Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Fairly Simple Math Could Bridge Quantum Mechanics and General Relativity

A framework that relies on college-level mathematics could describe what happens to particles in so-called space-time rips, gravity fluctuations such as those that occur during the birth of a black hole


quantum mechanics, general relativity Image: wylieconlon/Flickr

From Nature magazine.

Could an analysis based on relatively simple calculations point the way to reconciling the two most successful ? and stubbornly distinct ? branches of modern theoretical physics? Frank Wilczek and his collaborators hope so.

The task of aligning quantum mechanics, which deals with the behaviour of fundamental particles, with Einstein?s general theory of relativity, which describes gravity in terms of curved space-time, has proved an enormous challenge. One of the difficulties is that neither is adequate to describe what happens to particles when the space-time they occupy undergoes drastic changes ? such as those thought to occur at the birth of a black hole. But in a paper posted to the arXiv preprint server on 15?October (A.?D. Shapere et?al. http://arxiv.org/abs/1210.3545; 2012), three theoretical physicists present a straightforward way for quantum particles to move smoothly from one kind of ?topological space? to a very different one.

The analysis does not model gravity explicitly, and so is not an attempt to formulate a theory of ?quantum gravity? that brings general relativity and quantum mechanics under one umbrella. Instead, the authors, including Nobel laureate Frank Wilczek of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge, suggest that their work might provide a simplified framework for understanding the effects of gravity on quantum particles, as well as describing other situations in which the spaces that quantum particles move in can radically alter, such as in condensed-matter-physics experiments. ?I?m pretty excited,? says Wilczek, ?We have to see how far we can push it.?

The idea is attracting attention not only because of the scope of its possible applications, but because it is based on undergraduate-level mathematics. ?Their paper starts with the most elementary framework,? says Brian Greene, a string theorist at Columbia University in New York. ?It?s inspiring how far they can go with no fancy machinery.?

Wilczek and his co-authors set up a hypothetical system with a single quantum particle moving along a wire that abruptly splits into two. The stripped-down scenario is effectively the one-dimensional version of an encounter with ripped space-time, which occurs when the topology of a space changes radically. The theorists concentrate on what happens at the endpoints of the wire ? setting the ?boundary conditions? for the before and after states of the quantum wave associated with the particle. They then show that the wave can evolve continuously without facing any disruptions as the boundary conditions shift from one geometry to the other, incompatible one. ?You can smoothly follow this process,? says Al Shapere at the University of Kentucky in Lexington, a co-author on the paper, adding that, like a magician?s rings, the transformation is impossible to visualize, but does make mathematical sense.

The desire to escape the mathematical headaches caused by such transformations is one motivation for string theory, which allows smooth changes in the topology of space-time, says Greene. He suggests that the approach developed by Wilczek, Shapere and MIT undergraduate student Zhaoxi Xiong could be applied within string theory too.

Although Wilczek originally believed that the result was new, a 1995 paper by Aiyalam Balachandran of Syracuse University in New York proposed a similar strategy for describing changes in topology in quantum mechanics (A. P. Balachandran et al. Nucl. Phys. B 446, 299?314; 1995). Balachandran acknowledges that his work hasn?t hit the mainstream and says that he hopes Wilczek?s paper will prompt others to take a closer look. ?Conventional approaches to this problem don?t get very far,? he says. ?This opens up a new technique.?

Source: http://rss.sciam.com/click.phdo?i=081f5d2bcffa8f289cedb5f9df469071

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BP raises dividend as Q3 profit swells 5 percent

LONDON (AP) ? Oil company BP has posted a solid increase in third quarter profits that's allowed it to raise its dividend substantially.

BP says Tuesday that its profit of $5.5 billion more than offset the $1.34 billion loss reported in the previous three months when the company wrote down the value of some assets.

It was also 5 percent higher than last year's equivalent of $5.2 billion. Replacement cost profit, a key industry benchmark, was $4.7 billion, down from $5.3 billion a year earlier.

Revenue of $93.1 billion was also down from $97.7 billion a year earlier.

BP raised its quarterly dividend 12.5 percent to 9 cents per share.

