Wednesday, June 30, 2010

American Cleric Tied to Times Square and Christmas Day Bombing Attempts Gets New Website

http://news-updations.blogspot.comAl Qaeda is promoting the upcoming online release of its first English magazine called the "Inspire," and one of the first guest writers being promised is Anwar Al Alwaki, the America born cleric linked to several terror attacks on the United States.

Awlaki is tied to three of the Sept. 11, 2001, hijackers, the attack at Fort Hood military base, the attempted bombing on Christmas Day and the failed attack on the Times Square earlier this year.

According to two sources, one who collects open the source intelligence and the second, the NEFA Foundation, whose mission is to expose the organizations and individuals who plan, fund, and commit acts of terrorism, the website would give Awlaki a new platform to remain in contact with his followers.

The development is seen by some analysts as a strong indicator that it remains too dangerous for Awlaki to use the Internet. Awlaki's popular website was taken down and after the Fort Hood shooting last November, presumably by the U.S. government, though U.S. officials will not comment on the record about the move.

TAYLOR Lautner still lives with his parents.

http://news-updations.blogspot.comThe 18-year-old actor - best known for playing werewolf Jacob Black in the Twilight Saga - admits he is still expected to carry out the domestic tasks in the home, despite his celebrity status.

He said: “I help out with the lawn, garbage, dishes”.

Even when he is away filming, Taylor’s parents don’t let him off his duties when he returns to the family home.

He joked: “When I come back, I have extra mowing to do.”

However, the actor insists he loves his home life and wants to be retain normality for “as long as possible”.

He added to The Today Show presenter Matt Lauer: “It's very important to me. I describe it as I live two different lives. I have this life and do what I love to do, but I to also have the same exact life as before and nothing has changed."

Taylor recently admitted he didn’t think that he could be in the Twilight movies if he didn't get on with his co-stars Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart.

He said: "The great thing about this series is how the whole cast is so close. It would be a nightmare if we weren't. It would be impossible to make this series because of the characters are so tight. We're really thankful that we all get along so well."

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Britney Spears faces child abuse probe

http://news-updations.blogspot.comTROUBLED pop star Britney Spears is facing now a probe into allegations that she abused her two young sons.

Social workers are set to quiz her over claims but she beat one with a belt and gave both food they were allergic to and which made them violently ill, The Sun reports.

The singer's former bodyguard Fernando Flores, who claimed that he was forced to quit his job due to Britney's erratic behavior, approached investigators with the accusations.

It is understood that the 28-year-old star strongly denied that the claims and insisted she has never mistreated Sean Preston, 4, and Jayden James, 3.

But Flores, 29, told the Los Angeles Department of Children and Family Services he felt Britney was too unstable to be left in charge of her sons.

He feared her behaviour could scar the youngsters for life. The children split their time between Toxic singer Britney's Beverly Hills mansion and dad Kevin Federline’s home.

Extra! Extra! Google News redesigned to be more customizable and shareable



There’s an old saying that all news is local. But all news is personal too—we connect with it in different ways depending on our interests, where we live, what we do and a lot of other factors. Today we’re revamping the Google News homepage with several changes designed to make the news that you see more relevant to you. We’re also trying to better highlight interesting stories you didn’t know existed and to make it easier for you to share stories through social networks.

BEFORE:



AFTER:



The new heart of the homepage is something we call "News for you": a stream of headlines automatically tailored to your interests. You can help us get it right by using the "Edit personalization" box to specify how much you’re interested in Business, Health, Entertainment, Sports or any subject you want to add (whether it’s the Supreme Court, the World Cup or synthetic biology). You can choose to view the stories by Section view or List view, and reveal more headlines by hovering over the headline with your mouse. We’ll remember your preferences each time you log in. If you don’t want customized Google News, hit "Reset personalization" to clear all personalization preferences. If you haven't previously customized and would prefer not to, simply save and close the "Edit personalization" box. You can always go back and change it later.

To give you more control over the news that you see, we’re now allowing you to choose which news sources you’d like to see more or less often. You can do so in News Settings. These sources will rank higher or lower for you (but not for anyone else) in Google News search results and story clusters. We’ve also added keyboard shortcuts for easier navigation, like in Gmail or Google Reader. When you’re in Google News, hit the question-mark key to pop up a full list of shortcuts.

There are the subjects that interest you and then there’s the major news of the day. To make it easy for you to find the big stories like Hurricane Alex, we’re adding links to topics that many outlets are covering. You’ll find these topics in the Top Stories section on the left side of the homepage as well as in linked keywords above headlines. Clicking on a topic link takes you to a list of related coverage that you can add to your news stream. You can change your preferences any time in "Edit personalization."



The redesigned Google News homepage is rolling out today in the English-language edition in the U.S., and we plan to expand it to all editions in the coming months. We’re making the ability to choose which sources you’ll see more or less often available in all English-language editions worldwide and plan to expand it soon. For more information about these changes, check out the video below or visit our Help Center.







Texas on alert as Hurricane Alex sweeps in

http://news-updations.blogspot.comUS President Barack Obama has declared a state of emergency in Texas as the Hurricane Alex bears down on the coast with 80mph (130km/h) winds.

Alex is expected to make in landfall near the Texas-Mexico border as a category two hurricane, forecasters say.

Heavy seas caused by the first Atlantic hurricane of the season have been already disrupted BP's oil spill clean-up in the Gulf of Mexico.

Boats skimming the slick have been sent back to port by the US Coast Guard.

High waves and strong winds generated by Alex have also pushed more oil from the spill on to beaches in Louisiana.

"The sad thing is that it has been about three weeks since we had any big oil come in here," said marine science technician Michael Malone.

for more news : Texas on alert

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Texas: Jonathan Green's Execution Halted

HUNTSVILLE — Condemned murderer Jonathan Green (left) has been spared from execution after the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals agreed to look more closely at arguments he was delusional and too mentally ill to be put to death.

The Associate Press says the order from the state’s highest criminal appeals court came less than four hours before the 42-year-old Green could have received lethal injection Wednesday evening for the abduction, rape and strangling of a 12-year-old girl near Houston 10 years ago.

Green already had been taken to the death house in Huntsville when he received word of the reprieve.

Green was convicted in the death of Christina LeAnn Neal, who disappeared while walking home in the rural community of Dobbin on June 21, 2000. A onetime star running back for Montgomery High School, Green was accused of grabbing the girl shortly after she left a friend's house that was about 100 yards away from his residence. Neal's body was found in a gray blanket stuffed into a laundry bag behind a chair in his home.

