What's in the News

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Escaped Lunatic

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1650 on: March 14, 2011, 09:39:21 PM »
Looks like there are some people who can forgive even if they never forget.

http://edition.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/asiapcf/03/14/china.disaster.response/

China sent in a Search and Rescue team to help at a Japanese primary school.
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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1651 on: March 15, 2011, 01:30:33 AM »
Looks like there are some people who can forgive even if they never forget.


On ifeng I was pretty surprised by the tone of the comments- I guess I'd assumed they would be more along the lines of "serves you right, Japan" but many of them were commenting on the quality of the buildings in Japan post-earthquake vs. Sichuan.

Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1652 on: March 15, 2011, 03:03:56 AM »
I just read on a Danish news site how some Americans are, in a fit of fatal idiocy, making comments about how this quake was revenge for Pearl Harbour....right next to that was an article about how a married couple had their flimsy hopes dashed as they came across a completely wrecked mini-bus containing the corpse of their 18 year old daughter.
This is one of the largest natural disasters in modern history, the quake moved not only Japan but the Earth on its axis, thousands of people are dead, nuclear meltdowns and radioactive mayhem awaits and yet people of various nations are actually voicing some kind of twisted, psychotic elation because the Japanese government and military did something nasty more than half a century ago...I don't think the 18 year old girl in the minibus had much to do with Pearl Harbour. Honestly, how petty can individuals get.
"Anyone who lives within their means suffers from a lack of imagination." Oscar Wilde.

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piglet

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1653 on: March 15, 2011, 04:32:47 AM »
The answer Eric is extremely. You are always going to get some @$$hole telling you that God is wreaking vengeance on people for their sins etc etc.
Maybe the Maya civilization was right and the world is ending in 2012?  aoaoaoaoao aoaoaoaoao
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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1654 on: March 15, 2011, 05:02:55 AM »
I just read on a Danish news site how some Americans are, in a fit of fatal idiocy, making comments about how this quake was revenge for Pearl Harbour....right next to that was an article about how a married couple had their flimsy hopes dashed as they came across a completely wrecked mini-bus containing the corpse of their 18 year old daughter.
This is one of the largest natural disasters in modern history, the quake moved not only Japan but the Earth on its axis, thousands of people are dead, nuclear meltdowns and radioactive mayhem awaits and yet people of various nations are actually voicing some kind of twisted, psychotic elation because the Japanese government and military did something nasty more than half a century ago...I don't think the 18 year old girl in the minibus had much to do with Pearl Harbour. Honestly, how petty can individuals get.

Ignorant, semi-conscious thoughts are inevitably the most common. People aren't using their imaginations when they rejoice in another's suffering, and are shortsighted when they think they are themselves safe from natural disasters.

With the threadbare condition of the biosphere and consequent increasingly erratic weather conditions, the likelihood of falling victim to some natural disaster are every increasing. Hate to be all doom and gloom, but if we don't change our polluting-for-profit ways as a species, we'll all get to experience something along these lines.

Ah  bqbqbqbqbq I just depressed myself.

Speaking of imagination. When I see some of those pics from the earthquake/tsunami, every so often I get just a glimpse of the magnitude of the "horror," and it's really too much for anyone to have a handle on.

I also read today that the economy in Japan is taking a serious nose-dive, and perpetual electrical shortages are on the horizon. The whole country basically got smashed. It's really too much, and a terrible reminder of how one's life can suddenly be overturned, and one can find oneself scrambling for the basics if one's lucky enough to still be alive and in one piece.
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xwarrior

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1655 on: March 15, 2011, 11:34:23 AM »
from China Law Blog:
http://www.chinalawblog.com/2011/03/chinas_reaction_to_japans_earthquake.html

Quote
China's Reaction To Japan's Earthquake
Posted by Dan on March 11, 2011

Adam Minter of Shanghai Scrap has written an excellent piece for Foreign Policy Magazine, on China's reaction to Japan's horrible earthquake. The article is entitled, "Schadenfreude and Sympathy in Shanghai," and it does a great job conveying the "feelings" being expressed by Chinese regarding the terrible calamity that has struck Japan.