The company booked $59 million in costs related to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, raising the nine-month total to $882 million.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bp-raises-dividend-q3-profit-swells-5-percent-075949502--finance.html

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The Importance of Saving Money - Business Risk Management

?Stan takes his $100 check and makes an investment into South Park Bank. Annndd it?s gone.?? South Park really hit the nail on the head with this video, entitled, ?The Importance of Saving Money? (this episode originally aired back in March 2009, at about the time when the Dow Jones Industrial Average was hitting multi-decade lows in the wake of the so-called GFC (global financial crisis)):

Source: http://risk.garven.com/2012/10/30/the-importance-of-saving-money/

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Germany's Merkel to meet global finance chiefs

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BP Q3 Profit Gains (UK)>> LNG World News

BP Q3 Profit Gains

BP today announced its financial results for the third quarter of 2012, reporting underlying replacement cost profit, adjusted for non-operating items and fair value accounting effects, of $5.2 billion.

?BP?s performance and the strong progress we are making in transforming the company give us the confidence to increase distributions to our shareholders,? said group chief executive Bob Dudley. ?We are on track with our strategy to 2014 and are laying the right foundations for sustainable growth during the coming decade.?

BP expects to generate future growth through increased investment in new upstream projects in higher-margin areas and through new access and exploration. BP?s business portfolio is expected to become more tightly focused around its strong existing positions and its key operating strengths.

3Q 2012 Results

Third quarter underlying replacement cost profit was $5.2 billion, compared to $3.7 billion reported for the previous quarter and $5.5 billion for the third quarter of 2011, which was prior to a number of significant divestments.

The quarter?s results benefited from a strong performance in BP?s downstream business, where good operational delivery capitalised on increased refining margins. In the upstream, performance was similar to the second quarter as increased production from new projects and completion of turnarounds in the Gulf of Mexico was offset by seasonal maintenance in North Sea and Alaska and the impact of Hurricane Isaac in the Gulf. In addition, more stable oil prices in the third quarter resulted in some positive reversal of the unusual price effects seen in the second quarter earnings, such as Russian duty lag.

Operating cash flow in the quarter was $6.3 billion. At the end of the third quarter, gearing was 20.9 per cent compared to 21.9 per cent at the end of the previous quarter. Gearing is expected to reduce as the company works to complete the divestment programme and ends payments into the $20 billion Trust Fund.

Production of oil and gas, excluding TNK-BP, was 2.26 million barrels of oil equivalent a day (mmboed), broadly similar to the second quarter and 3 per cent lower than a year ago. Production is expected to increase in the fourth quarter as the maintenance season completes and the benefit of new projects continues, but offset partially by the timing of Gulf of Mexico and North Sea divestments expected to complete in the fourth quarter. BP?s share of TNK-BP production in the quarter was 1mmboed, slightly more than in the same period last year.

BP?s downstream segment delivered record quarterly underlying earnings. Strong operational performance in the fuels business ? with refining throughputs at the highest level for seven years ? captured the benefits of the quarter?s notably high refining margins. Contributions from supply and trading also returned to more normal levels. Refining margins are expected to decline in the fourth quarter in line with seasonal trends. Refining throughput is also expected to be lower due to turnarounds and the start of a transitional outage to replace the largest of three crude units at our Whiting refinery, as part of the major upgrade project.


LNG World News Staff, October 30, 2012

?

Source: http://www.lngworldnews.com/bp-q3-profit-gains-uk/

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Thursday, October 25, 2012

Aero Gaga likely to make upset in Ladbrokes Tv Trophy Final | bettor ...

Aero Gaga likely to make upset in Ladbrokes Tv Trophy Final

Accidently, the two legendary trainers, M. Wallis and P. Young, have come face to face as their respective pupils, Blonde Reagan and Aero Gaga, are going to compete for the glorious title of the Ladbrokes Tv Trophy Final that is worth ?8000.

For the high-stakes open race, that is scheduled to take place at Monmore on Thursday night, the punters have picked Blonde Reagan as the 6-4 favourite candidate with Aero Gaga being second on the odds list.

But, if we compare the stats and skills of the two, we find that Aero Gaga has relatively higher chances to win this race. The situation is same as the sport fans witnessed on October 17 when Mags Gamble and Bubbly Phoenix clashed in the final game of the All England Cup----Mags Gamble, despite being a non-favourite candidate, accomplished a convincing victory.