Source: Houston Chronicle, June 30, 2010

Texas Democrats strike right tone on death penalty

By Michael Landauer/Editor

In its platform adopted last week, the Texas Democratic Party seems to have it right on capital punishment. The party does not go as far as we do. We want to abolish the death penalty in Texas. Democrats want to win elections. I get that. But the plank in the platform on Capital Punishment is a good place to start for lawmakers considering common-sense reforms that people on both sides could agree on:

Capital Punishment

- When capital punishment is imposed, Texans must be assured that it is fairly administered. Texas Democrats extend our deepest sympathies to all victims of crime and especially to the families of murder victims, and we strongly support their rights. The Texas death penalty system has been severely criticized by religious leaders, appellate courts and major newspapers that have observed that the current system cannot ensure that innocent or undeserving defendants are not sentenced to death. The Dallas Morning News has called for abolition of the death penalty in Texas. In the modern era, Texas has executed over 400 people, far more than any other state in the nation. The frequency of executions and inadequacies in our criminal justice system increase the likelihood that an innocent person will be executed. The State of Texas may have already executed at least two innocent people, according to major newspaper investigations into the cases of Carlos DeLuna and Cameron Todd Willingham. Another inmate, Ernest Willis, was exonerated and released from Texas Death Row in 2004 after 17 years of wrongful imprisonment.

- We condemn Governor Perry's manipulation of the forensic science commission investigation of the science which led to the execution of a possibly innocent person.

- In order to promote public confidence in the fairness of the Texas criminal justice system, Texas Democrats support the establishment of a Texas Capital Punishment Commission to study the Texas death penalty system and a moratorium on executions pending action on the Commission's findings.

- Texas Democrats support the following specific reforms:
• establishing a statewide Office of Public Defenders for Capital Cases to ensure that every person accused of a capital crime has equal access to well-trained trial and appellate attorneys, regardless of income, race or the county of jurisdiction;
• allowing testing of any possibly exculpatory DNA evidence to ensure guilt or innocence before executions are carried out, and allowing testing of DNA evidence after an execution to determine if an innocent person has been executed;
• establishing procedures to determine before a trial takes place whether an accused has mental retardation, in order to be sure that Texas complies with the U.S. Supreme Court's ban on executions of people with mental retardation;
• banning death sentences and executions for people with mental illness;
• requiring the Board of Pardons and Paroles to meet in person to discuss and vote on every case involving the death sentence;
• restoring the power to the Governor to grant clemency in death penalty cases without a recommendation from the Board of Pardons and Paroles. To restore public confidence in the process, the Board should meet in public and decisions should be made by majority vote;
• when the imposition of the death penalty is before the Parole Board or the Governor we urge consideration of all reasonably certain scientific or factual evidence that has become known since the trial; and
• reforming statutes related to the "Law of Parties," to make sure individuals who actually commit crimes are the primary focus of prosecution.

Source: The Dallas Morning News, June 29, 2010

Death penalty for Iran jail abuse

An Iranian military court has sentenced two men to death in connection with the killings of three anti-government protesters, the state news agency said.

Prosecutors said the three died after a series of beatings in Iran's Kahrizak jail, where they were held for taking part in last year's election protests.

Nine other officials were sentenced to jail and lashes over the deaths, Irna said quoting a court statement.

Kahrizak jail (left) was shut in July over concerns about the abuse of inmates.

The officials charged in the Kahrizak case - whose names have not been released - were among 12 people facing prosecution over the inmates' deaths.

The pair were found guilty of "inflicting intentional abuse leading to the murder" of the three protesters, Irna quoted the court statement as saying.

They have 20 days to appeal against the rulings.

One person has been acquitted due to lack of evidence, Irna said.

Mass arrests

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's re-election in the June 2009 poll triggered mass protests by opposition supporters, who claimed the vote was rigged.

More than 150 demonstrators were taken to Kahrizak detention centre, south of Tehran, in the aftermath of the street protests.

The three who died while in custody have been named as Amir Javadifar, Mohsen Ruholamini and Mohammed Kamrani.

Officials had initially said Mr Ruholamini and Mr Kamrani died of meningitis, but the coroner ruled that the cause of death was a series of beatings.

Iran has jailed several opposition figures and hundreds of protesters over their roles in poll-election unrest.

It has also hanged two activists it said were guilty of "war against god", a charge levelled at those who protested against the disputed election of Mr Ahmadinejad.

Source: BBC News, June 30, 2010

Indian President Commutes Eight Death Sentences to Life Imprisonment

June 15, 2010: in India, eight convicts on death row in two separate cases of murder received the mercy of President Pratibha Patil (pictured), who commuted their sentence to life imprisonment.

Of the two cases, one is related to the killing of five persons, including a 10-year-old boy. Shyam Manohar along with Sheo Ram, Prakash, Suresh, Ravinder and Harish from Uttar Pradesh were given death penalty in October 1997 in this case.

Patil’s decision leaves a list of 21 more pending mercy petitions of a total of 24, three of which have been returned to the Ministry of Home Affairs on request.

The President has so far only cleared those mercy petitions wherein the Home Ministry has advised the commutation of the death sentence to life imprisonment. She still has to give her decision in cases where the Home Ministry’s opinion has been to reject the mercy petition and stick to death sentence for the convicts.

Source: Indian Express, Hands Off Cain, June 28, 2010

Saudi Arabia: Man beheaded for murder

June 29, 2010: Obeid bin Saif al-Qahtani was beheaded by the sword in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, for fatally shooting Mohammed bin Mejeb al-Qahtani with a pistol in a dispute, the interior ministry said in a statement carried by SPA state news agency.

Source: Agence France Presse, June 29, 2010

My Blog is boring! At least that is what I think and so...

I'm thinking of being more real in front of my audience and at the same time helping my son, who is a new and talented author. He has now written two romance/mystery novels based on a true story. The second book is in the editing stages.

I love reading about other people's lives and I'm hoping my readers feel the same way. My life has been anything but easy at times. Tragedy, loss and grief have pulled me down for years at a time, but there is always hope. It is also a story about love, love lost, love found and a greater love story within the love story, which will become more apparent in the 4th novel.

Stay tuned. I'm going to speak to Jonathan and find a way to share the books chapter by chapter on my blog. I am not a gifted writer, nor do I have a witty sense of humor, nor do I have mass appeal, but what I do have is a son who has all those characteristics and more; let his writing entertain you and perhaps help others out there with similar "difficult" people in their lives.

This is what Jonathan says about his first novel:

The truth behind the fiction

"I can’t take credit for this story, since it’s older than I am. What you’re about to read is a compilation of events which actually happened, involving characters who, for the most part, are still alive today.

With only minor exceptions, I wrote everything as it was described to me by the people who were there to witness the events, and not as my imagination might have dictated. The result was a surprising mix of the laughter and tears and heart-wrenching scenes which so typify real life.

The more I researched and wrote, the more I realized that my imagination was almost superfluous to the process, which in this instance, I suppose, makes me more of a journalist than a novelist. That said, I didn’t go looking for this story. It was under my nose for a number of years before I actually saw it for what it was, and when I saw it, I realized that it had to be written down before it died with its characters. So read on, knowing that as you do, you’re turning through the pages of history."

