Top 10 Obama White House surprises

It’s possible to say “no” to Barack Obama

In the heady post-election days, Obama looked unstoppable after beating John McCain. More than a million giddy Americans would head to the National Mall for his swearing-in ceremony.

Obama used that superheated mojo to get people to do what he wanted. Soon, he was pushing through a massive $787 billion stimulus package over the futile objections of congressional Republicans and firing Rick Waggoner, the CEO of General Motors. It seemed as though he could do almost anything he wanted.

But almost as quickly as it came, the aura of invincibility faded. It began gradually - in May, the Senate voted to block funding for the closure of the prison at Guantanamo Bay, rejecting a core Obama campaign promise. Then his poll numbers started to come down to earth, declining from 67 percent approval in May to 52 percent today, according to Gallup.

And in October, perhaps the first direct “no” the president had heard: The International Olympic Committee rejected Obama’s personal entreaties to award the 2016 Olympics to his hometown of Chicago. And just like that, it had become possible to say no to Barack Obama.

Then in December, Obama summoned the nation’s top bankers to the White House to urge them to stop their lobbyists from blocking financial regulatory reform on Capitol Hill. But in the days that followed, it became clear that the bankers had no intention at all of changing their lobbying tactics on the bill.


He’s more like George W. Bush that you thought

Barack Obama denounced the Bush administration time and time again on the campaign trail in 2008. But in 2009, he suddenly found a surprising number of ways to agree with his predecessor.

Obama initially invoked Bush-ian logic in rejecting a watchdog group’s request for a list of health care executives who had meetings at the White House - sounding a lot like the Bush administration fighting to keep its energy task force meetings secret. The Obama White House relented in part after being sued and released the names of several executives. Since then, Obama has begun to regularly release details on many of the people who visit the executive mansion.

On the campaign trail, Obama also bashed the Bush administration’s 2003 deal with the pharmaceutical industry that blocked the government from negotiating prices with the nation’s drug makers. But during the summer, his administration gave the drug makers the same deal if they’d back his health care plan.

And the president continued his George W. Bush impression when he announced a “surge” of forces in Afghanistan — just as Bush had done in Iraq just over two years earlier. Which leads us to …

The anti-war candidate is not always against war


Part of Obama’s appeal in the 2008 presidential primary was that he had opposed the Iraq war from the outset - a position he used to flog Clinton, who had voted for the unpopular war. As a result, Obama attracted a following brimming with pacifist liberals who didn’t want war in any situation. They largely overlooked Obama’s campaign trail distinction between Iraq, which he said was a war of choice, and Afghanistan, which was thrust upon the nation by the Sept.11 attacks.

But they couldn’t ignore that distinction after Obama announced he would commit to a Bush-style “surge” in Afghanistan. “This is not the change we voted for,” lamented the liberal talk radio host Bill Press after Obama announced his decision in a December speech at West Point.

No-drama Obama? Still (largely) drama free

On the campaign trail, Team Obama earned a reputation for being remarkably free of the kind of internal dissent that shredded morale inside the Clinton team. Not many savvy Washington pundits, however, expected that to translate into the White House - where even low-level staffers tend to think about their historical legacy and plot the chapter headings of their tell-all books.

Even the famously buttoned-down Bush administration, after all, had broken down into near open warfare between the Donald Rumsfeld’s Pentagon and Colin Powell’s State Department.


What’s remarkable is how little tension there has been within the new administration. No-drama Obama continues to hold. Sure, there have been cracks in the façade - the unceremonious dumping of White House Counsel Greg Craig seemed a lot like the old Washington. Reporters secretly root for an open break in the Rahm Emanuel/Valerie Jarrett relationship. And Obama’s call for accountability in the case of the would-be bomber on Christmas Day sure sounded like someone’s head is going to roll. But so far, Obama has presided over an unusually harmonious White House.

The press may love him, but he doesn’t love them back

At rallies and speeches, Obama uses a stock phrase whenever someone in the crowd shouts out “I love you” to him. “I love you back,” Obama says.

But not always. The national press has been all but shouting “I love you” to Obama all year long as they place him on an astonishing number of magazine covers and send camera crews to the White House for day-in-the-life features and gauzy Christmas specials.

And Obama is not saying “I love you back” to the media. Instead, he offers bracing criticism, as he did Sept. 9 at the memorial service for the beloved CBS news anchor Walter Cronkite: “We also remember and celebrate the journalism that Walter practiced,” Obama said. “It’s a standard that's a little bit harder to find today.” Obama wasn’t done: “What happened today?” is replaced with "Who won today?” he said of today’s journalism. “The public debate cheapens. The public trust falters.”