In tonight?s contest, Aero Gaga will replicate Mags Gamble. The four-year-old veteran brindle dog marvellously grabbed two big OR triumphs in the last month.

On September 5, he convincingly beat Droopys Aretha by 6 ? lengths to win Champions Night Marathon - Heat 1 at Romford. That was followed by the title of the Champions Night Marathon Final on 15th. Both were impressive ?and amazing performances.

The son of Kinloch Brae out of Great Madam stepped forward to seal top spot in the Ladbrokes.com 835 - Div 2 on October 6. He won that race by the huge margin of 7? lengths.

Since the dawn of the calendar year, Aero Gaga has achieved a number of classy feats at different venues. Thus, he possesses a diverse experience under his belt. Hopefully, he will compete with his utmost strength tonight.

On the other hand, Blonde Reagan has an excellent podium record. Except two times, he has finished in the top three positions throughout his career that began in June 2012.

After winning a T2 race with the margin of 16? lengths on October 9, he sealed first position in the Ladbrokes Tv Trophy Heat 1 on 18th.

Thus, the stage is all set for the rip-roaring battle between Blonde Reagan and Aero Gaga. Good luck to the both.

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are the writer's own and do not reflect Bettor.Com?s editorial policy.

Source: http://blogs.bettor.com/Aero-Gaga-likely-to-make-upset-in-Ladbrokes-Tv-Trophy-Final-a197626

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Results of the ISAR-LEFT MAIN 2 trial presented at TCT 2012

Results of the ISAR-LEFT MAIN 2 trial presented at TCT 2012 [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 24-Oct-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Judy Romero
jromero@crf.org
Cardiovascular Research Foundation

Second generation drug-eluting stents are safe and effective in treatment of left main coronary artery disease

MIAMI, FL OCTOBER 24, 2012 A study found that second-generation drug-eluting stents are safe and effective in the treatment of left main coronary artery lesions. Results of the ISAR-LEFT MAIN 2 trial were presented at the 24th annual Transcatheter Cardiovascular Therapeutics (TCT) scientific symposium. Sponsored by the Cardiovascular Research Foundation (CRF), TCT is the world's premier educational meeting specializing in interventional cardiovascular medicine.

Patients undergoing invasive treatment of unprotected left main coronary artery (uLMCA) lesions are often considered at high-risk of adverse cardiovascular events. The use of first generation drug-eluting stents in these lesions has previously been shown to be feasible, safe, and effective. The second-generation zotarolimus-eluting (ZES) and everolimus-eluting stents (EES), used more widely in clinical practice at present, perform very similarly in nearly all coronary artery lesions. However, their performance in uLMCA lesions has not yet been assessed.

The ISAR-LEFT MAIN 2 trial is the first and largest performed randomized, multicenter comparison trial between ZES and EES in uLMCA lesions. The study was designed to assess the non-inferiority of ZES to EES regarding the primary end-point: incidence of major adverse cardiac events (MACE), which was defined as the composite of death, myocardial infarction or target lesion revascularization at one-year follow-up. Secondary endpoints included the incidence of definite/probable stent thrombosis at one-year follow-up and angiographic restenosis at six-nine month follow-up.

In total, 650 patients with ischemic symptoms or evidence of myocardial ischemia in the presence of at least one ? 50 percent de novo stenosis located in the LMCA who were unable or unwilling to undergo surgery were randomly assigned to receive ZES (n= 324) or EES (n=326).

The incidence of MACE was 17.5 percent in the ZES group and 14.3 percent in the EES group (p=0.25). The incidence of definite stent thrombosis was 0.6 percent in both groups, while probable stent thrombosis occurred in 0.3 percent of the ZES group and 0 percent of the EES group. Angiographic restenosis occurred in 21.5 percent of the ZES group and 16.8 percent of the EES group.

"Results of this trial indicate that the use of second generation drug-eluting stents in unprotected left main coronary artery lesions in relatively unselected patients is feasible, safe and effective," said lead investigator, Julinda Mehilli, MD. Prof. Dr. Mehilli is Director of Catheterization Laboratories at the Medizinische Klinik I, Klinikum der Universitaet Munich and Co-Director of Clinical Research and Data Coordinating in the Intracoronary Stenting and Antithrombosis Research (ISAR) Center at the German Heart Center in Munich.