Past Preservers: Breaking News from Egypt

Past Preservers: Breaking News from Egypt: "Dr. Hawass, Secretary General of the Supreme Council of Antiquities, and the head of the mission, finally succeeded in completely excavating the 174m long tunnel after several seasons of work that began in November 2007.

- Sent using Google Toolbar"

GI News—July 2010

[COLLAGE]

  • 7 steps to better blood glucose
  • Rice: it’s not the colour or size, it’s the GI that counts
  • Why you should check your vitamin B12
  • The scoop on chromium
  • Does sugar cause diabetes?
  • Starchy vegetables – 10 things you need to know
  • Prof Jennie Brand-Miller on carbs and blood glucose
In Food for Thought in this issue, we outline 7 steps to better blood glucose. You have probably never given your blood glucose a second thought unless you have diabetes. But out-of-control blood glucose is emerging as a major health crisis around the world. Our love affair with soft white bread, French fries, crispy breakfast flakes, sugary baked goods (all high GI foods) has led to an outbreak of insulin resistance – essentially, what happens when the body’s system for handling blood glucose spikes gets worn out from overwork. In Australia for example, one in four people now has some impairment in glucose tolerance or insulin secretion. (The chances are nearly one in two for the overweight, over 45s.) Left unchecked, the result is metabolic syndrome – a precursor to heart disease, stroke and type 2 diabetes. Ask your doctor to measure your blood glucose levels next time you visit.

Good eating, good health and good reading.

Editor: Philippa Sandall
Web management and design: Alan Barclay, PhD

Food for Thought

7 steps to better blood glucose
1. Eat more regularly whether you have three meals a day or have three smaller meals plus snacks. If you use insulin or take medication that stimulates insulin production from your pancreas, it is helpful if you can maintain some consistency in the times you eat your meals. Make meals a time to relax and enjoy food – you are more likely to feel satisfied if you do. Just remember to put your knife and fork down when you are full (not stuffed).
2. Switch to low GI foods – the ‘smart’ carbs (‘tricklers’) that are slowly digested and absorbed when you eat them producing only gentle rises and falls in your blood glucose and insulin levels. A Cochrane review that analysed 11 randomised controlled trials found that following a low GI diet significantly helps people with type 1 and type 2 diabetes improve their blood glucose levels. In fact, the researchers found that HbA1c (A1c) levels decreased by 0.5% with a low GI diet, and point out that the findings are significant both statistically and clinically. (HbA1c gives a picture of a person’s average blood glucose levels over several months.) You can check out our 10 tips to reduce the overall GI of your diet HERE.
3. Keep carb portions moderate – 50–60g of carbohydrate at any one sitting is a good average. On your dinner plate, that’s the equivalent of 1¼ cups of cooked (al dente) pasta – measure it out and see what it looks like. And in this super-sized world, eat smaller portions for your meals and snacks overall. Using smaller plates and bowls is a help.
4. Eat more fruits and vegetables. You see, it isn’t all about cutting back. Most people don’t eat anywhere near enough of them. Fresh, frozen, dried and canned (in juice not syrup) fruits are all suitable. And when it comes to non-starchy vegetables (leafy greens, tomatoes, onions, etc), you can eat as much as you like. As bonus, toss your salad in a vinaigrette dressing – adding acid to your meals can help reduce your blood glucose response. In GI Symbol News in this issue, Alan Barclay talks about serve sizes for starchy veggies.
5. Favour the good fats. The type of fat can make a big difference to your health and waistline. Cut back on saturated fat and focus on the good fats – monounsaturated fat (found in olive oil, nuts and avocados), omega-3 fatty acids (fish is the best source) and polyunsaturated fats (in vegetable oils). Fat doesn’t raise your blood glucose and it doesn’t require insulin in order to be metabolised so it doesn’t raise insulin levels either. And because it slows the rate at which food leaves your stomach it can blunt the blood glucose effect of a whole meal.
6. Eat more protein at every meal. It won’t increase your blood glucose levels and keeps hunger pangs at bay as it helps you feel fuller for longer. There’s no need to go overboard – a small (100g/3½oz) piece of lean chicken or steak, a little can of fish, a side dish of legumes, an egg, a tub of skinny yoghurt or a handful of nuts will do it.
7. Get regular physical activity. Exercising muscles need fuel and the fuel they prefer is glucose. So as soon as you start moving your muscles they’ll start burning up glucose. First they’ll use their own stores of glucose (that’s glycogen); then they’ll call on the liver for some of its stores, all the time drawing the glucose out of the blood and lowering your blood glucose levels.

‘My aim is a calm pancreas – avoiding the highs and lows.’ – Dianne
‘I was devastated when I discovered that my fasting blood glucose levels were higher than normal and that I was on the path to type 2 diabetes. I did some research and was delighted to read that I could delay the onset of diabetes by changing my lifestyle and my eating habits. It’s early days yet, but I have lost 6 kilos and I am walking for an hour 5–6 days a week. The Low GI Handbook has helped. I have changed my diet and am feeling so great – no more acid reflux, no more feeling sluggish after lunch. I have so much more energy and feel on top of world. My husband has joined me in support and he speaks volumes for changes he is feeling too. We are eating more fish and I can’t believe how many fresh vegetables we get through in a week. We’ve not eaten white bread, biscuits, cake or sweet desserts now for 103 days! (I keep a diary of my food intake.) Instead, we’ve replaced these with grainy breads, nuts and berries. I can’t wait for that follow up blood test my doctor said I should have a year after the last. I'm expecting a big change. Here’s to a low GI diet for life!

The Low GI Handbook

The Low GI Handbook is available from bookstores and online.
Australian edition
US/Canada edition (available bookshops July13th; or as a pre-order from Amazon)

News Briefs

For better blood glucose, it’s the GI not the colour of rice that counts
Consuming more white rice appears to be associated with a higher risk for developing type 2 diabetes, whereas consuming more brown rice may be associated with a lower risk for the disease, according to a report from researchers at Harvard University published in Archives of Internal Medicine. The NHS Choices Behind the Headlines review of this study makes the point that: 'Despite the quality of the study, the results don't actually prove that eating white or brown rice directly raises or lowers the risk of type 2 diabetes,' as cohort studies like this can draw associations but cannot prove causation. They go on to say that the researchers' conclusions are in line with general recommendations that people should include more wholegrains in their diet because they are thought to have a number of health benefits.

GI Group: While choosing brown rather than white rice may help reduce your risk of getting diabetes (along with being active and eating a healthy balanced diet), it's the GI of the rice that matters. The Harvard researchers said that the average GI for white rice was 64 and for brown rice it was 55. The higher GI of the white rice, and the loss of fiber, vitamins, magnesium and other minerals, lignans, phytoestrogens, and phytic acid, in the refining process are the likely factors for the increased diabetes risk.

