Sunday, November 15, 2009

ChannelNewsAsia.com | Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) to mull over membership list

16 November 2009 0949 hrs - Hatoyama has avoided talking about who would join up, but his Foreign Minister Katsuya Okada mentioned 16 countries – the 10 countries of Southeast Asia plus Australia, India, China, Japan, New Zealand and South Korea.

The suggestion that the United States would be excluded has aroused concerns among some US and Japanese officials who fear it could jeopardise the Japan-US alliance, the bedrock of post-war security in Asia.

"Japan has relied a bit too much on the United States until now," the newly elected Hatoyama said in October after a summit with China and South Korea. "I would like to map out policies to reach out to Asia, as a country of Asia."..............

NY Times | The Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act - Seeks to Ban Misuse of Genetic Testing

The most important new antidiscrimination law in two decades — the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act — will take effect in the nation’s workplaces next weekend, prohibiting employers from requesting genetic testing or considering someone’s genetic background in hiring, firing or promotions.

David Escher, a former Burlington Northern employee, with his dog at his Reno, Nev., home on Friday. Burlington Northern insisted on doing genetic testing on Escher after he came down with carpal tunnel syndrome.

The act also prohibits health insurers and group plans from requiring such testing or using genetic information — like a family history of heart disease — to deny coverage or set premiums or deductibles.

“It doesn’t matter who’s asking for genetic information, if it’s the employer or the insurer, the point is you can’t ask for it,” said John C. Stivarius Jr., a trial lawyer based in Atlanta who advises businesses about the new law.

The biggest change resulting from the law is that it will — except in a few circumstances — prohibit employers and health insurers from asking employees to give their family medical histories. The law also bans group health plans from the common practice of rewarding workers, often with lower premiums or one-time payments, if they give their family medical histories when completing health risk questionnaires.

“Genetic information is very broad,” said J. D. Piro, a principal in the Health Care Law Group at Hewitt Associates. “It doesn’t simply include my own genetic information, such as do I have a risk for cancer. It also includes my family medical history — do I have any relatives who have had cancer or leukemia.”

Genetic tests help determine whether someone is at risk of developing an inherited disease or medical condition. These tests identify variations in people’s genes, like whether a woman has a predisposition for ovarian cancer.

Such testing can help determine which course of treatment might work best for fighting a specific cancer or for helping a patient’s body process a specific drug.

The new law (called GINA) was passed by Congress last year because many Americans feared that if they had a genetic test, their employers or health insurers would discriminate against them, perhaps by firing them or denying coverage. In a nationwide survey, 63 percent of respondents said they would not have genetic testing if employers could access the results.

“The message to employees is they should now be able to get whatever genetic counseling or testing they need and be less fearful about doing so,” said Peggy R. Mastroianni, associate legal counsel for the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

The act takes effect on Nov. 21 for all employers with 15 or more employees. It applies to group health insurers whose plan years begin on or after Dec. 7, and it took effect for individual health insurance plans last May. The act does not apply to life insurers.

The act would ban a company from not promoting a 49-year-old to chief executive because it knew that his father and grandfather died of a heart attack at age 50.

“There’s an absolute ban on the use of genetic information to make any kind of decision about employment,” said Christopher Kuczynski, assistant legal counsel with the commission. “There are no exceptions to that.”

Sharon F. Terry, chairwoman of the Coalition for Genetic Fairness, a group that backed the legislation, told of a woman who had informed her office that she was having a genetic test to determine whether she was predisposed to breast cancer. She was soon fired, with her boss saying the company could not afford to keep her if the results were positive.

One episode that created momentum for the legislation involved the Burlington Northern and Santa Fe Railway Company, which conducted genetic testing on several employees without their permission.

David Escher, a track maintenance worker in Nebraska who developed carpal tunnel syndrome on both wrists, said he was mystified why Burlington Northern ordered him to see a doctor who drew seven vials of his blood. Mr. Escher later learned that the railroad wanted to do genetic testing to determine whether he had a predisposition for carpal tunnel — in an effort to reduce its medical and workers’ compensation costs.

“I was really mad,” Mr. Escher said. “They were trying to do this through the back door. With genetic testing, they can learn lots of things about you that you don’t even know. If they can do genetic testing and find some problems, you might end up getting fired.”

Burlington Northern reached a $2.2 million settlement in 2002 that was distributed to 36 workers who were either tested or asked to submit to blood tests.

While the act makes it illegal for employers to intentionally acquire genetic information, it includes a “water cooler” exception, as in a case where a manager overhears one employee telling another that his father had a stroke.

Under the act, it is legal for a manager to garner genetic information from an obituary, for instance that an employee’s mother died of breast cancer. And if a manager asks why a worker took off a week to care for his father under the Family Medical Leave Act, it generally will not be considered illegal if the employer learns that the worker’s father has pancreatic cancer.

The act nonetheless prohibits use of such inadvertent knowledge to alter the terms, conditions or privileges of someone’s employment.

“The challenge becomes what if down the road, the employee has a lot of absences or his performance is off, and you discipline the employee,” said Michael P. Aitken, director of governmental affairs for the Society of Human Resource Management. “The employee could come back and say, ‘That’s because you knew I had a genetic marker.’ ”

The act and its accompanying regulations allow group health plans to request family medical histories to help determine whether an employee should be placed in a disease management or wellness program to combat, for instance, high blood pressure. The regulations stress that employees must give that information voluntarily and that the group plan cannot request such information before health plan enrollment or use it in any way for underwriting.

Under the regulations, group health plans, in seeking information for wellness programs, cannot attach a request for family medical history to any penalty or, as is far more common, any benefit. But wellness programs can request family medical history if there is no financial benefit attached.

