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Dec 9, 2009
Meet the Billionaire Brothers Funding the Right-Wing War on Obama
Meet the Billionaire Brothers Funding the Right-Wing War on Obama
By , Think Progress Posted on December 9, 2009, Printed on December 9, 2009
http://www.alternet.org/story/144455/
by Faiz Shakir, Amanda Terkel, Matt Corley, Benjamin Armbruster, Zaid Jilani, Lee Fang, and Alex Seitz-Wald
Billionaire brothers David and Charles Koch are the wealthiest, and perhaps most effective,
opponents of President Obama's progressive agenda. They have been
looming in the background of every major domestic policy dispute this
year. Ranked as the 9th richest men
in America, the Koch brothers sit at the helm of Koch Industries, a
massive privately owned conglomerate of manufacturing, oil, gas, and
timber interests. They are best known for their wealth, as well as for
their generous contributions to the arts, cancer research, and the Smithsonian Institute. But David and Charles are also responsible for a vicious attack campaign aimed directly at obstructing and killing progressive reform. Over the years, millions of dollars
in Koch money has flowed to various right-wing think tanks, front
groups, and publications. At the dawn of the Obama presidency, Koch
groups quickly maneuvered to try to stop his first piece of signature
legislation: the stimulus. The Koch-funded group "No Stimulus" launched television and radio ads deriding the recovery package as simply "pork" spending. The Cato Institute -- founded by Charles -- as well as other Koch-funded think tanks like the Heritage Foundation, produced a blizzard of reports
distorting the stimulus and calling for a return to Bush-style tax cuts
to combat the recession. As their fronts were battling the stimulus,
David's Americans for Prosperity (AFP) spent the opening months of the
Obama presidency placing calls and helping to organize the very first "tea party" protests. AFP, founded in 1984 by David and managed day to day by the astroturf lobbyist Tim Phillips,
has spent much of the year mobilizing "tea party" opposition to health
reform, clean energy legislation, and financial regulations.
STOPPING CLEAN ENERGY: David Koch presents himself as a champion of science.
Next year, because of his donations, a wing of the Smithsonian will be
named after him. Nevertheless, Koch has done more to undermine the
public's understanding of climate change science than any other person
in America. The Competitive Enterprise Institute, funded in part by
Koch foundations, has waged an underhanded campaign
to falsely charge that a set of hacked e-mails somehow unravels the
scientific consensus that global warming is occurring. Koch finances
the "Hot Air"
tour, a nationwide roadshow using a balloon to depict climate change
science as "hot air." Despite the brothers' extravagant wealth, Koch's
Americans for Prosperity has run populist ads mocking environmentalists
as spoiled brats more concerned about their "three homes and five cars" than about economic conditions. In addition to its efforts to misinform the public, Koch Industries has spent nearly $9 million dollars so far on direct lobbying, much of it on climate change legislation. With a team of Koch-funded operatives going as far as attempting to crash
the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen this week,
the brothers may succeed in scuttling any prospect for addressing
climate change.
STOPPING HEALTH REFORM: Much
of the fierce opposition to health reform can be credited to Koch
organizations. As the health care debate began, AFP created a front
group, known as "Patients United," dedicated itself to attacking Democratic health care reform proposals. Patients United has blanketed the country with ads distorting various provisions of the health reform legislation, particularly the public option. Patients United even centered a media campaign around
Shona Robertson-Holmes, claiming she had a brain tumor the Canadian
system refused to treat. However, the Ottawa Citizen reported that Patients United has been exaggerating Holmes'
case, and that she in fact had a benign cyst. In their quest to block
health care reform, Koch-funded groups have fostered extremism. A speaker with the roving Patients United bus tour repeatedly compared health reform to the Holocaust while an eight-by-five foot banner at an AFP health care rally with Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN) read, "National Socialist Health Care: Dachau, Germany" superimposed over corpses from a concentration camp. Although many were surprised at the level of anger AFP channeled into Democratic healthcare town halls
in August, it wasn't the first time Koch groups have helped to hijack
the health reform debate. Back in 1994, Americans for Prosperity, then
known as Citizens for a Sound Economy, worked closely with then-House
Speaker Newt Gingrich to bring mobs of angry men to health reform rallies with then-First Lady Hillary Clinton.