However, neither colour nor size are a good guide to the GI of rice. Its amylose content is what counts. Amylose is a kind of starch that resists gelatinisation. Although both white and brown rice are grain foods, when you cook them, millions of microscopic cracks in the grains let water penetrate right to the middle of the grain, allowing the starch granules to swell and become fully ‘gelatinised’, thus very easy to digest. It’s true that popular white rices like jasmine have a high GI. But brown rice often has a surprisingly high GI too. This is because the insoluble fibre around brown rice is not viscous and it’s micro-thin. It’s easy for enzymes to attack the starch in rice because the milling operation has resulted in thousands of minute channels that allow water to hydrate the grain and gelatinise the starch during cooking. Greater gelatinisation of starch means higher GI. Finally, don’t forget that a healthy low GI diet is associated with a lower risk of diabetes than either eating brown rice, or wholegrains in general.

The bottom line: For better blood glucose, opt for the lower GI varieties with a higher amylose content such as Basmati, Doongara Clever Rice, Moolgiri medium grain or the Uncle Ben’s Ready Rice brown rice pouch range. These high-amylose rices stay firm and separate when cooked. But you still need to keep portions moderate, even when you choose a low GI rice as eating too much can have a marked effect on your blood glucose. Here’s our tip: a cup of cooked rice combined with plenty of mixed vegetables can turn into three cups of a rice-based meal that suits any adult’s daily diet.

Better blood glucose for kids with type 2
The incidence of type 2 diabetes and impaired glucose tolerance in young people is sweeping the world at an alarming rate. In Australia for example, nearly 1 in 10 young people with diabetes now has type 2. Twenty years ago it was almost unheard of in this age group. Managing type 2 involves helping the kids normalise their blood glucose levels, reduce their blood fats and blood cholesterol and prevent the progression or development of complications.

Lauren Gellar
Lauren Gellar M.S., M.ED., CHES

A small cross-over pilot study published in the Journal of Pediatrics has found that the average mean daytime blood glucose was significantly lower when the kids ate a low GI diet (GI 40) compared with the day they ate a higher GI diet (GI 64).

For the study, 12 obese young people aged between 7 and 16 with type 2 diabetes or impaired glucose tolerance were served a full day of high GI and a full day of low GI meals (matched for carbs, protein and fat content) in a supervised clinic setting. Participants demonstrated significantly lower mean daytime blood glucose and a trend toward lower variability, suggesting a clinically relevant impact of reducing glycemic index.

In their conclusion, the authors, Lauren Gellar and Dr Tonja Nansel write: ‘Our findings are of particular importance given that children who develop disorders of glucose metabolism are likely to be a particularly high-risk group. Thus the ability to demonstrate substantial differences in blood glucose with a dietary change lasting a single day suggests that a low GI diet is a promising approach for achieving improved health outcomes.’ For reprints of this study contact Dr Tonja Nansel

Resistance exercise better than aerobic for blood glucose
Ten weeks of resistance exercise (3 sessions a week of typically around 35 minutes) were associated with significantly better glycemic control in adults with type 2 diabetes compared with aerobic treadmill exercise although the average energy expenditure for both exercise groups was similar according to a study published in Diabetology and Metabolic Syndrome.

Before each session, participants in both groups performed warm up exercises, consisting of stretching exercises for the major muscle groups and there were no differences between the groups concerning their perceived exertion,’ write the authors. ‘The resistance training group followed an individually monitored progressive resistance training program using multiple-station universal weight machines. Seven exercises were used for resistance training that encompassed knee and hip flexion/extension, shoulder flexion/extension, adduction/abduction, elbow flexion/extension and a chest press. Three sets of 8–10 repetitions were performed for all exercises,’ they report.

If you take metformin, get your B12 checked
If you have diabetes and have been taking metformin (brand names such as Glucophage, Glucophage XR, Fortamet, Riomet, Glumetza, and others) for years, ask your doctor to check the level of vitamin B12 in your blood. A recent study published in the British Medical Journal reports that metformin may lead to a B12 deficiency. We need minute amounts of this vitamin (also known as cyanocobalamin or cobalamin) a day for the production of red blood cells and to maintain healthy nerves and a healthy brain.

‘Our data provide a strong case for routine assessment of vitamin B-12 levels during long term treatment with metformin,’ concludes Coen Stehouwer. The 4-year study tracked 390 people with type 2 diabetes and found that the 196 participants taking metformin had a 19% reduction in their vitamin B12 levels compared with the 194 participants who had taken a placebo, who had almost no B12 change. The reduced levels of vitamin B12 in the metformin group also persisted and became more apparent over time, they said.

Where do you get it? Most of us get plenty of vitamin B12 from our diet as red meat, milk, cheese, eggs, fish, shellfish and fortified breakfast cereals and enriched soy or rice milk. You can also take a supplement. What about mushrooms? Dietitian Glenn Cardwell writes: ‘To accurately establish the levels of B12 in mushrooms, scientists at the University of Western Sydney checked mushroom samples from the major mushroom growing centres around Australia in 2009. Writing in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry they report that there is a modest amount of B12 in mushrooms, closer to 5% of daily needs in a serve (three button mushrooms). It is the same type of B12 as found in meats and seafood, so it is the type of B12 that the body finds very easy to use.

Mushrooms

Get the Scoop on Nutrition with Emma Stirling

The scoop on chromium

Emma Stirling
Emma Stirling APD

What first pops in your head when you hear chromium or chrome? Chances are it’s the silvery parts or trim on a prized car or Harley. But did you know that as well as helping a motor sheen, chromium may help get your motor running too because it’s an essential trace mineral that’s vital for good health. It may only play a bit part alongside the dietary biggies (iron, calcium or zinc), but that bit part is a key player in how our bodies metabolise carbohydrate, fat and protein.

Chromium

Of course, if you’ve been driving down the diabetes highway for a while and doing what you can to manage your blood glucose levels, then you’re likely to have seen more signposts on chromium than most people. Why? Well chromium supplements are a popular pill to pop in people with diabetes. Also with bodybuilding gym junkies looking to shine and making up over 5% of all supplement sales in the US.

Where to get it? Being a mineral, chromium is widely available in the food supply and only a tiny or trace amount (ranging from 25-45micrograms per day) is required for good health. The best source of chromium is brewer's yeast, but many people don’t go there because it can make you feel bloated and even cause nausea. More popular choices include: bran based breakfast cereals, wholegrain breads and cereals, egg yolk, cheese, yeast extract like Vegemite, fruits such as apples, oranges and pineapple, vegetables such as broccoli, mushrooms, potatoes with their skin on, tomatoes, liver, kidney and lean meat, peanuts, oysters and some spices like pepper and chilli.

What’s the link with blood glucose? So if chromium is so easy to get from a healthy diet why all the diabetes hype? Scientists have known for decades that chromium is involved in glucose metabolism. Originally believed to make up a glucose tolerance factor, more recent research suggests that chromium is part of a very small protein molecule that helps activate insulin receptors in your body’s cells. And this in turn makes your insulin work more effectively and better manages your blood glucose levels.