“This can be a big deal,” said Mr. Stivarius, the Atlanta lawyer. “A lot of people incentivize employees to provide this family medical information. They give them some extra paid time off if they participate in surveys. Now they can’t do that.”

Mr. Piro of Hewitt said many employers were only now realizing that their health risk questionnaires might violate the law.

“A lot of employers have to scramble to scrub this information out of their health risk questionnaires,” he said. “The alternative is to modify their reward structures so that they’re not considered to be purchasing or requiring the genetic information.”

Susan Pisano, a spokeswoman for America’s Health Insurance Plans, said the new rules were a challenge for insurers because they were taking effect during the open enrollment period. She said her industry group disagreed with the federal agencies’ interpretation that the law bans incentives to encourage employees to fill out family medical histories.

The Australian | Extra steps taken to protect Antarctic expeditioners - 80% exposed to UV radiation in excess of safe work limits

November 16, 2009 - While most would see the frozen continent as the last place to fear sunburn, the study found exposures similar in some cases to those of outdoor workers in Queensland......

Real-time Magnetosphere Simulation | Earth's protective Magnetosphere Update - November 15, 2009 8pm CDT



http://www2.nict.go.jp/y/y223/simulation/realtime/index.html

Alex Jone's InfoWars.com | Headlines - November 15, 2009

Major Hasan Of Fort Hood: A Patsy In A Drill Gone Live?
Webster G. Tarpley | Will the American public ever learn to see through and reject false flag operations?

Order Out of Chaos: CIA, Blackwater Responsible for Bombings, Assassinations in Pakistan
Kurt Nimmo | CIA bombing campaigns and assassinations create a situation requiring a continuation and expansion of the contrived global war on terror.

Leaked G20 Documents Shed Light on Global Carbon Tax
Corbett Report | The documents were snuck out of the conference by Daniel Estulin’s sources.

Equity fund boss: Unemployment at 20%, not 10%
Bloomberg | Leo Hindery is managing director of InterMedia Partners LP.

Gerald Celente — American public losing everything to fascist oligarchs
Dprogram | US economy is no longer capitalism, it’s oligarchies and fascism.

World gold supply running out
Telegraph | Total mine supply has dropped by 10pc as ore quality erodes, implying that the roaring bull market of the last eight years may have further to run.

World leaders back delay to final climate deal
Reuters | Obama and other world leaders Sunday supported delaying a legally binding climate pact until 2010 or even later.

Brown to Apologize for British Kidnapping of Thousands of Children
Telegraph | Kids sent to colonies by government ended up as slaves, abused, and neglected.

Croatian Priest Says Vaccine for Destruction of Humanity Worldwide
MINA | Controversy in Croatia after famous Croatian priest Miroslav Bustruk appealed to Croatians not to get vaccinated against the Swine flu vaccine.

DNA of protesters could be held for life
Anti-war protesters and train spotters arrested under anti-terror laws could have their DNA kept for life under Home Office plans.

Toronto Cops Conduct Door-to-door Search to Find Missing Girl
Toronto Sun | In what he called “an unprecedented move,” police have assigned 60 officers to conduct the intense door-to-door search.

Feds Propose Takeover of Subways, Light-rail Systems
Washington Post | Administration officials said the plan will be presented in coming weeks to Congress, which must approve a change in the law.

City surveillance: Crime deterrent or invasion of privacy?
KSL TV 5 | High-tech surveillance networks are providing police and government with the ability to monitor streets, parks and businesses like never before.

Fat mothers-to-be banned from giving birth at their local hospital
Mail Online | Pregnant women are to be barred from giving birth at their local hospital if midwives consider them to be too fat.

How ABC News’ Brian Ross Cooked His ‘Hasan Contacted Al Qaeda’ Scoop
Gawker | ABC News’ Brian Ross has a breathtaking record of recklessly inaccurate, overhyped stories that don’t live up to the headline.

Jehadi Déjà Vu: Hasan, 9/11 Muslims, and Strip Clubs
Corruption American Style | The story on Hasan and the Fort Hood massacre is cut from the same cloth as the story behind the 9-11 Muslim terrorists that was fed to the public following 9-11.

‘These people just want to be left alone’
Real News Network | In Afghaninstan the US soldiers are losing heart for a fight they feel their presence is only prolonging.

Million Hit by Plague Worse than Swine Flu
Sunday Express | A deadly plague could sweep across Europe, doctors fear, after an outbreak of a virus in Ukraine plunged the country and its neighbors into a state of panic.

H1N1: Fact or Fiction?
Barbara Loe Fisher | Last spring we suddenly found ourselves watching You Tube videos of people being quarantined in hotels and detained on airplanes by HazMat teams.
Empowering the Slave Class: Astounding Facts About Illegals
Infowars | Less than 2% of illegal aliens are picking our crops, but 29% are on welfare.

Task force seeks ban on assault weapons
Washington Post | A binational task force on U.S.-Mexico border issues will call Friday on the Obama administration and Congress to reinstate an expired ban on assault weapons.

White House to Begin Push on Immigration Overhaul in 2010
New York Times | Obama administration will insist on measures to give legal status to an estimated 12 million illegal immigrants.

Largest Iraq bombing in two years may have been inside job
Raw Story | Sunday’s twin suicide bombings in Baghdad that killed at least 155 people and wounded 500 others may have had help from within Iraq’s security apparatus.

Baghdad bombings kill 130, wound hundreds
MarketWatch | A pair of bomb blasts in downtown Baghdad near two government buildings killed more than 130 people and wounded hundreds.