That’s tough stuff. And although much of the media may think it’s involved in a love affair with the glamorous young president, the truth they may have to face is this: He’s just not that into you.

The incredible shrinking Obama online machine


There’s no arguing that the Obama team used technology to fundamentally change the way American presidential campaigns will be run in the future, making astonishing leaps in fundraising capability and in grass-roots organizing ability. But somehow, despite the predictions of many political sages, they’ve been unable to use technology to equally overhaul the presidency itself.

A campaign that had announced the selection of Biden as Obama’s running mate first over e-mail and text message became a White House in which Obama had to struggle against security and legal concerns to carry a BlackBerry. And although the White House has held Internet town halls, posts regularly on its blog, and updates its Flickr feed regularly, the Internet piece of the presidency feels more like an add-on than something core to the Obama administration’s success.

That may be because the Internet itself is not as well-suited to governing as it is to campaigning. When Obama held a jobs summit at the White House in December, his website urged people to hold their own summits - right at home. “Get your family, friends, and neighbors together and help get America back on track,” read the White House’s pitch.

“Fill out the form below if you’re interested in hosting a jobs forum in your community.”

Somehow, the effort fell flat.

The message masters muddled the health care message


On the campaign trail, Obama pounded in a one-word winning message: Change. In the health care debate, though, Obama never seemed to be able to settle on a single reason why Americans should back his plan. First, he talked about health care reform; then he modified that to “health insurance reform.” He talked about fixing health care and fixing the economy, to “stability and security” for people who already have insurance. For a while there, he talked about the “moral obligation” Americans had to help the uninsured. None of it was very clear.

And that zigging and zagging may be one reason why liberals and conservatives both seem outraged about the (semi) final product.

The post-partisan president meets the vast right wing

Obama began the year with a bipartisan flourish - he invited several Republicans to the White House to watch the Super Bowl. It’s been all downhill since then, as fraying tempers over the deficit, health care, the stimulus and a host of other issues have dashed Obama’s hopes of service as a post-partisan leader.

By September, things looked so different that former President Bill Clinton was once again talking about the “vast right wing conspiracy.” Obama himself seemed to acknowledge the reality of the challenges he faces in getting the two parties to work together after a bipartisan meeting on the economy at the White House on Dec. 9. He didn’t seem to hold out much hope for cooperation after a session in which party leaders pointed fingers at each other.

“I'm confident we can put our economic troubles behind us,” Obama said. “But it's going to require some work and cooperation and a seriousness of purpose here in Washington.”

His biggest diplomatic coup was the “beer summit”


One of Obama’s biggest selling points as a candidate was his ability to bring the U.S. and the world a little closer together after the strained diplomatic years of the Bush administration. But although he turned out 250,000 screaming Germans to hear a campaign speech in Berlin, Obama has had surprisingly little luck turning that worldwide popularity into gains on the diplomatic front.

He’s had trouble getting big contributions of new troops from allies in Afghanistan. The jury is still out on whether he can rally the world against Iran. And although he got good reviews on several fronts, including his nuclear proliferation speech at the United Nations in September, the unlikely highlight of the Obama diplomatic effort in 2009 was the unlikely “beer summit” between Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates Jr. and police Sgt. James Crowley of Cambridge, Mass.

The event was something of a White House make-up operation, as the president tried to undo the political damage from his statement that the Cambridge police had acted “stupidly” in arresting Gates this summer - comments that put the president squarely in the center of an unnecessary racially tinged national debate. The moment was hokey and contrived, but it seemed to get the two men talking and successfully defused the controversy.

He likes golf more than he likes basketball

This one, we’ve got to admit, we didn’t see coming.

Obama’s public image is ultracool: He listens to Jay-Z! He pals around with superstars! And his basketball playing — images of which were carefully doled out on the campaign trail - made him seem young and vigorous. His slick behind-the-back pass at a North Carolina Tar Heels practice gave him b-ball cred nationwide.

But as president, we’ve seen a lot less of Obama playing basketball and a lot more of him playing golf. And that’s an image that reminds voters a lot more of Dwight Eisenhower than Michael Jordan.

To be fair to the president, he has a basketball court at the White House, where cameras are not typically permitted. So it’s still possible that he shoots hoops more than he tees off. But we know a lot about the president’s golf habit, because the White House press corps loads up into a motorcade every time he hits an area golf course, which he’s done often since Inauguration.

And that’s a side of him that we didn’t see on the campaign trail at all.


Source - Yahoo News

Air travellers to US face virtual strip search

If you intent to visit US , then prepare to be a free virtual stripper, unless you can avoid from going through their airport.

President Barack Obama blamed a "catastrophic'' system failure for the Christmas Day terror attack over Detroit as officials warned air travellers entering the US could be forced to undergo "virtual strip searches''.