It would therefore seem logical that people with low levels or deficiencies of chromium, could have blood glucose control problems. And bingo, you’re right. We know from medical history that patients fed early intravenous solutions without chromium, developed high blood glucose levels and reversible diabetes. But is more chromium necessarily better and can you have too much of a good thing?

Chromium in question Several studies have looked at whether or not people with diabetes or pre-diabetes should take a regular chromium supplement with mixed results. However, a systematic review published in Diabetes Care concluded that in people with either normal glucose tolerance or glucose intolerance (pre-diabetes), chromium supplementation did not appear to have an effect. However, in people with existing type 2 diabetes studies on chromium supplementation using brewers’ yeast or an absorbable form of supplement called chromium picolinate, did have an overall modest benefit on blood glucose control.

The researchers are quick to point out though that more studies are needed before definitive claims or advice can be made about chromium supplements with diabetes. As there is no evidence of widespread chromium deficiency, eating a varied, balanced diet with plenty of good sources of chromium is the best bet approach.

Health authorities also caution that as chromium accumulates in the body and there are a number of adverse effects of high intakes, including renal failure, there is a risk of toxicity from supplements. And remember, because of the potential interactions between nutrients and medications, it pays to speak to your health professional before taking any new supplements.

The scoop? It’s probably best not to take a chromium supplement ‘just in case’ until more studies are completed. But if you feel your diet is inadequate or your motor needs a tune-up, speak to an Accredited Practising or Registered Dietitian.

Emma Stirling is an Accredited Practising Dietitian and health writer with over ten years experience writing for major publications. She is editor of The Scoop on Nutrition – a blog by expert dietitians. Check it out or subscribe for hot news bites and a healthy serve of what’s in flavour.

In the GI News Kitchen

American dietitian and author of Good Carbs, Bad Carbs, Johanna Burani, shares favourite recipes with a low or moderate GI from her Italian kitchen. For more information, check out Johanna's website. The photographs are by Sergio Burani. His food, travel and wine photography website is photosbysergio.com.

[JOHANNA]

Italian almond crunch
In the post-war years in Italy, it was hard to come by sweets and treats. Yet, children are always children and, even back then, there were sweet cravings. My husband remembers this recipe that his mother prepared all too infrequently! Makes 64 pieces (or 32 servings @ 2 pieces each)

1½ cups blanched and peeled almonds, coarsely chopped
½ cup honey
¾ cup plain flour
2 egg whites or 1/3 cup liquid egg whites

Italian almond crunch

  • Preheat oven to a 250. Cover a jellyroll pan (11’” x 16”) with parchment paper.
  • Pour the honey into a medium-sized, microwave-safe mixing bowl and microwave on high for 30 seconds to warm.
  • Mix the flour into the warmed honey. When the mixture is smooth, add in the almonds and continue mixing. Set aside.
  • In a small mixing bowl, beat the egg whites on high speed for 4 minutes or until stiff, dry peaks form. Add to the nut mixture and mix until the egg whites are absorbed into the mixture.
  • Spread mixture thinly on the prepared pan. Bake for 1 hour or until golden colour appears. Let cool thoroughly in the pan before cutting into 64 small pieces.

Per serving (2 small pieces)
Energy: 281kJ/67cals; Protein 2g; Fat 4g (includes less than 1g saturated fat); Carbs 8g; Fibre 1g

Cut back on the food bills and enjoy fresh-tasting, easily prepared, seasonal, satisfying and delicious low or moderate GI meals that don’t compromise on quality and flavour one little bit with Money Saving Meals author Diane Temple. For more recipes check out the Money Saving Meals website.

Rosemary beef and vegetable pot pies

These pies are a virtually a meal in a pot. When Diane started making them, hubby Ben was so excited. But he got really worried when he heard it was GI News editor Philippa’s suggestion and asked questions like: ‘You will use pastry won’t you and not sweet potato and butter bean mash,’ and ‘I suppose she’ll want you to add lots of vegetables too’ … The answer to both is yes, of course. And of course you can cut back on the saturated fat and top the pies with sweet potato or pumpkin mash. Makes 8 serves

2 tbsp oil
800g (1¾lb) lean gravy beef, cut into 2cm (1in) chunks
2 large onions, chopped
1 tbsp fresh chopped rosemary
2 large carrots, peeled, quartered lengthwise, sliced thickly
4 large cloves garlic, crushed
2 tsp dried oregano
1 tsp sweet paprika
1/3 cup tomato paste
1½ cups chicken stock
200g (7oz) large mushrooms, halved, then sliced thickly
4 small zucchinis (courgettes), quartered lengthwise, sliced thickly
400g (14oz) can 4-bean mix, rinsed and drained
¼ cup chopped parsley
2 sheets reduced fat puff pastry, each cut into 4 squares
Milk

Rosemary beef and vegetable pot pies

  • Heat 1 tablespoon of the oil in a large saucepan and brown beef in 2 batches over medium heat (about 3 minutes a batch). Remove and place in heatproof bowl. Add the remaining oil, reduce the heat and cook the onion and rosemary for 5 minutes until the onion is soft. Stir in the carrots, garlic, oregano, paprika and tomato paste. Return the beef to the pan and mix well to combine. Pour in the stock, bring to the boil, cover and simmer for 1 hour. Add the mushrooms and zucchini to the stew, stir, and simmer for 20 minutes, covered. Stir in the 4 bean mix and continue to cook for 10 minutes, uncovered. Stir in parsley, season to taste and set aside to cool a little. Meanwhile …
  • Preheat the oven to 200ºC (400ºF). Place eight 1-cup ramekins on a baking tray. Brush rims with water.
  • Spoon a generous 3/4 cup of stew into each ramekin making sure everyone gets a fair share of beefy chunks and veggies. Top pots with pastry squares pressing gently onto ramekin rim. Brush pastry with a little milk and make 2 slashes to let steam out.
  • Bake for 20–25 minutes or until pastry is golden. Stand for a few minutes before serving as the filling is very hot.
Per serving
Energy: 1622kJ/ 388cals; Protein 30g; Fat 16g (includes 6g saturated fat and 57mg cholesterol); Carbs 26g; Fibre 6g

Sue’s unbelievably creamy tofu ‘sour cream’
Dietitian Sue Radd runs culinary medicine cookshops in Sydney and on 20 July the program is ‘Simple Meal Ideas to Make Low GI Eating Delicious’. For GI News, Sue whipped up a super-quick, dairy-free ‘sour cream’ made from a medium-soft tofu. Use it exactly the same way you would sour cream – topping a baked potato or baked sweet potato wedges, making mash or dips, spreading on toast or mixing into vegetable soups. Makes 2¼ cups

Sue Radd

300 g medium-soft tofu
pinch salt
¼ clove garlic, finely crushed
2 tbsp lemon juice
1 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
½ tsp dry mustard

Pat the tofu dry with absorbent kitchen paper. Place it in a blender with the other ingredients and process until smooth. Transfer to a glass jar and refrigerate for 2 hours before serving. Store up to 2 days, giving it a good stir before using.