U.S. Moves to Seize Properties Tied to Iran
New York Times | Federal prosecutors began legal action to seize properties cross the country in a broad move against a nonprofit organization that was accused of illegally providing money and other services to Iran.

Israel Warns IDF Ready to Roll Against Iran
Arutz Sheva | Israel’s warnings that it will not tolerate an existential threat in the form of a nuclear Iran should be taken seriously, Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon warned.

‘US using Iran as excuse to boost military budget’
Press TV | Iran’s army chief says by accusing the Islamic Republic of pursuing a military nuclear program the US government is seeking to escalate its military spending budget.

Army Sends Infant to Protective Services, Mom to Afghanistan
Dahr Jamail | A single mother is being threatened with a military court-martial if she does not agree to deploy to Afghanistan, despite having been told she would be granted extra time to find someone to care for son.

Security Worsens As Taliban Move Into Northern Afghanistan
Radio Free Europe | When Taliban fighters hijacked two NATO fuel tankers along the new northern supply route into Afghanistan earlier this month, they generated international headlines.

Thousands of guns U.S. sent to Afghanistan are missing
CNN | More than one-third of all weapons the United States has procured for Afghanistan’s government are missing, according to a government report.

300 Seat Airliner Crash Test will Prove Official 9/11 Story False
TruthAlliance | Airplane crashes have always proved to leave massive holes, fire, bodies and a twisted plane smashed across a large debris field.

Immortal Technique on Obama, 9/11 Truth & Corporate America
Infowars | In an exclusive interview with RT’s Marina Portnaya he says America’s bad decisions are covered up with lame excuses.

9/11’s delayed legacy: cancer for many of the rescue workers
Guardian | A spate of recent deaths of New York police and fire officers who took part in the emergency operation at Ground Zero after the 9/11 attacks has heightened fears that it could be the start of a delayed epidemic of cancer-related illness.

Constitutional Candidates for Congress
Thomas R. Eddlem | Ron Paul’s presidential campaign evidently inspired dozens of candidates for congressional office across the nation who seek to reform Congress from a constitutionalist perspective.

Detroit Council members carry guns for safety
Detroit News | None said they plan to bring their weapons to City Hall, where armed security officers are assigned to council meetings to protect them.

Kentucky Joins Movement to Resist Abuses of Commerce Clause, 2nd Amendment
Michael Boldin | In states around the country, there’s a growing movement to address and resist two of the most abused parts of the Constitution – the Commerce Clause and the 2nd Amendment.

More than half of the UK population doesn’t accept climate change is man-made
Mail Online | 51% agree it is a serious concern but remain unconvinced of the role humans play.

Vaccination: Federal Health Agencies Continue to Deceive Americans
Richard Gale and Gary Null, Ph.D | “I have no doubt whatever that vaccination is an unscientific abomination and should be made a criminal practice.”

MPAA shuts down entire town’s muni WiFi over a single download
Cory Doctorow | The MPAA has successfully shut down an entire town’s municipal WiFi because a single user was found to be downloading a copyrighted movie.

Gore’s presentation on climate change draws 800 as 200 protestors gather outside
Palm Beach Post | Gore introduced as “president of the planet” when he delivered an environmental lecture in Boca Raton.

Genzyme Drugs Contaminated With Steel, Rubber
Bloomberg | Batches of Genzyme Corp.’s treatments for rare genetic disorders may be contaminated with steel fragments, non-latex rubber, and fiber-like materials from the manufacturing process

Oath Keepers Pegged as Hate Group in Montana
Independent Record | Ron Paul campaign group aslo characterized as outside the political mainstream.

Biotech Lobbyists Write Healthcare Statements for Lawmakers
New York Times | Statements by more than a dozen lawmakers were ghostwritten, in whole or in part, by Washington lobbyists working for Genentech.

Obama to Put Cap and Trade On Backburner?
Politico | Democratic lobbyist Steve Elmendorf says the White House focus on deficit reduction could easily kill the cap-and-trade effort.

Treasury Wants Donations to Pay Off National Debt
Reuters | Not sure what to give Uncle Sam this Christmas?

Photos of Protest Against Al Gore in Florida
Infowars | While Al Gore spewed his Global Warming lies in an outdoor arena we did our best to chant and educate on the TRUTH about the global warming scam!

Why Dobbs Quit CNN: Birthers, Politics
Newsmax | Lou Dobbs walked away from CNN — and $9 million — under pressure to tone down his rhetoric as the network seeks a more centrist position among the cable news channels.

People's Daily Online | U.S. President Obama arrives in China's economic hub Shanghai on Sunday night, starting a state visit to China

This is Obama's first state visit to China since he assumed the presidency in January. He is also the first U.S. president who paid a state visit to China within one year in office.

This year marks the 30th anniversary of diplomatic ties between the People's Republic of China and the United States.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Permanent Representative to the United Nations Susan Rice and National Security Advisor James Jones also arrived in Shanghai Sunday night.......FULL STORY

USGS | Quakes measuring 4.3 and 3.6 magnitude hit the CHANNEL ISLAND REGION, CALIFORNIA - Sunday, November 15, 2009



MAG UTC DATE-TIME
y/m/d h:m:s
LAT
deg
LON
deg
DEPTH
km
Region
MAP 3.6 2009/11/15 22:48:38 33.221 -119.282 5.7 CHANNEL ISLANDS REGION, CALIFORNIA
MAP 4.3 2009/11/15 22:45:27 33.165 -119.302 6.0 CHANNEL ISLANDS REGION, CALIFORNIA

Cave Headline | Sunday Morning November 15, 2009

AP | APEC Summit in Singapore, Saturday, Nov. 14, 2009
During this year's meeting in Singapore, the uniform was silk tunic shirts with mandarin collars, in a choice of red or blue-gray. Obama cheerfully opted for the latter. But since he arrived at the summit a day late and just in time for a gala dinner, there was something of a scramble as the leaders pulled together a special photo session to include him
.