Walk-through imaging machines that let security officials see through a passenger's clothes could become widespread across the country after the "crotch bomber's'' failed attempted to blow up a passenger plane as it prepared to land, reports the Courier Mail.

Six millimetre wave technology machines are already being used for primary screenings at airports in cities including Las Vegas, Miami and San Francisco.

Another 13 airports across the country use the machines to screen passengers who have already set off a metal detector.

Passengers can opt for a pat-down search instead.


Whole body imaging - how it works

- Millimeter wave technology (MMW) can see through clothing to reveal metallic and nonmetallic objects, including weapons or plastic explosives. They also reveal a person's silhouette and the outlines of underwear

- The technique bounces radio-frequency waves off people to construct a 3-D image within a few seconds

- MMW scans intentionally blur facial features, and the security officer viewing images sits in a remote location where he or she cannot identify the passengers

- The officer is unable to print, export, store or transmit the image

- The US Transportation Security Agency has also trialled backscatter technology which uses low level X-ray to create a two-sided image


Source - US Transportation Security Agency

11, 13 and 14 year old boys charged with Xmas Eve gang rape of girl, 12

Detectives have charged three boys over the gang rape of a 12-year-old girl on Xmas Eve in Western Australia's Kimberley region.

The girl visited the boys at a house in Kununurra, in the state's Top End on Xmas Day. WA police allege the boys, aged 11, 13 and 14, had sex with the girl while she was drunk and asleep at the house.

Kununurra Detective Senior Constable Alan Goodger today confirmed the trio had been charged with sexual penetration of a child under 13.

The 11-year-old and the 14-year-old have been granted bail while the 13-year-old has been remanded in custody.

The boys are due to appear in the Kununurra Children's Court on February 19.


Via - Heraldsun


- Boys these days, beware all girls .......

Chinese family saved from fire by the snake

A Chinese man who nursed a dying snake back to health claims it saved his family by raising the alarm when their house was on fire.

Yu Feng, of Fushun, in Liaoning province, found the dying black snake outside his home, reports the Liaosheng Evening Post.

"I treated it with herbal medicines, and in 20 days it recovered," he said.

He took the snake to a nearby mountain more than a mile away to release it back into the wild - but the next morning it was back at his house.

"I then set it free another two times, but it always came back," Yu added. "People around me said the snake had come back to repay my kindness, so I kept it."

He named the snake Long Long and adopted it as a pet - then one night, he claims it saved the whole family.

Yu explained: "I was asleep when suddenly I felt something cold on my face. I opened my eyes and it was Long Long.

"He had never woken me up before but I was so sleepy I went back to sleep. But Long Long grabbed my clothes with his teeth and whipped the bed with his tail.

"Then he went to my mother's bed and whipped her bed with his tail. I woke up then and smelt something burning, and saw my mother's electric blanket was on fire so I leapt up and turned it off."

Local reptile experts say snakes don't have the intelligence to act in this way - but Yu believes Long Long acted out of kindness, to repay Feng for saving his own life.


Via - Orange News

Cool matte paintings by Raphael Lacoste

Malik Shah's Sanctuary



Sunset on Babylon



Ancient Hall in Babylon



Arachne Elrafo



Balcony



Island




JTCE



Matte Esperance 1000



South kingdom - A scene in The Assassin's Creed



Rouen after



Shilo airport



Russian base Shilo



Snowy plain at night



A view



Industrial landscape




About Raphael Lacoste

Raphael Lacoste lives in Canada, Montreal, with wife and son since 2002. He was born in 1974 in Paris, but lived mostly around Bordeaux, south west of France until he left for Canada..

He studied in 1993 at Fine Arts school, Art and Media option, Photography and Video, at the same time, he was photographer and composer for a theatre company "les Pygmalions". He was already attracted by the scenery, mood and lighting. The Company Gave him the opportunity in 1997 to work on "the little Prince" of St Exupéry, he did there his first 3D pictures that were projected on giant screens with Pani 6KW projectors, Raphael was also the screening coordinator.


Later in 1998, he went to CNBDI school (Angouleme, France) and got a European Master of Art in 3D animation, his movie "Nîumb" was screened at Siggraph 2000, Imagina 2000, Anima mundi 2001...
He had teachers like René Laloux, Director of "Time masters", "Gandahar", "Fantastic Planet"... Raphael was very impressed by the work of his teacher and learned a bit of his knowledge...


Raphael Lacoste has been now Art director on Videogames and Cinematics (CG) for more than 7 years, he worked at Ubisoft on such licences as Prince of Persia and Assassin's Creed (see Art Direction link on the top). He won a VES Award in february 2006 for his work as Art Director on Prince of Persia the Two Thrones Cinematics.

