Charlottesville weekly apologizes over anonymous racist comment – Richmond Times-Dispatch: Virginia News

Now I’m not defending any racist or hateful speech, but as someone who values the first amendment, I don’t like the idea of ‘protesting’ to prevent even ugly speech from being said. And here’s why: What’s to keep something the protesters say from being considered ‘hateful’ and ‘ugly’ in the future? Nothing! If that happened, then they’d be the first to bitch about their ‘rights’ being infringed!

Sorry, but if you want to protect your right to free speech, then that means enduring comments you may despise. Otherwise, you run the risk of having your speech taken away. What’s more important to you? Being able to keep your own speech or removing that which you disagree with?

It’s a dangerous slippery slope that way too many in this country are willing to go down to keep from being ‘offended.’ I don’t give a shit about being offended because I frankly don’t give a rip about what folks think about me. Yet, most people are so sensitive that they can’t just ignore something…no, it has to be silenced.

One day someone will come for their free speech and I hope they remember this day. 

 

Charlottesville weekly apologizes over anonymous racist comment – Richmond Times-Dispatch: Virginia News.

NASA’s Cassini beams back stunning pictures of Saturn, Earth

Per CBS News and NASA

 

NASA’s Cassini spacecraft has beamed back spectacular pictures of Saturn, its rings and distant Earth, a “pale blue dot” nearly a billion miles away, as the robot passed behind the ringed planet last Friday.

Following Cassini’s lead, NASA’s Messenger spacecraft, in orbit around Mercury, also trained its camera on Earth during a search for undiscovered moons.

 

Passing behind Saturn last Friday, NASA’s Cassini spacecraft snapped a series of pictures showing the planet and its rings, including planet Earth as a “pale blue dot” 898 million miles away. A mosaic of all the images will be released in six weeks or so showing Earth, Saturn and its complete ring system.

/ NASA

 

 

“That images of our planet have been acquired on a single day from two distant solar system outposts reminds us of this nation’s stunning technical accomplishments in planetary exploration,” Sean Solomon, the principal investigator with the Mercury mission, said in a NASA statement.

“And because Mercury and Saturn are such different outcomes of planetary formation and evolution, these two images also highlight what is special about Earth. There’s no place like home.”

The Cassini images were the brainchild of Carolyn Porco, leader of the spacecraft imaging team at the Space Science Institute in Boulder, Colo. Porco launched a pair of contests inviting the public to submit music and photos that captured the moment of the cosmic encounter and urged people to step outside and wave at Cassini.

A zoomed-in view from Cassini’s narrow-angle camera shows humanity’s home and its moon as small points of light in the blackness of space, an image intended to spark wonder “in a way we only rarely get to see, from the most distant robotic outpost we have ever established around another planet,” Porco said on her web page.

 

This shot from Cassini’s narrow-angle camera shows a magnified image of the Earth, left, and its moon from the vantage point of Saturn.

/ NASA

 

 

“From the U.S. to New Zealand, England to South Africa, we used the opportunity to contemplate our cosmic whereabouts, the uniqueness of our lush, life-giving planet, and the significance of our own existence,” she wrote.

Cassini snapped the images from a distance of about 898 million miles while the spacecraft was passing behind Saturn, in eclipse and out of the direct glare of the sun.

A series of wide-angle shots will be assembled into a mosaic over the next six weeks or so, showing Saturn and its entire ring system in natural colors, as an astronaut passing behind Saturn might see it.

 

Earth and its moon as viewed from the Messenger spacecraft in orbit around Mercury, 61 million miles away.

/ NASA

 

 

A similar mosaic captured by Cassini in 2006 also showed Earth, but the image was captured as part of a science campaign. It was not optimized to show Saturn in natural color and the narrow-angle camera was not used to zoom in on Earth.

This time around, Porco wanted a mosaic that would appeal to the public, showing the glory of Saturn as well as the tiny point of light that is humanity’s home in space.

One segment of the eventual mosaic was released Monday, showing Earth as a star-like point of light just below the rings. The zoomed-in view also was released, clearly showing both Earth and moon. At Cassini’s distance, the image scale was 53,820 miles per pixel.

The Voyager 1 spacecraft imaged Earth from an even greater distance in 1990 as it neared the edge of the solar system. It was that image that prompted Carl Sagan to dub Earth a “pale blue dot” in space.