U.S. President Barack Obama, third right, poses with fellow APEC leaders for a group photo at the Gala Dinner at the APEC Summit in Singapore, Saturday, Nov. 14, 2009. Pictured with Obama from left, Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo, Japan's Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama, Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono , Singapore's Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong and China's President Hu Jintao.

Express.co.uk | RUSSIAN BOMBERS’ SECRET UK MISSIONS ‘NOT A FRIENDLY ACT’

November 15, 2009 - BRITISH passenger jets are being endangered by long-range Russian bombers flying secret monthly missions around UK skies, the Government has warned.
The Ministry of Defence fears a catastrophic collision between civilian airliners and Russian “Bear” bombers, which have been heading towards Britain without notifying air traffic controllers.

The escalating risk is so serious that RAF fighters have been scrambled 10 times this year, and on 16 further occasions since 2007.

On each one, Tornado and Typhoon pilots made contact with Russian counterparts as civilian jets prepared emergency diversions to standard flight paths.

The ageing Russian Tupolev-95 bombers are believed to take off from bases near Archangel in Russia then fly at 25,000ft over the North Sea and travel as far as Hull and Lowestoft, testing and tracking British defence echanisms.

In a report last week, the Government agreed with the findings of backbench MPs who said Russia’s cat and mouse actions “risk leading to serious accidents” in “some of the busiest air routes in the world”.

Yet despite demands by the Commons Defence Committee for the Government to take a “more robust” approach with Russia, the Sunday Express has discovered that not one representation has been made to Moscow on the issue.

Last night, MP Bernard Jenkin, a Tory member of the defence committee, said he was “astonished” by the Government inaction.

The British Airline Pilots’ Association voiced its own concerns, calling for immediate assurances from Russia that it would start complying with international regulations.

However, defiant Russian officials said they would continue their hard line approach.

LiveScience.com | Hawaii's Beaches Shrinking

November 15, 2009 - What's Hawaii without it's beaches? Well, tourist officials may be worrying about that with news that a fourth of Oahu's sandy shores have disappeared while more than half o Kauai's beaches are eroding, AP reports.....

Medical Doctor Retracts H1N1 Vaccine Advice After Reading Insert!

Dr. Roby Mitchell, M.D. (www.drfitt.com) issues a retraction to nurses he originally advised to get the H1N1 flu vaccination. After reading the insert of the vaccine, he retracted his advice. This video exposes what is actually IN the vaccine our government is so eager to inject into our population.

For more information, please visit the following websites below:

www.vactruth.org
www.drtenpenny.com
www.theflucase.com
www.fluscam.com
www.drcarley.com
www.brainguardmd.com
www.mercola.com
www.naturalnews.com
www.russellblaylockmd.com

NaturalNews.com | Today's Featured Stories - November 15, 2009


A to Z of what's wrong with America
(NaturalNews) America has some major challenges. Lots of things could use some improvement. To help create this A-to-Z list of what's "wrong" with America, we tapped into the collective wisdom of our Facebook fans who...

A to Z of what's right with America
(NaturalNews) Ah, America. Land of the free. Home of the brave. Baseball and apple pie. It's all so irresistibly attractive that it's begging for a list of 26 awesome things about America. So I asked the NaturalNews Facebook team to come up with an...

Artificial Sweeteners are Continually Found to be Unsafe and Toxic
A recent study presented at the annual meeting of the American Society of Nephrology in San Diego found that adult women who drink at least two diet sodas a day experience a 30 percent drop in kidney function over the course of a decade....

Water Wars Erupt in India as Drought Threatens Population Survival
(NaturalNews) The drought in India has become so severe that people have begun literally fighting over water in many regions of the country, even murdering each other over the precious substance. Northern India is in the grips of a drought so severe...

Carrots going into space to help nourish astronauts with phytonutrients
(NaturalNews) NASA has announced there's evidence of frozen water on Mars and the moon, raising hopes humans will eventually explore and colonize those and other neighbors in our solar system and beyond. Already, astronauts live for long periods aboard...

What Your Doctor did Not Tell You about Food Intolerances
Allergies are a condition in which the immune system over-reacts to a substance that is not normally harmful. They can be tested by a doctor and are far less common than intolerances. Intolerances tend to develop due to other imbalances in...

Calcium Bentonite Clay is the Natural Body pH Balancer
Ph is the new buzz word these days regarding health. We have begun to discover the pitfalls and dangers when our bodies are over acidified from many sources. Nancy Appleton, Ph. D, a nutritional consultant, stated, "The state of balance ...

Stop and Kill Cancer Cells: Chrysanthemums could Hold the Key, Chinese Scientists Find
Chinese scientists have found that an extract of a common flowering plant -- known to most of us as mums -- could be a potent cancer treatment. In a series of studies, a research team headed by Professor Zong-fang Li from the Second Affiliated...

Best restaurant in the world accused of using toxic additives in their cuisine
(Natural News) Ferran Adria, the world renowned chef of El Bulli, has been criticized for inadvertently poisoning customers with his version of the sophisticated culinary art known as haute cuisine. El Bulli, near Barcelona, Spain, has been chosen...