His Focus now is to work as Senior Concept Artist, Matte painter and production designer for Film. He is skilled particularly in environments, moods, picture composition and lighting (see portfolio).


Check out more Raphael’s works at http://www.raphael-lacoste.com

Glowing wallpaper could replace lightbulbs



This is not about a glowing wallpaper created with Photoshop. This is about a real glowing wallpaper that could replace lamps for lighting homes and offices.

Although the idea may sound ludicrous, the Government's Carbon Trust is so excited by the prospect it has awarded Lomox, a Welsh company £454,000 ($720,000) to develop flexible films that could replace traditional lights, which is inspired by the thin OLED televisions just now beginning to hit the market.

"Lighting is a major producer of carbon emissions," said Mark Williamson, director of innovations at the Carbon Trust. "This technology has the potential to produce ultra-efficient lighting for a wide range of applications, tapping into a huge global market."

If glow in the dark wallpaper catches on, it could pave the way for other devices around the home - including light-emitting curtains, colour changing clothes and even luminous pet accessories.

It's the latest use for "Organic Light Emitting Diodes or OLEDs" - the technology that is expected to revolutionise flat screen televisions, computer monitors and mobile phone screens in the next few years.

OLEDs are made of thin films of organic molecules that light up when electricity passes through them. Because they needs a very low operating voltage - just three to five volts - they can be powered by solar panels or batteries.

And because they exist as a thin layer of film, they can be rolled up, bent or fixed to a wall.


Lomox Limited is a start-up company from North Wales and is founded for around two years.


Ken Lacey, chief executive of LOMOX Ltd, which is attempting to bring the technology to the market, said the company planned to make OLED lights within two years, as soon as 2012.

OLEDs have been around for several years - but remain expensive. They are difficult to use in large displays, and still have a short lifetime.

Mr Lacey said his company was developing new types of OLEDs that were cheaper and longer lasting.

'In a light you can put it anywhere. You can paint it on a wall or wallpaper,' he said.

The technology could be used to make flexible screens that could be rolled up after use, or carried into a presentation, while it would also provide an effective alternative to outside lighting with traditional lights, he said.



Via - Daily Mail

Unidentified Marblehead Neck monster

Is it a fox? I don't think so. Is it a wolf? I don't think so. If these photos are not photoshopped, then this animal can be included in unsolved mysteries.







An unidentified, sinister looking beast has been photographed near Marblehead Neck Wildlife Sanctuary, Massachusetts.

The fierce looking creature was spotted drinking from a pond in a Blanchard Street yard in Marblehead recently before it quickly scarpered. Local residents have been speculating what the strange looking animal is, a werewolf one resident suggested, others say it’s just a fox with mange. Possibly then another contender for a chupacabras sighting.


Via - The MorningStarr

Metal nut left in girl's spine during surgery

A girl's intention to return to normal life after a car accident last year stunted when doctors confirmed a 0.5cm nut embedded near her spine, thus may become worse if not immediately removed.

Victims claim that it caused due to negligent attitude of a doctors perform during spine surgery with metal implants using nuts and bolts last year to treat injuries from road accidents a year ago in a famous private hospital in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

A worried victim known as Khai Tan Yien, 29, an interior designer, said "I am disappointed with the negligence and irresponsibility of the doctor in treating my injury."

"After the surgery, the orthopaedic surgeon informed me that a nut had accidentally fallen into the operated area, very close to my spine where the metal implant was placed," she said.

"However, the surgeon assured me that the nut is not harmful and can be removed together with the fixture of the metal implant a year later without complications," she said, showing her x-rays and CT scan to reporters.

In October, a day before Tan’s scheduled surgery to remove the metal implant, the surgeon claimed that the fallen nut, which has shifted from its original position, could not be removed as it is located very close to a blood vessel.

Only the metal implant was removed while the fallen nut remained in around her spine. "The doctor said there was nothing he could do and claimed that it would not cause me any problem.

"But I'm worried if the nut may shift around and cause complications," she said. Tan also claimed that she had sought a second opinion from an orthopaedic surgeon in another private hospital earlier this month, who advised her to undergo surgery as the location of the nut might be harmful.

Her surgery is scheduled for today.  Department head Datuk Michael Chong said he would bring the matter up with the Health Minister and asked for all doctors to be more careful.

"We will have to wait for the result of the operation first," he said.


Via - AsiaOne

Facebook, Twitter, Youtube top list of weird stories in 2009

So many weird stories in 2009, from the German town that unpurposely advertised pornography on its website to the American who interrupted his wedding to update his Facebook and Twitter accounts.

"Standing at the alter with @TracyPage where just a second ago she became my wife! Gotta go, time to kiss the bride" is how Dana Hanna kept the world posted between "I do" and that kiss.