A LONG HISTORY OF STOPPING PROGRESS: The
Koch brothers clearly have a financial stake in blocking reform. Koch
Industry oil refineries are major carbon dioxide polluters, and
George-Pacific, a Koch Industries timber subsidiary, is one of the
largest contributors to the loss of carbon-sink capacity. According to
the EPA, Koch Industries is responsible for over 300 oil spills in the U.S. and has leaked three million gallons of crude oil into fisheries and drinking waters. So there are clear business-related reasons
why Koch would want to block regulatory enforcement, clean energy,
labor, and other reforms. But part of their opposition stems from a
long family tradition of funding conservative movements to shift the
country to the far right. Fred Koch, father of Charles and David and
the company's namesake, helped to found the John Birch Society in the late 1950s. The John Birch Society harnessed Cold War fears into hate against progressives,
warning that President Kennedy, Civil Rights activists, and organized
labor were in league with communists. By presenting progressive reform
as a capitulation to the Soviet Union,
Fred Koch and the other industrialists bankrolling the Birch Society
were able to galvanize hundreds of thousands of middle class people
into supporting their narrow agenda of cutting corporate taxes and
avoiding consumer regulations.
Posted at 11:59 am by mikguiruram
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Fox host that promoted poll adding up to 120% was valedictorian, studied at Stanford
Fox host that promoted poll adding up to 120% was valedictorian, studied at Stanford | Raw Story
Not so fast.
Gretchen Carlson, the host of Fox and Friends on Fox News Channel, highlighted poll
results Dec. 4 claiming that 94 percent of Americans suspect scientists
of using falsified climate data. The totals figures in the poll added
up to 120 percent.
Carlson, the Daily Show's Jon Stewart noted, claims to have been so uneducated that she needed to Google the terms "czar" and "ignoramus."
Turns out that she was valedictorian of her high school class and graduated with honors from Stanford. The Daily Show revealed her academic past Tuesday: she also studied at Oxford University, and plays classical violin.
"How do you get a job on television if you appear to be one of those
people who need to pin their address to their coat so a stranger can
help them find their way home?" Stewart asks.
Story continues below...
Fox producer Lauren Petterson, executive producer of Fox & Friends, said in an interview Tuesday that the 120% graphic wasn't erroneous.
âWe were just talking about three interesting pieces of
information from Rasmussen,âť Petterson said. âWe didnât put on
the screen that it added up to 100 percent.âť
Posted at 11:49 am by mikguiruram
Permalink
May 5, 2009
Windows 7 download is now available for the public to download for free.
Windows 7 download is now available for the public to download for free.
The
wait is over folks, Microsoft has published the download page for the
Windows 7 RC. As we noted earlier, the download was scheduled to launch
tomorrow and was to be available worldwide. Coming straight from the download page, here are Microsoft’s notes for the release candidate: -
You don’t need to rush to get the RC. The RC will be available at least
through July 2009 and we’re not limiting the number of product keys, so
you have plenty of time.
- Watch the calendar. The RC will
expire on June 1, 2010. Starting on March 1, 2010, your PC will begin
shutting down every two hours. Windows will notify you two weeks before
the bi-hourly shutdowns start. To avoid interruption, you’ll need to install a non-expired
version of Windows before March 1, 2010. You’ll also need to install
the programs and data that you want to use. (Learn more about installing Windows.)
- Protect your PC and data. Be sure to back up your data and please don’t test the RC on your primary home or business PC.
- Tech details/updates: Before installing the RC, please read the Release Notes and Things to Know for important information about the release.
- Keep up with the news. You can keep up with general technical information and news by following the team blog. And, you can get non-technical news, tips, and offers by subscribing to the monthly Exploring Windows newsletter.
- Keep your PC updated: Be sure to turn on automatic updates in Windows Update in case we publish updates for the RC.
