Monday, December 5, 2011

Israeli ads for expats prompt ire from US Jews

Israel has cancelled government-sponsored television advertisements calling on expatriates to return, after some American Jews complained that the message denigrated their lifestyles.

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The spots, aired on Israeli channels that are often viewed by emigrants, featured dramatized scenes of Jewish assimilation in gentile settings. In one, an Israeli couple looks dismayed to hear their grandchild mention celebrating Christmas abroad.

"I don't think I have ever seen a demonstration of Israeli contempt for American Jews as obvious as these ads," wrote influential U.S. blogger Jeffrey Goldberg, in sentiments echoed by several American Jewish groups that lodged complaints.

The United States has the largest Jewish community outside Israel, and religious assimilation there is common. Israel looks to American Jews for support, but some in the community chafe at Israel's rightist tilt and strains in its ties with Washington.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered that the ads, produced by Israel's Immigration and Absorption Ministry, be yanked "immediately" upon hearing of the controversy they caused, his spokesman said on Saturday.

"The government of Israel is very attuned to the sensitivities of the American Jewish community," the spokesman, Mark Regev, said.

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45533868/ns/world_news-mideast_n_africa/

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Japan's 'nuclear gypsies' face radioactive peril at power plants

Reporting from Namie, Japan?

Kazuo Okawa's luckless career as a "nuclear gypsy" began one night at a poker game.

The year was 1992, and jobs were scarce in this farming town in the shadow of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. An unemployed Okawa gambled and drank a lot.

He was dealing cards when a stranger made him an offer: manage a crew of unskilled workers at the nearby plant. "Just gather a team of young guys and show up at the front gate; I'll tell you what to do," instructed the man, who Okawa later learned was a recruiter for a local job subcontracting firm.

Okawa didn't know the first thing about nuclear power, but he figured, what could go wrong?

He became what's known in Japan as a "jumper" or "nuclear gypsy" for the way he moved among various nuclear plants. But the nickname that Okawa disliked most was burakumin, a derisive label for those who worked the thankless jobs he and others performed.

Such unskilled contractors exist at the bottom rung of the nation's employment ladder, subjecting themselves to perilous doses of radioactivity.

Solicited from day labor sites across the country, many contractors are told little of the task ahead.

"The recruiters call out their windows that they have two days of work; it's not unlike the way migrant farm workers are hired in the U.S.," said Kim Kearfott, a nuclear engineer and radiation health expert at the University of Michigan.

"Many are given their training en route to the plant. They're told: 'Oh, by the way, we're going to Fukushima. If you don't like it, you can get off the truck right now.' There's no such thing as informed consent, like you would have in a human medical experiment," she said.

After an earthquake-triggered tsunami deluged the Fukushima plant in March, a disaster that cascaded into reactor core meltdowns, activists are calling for better government regulation of what they call the nuclear industry's dirtiest secret.

For decades, they say, atomic plants have maintained a two-tiered workforce: one made up of highly paid and well-trained utility employees, and another of contractors with less training and fewer health benefits.

Last year, 88% of the 83,000 workers at the nation's 18 commercial nuclear power plants were contract workers, according to Japan's Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency, a government regulator.

A study by the Citizens' Nuclear Information Center, a Tokyo-based watchdog group, found that contractors last year accounted for 96% of the harmful radiation absorbed by workers at the nation's nuclear power plants. Temporary workers at the Fukushima plant in 2010 also faced radiation levels 16 times higher than did employees of the plant's owner-operator, Tokyo Electric Power Co., because contractors are called in for the most dangerous work, according to the government's industrial safety agency.

"This job is a death sentence, performed by workers who aren't being given information about the dangers they face," said Hiroaki Koide, an assistant professor at Kyoto University's Research Reactor Institute and author of the book "The Lie of Nuclear Power."

Okawa, who was off work from the plant the day of the tsunami, immediately quit the job and the "suicidal work" he performed there: mopping up leaks of radioactive water, wiping down "hot" equipment and filling drums with contaminated nuclear waste.

He described an unofficial pecking order at most nuclear plants among contractors, with the greenest workers often assigned the most dangerous jobs until they got enough experience to question the work or a newer worker came along.

"In the beginning, you get a little training; they show you how to use your tools," said Okawa, 56. "But then you're left to work with radiation you can't see, smell or taste. If you think about it, you imagine it might be killing you. But you don't want to think about it."

Okawa, a small man with powerfully built hands, said contractors knew they faced layoff once they reached exposure limits, so many switched off dosimeters and other radiation measuring devices.

"Guys needed the work, so they cut corners," he said. "The plant bosses knew it but looked the other way."

Source: http://feeds.latimes.com/~r/latimes/news/science/~3/pjOyTztzcOc/la-fg-japan-nuclear-gypsies-20111204,0,6661765.story

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Sunday, December 4, 2011

Mark Goulston, M.D.: Coming Soon to a Congress Near You

Do these sound like any political parties you know?