Cartoon character, Marge Simpson made it on the cover of Playboy magazine. That means no payment for her and save budget.

Two White House gate-crashers celebrated their triumph on Facebook, and the world was fooled into believing a 6-year-old boy was caught in a runaway home-made helium balloon.

Social networking sites such as Facebook, Twitter and YouTube proved fertile ground for many of the bizarre stories.

British physicians were advised to ignore amorous advances from patients after some were propositioned on Facebook, Dutch lawmakers were told off for tweeting in parliament and in Canada an MP had to apologize for insulting a rival on Twitter.

In New York, five "restroom ambassadors" got jobs tweeting from the toilets at Times Square: greeting tourists and shoppers - and then sending short dispatches on their encounters.

Britain's High Court ordered its first injunction via Twitter to stop an anonymous Tweeter impersonating someone else.

The U.N.'s World Food Programme sent text messages to Iraqi refugees in Syria so they could redeem the virtual vouchers for fresh food in local shops. A U.S. survey found that one in five drivers read or sent text messages from behind the wheel.

"The new technologies that help us multi-task in our everyday lives and increasingly popular social media sites present a hard-to-resist challenge," said U.S. motor club head Robert Darbelnet - a fitting description for the whole year.

Youtube, Google, Facebook, sex and porn, were at top from the most popular items kids searched for online in 2009, as tracked by Symantec's OnlineFamily.Norton.


Funeral home goes green

Swine flu, or H1N1, presented another challenge - and rich source of weird stories. In Egypt, thousands of pigs were slaughtered even though the United Nations said the mass cull was a "real mistake" because the strain was not found in pigs.

Russian soccer fans were instructed to drink whisky on a trip to Wales for a World Cup qualifier match to ward off the H1N1 virus. In Japan, candidates stopped shaking hands. In Italy an inventor devised an electronic holy water dispenser.

The spread of new media got people in trouble. Dutch muggers were caught with the help of a Google street view camera.

A vain British burglar sent a picture of himself to his newspaper because the wanted criminal said he did not like the police mugshot. A picture of a student urinating on a British war memorial published in a newspaper led to his being charged.

A German student thrown off a train for riding without a ticket got in trouble on his own.

He stuck his backside against the window at railway staff but his trousers got caught in a train door. He nearly died mooning as he was dragged half-naked along the platform, out of the station and onto the tracks before the train stopped.

In India, a mid-air scuffle broke out between pilots and crew of one flight. In the U.S., two Northwest pilots overflew their destination by 250 km (155 miles). They said they lost their bearings while using their personal laptops in the cockpit.

A Saudi court sentenced a man to five years in jail and 1,000 lashes for boasting about his sexual exploits on TV.

Australian horse racing officials were denounced for holding a dwarf racing competition. The race involved men charging down a course with dwarfs dressed in jockey silks riding piggyback.

The Paris tourist board urged locals to do their part to battle a 17-percent plunge in visitors: Smile! S'il vous plait.

In Norway happy cows proved to be more productive. Since new rules were introduced in 2004 allowing the cows to relax for up to half a day on soft rubberized mattresses, officials reported they are producing more milk and have fewer udder infections.

An Irish school told children to bring their own toilet paper to help the school save money while Cuban officials said the country was facing a severe shortage of toilet paper.

Climate change was another big theme in 2009. To save water and electricity in Venezuela, President Hugo Chavez urged people to stop singing in the shower.

Those wishing to be cremated but worried about producing greenhouse gases even after dying learned about a funeral home in Florida that has come up with a greener way to go by dissolving the body using a chemical process.


Via - Reuters



The Weirdest News of 2009 - from Sphere.com

1. Driving Furniture While Intoxicated: Not satisfied with falling off a stool like other drinkers, Kile Wygle of Ohio equipped his bar seat with a lawnmower engine. After downing 15 beers one night in June, he was spotted zipping down a public street on his motorized bar stool at 38 mph. He would serve three days in a driver education program.

2. Busted Justice: When British retailer Marks & Spencer started charging more for brassieres size DD and up, Beckie Williams of Britain – herself a size G – led the "Busts 4 Justice" protests. Her 17,000-member Facebook group brought M&S to its knees. By June, the policy was dropped and the store reported that sales had shot up to two bras per second – up by half a bra!

3. Moonwalk Like an Ancient Egyptian: The death of Michael Jackson launched many strange tributes, none stranger than the crowds gathering at Chicago's Field Museum because they thought they could see the King of Pop's face in a 3,000-year-old statuette, complete with catlike features, unnaturally large eyes and a disfigured nose.