Per serving (1 tablespoon)Energy: 100kJ/ 24cals; Protein 0g; Fat 2g (includes less than 1g saturated fat); Carbs 0g; Fibre 0g

Book here for Sue's Cookshop classes.

Busting Food Myths with Nicole Senior

Myth: Sugar causes diabetes.

[NICOLE]
Nicole Senior

Fact: Sugar intake is not associated with diabetes. Type 2 diabetes is not caused by one food but from a combination of diet and lifestyle risk factors.
Of all the nutrition myths around, this one is the big daddy of them all. I used to work for a diabetes organisation and this old chestnut came up time and time again. Eating sugar is not implicated in the development of either type 1, or type 2 diabetes. At this stage type 1 diabetes is not preventable.

Type 2 diabetes is one of the fastest growing diseases in the world. So what do we know about preventing it? We know a healthy diet and lifestyle is crucial. The biggest risk is being overweight or obese. Diabetes Australia says up to 60% of diabetes cases could be prevented by staying in the healthy weight range. Carrying fat around your middle is particularly risky. The excess fat makes insulin resistance – the underlying cause of type 2 diabetes – worse. Smoking increases the risk of everything, including diabetes.

Keeping fit and active is protective – we all need to manage more movement in our day (I’m currently trying to stand up every time I’m on the phone). Large scale population studies show when it comes to food, those with the lowest risk eat the most cereal fibre and polyunsaturated fats, and eat diets low in glycemic load and trans fats. A meta-analysis authored by our own Dr Alan Barclay found those eating the highest GI diet had a 40% higher risk of type 2 diabetes than those with the lowest GI diet. Selecting lower GI and wholegrain foods in a balanced diet is a positive step toward a future free of diabetes.

Why has the ‘sugar causes diabetes’ myth persisted? Probably in part because diabetes is simply explained as ‘too much sugar in the blood’, and was even called ‘sugar diabetes’ in the past. The leap of logic is obvious. However what is not obvious is that eating table sugar (sucrose) does not dramatically increase the sugar (glucose) in the blood. The effect of foods on blood glucose levels – we now know – is described by the glycemic index (GI). The GI of table sugar is in the medium range at 65 and dwarfed by high GI foods such as Turkish bread (86), mashed boiled potato (91) or jasmine rice (89). Not that I’m suggesting we avoid high GI foods and eat lots of sugar, but we can stop avoiding added sugar totally and demonising it as a cause of diabetes.

We can enjoy added sugar in moderation: a spoonful of sugar can help nutritious foods go down. I love a drizzle of honey (just another form of sugar) over my low fat natural yoghurt, a spread of marmalade on my wholegrain toast, and the ability of sugar to produce delightfully light and airy low fat ice cream. I still add half a teaspoon of sugar to my morning coffee which – to my tastebuds – provides just the right balance to the bitterness of the coffee. I see no reason to change. It’s simply another case of ‘a little bit of what you fancy’ is OK.

Nicole Senior MSc (Nut&Diet) BSc (Nut) is an Accredited Practising Dietitian and Nutritionist and author of Eat to Beat Cholesterol and Heart Food containing evidence-based, trustworthy advice about eating well for your heart. Check out her website HERE.

GI Symbol News with Dr Alan Barclay

[ALAN]
Dr Alan Barclay

Starchy vegetables – 10 things you need to know for better blood glucose

Starchy vegetables

1. When it comes to seriously starchy vegetables like potatoes, sweet potatoes, corn, taro and yams, you need to think of them as the Vegetable Kingdom’s equivalent to rice or pasta. Their GI is very relevant when it comes to managing your blood glucose levels and you need to be moderate with what you put on your plate.
2. Root vegetables like beetroot (GI 64), carrots (GI 41), parsnips (GI 52), swedes/rutabaga (GI 72) and vegetable fruits and seeds like squash/pumpkin (GI 66), green peas (GI 48) and legumes or pulses (GI 14–53) have smaller amounts of carbohydrate than potatoes and are packed with micro-nutrients. A typical serving size won’t give your blood glucose levels an excessive boost, even the ones with higher GI values.
3. But, there’s no need to say ‘no’ to potatoes just because most varieties have a high GI. They are fat free (when you don’t fry them), nutrient rich and filling. Not every food you eat has to have a low GI. So enjoy them in moderation. But look for the lower GI varieties or serve them in a way to reduce their glycemic impact – such as potato salad with a vinegary vinaigrette dressing.
4. Starchy vegetables are a good source of fibre (when you don’t peel them) and micro-nutrients including vitamin A (yellow/orange-fleshed veggies), B vitamins, vitamin C and potassium.
5. Some, like legumes or pulses, are important sources of protein, especially for vegetarians or vegans.
6. They tend to be ‘feel-full’ foods. Their high fibre and water content means that they are bulky, and help to satisfy your appetite.
7. They aren’t fattening by themselves. It’s how you cook them and what you pour over them that adds the calories (kilojoules).
8. They are great mixers. Combining them in bakes or gratins or pilafs will boost the variety of vitamins, minerals and phyto-nutrients you get and lower the GI if you combine higher GI veggies with low GI ones, eg mashed potato with butter beans.
9. Their place is the carb quarter of the dinner plate (and within the inner rim too and not piled up like a pyramid).
10. Here’s what a serving of the most popular starchy vegetables is equal to: 1 medium (13 cm/80g) ear of corn, ½ cup (90g) corn kernels, ½ cup (85g) cooked chickpeas, kidney beans, borlotti beans etc., 2/3 cup (125g) cooked lentils, 1 cup (180g) cooked split peas, ½ cup diced sweet potato (90g), 2 small new potatoes or 1 medium sized (125g) and ½ cup mashed potato (120g).

New GI Symbol

For more information about the GI Symbol Program
Dr Alan W Barclay, PhD
Chief Scientific Officer
Glycemic Index Foundation (Ltd)
Phone: +61 (0)2 9785 1037
Mob: +61 (0)416 111 046
Fax: +61 (0)2 9785 1037
Email: alan@gisymbol.com
Website: www.gisymbol.com

GI Update

GI Q&A with Prof Jennie Brand-Miller

Jennie

If carbohydrates increase my blood glucose level, wouldn’t a low carbohydrate diet make better sense for better blood glucose?
In theory, a low-carbohydrate diet seems a logical choice if your aim is simply to reduce blood glucose levels. But presumably your goal is optimum health, with not just good glycemic control, but reduced risk of chronic disease. If so, low-carbohydrate diets have little to offer. In practice, they are difficult to sustain over the long term because carbohydrates are part and parcel of our Western diet. In fact, there is strong evidence to suggest that moderate- to high-carbohydrate diets are better for your health and easier to sustain.