Loss of Ocean Seagrass Beds Accelerating Due to Human Activity
(NaturalNews) As critical for ocean life as coral reefs but less well known, seagrass beds around the planet are also in sharp decline, according to a study conducted by researchers from Australia, Spain and the United States, and published in the

The Australian | Forbes Most Powerful Twenty Photo Gallery

ZeroHedge.com | Would Our Government Really Start a War to Try to Stimulate the Economy?

November 14, 2009 - I've written two essays attempting to disprove "military Keynesianism" - the idea that military spending is the best stimulus. See this and this.

In response, a reader challenged me to prove that anyone would advocate military spending or war as a fiscal stimulus.

In fact, the concept of military Keynesianism is so widespread that there are some half million web pages discussing the topic.

And many leading economists and political pundits sing its praises.

For example, Martin Feldstein - chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers under President Reagan, an economics professor at Harvard, and a member of The Wall Street Journal's board of contributors - wrote an op-ed in the Journal last December entitled "Defense Spending Would Be Great Stimulus".

And as the Cato Institute notes:

FULL STORY

Reykjanes Ridge, a volcanically active area - part of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge system - is being hit with quakes today - November 15, 2009


MAG UTC DATE-TIME
y/m/d h:m:s
LAT
deg
LON
deg
DEPTH
km
Region
MAP 5.0 2009/11/15 13:58:06 53.969 -35.023 10.0 REYKJANES RIDGE
MAP 5.2 2009/11/15 13:10:59 53.920 -35.212 10.0 REYKJANES RIDGE
MAP 4.9 2009/11/15 12:59:58 53.878 -35.116 10.0 REYKJANES RIDGE

1005 km (620 miles) SE of Qaqortoq (Julianehab), Greenland
1350 km (840 miles) SW of REYKJAVIK, Iceland
1485 km (920 miles) SE of NUUK (GODTHAB), Greenland


RELATED:
Nov 2, 2009 ... The Reykjanes Ridge, part of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge system, is a volcanically active area, and these earthquakes may be related to submarine ...

Mid-Atlantic Ridge - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR) is a mid-ocean ridge, a divergent tectonic plate ... which includes the island of Iceland is also known as the Reykjanes Ridge. ...

Reuters | Farmers scramble to finish harvest from hell

MARENGO, Illinois (Reuters) - Brothers Steve and Ron Pierce spent most of an hour in a chilly northern Illinois field last week clearing a clog of soybean chaff from the guts of their combine, using a mix of tools and their bare hands.

"The beans get tough when they pick up moisture," Steve Pierce said.

The clog had idled the $260,000 harvester, another delay in what has been the harvest from hell across the U.S. Midwest corn and soybean belt.

The clock is ticking on farmers like the Pierce brothers all across the Midwest as they scramble to bring in the largest U.S. soybean crop on record and the second-largest corn crop before winter arrives.

Late-maturing crops and persistent rain throughout October halted fieldwork, making this the slowest start for the U.S. harvest since the 1970s. The delays -- and questions about crop quality -- have kept Chicago Board of Trade grain markets on the boil.

FULL STORY>>>

BusinessInsider.com | Protesters Plan Huge Anti-Goldman Rally In Washington, DC on Monday Nov 16th

Washington, DC—On Monday, SEIU President Andy Stern and hundreds of taxpayers will converge on the Washington headquarters of Goldman Sachs to demand an end to multi-billion dollar bonuses and the Too Big To Fail Doctrine and call for immediate Congressional action on real financial reform. This is the latest in a national mobilization launched last month as 5,000 taxpayers from 20 states converged on the American Bankers Association convention in Chicago to demand Wall Street and big banks stop fighting reforms that will protect our families from the next crisis.............

Jim Sinclair MineSet | Hundreds of taxpayers and community leaders to converge on the Goldman Sachs Washington, D.C. headquarters Monday Nov 16th

Click the following image to see the progression of unemployment in the US.


WHAT: Hundreds of taxpayers and community leaders to converge on the Goldman Sachs Washington, D.C. headquarters to demand an end to the Too Big To Fail doctrine, request that their projected $23 billion in bonuses and compensation go to foreclosure prevention programs, and call on Congress to take immediate action on reform.

WHEN: Monday, November 16, 12:00 PM ET

WHERE: 101 Constitution Avenue NW; Washington, DC (off 1st Street NW)

FULL STORY

Hawaii Star Bulletin | Sweden returns 22 skulls to delegates from Hawaii

November 15, 2009 - STOCKHOLM » With a solemn ceremony in Stockholm's antiquities museum, Sweden marked the return of 22 skulls looted from a native Hawaiian community mainly in the 17th century....

CommodityOnline.com | Gold coins market booms in Iran

November 15, 2009 - TEHRAN (Commodity Online): Following India and China, it is now Iran that is mopping up gold as precious reserves for the country. Iran's central bank said last week that it will inject 5 million newly-minted gold coins into the domestic market in order to control rising gold coin prices.

At Thursday's price of 2.8 million rials (about $280) for a standard gold coin in Iran, the total value of the planned intervention would amount to $1.4 billion.

The price of gold coins in Iran has risen sharply in line with developments on international markets where gold bullion has risen 28 per cent this year to a record high $1,122.85 an ounce.

Many Iranians buy gold coins as wedding gifts and also as a long-term investment. A standard gold coin weighs around 8.13 grams. It is also sold in smaller denominations of half a coin and a quarter of a coin.

'Five million gold coins, minted by the Central Bank of Iran, will be supplied to the market beginning on Saturday,' Central Bank Governor Mahmoud Bahmani said.

The Irna report did not give more details on the reasons for the central bank's planned gold market intervention, but it appeared in part to be an attempt to help bring down inflation and reduce liquidity in the economy.