4. Antisocial Media: A teen in Staten Island, N.Y., walking down a sidewalk and texting, fell into an open manhole. Within hours, she was tweeting about it.

5. Urine Luck: In one of the stranger save-the-Earth campaigns, a Brazilian environmental group asked people to save water by peeing in the shower -- a move that could save 1,000 gallons of water annually, or so the group claimed in public service announcements.

6. Horsing Around: One interspecies roll in the hay is bad enough. Get caught twice and you must be Rodell Vereen, who had to register as a sex offender after his first man-on-horse conviction in 2007.

7. Ridiculously Fertile: For years, Julia Grovenburg and her husband tried to conceive. Then, like a miracle, it happened not once, but twice. The Arkansas woman somehow managed to conceive a second child while pregnant with her first.

8. This Is Your Brain On Drugs: Acea Schomaker had some explaining to do when a Pennsylvania sheriff caught him stuffing his cat into an extra-large, homemade bong. The 20-year-old was apparently trying to mellow out the kitty. "I know for sure this isn't the first time someone has done this," he told The Associated Press. "I'm just the first one to get caught."

9. Excuses, Excuses: A Belgian teen claimed she fell asleep in a tattoo artist's chair and woke up with 56 stars plastered over her face. The artist claimed she was a willing participant. And days later, she admitted that she just didn't want to tell her folks the truth about her ear-to-ear makeover.

10. Nude Coffee Kerfuffle: When 29-year-old Erick Williamson got busted in his own home for drinking his morning coffee in the nude, civil libertarians suddenly had a whole new war to fight.

11. Google Worship: Search engine optimization – a fancy way of saying "whoring yourself in any way possible to rank high in an Internet search" – became an obsession in 2009, not just for media companies and retailers, but for municipalities.

12. Moo-ving Research: Farmers have long been trying to get cows to produce more milk. Finally, this year, scientists at England's Newcastle University gave us a solution: talk to the animals.


Further Weirdest News of 2009 reading at Sphere.com

Devastation Caused By Earthquakes


Earthquakes are sudden movements of the Earth’s crust and are measured by seismographs. These movements involve enormous amounts of energy. Reports of earthquakes are received from around the world at a rate of about once every two weeks, and many of them occur under the oceans. However, major earthquakes that are reported in the news usually involve the devastation of property and loss of human lives.




The greatest concentration of earthquakes occurs around the Pacific Ocean where the volcanic 'Ring of Fire' is situated. Other areas include the Mediterranean and the Himalaya-Asia region.





During the famous 1906 earthquake in San Francisco, USA, much of the damage was caused by fires that broke out when power and gas lines were ruptured.






The collapse of the structurally unsound apartment buildings is the main cause of a high human death toll of 17,000 during the 1999 earthquake in Izmit, Turkey, with a magnitude of 7.4.




The following are some of the earthquake events of recent years:


The 2008 Sichuan earthquake was a deadly earthquake that measured at 8 in magnitude. It killed at least 69,000 people in the province of China.

The earthquake was also felt in nearby countries and as far away as both Beijing and Shanghai - where office buildings swayed with terror.

Strong aftershocks, some exceeding magnitude 6, continue to hit the area even months after the main quake, causing new casualties and damage.



The September Sumatra earthquake occurred just off the Southern coast of Sumatra, Indonesia, with a magnitude of 7.6.

Around 135,000 houses were severely damaged and an estimated 250,000 families (1,250,000 people) have been affected by the earthquake through the total or partial loss of their homes and livelihoods.



The 2009 Honduras earthquake occurred on May 28. The earthquake caused at least 7 fatalities, 40 injured and more than 130 collapsed or damaged buildings across northern Honduras. The powerful 30-second offshore quake was felt in Guatemala, El Salvador, Belize, and as far as Cancun in Mexico.

Two important bridges and a number of levees and port terminals were also seriously damaged.



The shock and misery resulting from the earthquake can be traumatic. I would like to extend my deepest condolences to the victims especially to those who have lost their loved ones and properties in these disasters.




Sources: Interactive Geography, Wikipedia

The woman whose entire world is pink

This woman from Los Angeles is so hardcore and obsessed with pink colour. Almost all of her stuffs are in pink, even her dog.

Kitten Kay Sera, 46, says that she's had her pink obsession for 25 years - and hasn't worn anything but the colour for much of that time.









Kitten insists that she isn't strange - she says that she simply has a natural affinity for the shade, which makes her feel 'lovely and luxurious'.


Via - Metro

Washing hands in hospital may spreads disease

It is no doubt that washing hand is an easy way to prevent infection, especially if along with soap.

But washing your hands in hospitals can actually make you more likely to pick up infections, according to one of Britain’s leading bacteriologists.