Japan, all good people stand with you and support you as you seek to overcome this tragedy.

then

Quote
Update: I wrote a number of my friends in Japan to make sure they were okay and to let them know that I and the United States will be there to assist. From one of my attorney friends (who shall remain nameless) I got back a response that said that "we welcome assistance of United States but not China." Wow. And this came without my having mentioned a word about China. Of course I knew that the animosity between China and Japan runs deep, but sometimes it takes a real life highly personalized incident to really hammer it home. 


I have my standards. They may be low, but I have them.
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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1656 on: March 15, 2011, 10:24:37 PM »
Earthquakes, storms, floods, drought, tornadoes, volcanic eruptions, etc.

None of them are new nor do they target anyone. As disasterous and tragic as they are, they are a part of life and death on this planet.

The other day I was listening to a radio program and the host was trying to tie in this rescent event with the Iluminati. I wanted to reach into the computer and throttle the imbecile
For you to insult me, first I must value your opinion

Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1657 on: March 15, 2011, 10:41:27 PM »
Earthquakes, storms, floods, drought, tornadoes, volcanic eruptions, etc.

None of them are new nor do they target anyone. As disasterous and tragic as they are, they are a part of life and death on this planet.

The other day I was listening to a radio program and the host was trying to tie in this rescent event with the Iluminati. I wanted to reach into the computer and throttle the imbecile

I think that "Illuminati"  bqbqbqbqbq is intended to take people's eye off the ball of the real culprits (i.e., who is really in power and responsible for societal problems), and also to discredit whistle blowers and legitimate conspiracy theories by mixing them with wacko nonsense.

As for the natural disasters, I wouldn't lump them all together, because some are exacerbated or even caused by climate change and environmental devastation (drought, floods, storms…), whereas volcanoes and earthquakes, as far as I know, are not effected by damaging or polluting the environment. And while there have always been natural disasters, they're becoming more common and will continue to do so as we continue to debilitate the biosphere of our planet.

[Note: all scientific bodies agree that global warming is a reality, and the naysayers are all funded by oil corporations and other polluters. There actually is NO controversy in the scientific community about climate change, and more than there is about gravity or evolution. Those critical of global warming are just doing PR so the big polluters can keep on keeping on making loads-O-dough.]
suddenly it become more of a statement to NOT have a tattoo…

Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1658 on: March 15, 2011, 11:30:35 PM »
For those of us needing to hear a bit of good news amidst all this madness -- a 4 month old baby was found alive 3 days after being torn from her father's arms by tsunami waters.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1366155/Japan-earthquake-tsunami-4-month-old-baby-girl-father-reunited-Ishinomaki.html

Awwww


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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1659 on: March 16, 2011, 08:43:42 PM »
Here's something to make you view man's best friend in a different light:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/livescience/20110315/sc_livescience/dogsthateatrottentoesaltruisticorjustplainhungry

 aoaoaoaoao aoaoaoaoao aoaoaoaoao
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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1660 on: March 17, 2011, 11:29:10 AM »
EL, I always said that if I had my heart attack at home alone, I would be found minus my toenails and fingernails. My little dog Pippa used to come to me as soon as she heard me with the nail clippers. Yes! I did give the nails to her to eat. Our sheep and cattle dogs out on our property used to like to eat the horses hooves when they were trimmed. My little dog was also great at detecting skin cancers. My neighbor would always be able to point out a new skin cancer at the Molescan clinic and sure enough, it would need to be removed.

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xwarrior

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1661 on: March 18, 2011, 06:19:24 PM »
Quote
China's Reaction To Japan's Earthquake

A pretty good explanation for the mixed reactions in China to anything to do with Japan:

http://granitestudio.org/2011/03/15/guest-post-from-yajun-earthquakes-and-complex-feelings-toward-japan/
I have my standards. They may be low, but I have them.
- Bette Midler

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kitano

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Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1662 on: March 19, 2011, 07:19:30 AM »
when you actually hear about what happened in the war i can't imagine it being forgotten while it's still living memory. two things i think about it

1)There is a big difference between the Germans and the Japanese war crimes aside from the acts in that Germany was completely re-imagined after the war and managed to express that many normal German people also hated and feared Nazis. Germany is enviable in europe in the respect that it has in it's constitution that racial hatred is illegal which means none of the racist parties we have in england and france. Japan didn't change their government structure and even protected a lot of it's war criminals. They never disowned their wartime government.

