeks following an outbreak of pneumonia in a herd that lives along the upper Yellowstone River near Gardiner.

Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks staff has collected a mix of dead rams, lambs and one adult ewe and taken them to the state wildlife lab in Bozeman, where all were determined to have died from pneumonia.


Historically, pneumonia affects bighorn sheep herds differently. According to FWP wildlife veterinarian Jennifer Ramsey, "Sometimes we'll see a large scale, all age die-off in which most of the population dies, and that population never really rebounds. Yet in other herds we seem to see a low-level mortality year after year."


In the Gardiner area, bighorn sheep have experienced a small number of pneumonia cases each of the last few years, but not to this extent.


It is not possible to detect the source of the pneumonia outbreak.


Pneumonia outbreaks have occurred in bighorn sheep populations with no known contact with domestic sheep (or goats). However, research has shown bacteria can be transmitted from healthy domestic sheep (or goats) to bighorn sheep, causing pneumonia in the wild sheep. There are currently flocks of domestic sheep in the area.


FWP, within its scope of authority, works to ensure separation of domestic and wild sheep. This includes the lethal removal of any wild sheep known to have been in direct contact with a domestic sheep.


In the meantime, FWP encourages the public to keep their distance from the Gardiner bighorn sheep, especially at this time as they are stressed. People are asked to report any sick, coughing or dead sheep to the Region 3 headquarters - or wild sheep in close proximity to domestic sheep - by calling 406-994-4042.


Want something else to read? How about 'Grievous Censorship' By The Guardian: Israel, Gaza And The Termination Of Nafeez Ahmed's Blog