- Installation:
You can install the Windows 7 RC on a PC running Windows Vista without
backing up the PC—but we encourage you to make a backup for safe
keeping. If you’re running Windows XP or the Windows 7 Beta, you’ll
need to backup your data, then do a clean installation of the RC, then reinstall your applications and restore your data. If you need to do a backup, please see How to back up your PC for more details and a suggestion for how to backup a PC running Windows 7 Beta or Windows Vista.
So without further a-do folks, click here to go to Microsoft’s download center and download the Windows 7 RC. Microsoft has also launched the Technet download which you can find here.
On a side note, it appears as if you will be issued a new product key
for the RC. It is most likely going to give you the extended time for
using the RC if you have downloaded from another source. Installation instructions can be found here. If you’re wondering what has changed from the beta release to the RC, click here to read our guide. Is your system up-to-par for Windows 7? Microsoft has confirmed new system requirements for Windows 7. Sponsored Ads: Email Archiving Service | Bible Covers | Naples Direct Mail
Posted at 02:29 pm by mikguiruram
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Apr 8, 2009
Humans and Aliens Might Share DNA Pattern
Humans and Aliens Might Share DNA Pattern
By Brandon Keim April 07, 2009 | 7:26:38 PM

The building blocks of life may be more than merely common in the
cosmos. Humans and aliens could share a common genetic foundation.
That’s the tantalizing implication of a pattern found in the
formation of amino acids in meteorites, deep-sea hydrothermal vents,
and simulations of primordial Earth. The pattern appears to follow
basic thermodynamic laws, applicable throughout the known universe.
“This may implicate a universal structure of the first genetic codes
anywhere,” said astrophysicist Ralph Pudritz of McMaster University in
Hamilton, Ontario.
There are exactly 20 standard amino acids — complex molecules that
combine to form proteins, which in turn compose the nucleic acids from
which the simplest self-replicating structures are built.
Ten were synthesized in the famous 1953 Miller-Urey experiments,
which modeled conditions believed to exist in Earth’s early atmosphere
and volcano-heated pools. Those 10 amino acids have also been found in
meteorites, prompting debate over their role in sparking life on Earth
and, perhaps, elsewhere.
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Pudritz’s analysis, co-authored with McMaster University
biophysicist Paul Higgs and published Monday on arXiv, doesn’t settle
the former debate, but it does suggest that basic amino acids are even
more common than thought, requiring little more than a relatively warm
meteorite of sufficient size to form. And that’s just the start.
If the observed patterns of amino acid formation — simple acids
require low levels of energy to coalesce, and complex acids need more
energy — indeed follow thermodynamic laws, then the basic narrative of
life’s emergence should be universal.
“Thermodynamics is fundamental,” said Pudritz. “It must hold through
all points of the universe. If you can show there are certain
frequencies that fall in a natural way like this, there is an implied
universality. It has to be tested, but it seems to make a lot of sense.”
Pudritz
and Higgs tabulated the types and frequencies of amino acids found in
primordial Earth experiments, then correlated the results on a graph of
temperature versus atmospheric pressure at which the acids likely
formed.
The 10 amino acids synthesized in primordial Earth experiments
tended to arise at relatively low temperatures and pressures, and are
chemically simple. Other, more complex acids formed less frequently,
and require more temperature and pressure. Their distribution follows a
clear, possibly thermodynamic, curve.
“The most frequent amino acid that forms is the one that’s
least-demanding, energetically. There’s less and less amino acids that
require more energy to form. That’s very sensible, from a thermodynamic
point of view,” said Pudritz.
Internal conditions of meteorites are unknown, but some scientists
believe that certain large meteorites are both warm and hydrated,
making them roughly analogous to the relatively temperate environment
of Earth’s youth.
“There’s a theory,” said Pudritz, “that they could be made in the warm interiors of large-enough meteorites.”
This is necessarily speculative, but it would explain why the 10
amino acids most common in primordial Earth experiments are also the
most common acids found in meteorites.
Pudritz and Higgs speculate that these 10 common amino acids
sufficed to generate the earliest replicating molecules, with other,
rarer acids incorporated into the nascent genetic code as they formed
or arrived — a process called “stepwise evolution,” culminating in the
genes that gathered 3.6 billion years ago in a common ancestor of all
complex life.