 

Play VIDEO

A view of Earth, from Saturn

 

Even though Cassini is much closer than Voyager 1 was in 1990, the scale was still daunting — 53,820 miles per pixel.

“The illuminated areas of neither the Earth nor the Moon are resolved here,” NASA said in a statement. “Consequently, the size of each `dot’ is the same size that a point of light of comparable brightness would have in the wide angle camera.”

While no surface detail is visible, “this pale blue dot is a succinct summary of who we were on July 19,” Linda Spilker,the Cassini project scientist, said in NASA’s statement. “Cassini’s picture reminds us how tiny our home planet is in the vastness of space, and also testifies to the ingenuity of the citizens of this tiny planet to send a robotic spacecraft so far away from home to study Saturn and take a look-back photo of Earth.”

Feds probe company that helped get EB-5 funding for McAuliffe’s Greentech

First Wonderboy Bob’s antics and now this? I think people have gotten to be so damn stupid and apathetic that they deserve everything they get. This is the guy some want to be governor? How about we throw BOTH parties out of power and start over again? This is so damn messed up it isn’t funny. Ever notice how they go to Richmond, or DC, poor and come back millionaires? It’s time WE THE PEOPLE take our system back..for our children’s sake if anything.

 

per blogs.nbc12.com

 

The Associated Press is out with a damaging report on the company recruited by Terry McAuliffe to help secure funding for his Greentech Automotive start up venture.

 

The Associated Press is out with a damaging report on the company recruited by Terry McAuliffe to help secure funding for his Greentech Automotive start up venture.

Macker mississippi

AP reporter Alicia Caldwell has discovered that a high ranking official in the Department of Homeland Security is under investigation for helping to facilitate access to the EB-5 program for a Chinese Company through the group Gulf Coast Management.

Here is part of Caldwell’s report:

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services Director Alejandro Mayorkas, who has been nominated to be the department’s No. 2 leader, was named by the DHS Inspector General’s Office as a target in an ongoing investigation about the foreign investor program run by USCIS.

According to an email sent to lawmakers Monday evening, the IG’s office initially starting investigating the EB-5 visa program last year based on a referral from an FBI analyst in the counter intelligence unit in Washington. The email does not specify what criminal violations it is investigating.

The EB-5 program allows foreign nationals to get a visa if they invest $500,000 to $1 million in a project or business that creates jobs for U.S. citizens. The amount of the investment required depends on the type of project. Investors who are approved for the program can become legal permanent residents after two years and would later be eligible to become citizens.

The White House did not have an immediate comment on the investigation. Neither the department nor USCIS immediately responded to inquiries.

Were Mayorkas confirmed as the department’s deputy secretary, he likely would run the department on an interim basis until a permanent replacement has been approved to take over for departing Secretary Janet Napolitano.

The root of the complaint against Mayorkas is an allegation that he helped a financing company run by Anthony Rodham, the brother of former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, win approval for an investor visa even after the application was denied and an appeal rejected.

read the full story here.

What Caldwell’s report doesn’t include is the connection of Gulf Coast Management to McAuliffe’s Greentech Automotive. According to Gulf Coast Management’s web site, the only company they are currently working on securing funding for is Greentech Automotive.

McAuliffe was the connection between Anthony Rodham, the brother of former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and Greentech.

In the past, officials in Mississippi have blamed the lack of progress in the Greentech venture on a hold up in EB-5 funds.

Last week company spokesperson Marianne McInerney rejected any claims that Greentech was inappropriately using the EB-5 program.

“We’ve met every regulation of the EB 5 program so I would say those (claims) are misguided”, she said.

She also said that the EB-5 program was only one component of the company’s investment plan.

“EB-5 is one part, and it’s an important part, of our strategy but not the only one,” she said.

McAuliffe resigned his position with Greentech in late 2012. We will have much more on Greentech tomorrow on NBC12.

Dem Senator: Roller Coasters Need More Federal Regulations « CBS Houston

Oh, come on! Let the fucking states take care of this! Don’t you assholes have better things to do..whoops this is a dumbass democrat..they’re busy trying to tell you how to take care of your body (obamacare) just like the religious right over abortion..and finding ways to allow illegal aliens to have citizenship so native born people are shoved to the back of the bus. Now, I don’t normally speak my mind on politics but this is the kind of bullshit that gets me worked up. How about working to GET PEOPLE BACK TO WORK. Whoops..that means they wouldn’t need the dems to take care of them…

And the Repubs aren’t any better either…

 

Dem Senator: Roller Coasters Need More Federal Regulations « CBS Houston.