Ethiopian Review | Blood Coffee – Coming to a Café Near You

Much has been said about the curse of natural resources in the African continent. From the suffering of the Ogony people and subsequent murder of environmentalist and human rights activist Ken Saro-Wiwa in the Niger Delta, along with eight fellow activists, to the displacement of millions of citizens across the continent so that tyrannical regimes and multinational corporations can exploit and benefit from the riches that cover the beautiful landscape of Africa. Certainly the most publicised of all such enterprises is the diamond trade and how it has oiled and fuelled conflict in parts of Africa. As repressive regimes, lawless rebel groups andmultinational corporations have juggled for portions of the pie, the inhabitants of the land have been uprooted and persecuted for voicing their opposition. FULL STORY

DUBAI AFP | Ethiopia orders 12 - A350 aircraft from Airbus - valued at around three billion dollars by list price

November 15, 2009 - The deal was inked by Airbus president and chief executive Tom Enders and Ethiopian Airlines counterpart Girma Wake on the sidelines of the Dubai Airshow which opened amid doubts orders will match previous editions of the biennial show.

"We believe in what we heard about A350 XWB (Extra Wide Body), and I think it will serve our market very well," Wake told reporters.

He said delivery of the first unit of the aircraft was planned for 2017, but indicated his carrier might opt to lease similar planes in the meantime.

Airbus chief operating officer John Leahy said the deal's value at book price amounted to three billion dollars. He did not clarify if Ethiopian Airlines was offered a discount.

Ethiopian Airlines had signed a memorandum of understanding for the 12 units in July.

Leahy also told reporters that Airbus did not have any "distressed" orders for the A350 XWB resulting from the global economic crisis.

RELATED:

Middle East and North Africa is the only growing region in airline industry
Business Intelligence Middle East (press release)
The Middle East and North Africa (MENA) is currently the only region which is experiencing growth in the airline industry this year, according to recent ...

All aboard rescued after ferry that left Tokeyo runs aground

November 14, 2009 - Japan's coast guard has rescued all 28 people who were aboard a ferry that ran aground in the Pacific ocean.

Some of the passengers on board the 7,910-ton Ariake were winched onto a helicopter before the ship rolled onto its side. Others were saved by coastguard patrol ships after jumping into the sea. The ship, a commercial ferry carrying 3,300 tonnes of cargo, started tipping onto its side 20 kilometres off western Japan, leaking fuel and belching black smoke.

Breaking News and Commentary from Citizens For Legitimate Government | 15 Nov 2009

US blocks release of Iraq, Afghanistan torture photos 15 Nov 2009 US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates has blocked the release of new photographs showing prisoners in Afghanistan and Iraq being abused by their Americans captors. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) had sued for the release of 21 color photos under the Freedom of Information Act. The Obama regime filed a brief with the Supreme Court late Friday saying that Gates has invoked new powers blocking the release of the photos. Federal courts had rejected the government's arguments to block their release, so Congress gave Gates new powers to keep them private under a law signed by President Barack Obama last month. Gates' order specifically cites the 21 pictures sought by the ACLU, plus 23 additional ones cited in a ruling by the US Court of Appeals for the second Circuit. However, Pentagon spokesman Bryan Whitman said the order covers all photographs from investigations related to the treatment of individuals captured or detained in military operations outside the US between Sept. 11, 2001, and Jan. 22, 2009.

ACLU pledges to fight after photos release blocked 15 Nov 2009 The American Civil Liberties Union says it will continue to fight for the release of photographs of foreign detainees prisoners being abused tortured by their U.S. captors, after Defense Secretary Robert Gates invoked new powers to block them from public view. ACLU spokesman Jameel Jaffer says the photos are "an important part of the historical record." And he says preventing their release "sets a bad precedent for the government to be suppressing information that relates to government misconduct."

Britain's Abu Ghraib: Did Britain collude with US in abuse [and torture] of Iraqis? 14 Nov 2009 Claims that British soldiers recreated the torture conditions of Abu Ghraib to commit the sexual and physical abuse of Iraqi civilians are being investigated by the Ministry of Defence. In one case, British soldiers are accused of piling bodies of Iraqi prisoners on top of each other and subjecting them to electric shocks, an echo of the abuse at the notorious US detention centre at Baghdad's Abu Ghraib prison. One claimants says he was raped by two British soldiers, and others say they were stripped naked, abused and photographed... "They made him strip naked and started messing with his penis and taking photos. On one occasion I refused to pick a fight, then a soldier kicked me hard on my back, which made me fall on the floor. He started hitting me with a baton on my knees. Then he used an electric baton on different parts of my body."

Ministry of Defense investigating fresh Iraq abuse claims 14 Nov 2009 Some 33 allegations of abuse involving British soldiers who served in Iraq are being investigated, the Ministry of Defense said today. The rape, torture and physical assault allegations come in the wake of the British withdrawal from Iraq. One claimant says he was raped by two British soldiers while another claims he was sexually humiliated by both male and female personnel. Others allege they were stripped naked and photographed in the same style as the notorious pictures at Abu Ghraib, where abuses of prisoners by US troops helped fuel anti-American sentiment.

No public probe into Iraq abuse [Instead, they'll investigate *themselves.*] 14 Nov 2009 Fresh allegations of abuse by the UK military in Iraq do not warrant a new public inquiry, the Armed Forces Minister Bill Rammell has said. He said a special unit within the Ministry of Defence, overseen by him, had been set up to examine the claims. Lawyers for former Iraqi prisoners want an inquiry into 33 abuse claims, which include the rape of a 16-year-old boy. Mazin Younis, the Iraqi human rights campaigner who has been compiling the allegations, said many people were detained at random and abused.