If simulations of interactions between these 10 acids indeed produce
molecules that can copy themselves, said Pudritz, then it’s possible
that they represent an ur-genetic code.
“There’s a possible universality,” he said, “for any code that would use amino acids.”
Harvard University systems biologist Irene Chen, who specializes in
the evolution of molecules, called the work “interesting,” but noted
that “in the absence of some experimental backup, it’s generally
difficult to know if this kind of analysis is a Panglossian argument.”
The ultimate experimental backup, of course, is finding aliens. In
the meantime, the ending of Battlestar Galactica seems a bit less
implausible.
Citation: “A thermodynamic basis for prebiotic amino acid
synthesis and the nature of the first genetic code.” By Paul G. Higgs,
Ralph E. Pudritz. arXiv, April 6, 2009.
Posted at 08:42 am by mikguiruram
Permalink
Mar 13, 2009
China: `We feel like we are serving prison sentences’, say factory workers for Hewlett-Packard, Dell, Lenovo, Microsoft and IBM
Posted in News on March 10th, 2009 by admin – Be the first to comment
This
story may help you all think about the true price of a computer. While
the price may only be $300 or $400 or whatever, the human price may be
much larger. Someplace, in some 3rd world country, a human is being
exploited so that we can have computers lower than what they should be.
I’m not saying I’m one to turn a deal down, but I definitely keep such
a thing in mind when buying goods. And just because something is more
expensive in no way means it was made in a more humane way, it probably
just means the CEO is getting a larger chunk of profit from the sale.
source
Workers sit on hard wooden stools
without backrests 12 hours a day racing to complete 500 keyboards an
hour. Each worker will complete 35,750 operations a day.
By Charles Kernaghan
[This is an excerpt from the introduction
and executive summary of a report released by the National Labor
Committee in February 2009, High Tech Misery in China: The Dehumanization of Young Workers Producing Our Computer Keyboards. Click here to download the full report in PDF format.]
“I think it’s fair to say
that personal computers have become the most empowering tools we’ve
ever created. They’re tools of communication, they’re tools of
creativity, and they can be shaped by their user…The Internet is
becoming the town square for the global village of tomorrow.” — Bill Gates
“We feel like we are serving prison sentences.” — factory worker making Microsoft keyboards
The new assembly line: Making computer keyboards and other peripherals for Hewlett-Packard, Dell, Lenovo, Microsoft and IBM
The workers sit on wooden stools, without
backrests, as 500 computer keyboards an hour move down the assembly
line, twelve hours a day, seven days a week, with just two days off a
month.
Every 7.2 seconds a keyboard passes each worker, who has to snap six or seven keys into place—one key every 1.1 seconds.
The assembly line never stops. The
workplace is frantic, monotonous, numbing and relentless. Each worker
inserts 3250 keys an hour; 35,750 keys during the official 11-hour
shift; 250,250 a week, performing over one million operations a month.
Workers are paid 1/50th of a cent for each operation they complete.
Of the 2000 or so workers at the Meitai factory, the majority are young women, ranging in age from 18 to their mid-twenties.
While working, the women cannot talk,
listen to music, or even lift their heads to look around. Workers are
ordered to “periodically trim their nails” — to facilitate work, or be
fined. Workers needing to use the bathroom must learn to hold it until
there is a break. Security guards spy on the workers, who are
prohibited from putting their hands in their pockets and are searched
when they enter and leave the factory.
The factory operates 24 hours a day on two
12-hour shifts, with the workers rotating between day and night shifts
each month. The workers are at the factory for up to 87 hours a week,
and all overtime is strictly mandatory. There are just two half-hour
meal breaks per shift, but after racing to the cafeteria and queueing
up to get food, the workers have only about 15 minutes to eat.
The base wage is 64 [US] cents an hour,
which after deductions for primitive room and board drops down to a
take-home wage of just 41 cents an hour.
There is also mandatory unpaid overtime to
clean the factory and dorms. At the end of a shift, workers must stand
at attention as the foreman reviews the day’s work and what
improvements must be made.