San Antonio’s Iron Rattler shut down after fatal Arlington ride

Per Beaumont enterprises website:

 

The new Iron Rattler features a 171-foot drop at a nearly vertical 81 degrees. It also has four overbanked turns (more than 90 degrees) and a top speed of 70 mph. Photo: John Davenport / San Antonio Express-News

 

The Iron Rattler at Six Flags Fiesta Texas in San Antonio remains closed as officials investigate what led to a fatal accident on another roller coaster at the company’s Arlington theme park.

Fiesta Texas spokeswoman Sydne Purvis said Monday that the decision to close the attraction was made late Friday after officials heard about the accident in Arlington. According to Dallas-area news outlets, the 52-year-old woman was thrown to her death from the Texas Giant at Six Flags over Texas about 7 p.m. Friday.

The Tarrant County Medical Examiner’s Office reportedly said that she died of “multiple traumatic injuries due to (a) fall from a roller coaster.” The Dallas Morning News said relatives identified her as Rosy Esparza, though the coroner’s office has identified her as Rosa Ayala-Gaona.

The Iron Rattler, which debuted in May, is “somewhat similar, although not identical” to the Texas Giant, Purvis said, describing them both as hybrid roller coasters made from a combination of wood and steel.

“They’re not identical in configuration, and in a number of other ways, the roller coasters are different,” Purvis said.

It wasn’t clear early Monday how long the Iron Rattler would remain shuttered. Purvis said the decision was made as a precaution. Six Flags over Texas officials told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram that the Texas Giant will remain closed until the end of an in-house investigation into the woman’s death.

The Iron Rattler is a revamped version of the theme park’s original Rattler, a 20-year Fiesta Texas landmark that was retired in August 2012. The Iron Rattler runs on new steel tracks and rails added to its iconic predecessor’s wooden structure.

The redesign increased the original coaster’s drop from 124 feet to 171 feet, upgraded the drop from about 61 degrees to a much steeper 81 degrees and added 5 mph to the ride’s top speed. The old Rattler’s top speed was 65 mph. The Iron Rattler’s is 70 mph.

On June 12, 2007, Hailey Kuhn, 14, fell off a rollercoaster platform and was paralyzed while waiting in line to ride the Poltergeist at Fiesta Texas.

An Express-News investigation found that Texas ride owners told state officials that more than 1,800 people were injured on or near amusement rides from 2000 to 2008 — an average of about 230 per year. Most victims suffered only scrapes and bruises, and the official tally of injuries has declined over the years. But there have been painful mishaps — at least 120 people broke bones; nearly 60 people had teeth chipped or knocked out; and four people suffered amputations.

Prices Fuel Outrage in Brazil, Home of the $30 Cheese Pizza

This is here right now too. If you factor in the ‘volatile food and energy markets’ (which is where WE PAY THE MOST) inflation in the USA is running 7%+. Throughout the globe, economies are crashing because they’re taking money from those who are making income and giving it to those who won’t work (those who can’t work deserve to get our help). What that does is drain funds from the economy by taking away disposable income for those who are working. Is it any surprise then that the economies are stagnant or in recession/depression? It doesn’t take much brains to see that these quasi-socialist, socialist and/or Marxist systems just don’t work. Why? Because eventually you run out of money!

I sit back and watch the calls for us to ‘take the money from the 1% they’ve stolen.’ Well, that’s all good, but even if we took 100% of their money, it’d fund the government for less than a week. So, what then? Now all the money from the ‘rich’ has been taken, so who gets the chopping block next? The upper middle class, then the middle of the middle class and then the lower middle class. Then 401k’s will be nationalized (an Idea Obama has floated before) and that money will be taken from those who’ve worked their ass off. Soon, you’re down to the poor, who have no money, and that’s when the system collapses under it’s on weight. It’s happening in Greece and many other countries and will happen here-it’s a certainty…you can take that to the bank.

 

Per the NY Times

By 
Published: July 22, 2013

SÃO PAULO, Brazil — Shoppers here with a notion of what items cost abroad need to brace themselves when buying a Samsung Galaxy S4 phone: the same model that costs $615 in the United States is nearly double that in Brazil. An even bigger shock awaits parents needing a crib: the cheapest one at Tok & Stok costs over $440, more than six times the price of a similarly made item at Ikea in the United States.