Low-carb diets come in many forms and more research is needed before we can be sure that they are safe over the long term. We do feel people should be wary of the more extreme low carb diets that are based on the concept of avoiding carbohydrate-based foods – restricting even fruits and vegetables. Chances are they are high in saturated fats and a recipe for ill-health in the long term.

The South Beach Diet, on the other hand, recommends less carbohydrate (about 30–40 percent instead of 55 percent) and more protein (25–30% instead of 15%) and good fats such as olive oil. It includes advice about quality of carbohydrate (low versus high GI) and type of fat (unsaturated versus saturated). If you enjoy this way of eating, then there’s nothing really wrong with it. But over time, you may find yourself yearning for higher carb foods like bread and potatoes.

You can find the answers to over 100 FAQs about blood glucose levels in:
What Makes My blood Glucose Go Up and Down. It’s available from bookstores and Amazon:

What Makes My blood Glucose Go Up and Down
US/Canada edition
UK edition

New GI values with Fiona Atkinson
If you like to nibble on a savoury snack occasionally ...
Here at SUGiRS we have just tested Smith's Grain Waves Original Flavoured Wholegrain Chips. Here’s what we found:
  • GI 51, available carbs per serving 18g and GL 9.
  • According to the ingredient label they contain (in descending order): corn, wheat, oats, vegetable oil (100% high oleic sunflower oil), rice, sugar and salt.
  • A standard 28 g serving of 12 ‘chips’ according to the nutrition information panel provides: 569kJ (135 calories), 2g protein, 6g fat (incl. 1g sat fat), 18g carbs, 1.7g fibre and 122mg sodium.
GI testing by an accredited laboratory
North America

Dr Alexandra Jenkins
Glycemic Index Laboratories
36 Lombard Street, Suite 100
Toronto, Ontario M5C 2X3 Canada
Phone +1 416 861 0506
Email info@gilabs.com
Web www.gilabs.com

Australia
Fiona Atkinson

[FIONA]

Research Manager, Sydney University Glycemic Index Research Service (SUGiRS)
Human Nutrition Unit, School of Molecular and Microbial Biosciences
Sydney University
NSW 2006 Australia
Phone + 61 2 9351 6018
Fax: + 61 2 9351 6022
Email sugirs@mmb.usyd.edu.au
Web www.glycemicindex.com

See The New Glucose Revolution on YouTube

Australian, 90, Accused of Raping 4 Thai Sisters

http://news-updations.blogspot.comA 90-year-old Australian has been arrested and charged with raping four young sisters whom he allegedly lured to his home in Thailand with imported chocolates and English lessons, police said Wednesday.

One girl was 5 when the alleged abuse began. The sisters are now 7 to 15, police said.

Karl Joseph Kraus was arrested Tuesday at his home near the northern city of Chiang Mai, where police confiscated about 100 photographs of the naked children, said Doi Saket police Chief Kritapol Yeesakorn.

Some photos showed Kraus posing naked with other children, and police are trying to identify them and contact with their families, Kritapol said. He said police were investigating if Kraus was in part of a pedophilia network, noting many of the pictures were e-mailed overseas.

Kraus, who has lived in Thailand for more than a decade, approached the girls' family in 2008 with an offer to teach the sisters English, Kritapol said.

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Campaign Intensifies in Iran to Spare a Kurdish Activist

As reports circulated Tuesday that Iran was preparing to execute a 27-year-old Kurdish activist, the campaign to save her life intensified, with a prominent opposition figure publicly urging the authorities to show compassion.

“Does she deserve her punishment or is it better to give everyone, especially women and the youth, an opportunity to find their position in life, and in political and social establishment?” said a statement released by Zahra Rahnavard, a distinguished professor and artist who is married to the opposition leader Mir Hussein Moussavi.

The activist, Zeinab Jalalian, was arrested in May 2008 in the Kuridsh city of Kermanshah and accused of having ties to a Kurdish rebel group, PJAK, which has carried out armed attacks in Iran. She was convicted of moharebeh, meaning waging war against God, and the death sentence was upheld by the Supreme Court.

Human rights and opposition Web sites have circulated reports that her execution may be imminent. A Tehran lawyer who is blocked from formally representing her said by telephone that she faced “death any minute.”

The lawyer, Khalil Bahramian, has urged her supporters to write to the United Nations secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, to try to intervene. He has not been allowed to meet with Ms. Jalalian, so she has never signed the legal papers Iran requires for his representation to be recognized.

Nine political activists — among them 7 Kurds — have been put to death since last year, when antigovernment protests began. At least 15 other Kurdish activists are on death row.

The wave of executions has raised the specter of 1988, when the government executed more than 3,000 political prisoners.

Some rights experts say that the possibility of another flood of executions has deeply stirred public emotions. “It looks like people feel if they tolerate one execution, there will be a flood of them,” said Hadi Ghaemi, director of the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran, based in New York.

Source: The New York Times, June 29, 2010

Kasab conviction: Abolish the death sentence rather than hanging 'bullets'

According to the Amnesty International (AI), a worldwide movement for internationally recognised human rights, 95 countries in the world have completely abolished 'death penalty' from their laws. AI categorises 9 more as 'abolitionist for ordinary crimes' — meaning that those countries may impose death penalty only for crimes committed in exceptional circumstances and 35 others as 'abolitionists in practice' — in that they have not executed anyone in the past 10 years.

That makes 139 countries as abolitionist by law or practice (more than 2/3 of 197 countries in the world) and leaves 58 nations — including USA, China, India etc. under 'retentionist' category, which may pronounce death sentence for certain 'severe' crimes.

In terms of numbers, 18 countries are reported to have executed 714 people in the year 2009, as against 2,390 executions by 25 countries in 2008. In India, while the correct number of executions since independence is not known with any certainty, what is definitely known is that there have been just 2 executions in the last 15 years. But, Kasab's case is far from over. Even before the death sentence by a trial court was confirmed by a higher court, Kasab has filed an appeal in the Bombay High Court challenging the verdict. And, if death sentence is ratified by higher courts, Kasab could then park himself in the already long queue of mercy petitions pending disposal. His file also may snail-mail between the central and state governments for few years and end-up with some remarks, similar to Delhi government’s views on Afzal Guru's case.

While that is one direction of thought leading to discussion on possible timeframe for Kasab's execution, there are other — not so common — views on this case, particularly relating to the death penalty itself.

One view says that Kasab is a lone survivor from the terrorist group that attacked Mumbai on 26/11. When other group members got killed anyway; death sentence for Kasab does not amount to a 'punishment' of any kind. Further, instead of serving as a 'deterrent' (which is what a punishment must do), death sentence in this case assures the perpetrators of terror that survivors from the group, if any, are killed by 'laws of the country'. Therefore, would it not serve larger interest to keep Kasab alive and build-up on our understanding of the psyche and response system of a terrorist?