Incidentally according to Iris Chang who wrote Rape of Nanking, China has played a part in this to some extent since Japan was their main trade partner when the US was their 'enemy' and is still one of their main trade partners

2) Even though Germany is now a 'good' country, there is still a rivalry. English French and Germans will rip on each other, resent each other, hate each other etc etc as long as the countries exist. I get the impression that is at play in China, korea and Japan as well, just local rivalry. Koreans are old fashioned, Japanese are snobs, Chinese are uncouth etc

Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1663 on: March 19, 2011, 07:44:01 AM »
Quote
China's Reaction To Japan's Earthquake

A pretty good explanation for the mixed reactions in China to anything to do with Japan:

http://granitestudio.org/2011/03/15/guest-post-from-yajun-earthquakes-and-complex-feelings-toward-japan/

That article was pretty good. This part is something I've been harping on about
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Japanese soldiers were always described as short, cunning and ruthless people. They were not portrayed as human, but as aliens or killing machines.
= er, the thinking/believing/perceiving others as different and alien, and hence easier to hate, kill, whatever.

Another interesting bit was that Japan helped China out after the Wenchuan quake.

I'd also seen, on ChinaSMACK, what they mentioned about Chinese people writing in to express their admiration for how the Japanese comported themselves after the tragedy.

And the final note was rather optimistic, and something I agree with
Quote
With such a large number of ordinary Chinese using the Internet, more and more young Chinese rely on their own critical thinking and information that they find online, rather than rigid patriotic doctrine, to shape their opinion towards Japan.

I was touching on this the other day when talking about the internet being a venue for people to express their opinions and do research, and that it's one of the few things that gives me hope for the future.

suddenly it become more of a statement to NOT have a tattoo…

Re: What's in the News
« Reply #1664 on: March 19, 2011, 10:09:38 PM »
Geez...

Three states seek to kick habit of raising cig taxes
Associated Press

CONCORD, N.H. - As some states look to tobacco tax increases to plug budget holes, a few are bucking the national trend and saying, "If you smoke 'em, we got 'em," looking at dropping the rate to boost cigarette sales.

In New Hampshire, supporters argue that reducing the tax by a dime would help the state compete with Maine, Vermont and Massachusetts, while opponents say it would still lose millions of dollars even if higher sales resulted.

New Hampshire's House voted Thursday to reduce the tax and sent the bill to the Senate, where its prospects are uncertain. New Jersey and Rhode Island have also considered reducing their taxes.

Aaron Evans, 25, weighed his potential new option Thursday as he stopped at a convenience store in Haverhill, Mass, for a sandwich and a $7.13 pack of Marlboro cigarettes. A pack would cost him $5.99 a couple miles away in New Hampshire, which already has significantly lower taxes than Massachusetts.

He welcomed any move to make smokes cheaper but said a dime a pack wouldn't make him change his buying habits.

"You've got to average it out," he said. "I could either drive all the way over to New Hampshire and waste the gas - it kind of evens it out."

It's very unusual for states to lower the tax, said Frank Chaloupka, an economics professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago. The sales increase isn't enough to offset the drop in tax revenue, he said.

States have enacted 100 increases over the past decade, he said.

New Hampshire raised its tax repeatedly since Democratic Gov. John Lynch took office in 2006, increasing it from 52 cents per pack in 2005 to $1.78 currently.

"New Hampshire has been going in the same direction as the rest of the country, basically forever," Chaloupka said.

The bill passed by the House would cut the rate 10 cents to $1.68 per pack. The taxes are $2.51 in neighboring Massachusetts, $2 in Maine and $2.24 in Vermont.