Multimedia

For Brazilians seething with resentment over wasteful spending by the country’s political elite, the high prices they must pay for just about everything — a large cheese pizza can cost almost $30 — only fuel their ire.

“People get angry because we know there are ways to get things cheaper; we see it elsewhere, so we know there must be something wrong here,” said Luana Medeiros, 28, who works in the Education Ministry.

Brazil’s street protests grew out of a popular campaign against bus fare increases. Residents of São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro spend a much larger share of their salaries to ride the bus than residents of New York or Paris. Yet the price of transportation is just one example of the struggles that many Brazilians face in making ends meet, economists say.

Renting an apartment in coveted areas of Rio has become more expensive than in Oslo, the capital of oil-rich Norway. Before the protests, soaring prices for basic foods like tomatoes prompted parodies of President Dilma Rousseff and her economic advisers.

Inflation stands at about 6.4 percent, with many in the middle class complaining that they are bearing the brunt of price increases. Limiting the authorities’ maneuvering room, the popular indignation is festering at a time when huge stimulus projects are failing to lift the economy from a slowdown, raising the specter of stagflation in Latin America’s largest economy.

“Brazil is on the verge of recession now that the commodities boom is over,” said Luciano Sobral, an economist and a partner in a São Paulo asset management firm who maintains an irreverent economics blog under the name the Drunkeynesian. “This is making it impossible to ignore the high prices which plague Brazilians, especially those who cannot easily afford to travel abroad for buying sprees where things are cheaper.”

Brazil’s sky-high costs can be attributed to an array of factors, including transportation bottlenecks that make it expensive to get products to consumers, protectionist policies that shield Brazilian manufacturers from competition and a legacy of consumers somewhat inured to relatively high inflation, which remains far below the 2,477 percent reached in 1993, before a drastic restructuring of the economy.

But economists say much of the blame for the stunningly high prices can be placed on a dysfunctional tax system that prioritizes consumption taxes, which are relatively easy to collect, over income taxes.

Alexandre Versignassi, a writer who specializes in deciphering Brazil’s tax code, said companies were grappling with 88 federal, state and municipal taxes, a number of which are charged directly to consumers. Keeping accountants on their toes, the Brazilian authorities issue an estimated 46 new tax rules every day, he said.

Making matters worse for many poor and middle-class Brazilians, loopholes enable the rich to avoid taxation on much of their income; wealthy investors, for instance, can avoid taxes on dividend income, and partners in private companies are taxed at a much lower rate than many regular employees.

The result is that many products made in Brazil, like automobiles, cost much more here than in the far-flung countries that import them. One example is the Gol, a subcompact car produced by Volkswagen at a factory in the São Paulo metropolitan area. A four-door Gol with air-conditioning sells for about $16,100 here, including taxes. In Mexico, the equivalent model, made in Brazil but sold to Mexicans as the Nuevo Gol, costs thousands of dollars less.

The ability of many Brazilians to afford such cars reflects positive economic changes over the past decade, like the rise of millions of people from grinding poverty and a decline in unemployment, which is now at historically low levels. Salaries climbed during that time, with per-capita income now about $11,630, as measured by the World Bank, compared with $6,990 in neighboring Colombia. But Brazil finds itself far below developed nations like Canada, where the per-capita income is $50,970.

As a result, a resident of São Paulo, Brazil’s financial capital, has to work an average of 106 hours to buy an iPhone, while someone in Brussels labors 54 hours to buy the same product, according to a global study of wages by the investment bank UBS. To buy a Big Mac, a resident here has to work 39 minutes, compared with 11 minutes for a resident of Chicago.

Stroll into any international airport in Brazil, and such imbalances are vividly on display, with thousands of residents packing into flights each day for shopping trips to countries where goods are substantially cheaper.

Even though the Brazilian currency, the real, has weakened against the dollar this year (it currently stands at about 2.20 to the dollar), Brazilians spent $2.2 billion abroad in May, the highest amount on record for the month since the central bank began tracking such data in 1969.

Eyeing this market, some travel agents have begun tailoring trips to Miami for clients eager to buy baby products like digital monitors, strollers, pacifiers, even Pampers wipes, which in Brazil cost almost three times as much as in the United States.