Onepercentocracy (one-per-cent-oc'-ra-cy) -- a system of government where the most greedy and entitled are elected by the wealthiest and most powerful greedy and entitled, and where the 1% of members of society least likely to care about the remaining 99%, are continuing to be disproportionately and excessively rewarded with goods and services provided off the backs of people anywhere in the world that can provide them for the cheapest price (a.k.a. the "Yellers").

Ineptocracy (in-ep-toc'-ra-cy) -- a system of government where the least capable to lead are elected by the least capable of achieving, and where the members of society least likely to succeed or even to sustain themselves, are abundantly rewarded with goods and services paid for by the confiscated wealth of a diminishing number of producers (a.k.a. the "Whiners").

And the solution?

Meritocracy (mer-it-oc'-ra-cy) -- a system of government where those most capable of seeing and then leading their society into a future that serves all fairly and justly are elected by the most mature/mission driven and least immature/ego driven, and where the members of society most able to see, chart and implement a course of action are rewarded by meaning, significant and global respect, appreciation and esteem (a.k.a. As Good as It Gets, where everybody makes everyone else want to be a better person).

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Follow Mark Goulston, M.D. on Twitter: www.twitter.com/markgoulston

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mark-goulston-md/political-parties-_b_1127215.html

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Saturday, December 3, 2011

Skrillex: Grammy Nods 'Beyond My Wildest Fantasies'

Breakout electro star is up for five awards, including Best New Artist, at February's Grammy Awards.
By James Montgomery


Skrillex
Photo: C. Flanigan/FilmMagic

It has been a very big year for Sonny Moore, better known to the rest of the world as Skrillex. From massive festival dates to the cover of Spin magazine (and just about every point in between), he has been perhaps the unexpected success story of 2011 ... which is why, when he was nominated for five Grammys on Wednesday night (the same number as Lady Gaga and Katy Perry combined), it was a pretty fitting cap on the past 12 months.

Then again, as Skrillex told MTV News on Thursday morning (December 1), he wasn't expecting any of it ... in fact, he's still not quite sure what the whole Grammy thing is all about.

"I was actually on my bus, just about to sleep," he said of what he was up to when he heard he'd been nominated. "I was in Nottingham last night, chilling in the Sherwood Forest, and my tour manager just pops his head into my bunk while I'm sleeping, screaming like 'Yeaaah!' And we had been having some drinks, having a good time, but I didn't really know what was going on, and he told me I had gotten a nomination — I didn't even know it was more than one until later.

"And then I went back to sleep, actually," Skrillex laughed. "But it's crazy; it hasn't really hit me yet. I almost don't even know what it means, in terms of the big picture. This whole year has been insane, and these are surprises and things beyond my wildest fantasies ... and I'm just so thankful to have a great team and people that support me, man, because we've come a long f---ing way, man. People didn't believe in us, and we built this incredible team and system, and it's pretty awesome just to get that acknowledgment and do it with the people you love."

Skrill's biggest nod came in the Best New Artist field — he's the first DJ to ever be nominated in the category — where he's up against the likes of Nicki Minaj, J. Cole and Bon Iver. He's not about to attempt to handicap the category ("I'm not picking favorites or anything, but Bon Iver seems like a no-brainer," he said), and he doesn't see the mainstream nomination as some grand recognition of the electronic genre, either. Though, he will admit that he hopes his is just the first of many noms for his fellow DJ/producers.

"Whether it's on an acoustic guitar or if it's on a computer, music's music, and the most important thing about music is the emotional impact it has on people and culture," he said. "I'm only hoping that my nomination this year will carry on to the next year, and open doors for more people to come up and be noticed and recognized as actual musicians."

And though the Grammys aren't until February, he's already begun to tackle the tough questions about the show itself ... namely, just what will he wear on the red carpet. Of course, if you're a fan of his, you probably know his answer already.

"Oh man, I have no idea what I'll wear," he laughed. "All black! All-black everything!"

Sound off on the Grammy nominations in the comments section or on our Facebook wall!

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Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1675223/grammy-nominations-skrillex.jhtml

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Who Went Home In 'The X Factor' Double Elimination?

Michael Jackson tribute night on The X Factor brought out the best of all seven remaining contestants, so Thursday night's double elimination was the most emotional results show of the season so far.

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/astro-and-drew-are-voted-x-factor/1-a-407387?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Aastro-and-drew-are-voted-x-factor-407387

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Q&A Platform LawPivot Raises $1M; Launches Legal Services Marketplace

mlawGoogle Ventures-backed LawPivot , a ?Quora for legal advice," is announcing a $1 million round of additional seed funding from Vaizra Investments, Venture51, Quotidian Ventures and angel investors. Previous backers include Google Ventures, Deep Nishar, David Austin, David Tisch, Richard Chen and Allen Morgan. As we've written in the past, LawPivot allows technology companies and startups to confidentially ask legal questions to expert attorneys. On LawPivot, startups can post questions on the site, and lawyers message these companies back with advice. Questions are completely confidential, so companies still have privacy within the platform.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/kRm_-Z0MTxU/

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Friday, December 2, 2011

Cain tells aides he is reassessing his campaign (AP)

ATLANTA ? Herman Cain told aides Tuesday he is assessing whether the latest allegations of inappropriate sexual behavior against him "create too much of a cloud" for his Republican presidential candidacy to go forward.