Prof Hugh Pennington said hospital taps were often crawling with dangerous germs.

He said money needed to be spent urgently to replace hand taps with automatic infra-red systems to stop staff, patients and visitors picking up viruses.

Professor Pennington, emeritus professor of bacteriology at Aberdeen University, said the automatic wash basins were now common in slaughterhouses but not hospitals.

"The technology has been around for a long time but it would make a significant difference to controlling infections in hospitals," he said. "They do this in airports – even in slaughterhouses – but for some reason not in enough hospitals. It seems crazy.

"It is important that hands do not get re-contaminated. But using hand taps - which have been touched by hundreds of people - you may end up catching more bugs than before you washed your hands.

"It strikes me that hospitals are taking a devil of a time over this. Of course it would cost money but it would be worth it.”


Via - Telegraph

Two Argentine men, first gay wedding in Latin America



The purpose of marriage is to spiritually, emotionally and physically unite a man and a women together, as husband and wife, in a covenantal relationship between themselves and their Creator.

But what is the purpose of gay marriage? Only for sex? How to give birth if man married man?

Two Argentine men have defied national law to wed in Latin America's first same-sex marriage.

Last month, a lower court judge in Buenos Aires cleared the way for the marriage by dismissing Argentina's marriage laws as unconstitutional.

But then the couple could not find an official in Buenos Aires who would agree to marry them. In the end the two travelled 2,000 kilometres to the far south of Argentina where they were able to get married.

Gay marriage is illegal in Argentina, but the provincial governor issued a special decree to allow the two men to wed.

One of the grooms, Jose Maria Di Bello, says he hopes his marriage will set a precedent for other countries.

"I want this union to symbolise that this point, the further south in the world is the end of the world, but also the beginning of everything," he said.

"And from Ushuaia, the city further south in the world and from Argentina we are shedding light, to the whole of Latin America and the Carribbean."

In much of the commentary in Argentine media, the idea of same-sex marriage is still considered scandalous and in general homosexuality is frowned upon.

The Catholic Church has expressed concern over the wedding.


Via - ABC News


8 people have died caused by mysterious disease in Uttar Pradesh

A mysterious disease, marked by high fever, severe headache and vomiting, has claimed lives of eight people in the last 15 days in the Kanpur Dehat (rural) district of Uttar Pradesh, a health official said Tuesday.

'At least eight people have died of this mysterious disease in Vajayeepur village of Kanpur Dehat. We have not yet been able to identify the disease,' Kanpur Dehat's additional Chief Medical Officer R.K. Singh told IANS.

The first death of 22-year-old Ramawati Dohrey was reported in the village Dec 15. Since then, seven more people have died.

'Following the directives of the district magistrate, several teams of health officials have been directed to camp in the village and conduct necessary medical check-ups to identify the disease,' he said.


India swine flu toll 880, over 25,000 infected

At least two people died due to swine flu Monday taking the countrywide toll to 880, health authorities said, adding that 124 new cases have taken the infection tally to 25,236.

The two deaths were reported from Maharashtra and Assam. With this, the casualty figure has reached 257 in Maharashtra. Assam reported its first death.

Besides, the country reported 124 cases of new infections of the pandemic virus. Of the total new cases, Delhi reported 68. While 17 cases were reported from Gujarat, 12 were from Haryana.

In the national capital, there were no fresh deaths due to swine flu but at least 68 more people were infected with the contagious virus Monday, authorities said.

'We have reports of 68 fresh cases of swine flu of which 30 were children,' Anjana Prakash, deputy nodal officer in charge of swine flu in Delhi, told IANS.

With these, the number of infections in the capital has reached around 9,200. Of these, over 55 percent are children.


Via - Andhravilas , 28 December 2009

Dead man starts talking before his funeral

If this happen in front of your eyes, maybe you'll think he is a ghost, a really fresh and immediate ghost.

Staff at a Chinese funeral home were shocked when a dead man started talking minutes before he was to be laid to rest.

Zhang Dabo, 70, a cancer patient, was sent to the funeral home after his sister found him lying motionless at their home, reports China Daily.

However, a staff member revealed that the deceased was about to be put in a refrigerating facility when he started uttering inaudible words.

Dabo was then rushed to hospital where doctors confirmed he never died.  He is currently undergoing treatment. (ANI)


Via - Qianjiang Evening News

Foods that work as Natural Antibiotics

Antibiotics are a category of drugs which are referred to as “antimicrobials,” which means they inhibit the growth of or kills bacteria, without causing significant damage to the person (host). Traditionally, antibiotics were obtained from natural compounds, however; medical science has developed synthetic forms of antibiotics called fluoroquinolones, which are neither natural nor obtained from natural compounds.