Seeking to prevent such shopping binges from getting out of control, the federal police screen travelers upon arrival, picking out people whose luggage appears to bulge with too many items. If it can be proved that Brazilians spent over a certain limit abroad, they are immediately forced to pay taxes on their purchases.

Such screening catches foreigners, too. In May, the police at São Paulo’s international airport arrested two American Airlines flight attendants, both American citizens, on smuggling charges after they were found going through customs carrying a total of 14 smartphones, 4 tablet computers, 3 luxury watches and several video games. The smartphones were hidden in their underwear, the police said, and were intended to be sold on the black market.

Before the protests began, Brazil’s government had begun trying to combat price increases. The central bank raised interest rates after an uproar over food prices this year contributed to inflation fears. The authorities removed some taxes on some products, like cars. Even so, inflation remains high while the economy remains sluggish, leaving many Brazilians fuming about the high taxes embedded in the price of products they buy.

A new federal law requiring retailers to detail on receipts how much tax customers are being charged has fed some of this anger. Fernando Bergamini, 38, a graphic designer, was stunned after spending $92 one recent day on groceries like tomatoes, beans and bananas, only to glance at his receipt and discover that $25 of that was in taxes.

“It is shocking given the services we receive for giving the government our money,” Mr. Bergamini said. “Seeing it like this on a piece of paper makes me feel indignant.”

Lucy Jordan contributed reporting from Brasília, Taylor Barnes from Rio de Janeiro, and Paula Ramon from São Paulo.

 

The Bankruptcy of Detroit

I’ve been following that sad state of affairs with great interest. Why? Because it’s the ultimate fate of our country due to the debt we have-but that’s neither here nor there. What bothered me were statements made on the radio today.

This afternoon I had nothing to do so I was on my way home and for the first time in a while, I turned the radio on. A nationally syndicated blow hard was on and he spoke about the Detroit deal. The reasons for the bankruptcy in his mind were ‘the unions’ and ‘liberalism.’ While I do think making people dependent on the system, and then taking money from others to pay to the dependent ones, is morally wrong, that’s not the only reason for the destruction of Mo-town.

Nor were the unions totally to blame either. Big Management wants to make sure they get every damn dime they can and that’s how it is. And if we didn’t have unions, then we’d all be slaves to the company. The 40 hr work week, vacations, labor laws and benefits all came about in the USA due to the unions, so they’ve done many things to help out the worker.

With that said, here’s the rub. Both parties helped cripple the auto industry. Do you really think it costs 50k to build a 4×4 F-150? Seriously, that’s so overpriced it isn’t funny. Why? Because the company is going to make sure management (specifically the upper echelon) gets their outrageous pay and then uses the ‘good old boy’ network to make sure their buddies do too. All these CEO’s are on other company’s Board of Directors so it becomes ‘you scratch my back, I’ll scratch yours.’ “You give me thirty million here and I’ll vote to give it to you at your company.” What a fucking racket. However, do Union workers need $40 per hour to build cars? No, but despite all that is said on the right, the figures that the CEO’s, and the other members of upper management, are getting is causing far more harm than the unions. So, look at the figures of their pay and think about whenever they say the ‘unions are killing us on labor cost.’ I’ll bet you 20 bucks they’re mad because it’d cut into their big ass paychecks, which is why they’re angry.

http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune500/2012/ceo-pay-ratios/

Now look at those figures and tell me it’s the unions fault! I’m sorry, talk radio, but the 1%, both in business and politics/government, are getting richer off our backs and we’re not seeing a damn dime of it really. Looks like it’s time for a union renaissance.

Train Physics and Video

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In this video we have a Canadian Pacific (CP) container train leaving the yard after a crew change. Note how he gradually increases the power. You can tell when he grabs each ‘notch’ (which means the slot on the control stand) as they get up to speed. I can hear the question: “Why didn’t he just give it full power and take off?” Well, here’s why:

The standard drawbar on a car is rated for 350-390k pounds of force, so if the engineer took off too hard, then he could exceed that and pull the train apart. That’s not good. If it’s a broken knuckle, that can be replaced fairly easily. If a drawbar is pulled, then that can require the car department to come fix it-and they could be in that yard or at another one several hours away. Either way, it’ll tie of the RR, get the Trainsmaster’s upset an truly anger the Dispatchers because it ruins the flow.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_k_T1BDLBNM