Illinois jail is lined up to hold Guantánamo detainees --'Super-maximum' facility backed by state governor but would need approval of Congress 15 Nov 2009 A significant number of the remaining 215 inmates of Guantánamo Bay could be transferred to a maximum-security prison in rural Illinois, according to a source in President Barack Obama's administration. The source described the Thomson Correctional Centre, a 1,600-cell maximum security facility built in 2001, as the "leading contender" to house a number of suspected terrorists detained at the Guantánamo Bay base in Cuba, which Obama has vowed to close.

Terrorists smuggle fatwas out of secure prisons 15 Nov 2009 Some of Britain’s most dangerous 'Al-Qaeda' leaders are promoting jihad from inside high-security prisons by smuggling out propaganda for the internet and finding recruits. In an authoritative report, Quilliam, a think tank funded by the Home Office, claims "mismanagement" by the Prison Service is helping Al-Qaeda gain recruits and risks "strengthening jihadist movements"...The notorious "preacher of hate" Hamza, who was convicted in 2006 of inciting murder and racial hatred [?!?] during his time as imam of Finsbury Park mosque, north London, has been able to give sermons to other Muslims through the water pipes that link the prison cells at Belmarsh. A charismatic figure who has led hunger strikes at the jail, he is thought to use the plughole in the sink in his cell to shout passages from the Koran. [OMG! It's the Koran-spouting, sink-plugholed 'preachers of hate' using supermax prison pipes to wage more terror and global jihad!! Got that, Obama? If you move terrorists from Guantanamo Bay onto US soil, we'll have dozens of desperate al-Qaeda number twos (HUNDREDS of those, don't ya know) preaching their terrorist fatwas through water pipes and sink plugholes all over America! Wait until Joe Lieberman hears about *this* one! --Lori Price]

Obama: Time running out for nuclear deal with Iran 15 Nov 2009 U.S. President Barack Obama warned on Sunday that time was running out for Iran to sign on to a deal to ship its enriched uranium out of the Islamic Republic for further processing. Standing beside Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, after the two leaders met Sunday on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum, Obama said: "We are now running out of time."

Afghan troop surge to cost up to $54 bn per year 15 Nov 2009 The cost of sending 40,000 additional American troops to Afghanistan is estimated to be between $40 billion to $54 billion annually, a new report says. The New York Times cited top administration officials on Saturday that budget projections for the Afghan war will cost US taxpayers at least $1 million per soldier, per year.

'The US and the UK are fighting an ill-conceived and ill-judged war that has left as many as 32,000 Afghans dead and 235,000 displaced.' War in Afghanistan: Not in our name --71% of Britons back IoS call for withdrawal of forces within a year 15 Nov 2009 Seven out of 10 Britons back The Independent on Sunday's call for a phased withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan as a landmark report by Oxfam this week exposes the real human cost of the war. The powerful dossier by the aid agency reveals how women and children in Afghanistan are bearing the brunt of the ongoing conflict, undermining the international community's claims [lies] that they are the very people being helped by the West's activities.

2 U.S. Soldiers and a Contractor Are Killed in Afghanistan 15 Nov 2009 Two American service members and an American contractor were killed in two separate bombing attacks in Afghanistan on Friday, according to a statement from a NATO spokesman. One service member was killed by a roadside bombing in eastern Afghanistan. The other attack took place on a road in southern Afghanistan, killing an American serviceman and an American contractor.

Militants attack anti-Taliban mayor in Pakistan 15 Nov 2009 More than a dozen militants opened fire on the house of an anti-Taliban mayor in northwestern Pakistan on Sunday, but security guards repelled the attack, killing three assailants who had disguised themselves by wearing women's burqas, police said. Militants have staged a wave of attacks in northwestern Pakistan in recent weeks in retaliation for an army offensive launched last month in the tribal area of South Waziristan, where 'al-Qaida' and Taliban leaders are believed to be hiding.

'Jaffery was a well-known journalist.' Pakistan: Iranian Consulate official shot dead 12 Nov 2009 Gunmen on Thursday killed a Pakistani working as the director of public relations at the Iranian Consulate in the northwest city of Peshawar, a police official said. The gunmen shot dead Abul Hasan Jaffery near his home before escaping, according to police. Jaffery was critically wounded in the attack and later died from his injuries at a military hospital in Peshawar, the capital of North West Frontier Province located near the Afghan border. Before joining the Iranian consulate, Jaffery was a well-known journalist. He had served with the provincial government as press officer and worked for two chief ministers. [And then, Blackwater arrived.]

Eleven Killed In Pakistan Car Bomb Blast 14 Nov 2009 Eleven people have been killed by a suicide car bomber in the Pakistani city of Peshawar. The bomber detonated his device when policemen asked him to stop for a search.

Ousted Honduran president won't recognize vote 15 Nov 2009 Ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya insisted late Saturday that he will not accept any deal to restore him to office if it means he must recognize elections later this month. In a letter addressed to President Barack Obama, Zelaya also repeated his accusation that Washington reversed its stance on whether the Nov. 29 vote should be considered legitimate if he was not in office. "As the elected president of the Honduran people, I reaffirm my position that starting today, no matter what, I will not accept any agreement on returning to the presidency of the republic to cover up this coup d'etat," Zelaya said, reading from the letter on Globo radio.

Obama, Medvedev optimistic on START replacement 15 Nov 2009 President Barack Obama and Russian leader Dmitry Medvedev say they still plan to have a replacement START nuclear arms reduction treaty ready by year's end. Obama and his Russian counterpart met Sunday on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum. Russian and U.S. negotiators are working against a tight deadline. The current START agreement runs out Dec. 5.