The food we eat has the capacity to harm or heal us and in the following article, foods that act as natural antibiotics are discussed. One of the main problems with understanding which foods offer antibiotic qualities, is that with so much misinformation available, many people walk away from researching and reading, feeling confused and have not truly been provided with accurate information. The following information is designed to provide the reader with a better understanding of which foods offer the best antibiotic properties and what it can do for their body.


Foods that Contain Natural Antibiotic Qualities/Properties

The following is a list of foods that contain natural antibiotic qualities and properties and specific information relating to what it offers to a person health wise:


Garlic: garlic has been a natural antibiotic used since ancient times. Garlic in the diet helps reduce cholesterol, triglycerides and blood pressure, and also helps thin the blood and acts as an expectorant and decongestant. In the past, garlic was used for its antimicrobial properties in World War I to treat typhus and dysentery, and during World War II it was used to ward off sepsis (blood poisoning). Modern research has shown that garlic has extensive antibiotic properties. Japanese, Russians, English and American scientists have conducted extensive research which shows a diet which contains regular amounts of garlic can reduce the risk of stroke, hypertension, tumors, and certain forms of cancer and can help with treatment of the common cold.



Onions: a close relative of garlic, onions have also been shown to have excellent antibiotic properties with a history of usage dating back to ancient Rome.

There is a long list of beneficial medicinal properties which has been directly attributed to the onion such as; herbal analgesia, anti-inflammatory substance, increases circulation, alleviating angina, and used in the treatment of the common cold and flu, and for people who have a persistent cough.





Honey: has long been used as a traditional topical treatment for wound infections and has shown to be effective against certain antibiotic-resistant bacterial strains.

Honey has been shown to have a broad range of antimicrobial action against a broad range of both fungi and bacteria. Further research is ongoing to determine further all the healthful benefits of honey’s antibiotic properties.





Australian Tea Tree Oil: comes from a small, fragrant evergreen tree and is sold in health food stores. The substance can be applied topically to treat fingernail fungus, slow healing wounds and sores.







Fruits containing vitamin C: fruits high in vitamin C are recommended because they can help stave off or eliminate certain infectious bacteria. Vitamin C is essential for growth and development, and serves in the function of skin repair. The substance is very important in wound healing, strengthens the human immune system



and increases the body’s ability to resist infection.

Studied first in the 1930’s by Dr. Fred Klenner at the University of North Carolina, the antibiotic action of vitamin C was shown to help patients heal from snake bites, viral and bacterial infections. Fruits rich in vitamin C include; kiwi, strawberries, oranges, pineapple, honeydew melon, mangoes, plums and watermelon.



Vegetables rich in vitamin C: due to the high vitamin C content of some vegetables, the following foods can serve as a natural antibiotic as well; cabbage, kale, Brussels sprouts, cauliflower, broccoli, asparagus, tomatoes and spinach.






Fermented foods: these are foods that are prepared with microorganisms, mainly bacteria. The foods can also be considered as a form of natural antibiotics because they reintroduce friendly bacteria into the body.

Fermented foods are often recommended in conjunction with traditional antibiotic treatment because while the underlying disease is being treated and bacteria is being killed, a person will be less likely to develop a secondary infection due to the decrease of normal bacterial body flora.





Eucalyptus: used as a powerful decongestant, has a very crisp, easy-to-recognize odor.

Eucalyptus is a natural antiseptic which kills certain funguses, bacteria and viruses. Can be steeped and made into an herbal tea.





Goldenseal: a powerful and potent immune system stimulant which medical research has shown to block streptococci bacteria from colonizing within the human body. Native American Indians have also used goldenseal in the treatment of certain types of fungal and protozoa infections.





Herbs that Contain Natural Antibiotic Qualities/Properties

The University of Colorado has also uncovered certain herbs which exhibit traits and qualities that mimic antibiotic actions in the human body, which include the following:




• Allspice
• Oregano
• Thyme
• Cumin
• Cinnamon
• Tarragon
• Cloves
• Bay leaf
• Chili peppers
• Rosemary
• Marjoram
• Caraway seed
• Coriander
• Dill
• Basil
• Nutmeg
• Cardamom
• Pepper
• Ginger
• Anise
• Fennel
• Mint sage
• Mustard
• Parsley
• Basil


Overview

Various scientific studies have shown that certain foods we eat have characteristics and qualities which act as a natural antibiotic on the human body. Natural antibiotic qualities exhibited by certain foods are a subject that requires more extensive research to be completely understood. Before attempting to substitute natural antibiotic containing foods for standard prescription antibiotics, it is highly recommended a person consults with a physician to obtain medical advice and to determine the best course of treatment to use for the particular medical condition which is presenting.




Source: Dana Fenton/Healthy Living