The workers get up around 6.00 am When
they return to their dorm, sometime between 9.00 and 9.30 pm — they
bathe using a small plastic bucket. Summer temperatures routinely reach
into the high 90sF. During the winter, workers have to walk down
several flights of stairs to fetch hot water in their buckets. Ten to
twelve workers share each overcrowded dorm room, sleeping on narrow
metal bunk beds that line the walls. Workers drape old sheets over
their cubicle openings for privacy.
If a worker steps on the grass on the way
to the dorm, she is fined. The workers are locked in the factory
compound four days a week and are prohibited from even taking a walk.
Management tries to brainwash the young
workers, telling them they “… must love the company like their home…”
and that “to serve society, each worker must be devoted to their duty …
continuously striving for perfection…” and “developing good personal
work habits”. These good workers also have to spy on each other for “…
employees should actively monitor each other”. Communism in China has
come a long way as the young workers at the Meitai factory are taught
that “economising on capital … is the most basic requirement of factory
enterprise”.
Workers who hand out flyers or discuss
factory conditions with outsiders will be fired. Many young workers
have never heard the word “union” and have no idea what one is.
All the workers know is that they all “feel like we are serving prison sentences”.
God help us if the labour-management
relations being developed in China becomes the new low standard to be
accepted by the rest of the world. The $200 personal computer and the
$22.99 keyboard may be seen as a great bargain, but in the long run
they come at a terrible cost.
A good question is: Would you want your
daughter to work in this factory? Corporations attempt to dumb down
every job so they can slash wages and benefits. If workers oppose this
and try to fight back, the work is outsourced. The result is a race to
the bottom, where workers are pitted against one another to compete
over who will accept the lowest wages, the least benefits and most
miserable working and living conditions. There are no winners in this
battle.
High-tech misery in China: Meitai Plastics & Electronics, Dongguan City, Guangdong, China
- Two thousand workers, mostly young women, produce computer
equipment including keyboards and printer cases for Hewlett-Packard,
Dell, Lenovo, Microsoft and IBM.
- Management instructs the workers to “love the company like your
home”, “continuously strive for perfection” and to spy on and “actively
monitor each other”.
- Workers are prohibited from talking, listening to music, raising
their heads, putting their hands in their pockets. Workers are fined
for being one-minute late, for not trimming their fingernails and for
stepping on the grass. Workers are searched on the way in and out of
the factory. Workers who hand out flyers or discuss factory conditions
with outsiders are fired.
- The young workers sit on hard wooden stools twelve hours a day,
seven days a week as 500 computer keyboards an hour move down the
assembly line, or one every 7.2 seconds. Workers are allowed just 1.1
seconds to snap each key into place, repeating the same operation 3250
times an hour, 35,750 times a day, 250,250 times a week and over one
million times a month.
- The workers are paid 1/50th of a cent for each operation.
- The assembly line never stops, and workers needing to use the bathroom must learn to hold it until there is a break.
- All overtime is mandatory, with 12-hour shifts seven days a week
and an average of two days off a month. A worker daring to take a
Sunday off — which is supposedly their weekly holiday — will be docked
2.5 days’ wages. Including unpaid overtime, workers are at the factory
up to 87 hours a week. On average, they are at the factory 81 hours a
week, while toiling 74 hours, including 34 hours of overtime, which
exceeds China’s legal limit by 318 per cent!
- The workers are paid a base wage of 64 cents an hour, which does
not even come close to meeting subsistence level needs. After
deductions for primitive room and board, the workers’ take-home wage
drops to just 41 cents an hour. A worker toiling 75 hours a week will
earn a take-home wage of $57.19, or 76 cents an hour including overtime
and bonuses. The workers are routinely cheated of 14 to 19 per cent of
the wages legally due them.
- Ten to twelve workers share each crowded dorm room, sleeping on
narrow metal bunk beds that line the walls. They drape old sheets over
their cubicle openings for privacy. In the winter, workers have to walk
down several flights of stairs to fetch hot water in a small plastic
bucket, which they carry back to their rooms to take a sponge bath. In
the summer, dorm temperatures reach into the high 90s.
- Workers are locked in the factory compound four days a week and are prohibited from even taking a walk.