Minot missile, bomb wings to become part of Global Strike Command 15 Nov 2009 Members of the 91st Missile Wing at Minot Air Force Base will make history Dec. 1 when they become part of a new command Air Force Global Strike Command. The new command will oversee all of the Air Force's nuclear forces intercontinental ballistic missiles and bombers. The 5th Bomb Wing will become part of the new command on Feb. 1.

Lawmakers brush off Obama calls to delay Fort Hood hearings 15 Nov 2009 President Barack Obama's plea for Congress to hold off on investigations into the Fort Hood shooting isn't deterring lawmakers. During his Saturday address, Obama called on lawmakers to "resist the temptation" to turn the mass killing into political theater. He says he's not opposed to the hearings, he just wants lawmakers to wait until after federal law enforcement and military authorities have completed their probes. Lawmakers in both the House and Senate, however, say they plan to go ahead with the investigations.

Obama urges Congress to put off Fort Hood probe 15 Nov 2009 President Barack Obama on Saturday urged Congress to hold off on any investigation of the Fort Hood rampage until federal law enforcement and military authorities have completed their probes into the shootings at the Texas Army post, which left 13 people dead. On an eight-day Asia trip, Obama turned his attention home and pleaded for lawmakers to "resist the temptation to turn this tragic event into the political theater."

Federal oversight of subways proposed 15 Nov 2009 The Obama administration will propose that the federal government take over safety regulation of the nation's subway and light-rail systems, responding to what it says is haphazard and ineffective oversight by state agencies. Under the proposal, the U.S. Department of Transportation would do for transit what it does for airlines and Amtrak: set and enforce federal regulations to ensure that millions of passengers get to their destinations safely. Administration officials said the plan will be presented in coming weeks to Congress, which must approve a change in the law. [Does this mean that in addition to the 'No Fly' list, we could be added to a 'No Ride' list? --LRP]

US medical workers balk at mandatory flu vaccines 13 Nov 2009 Thousands of nurses and other front-line healthcare workers are fighting mandatory flu immunization policies being put in place by some U.S. hospitals. Nurses unions have won some early battles against compulsory vaccination. Critics say mandating that healthcare workers get vaccines is misguided, ineffective and ultimately counterproductive.

'It returns you to problems that we have today.' Health insurers could be allowed to bypass some key reforms --Senate bills would include loopholes for proposed 'exchange' 15 Nov 2009 Nobody wants to spend a lot of time and energy -- and taxpayer money -- and end up where they started. But that's what could happen with one of the principal elements of health reform, the "exchange" or "gateway." Even as legislators focus on the details of how the marketplace will work, senators have indicated that they would allow insurers to continue operating outside it, much as the health-insurance lobby has sought. One Senate bill would preserve the possibility that insurers could tailor policies to draw healthy individuals out of the new markets, leaving coverage less affordable for those who stay behind.

Previous lead stories: Khadr to stand trial at military tribunal --U.S., Canada embracing Bush-era disdain for justice in trying to find a forum to guarantee conviction, critics say 14 Nov 2009 Omar Khadr's fate remains in the legal twilight of widely denounced military tribunals, despite President Barack Obama's promise to end the makeshift Bush-era system for putting terrorists on trial and to shutter the notorious Guantanamo Bay prison camp. Instead, the Obama administration has tinkered with, but not scrapped, military commissions and intends to put a child soldier on trial, the first time it has been done at a war crimes tribunal since the Second World War. The Harper government applauded the decision, even as it fought in Canada's Supreme Court to overturn an order to bring Mr. Khadr home. He has been imprisoned in Guantanamo Bay for nearly eight years. Mr. Khadr, who has been in prison - including years in solitary - since 2002 may still be years away from having his case heard... "Any trial before the revised system of military commissions will carry the stigma of Guantanamo," said Human Rights Watch in a statement that accused the Obama administration of reviving the "discredited military commissions by trying a child soldier."

Accused 9/11 plotter Khalid Sheikh Mohammed faces New York 'trial' --AG: All five to be tried together; prosecutors will seek death penalty 13 Nov 2009 Five Guantanamo Bay detainees with alleged ties to the 9/11 conspiracy, including accused mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, will be transferred to New York to go on trial in civilian court, Attorney General Eric Holder announced Friday. Mohammed, Ramzi Bin al-Shibh, Walid bin Attash, Ali Abdul Aziz Ali and Mustafa Ahmed al-Hawsawi will all be transferred to the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York -- a short distance from the World Trade Center towers that were destroyed in the September 11 attacks. [KSM was waterboarded 183 times in one month. (Gee, I'd confess to the 9/11 attacks, too.) Regrettably, the actual architects of the 9/11 terror attacks -- the Bush/Cheney cabal -- have yet to be tried for treason and war crimes. --LRP]

US military: We pay hundreds of millions of dollars to Afghan insurgents --How the US Funds the Taliban By Aram Roston 11 Nov 2009 It is an accepted fact of the military logistics operation in Afghanistan that the US government funds the very forces American troops are fighting. And it is a deadly irony, because these funds add up to a huge amount of money for the Taliban. "It's a big part of their income," one of the top Afghan government security officials told The Nation in an interview. In fact, US military officials in Kabul estimate that a minimum of 10 percent of the Pentagon's logistics contracts--hundreds of millions of dollars--consists of payments to insurgents. [CLG has been reporting this insanity for years. Too bad the mainstream media won't cover it, instead of spending 24/7 on bimbo Sarah Palin's ghostwritten insipid Mantra of Whine. --LRP]