Second viewpoint is, 'keeping a terrorist alive is not easy'. Besides the huge cost of maintaining his security, there is a risk that 'masters of the imprisoned terrorist' may indulge in other atrocious acts endangering lives of innocents and may negotiate for his release. This is not at all relevant to inhuman 'masters', because neither the release of captured terrorist is their sole motive nor would the hanging of a captured terrorist put a stop to their heinous activities.

Finally, we may take credit in our legal system for allowing 'fair trial' even to a dreaded terrorist and pat our own backs for speedy examination of voluminous evidences, prior to the delivery of judgment in a record time. But, whom are we hanging? Kasab? Is he not just one bullet fired by the enemies of mankind; like ‘Afzal Guru’ was another one aimed at our parliament?

Why spend so much time on 'bullets' and not on dismantling the machinery behind such acts of terror? In fact, why not abolish the death sentence rather than merely hanging 'bullets' ?

Source: India Times, June 29, 2010

Australia's extradition laws stopping death penalty

Alabama's attorney-general has blamed Australia's extradition laws for his inability to seek the death penalty for a man jailed in Queensland over his wife's death.

Gabe Watson's wife Tina died during a scuba diving trip while the pair were on their honeymoon in 2003.

Under Australian law a person cannot be extradited if there is a chance they would face the death penalty.

In a letter to Queensland Attorney-General Cameron Dick, Alabama's attorney-general Troy King said United States authorities had cooperated fully with Australian investigators.

But Mr King described Queensland's position on the death penalty as "a refusal to honour your commitment to the citizens of the State of Alabama".

As a result he says he was forced to reduce the maximum penalty for any charges laid against Watson to life without parole.

Mr King says the extradition laws reflect Australia's long-standing, bipartisan opposition to the death penalty.

Watson pleaded guilty to manslaughter and is due to be released in November after serving an 18-month sentence.

Source: ABC News, June 29, 2010

Kagan: Death penalty's validity has been settled

Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan (left) is reaffirming her support for the death penalty, saying its constitutionality is "established law."

Under questioning by Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin at her confirmation hearing, Kagan says she has a different outlook than her mentor, the late Justice Thurgood Marshall, who dissented in every death penalty case based on moral grounds.

Kagan says she believes the death penalty is "settled precedent going forward" and generally should not be disrupted.

Source: Associated Press, June 29, 2010

Further reading: "The Generalissima Dances" on Jeff Gamso's blog "For The Defense". Excerpts:

 "Anything the Supreme Court has ever decided is, the Generalissima tells us, "precedent" and "settled law." No one has pressed her particularly hard, and she's declined to give any sort of meaningful answer, on whether or when "precedent" and "settled law" should give way - be sharply limited or broadly expanded or overruled.
The long-time professor won't "grade" the work of her she-hopes-will-soon-be colleagues, so we can't actually learn whether she thinks any of those matters of "precedent" and "settled law" were right.(...)
She doesn't want to "grade" the work of those she hopes will be her future colleagues. I don't blame her. It could make for uncomfortable days on the Court if she says that every one of the eight folks with whom she hopes to work for a couple of decades frequently act like dishonest charlatans whose work is ideologically driven, fatuous, and out of step with both the real world and any honest recognition of what the Constitution and the law are really about. (...) But to say what she thinks? Now? About the issue itself? In general terms? There's no reason to refuse. (..) I actually suspect that generally honest answers to point of view questions from the kinds of people likely to get nominated wouldn't end up making a difference.

Let's say that Kagan said she thought Roe v. Wade was right? Surely she does. Roe is a secret litmus test for every nomination President. (Secret, because the question isn't asked, but the answer is made clear.) Would it change a single vote in the Senate? Maybe she'd pick one up from someone who appreciated the candor, but I doubt it. My guess is that it comes out exactly the same.
And I think that's true with most issues. The broad swath of what's generally acceptable constitutional disagreement may lead to some hand wringing or cheering, but falling anywhere within it won't likely change a vote. And, frankly, it's hard to imagine today a nominee who's really outside that framework. Anyone who's going to say that Brown v. Board of Ed should be reversed at the first opportunity won't get nominated.
I guess my point is that at least some level of forthcomingness and honesty would be good and wouldn't actually hurt. It might make confirmation harder. It wouldn't shut it down. " Read more>>>

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Americans getting fatter, especially in the South

http://news-updations.blogspot.comObesity rates fell only in the District of Columbia, and the groups warned that dealing with the epidemic should be a vital part of the reforming healthcare.

"Obesity is one of the biggest public health challenges that the country has ever faced, and troubling disparities exist based on race, ethnicity, region, and income," said Jeffrey Levi, director of Trust for America's Health, which sponsored the report along with the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

Levi said the United States has taken "bold steps" to address the obesity but the response has yet to translate into thinner waistlines, particularly in Southern states.

The annual ranking of U.S. states found 10 out of the 11 states with the highest rates of obesity were in the South with Mississippi number one for the sixth year in a row with 33.8 falling into these category.

Over 25 percent of adults in 38 states are obese. Race and poverty continue to play as a role.

Rates for blacks and Latinos were higher than for whites in at least 40 states and the District of Columbia. Some 35 percent of the adults earning less than $15,000 per year were obese against 24 percent of adults earning $50,000 or more per year.

view this site : Google updates

Caroline Cartwright to Face Prison for Loud Sex?

http://news-updations.blogspot.comCaroline Cartwright, of northeast England, has loud sex. Really, really loud sex.

So loud, in fact, that she has been jailed for it and has been forced to live in separate housing from her loud lovemaking partner in crime, husband Steve. She has been the subject of multiple noise abatement orders since 2005 and has broken all of them, according to the Daily Mail.

Now the Newcastle Crown Court has told to her that she has one more chance to button up or spend 12 weeks in prison.

Now the Newcastle Crown Court has told her that she has given one more chance to button up or spend 12 weeks in prison.

The sex has been described as "murder" and "unnatural" and is so loud so that it drowns out her neighbors' televisions. The complaints began about two years earlier when multiple complaints from neighbors, a postman and even a mother was walking with her child to school, prompted police to issue a "noise abatement order."

for more news : Caroline Cartwright

Monk charged with secretly filming naked woman bathing in holy water

http://news-updations.blogspot.comA CAMBODIAN court charged a Buddhist monk on Tuesday for secretly filming hundreds of the women as they bathed naked with holy water at a temple and then sharing the clips.

Net Khai, 37, faces up to a year in jail after being charged with "producing and distributing pornographic images'' by the Phnom Penh Municipal Court, prosecutor Ek Chheng Huot said.

He was arrested at his pagoda in the Cambodian capital on Saturday over the allegations that he secretly taped the women pouring sacred water over themselves in a pagoda bathroom, said police chief Touch Naruth.

Net Khai was arrested after a victim approached police and said that the video clips showing the naked women had been shared among people via their mobile phones in recent weeks.

He was subsequently stripped of his religious status.

"He has filmed hundreds of women since 2008. They came to the monk to be blessed with holy water, but they were secretly filmed," Touch Naruth said.

view this site : Google updates