- To symbolise their “improving lives” the workers are served a
special treat on Fridays — a small chicken leg and foot. For breakfast,
they are given watery rice gruel. The workers say the food has a bad
taste and is “hard to swallow”.
- Illegally, workers are not inscribed in the mandatory work injury
and health insurance and social security maternity leave program. In
the molding department, due to the excessive heat, the workers suffer
skin rashes on their faces and arms.
- One worker summed up the general feeling in the factory: “I feel like I am serving a prison sentence.”
“I feel like I’m serving a prison sentence…”
“The factory is forever pressing down
on our heads and will not tolerate even the tiniest mistake. When
working, we work continuously. When we eat, we have to eat with
lightning speed. When I need to go to the bathroom, I have to try my
hardest to control myself, to hold it in and not go. The security
guards are like policemen watching over prisoners. We’re really
livestock and shouldn’t be called workers.
“Even when you get off your shift,
there is no freedom. Even such simple pleasures as taking a walk or
strolling down the street are closely managed by the factory.”
Meitai worker #1
``My hands are moving constantly…”
“Every day I enter the factory and I
assemble keyboards. My hands are moving constantly and I can’t stop for
a second. Our fingers, hands and arms are swollen and sore. Every day I
do this for 12 hours. What makes it even worse is the constant pressure
and boring monotony of the work.”
Meitai worker #2
“We are not human…”
“Working like this every day I don’t
see how we are any different from machines. Management treats us so
harshly; it is like we are not human. They don’t see us as people. They
treat us like tools. The factory has to pay money to purchase the
machines, but they don’t have to spend money on us.”
Meitai worker #3
“We have to beg the boss for mercy…”
“The factory rules are really like a
private law. We are forced to obey and endure management’s harsh
treatment. Some young workers have boyfriends and girlfriends outside
the factory and if they want to go on a date, we have to beg the boss
for mercy to be able to leave the factory compound.”
Posted at 01:20 pm by mikguiruram
Permalink
Mar 4, 2009
Pink dolphin appears in US lake
The
world’s only pink Bottlenose dolphin which was discovered in an inland
lake in Louisiana, USA, has become such an attraction that
conservationists have warned tourists to leave it alone. Charter
boat captain Erik Rue, 42, photographed the animal, which is actually
an albino, when he began studying it after the mammal first surfaced in
Lake Calcasieu, an inland saltwater estuary, north of the Gulf of
Mexico in southwestern USA. Capt Rue originally saw the dolphin,
which also has reddish eyes, swimming with a pod of four other
dolphins, with one appearing to be its mother which never left its side. He said: “I just happened to see a little pod of dolphins, and I noticed one that was a little lighter. “It was absolutely stunningly pink. “I
had never seen anything like it. It’s the same color throughout the
whole body and it looks like it just came out of a paint booth. “The dolphin appears to be healthy and normal other than its coloration, which is quite beautiful and stunningly pink. “The
mammal is entirely pink from tip to tail and has reddish eyes
indicating it’s albinism. The skin appears smooth, glossy pink and
without flaws. “I have personally spotted the pink dolphin 40 to
50 times in the time since the original sighting as it has apparently
taken up residence with its family in the Calcasieu ship channel. “As
time has passed the young mammal has grown and sometimes ventures away
from its mother to feed and play but always remains in the vicinity of
the pod. “Surprisingly, it does not appear to be drastically
affected by the environment or sunlight as might be expected
considering its condition, although it tends to remain below the
surface a little more than the others in the pod.” Regina
Asmutis-Silvia, senior biologist with the Whale and Dolphin
Conservation Society, said: “I have never seen a dolphin coloured in
this way in all my career. “It is a truly beautiful dolphin but
people should be careful, as with any dolphins, to respect it - observe
from a distance, limit their time watching, don’t chase or harass it “While this animal looks pink, it is an albino which you can notice in the pink eyes. “Albinism is a genetic trait and it unclear as to the type of albinism this animal inherited.” A close relation of dolphins, the Amazon River Botos, called pink dolphins, live in South America in the Amazon.
Posted at 11:12 am by mikguiruram
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