Rhode Island's bill would cut its tax by $1, to $2.46 per pack compared with $3 in neighboring Connecticut. New Jersey last year considered reducing its tax 30 cents, to $2.40 per pack, but hasn't followed through.

When states raise the tax, revenue goes up even though sales decline, Chaloupka said. Over time, tobacco tax revenues gradually drop after a tax hike as smoking use declines, he said. To drive revenues back up, states have raised taxes again.

The only time tax revenues dropped after a state raised its tax was in 2006, when New Jersey raised its rate 17.5 cents, he said - though the revenue decline was more likely due to adoption of a comprehensive smoke-free policy.

New Jersey raised the tax 12.5 cents in 2009 and revenue rose, he noted.

Chaloupka asserted that any reduction in cigarette prices would add to Medicaid and other health care costs. The Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids estimates that if the New Hampshire cut is enacted it would mean more than $21 million in long-term health costs.

The campaign also estimates a 10-cent drop per pack would result in 1,000 new young smokers in New Hampshire.

New Hampshire has historically looked to export its tax burden - and any resulting health costs - to other states through taxes on products such as tobacco and alcohol it sells to its residents.

"That's always been the way we run our tax structure," said Mike Rollo, spokesman for the American Cancer Society in New Hampshire. "We've always tried to tax people from out of state."

State Rep. Susan Almy, a Lebanon Democrat and member of the House Ways and Means Committee, said the health impact was not taken into account in the committee when it promoted the tax cut.

Instead, lawmakers are looking at a study by the New Hampshire Grocers Association, which has consistently criticized the tax increases as hurting small businesses, particularly along New Hampshire's state line.

Grocers Association President John Dumais said Thursday its study shows that cutting the rate a dime would cost the state tobacco tax revenues but would be offset by an increase in state taxes collected from people renting hotel rooms, eating in restaurants, and buying alcohol, lottery tickets and gasoline.

The net result would be no loss of revenue to the state but an incentive for tourists to visit the state to shop, he said.

"People coming from out of state are going to have an empty gas tank. They're going to be hungry. They're going to be tired," he said. "It's going to help every business."

State Rep. Patrick Abrami, R-Stratham, made that argument successfully during the House debate.

"We have reached the tipping point," he said. "We are hurting our merchants. We are losing sales on our borders."

But state Rep. Christine Hamm, a Hopkinton Democrat, called the move "fiscally stupid."

"No state has cut their tobacco tax and seen a revenue increase," she said.

New Hampshire Senate Finance Chairman Chuck Morse said he believes the Senate will support the cut.

"I think it's a positive sign for business. I think it will provide revenue in the long run," said Morse, a Republican who lives in Salem.

Unlike in other states where campaign contributions have the potential to sway votes, New Hampshire House members are unpaid volunteers and spend very little on campaigns - so it's unlikely that tobacco money is essentially paying for votes.

But lobbying organizations do target the smaller Senate because it's easier to win votes, and the potential benefit to tobacco companies remains clear.

"Yes, we do support the excise tax rollback as it would benefit retailers, consumers, jobs and bring tobacco tax revenue back to New Hampshire," said David Sutton, a spokesman for Altria Group, the parent company of Phillip Morris USA Inc.

If approved by the Senate, the cigarette tax cut bill would go to the governor, who doesn't support it. But the House and Senate, led by Republicans, could override a veto by the governor, saving cigarette smokers 10 cents a pack.

The House voted 236-93 to send the bill to the Senate anyway. Pro-business Republicans who control the Legislature are siding with Dumais' argument that the ripple effects from cutting the rate make it worth doing.

Lynch spokesman Colin Manning, who said the governor doesn't support the tax cut, pointed out that New Hampshire's tax rate already is the lowest in the region.

Unlike the other states, New Hampshire has no sales tax.

Manning said the House is considering making much deeper budget cuts than Lynch proposed "and now with this action today it raises the question of what else they are going to cut."
« Last Edit: March 20, 2011, 01:50:26 PM by Con ate dog »
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