Acknowledging the "firestorm" arising from an accusation of infidelity, Cain only committed to keeping his campaign schedule for the next several days, in a conference call with his senior staff.

"If a decision is made, different than to plow ahead, you all will be the first to know," he said, according to a transcript of the call made by the National Review, which listened to the conversation.

It was the first time doubts about Cain's continued candidacy had surfaced from the candidate himself. As recently as Tuesday morning, a campaign spokesman had stated unequivocally that Cain would not quit.

Cain denied anew that he had an extramarital affair with a Georgia woman who went public a day earlier with allegations they had been intimate for 13 years.

"It was just a friendship relationship," he said on the call, according to the transcript. "That being said, obviously, this is a cause for reassessment."

He went on: "With this latest one, we have to do an assessment as to whether or not this is going to create too much of a cloud, in some people's minds, as to whether or not they would be able to support us going forth."

Saying the episode had taken an emotional toll on him and his family, Cain told the aides that people will have to decide whether they believe him or the accuser. "That's why we're going to give it time, to see what type of response we get from our supporters."

Cain has denied the affair as well as several other accusations of inappropriate sexual behavior that have dogged his candidacy over the past month. He had been publicly resolute about pressing ahead even as his standing in public opinion polls and his fundraising started to slide.

But in the conference call, he pledged only to keep his imminent schedule, including a foreign policy speech at Hillsdale College in Michigan later Tuesday that he promised to deliver with "vim, vigor and enthusiasm."

One participant on the call, speaking on the condition of anonymity because of the private nature of the conversation, described the tone as positive but also noted the uncertainty coming from Cain.

After the conference call, Cain attorney Linn Wood told AP: "Any report that Mr. Cain has decided to withdraw his candidacy is inaccurate."

"I think they are assessing the situation, just as I would expect the campaign to do or any prudent business person to do," said Wood. He added that he would hate to see what he described as false accusations drive Cain out of the race for the presidency.

On Monday, Ginger White said in an interview with Fox 5 Atlanta that her affair with Cain ended not long before the former businessman from Georgia announced his candidacy for the White House.

"It was fun," said White, 46, as she described Cain buying her plane tickets for a rendezvous in Palm Springs, Calif. "It was something that took me away from my sort of humdrum life at the time. And it was exciting."

Cain went on television to flatly deny White's claims even before the report aired.

"I didn't do anything wrong," he said then. On Tuesday, he told his staff "I deny those charges, unequivocally," and went on to say he had only helped White financially "because she was out of work and destitute, desperate."

Seemingly out of step with Cain's denials, his lawyer issued a statement Monday that included no such denial of the affair and suggested that the media ? and the public ? had no business snooping into the details of consensual conduct between adults.

Cain's response was faster and more deliberate than he had managed when it was reported that three women alleged he had sexually harassed or groped them when he was the president of the National Restaurant Association in the mid- to late 1990s. The trade group paid settlements to two women who had worked there.

As some conservative Republicans sought an alternative to Mitt Romney, Cain surged in the polls while pushing his 9-9-9 tax plan and providing tough criticism of President Barack Obama during televised debates.

But as the harassment allegations surfaced, Cain stumbled in explaining his views about U.S. policy toward Libya and other foreign policy issues, creating an opening for rival Newt Gingrich to assert himself as a more reliable, seasoned politician to challenge Romney and even Obama. Cain fell in the polls and Gingrich began to rise.

In her TV interview, White said she decided to come forward after seeing Cain attack his other accusers in an appearance on television.

"It bothered me that they were being demonized, sort of, and being treated as if they were automatically lying, and the burden of proof was on them," she said. "I felt bad for them."

She said she first met Cain in the late 1990s in Louisville, Ky., when he was president of the National Restaurant Association. They had drinks and he invited her to his hotel room, she recalled.

She quoted Cain as telling her, "You're beautiful to me and I would love for us to continue this friendship," then produced his personal calendar and invited her to meet him in Palm Springs.

White has been accused of lying before. A former business partner, Kimberly Vay, filed a libel suit as part of a larger business dispute with White. Court records show a state judge ruled in favor of Vay because White failed to respond to the suit. Vay's attorney, Kurt Martin, said a jury must still decide whether to award damages.

White's attorney, Edward Buckley, acknowledged the libel suit. He said White thought the libel claim had been settled as part of a larger settlement.

___

Associated Press writers Thomas Beaumont in Des Moines, Iowa, Steve Peoples in Amherst, N.H., Greg Bluestein in Dunwoody, Ga., and researcher Barbara Sambriski in New York contributed to this report.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/politics/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111129/ap_on_el_pr/us_cain

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