"Both zotarolimus and everolimus stents provide similar clinical and angiographic outcomes at one-year follow-up in this high-risk patient population," said Dr. Mehilli.

The results of the ISAR-LEFT MAIN 2 trial will be presented on Wednesday, October 24 at 11:58 AM in the Main Arena (Hall D) of the Miami Beach Convention Center.

###

The trial was an investigator initiated trial without any industry funding. Dr. Mehilli reported receiving lecture fees from Lilly/Daiichi Sankyo, Abbott Vascular and Terumo.

About CRF

The Cardiovascular Research Foundation (CRF) is an independent, academically focused nonprofit organization dedicated to improving the survival and quality of life for people with cardiovascular disease through research and education. Since its inception in 1991, CRF has played a major role in realizing dramatic improvements in the lives of countless numbers of patients by establishing the safe use of new technologies and therapies in interventional cardiovascular medicine.

Transcatheter Cardiovascular Therapeutics (TCT) is the annual scientific symposium of the Cardiovascular Research Foundation. TCT gathers leading medical researchers and clinicians from around the world to present and discuss the latest developments in the field.

For more information, visit www.crf.org.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Results of the ISAR-LEFT MAIN 2 trial presented at TCT 2012 [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 24-Oct-2012
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Judy Romero
jromero@crf.org
Cardiovascular Research Foundation

Second generation drug-eluting stents are safe and effective in treatment of left main coronary artery disease

MIAMI, FL OCTOBER 24, 2012 A study found that second-generation drug-eluting stents are safe and effective in the treatment of left main coronary artery lesions. Results of the ISAR-LEFT MAIN 2 trial were presented at the 24th annual Transcatheter Cardiovascular Therapeutics (TCT) scientific symposium. Sponsored by the Cardiovascular Research Foundation (CRF), TCT is the world's premier educational meeting specializing in interventional cardiovascular medicine.

Patients undergoing invasive treatment of unprotected left main coronary artery (uLMCA) lesions are often considered at high-risk of adverse cardiovascular events. The use of first generation drug-eluting stents in these lesions has previously been shown to be feasible, safe, and effective. The second-generation zotarolimus-eluting (ZES) and everolimus-eluting stents (EES), used more widely in clinical practice at present, perform very similarly in nearly all coronary artery lesions. However, their performance in uLMCA lesions has not yet been assessed.

The ISAR-LEFT MAIN 2 trial is the first and largest performed randomized, multicenter comparison trial between ZES and EES in uLMCA lesions. The study was designed to assess the non-inferiority of ZES to EES regarding the primary end-point: incidence of major adverse cardiac events (MACE), which was defined as the composite of death, myocardial infarction or target lesion revascularization at one-year follow-up. Secondary endpoints included the incidence of definite/probable stent thrombosis at one-year follow-up and angiographic restenosis at six-nine month follow-up.

In total, 650 patients with ischemic symptoms or evidence of myocardial ischemia in the presence of at least one ? 50 percent de novo stenosis located in the LMCA who were unable or unwilling to undergo surgery were randomly assigned to receive ZES (n= 324) or EES (n=326).

The incidence of MACE was 17.5 percent in the ZES group and 14.3 percent in the EES group (p=0.25). The incidence of definite stent thrombosis was 0.6 percent in both groups, while probable stent thrombosis occurred in 0.3 percent of the ZES group and 0 percent of the EES group. Angiographic restenosis occurred in 21.5 percent of the ZES group and 16.8 percent of the EES group.

"Results of this trial indicate that the use of second generation drug-eluting stents in unprotected left main coronary artery lesions in relatively unselected patients is feasible, safe and effective," said lead investigator, Julinda Mehilli, MD. Prof. Dr. Mehilli is Director of Catheterization Laboratories at the Medizinische Klinik I, Klinikum der Universitaet Munich and Co-Director of Clinical Research and Data Coordinating in the Intracoronary Stenting and Antithrombosis Research (ISAR) Center at the German Heart Center in Munich.

"Both zotarolimus and everolimus stents provide similar clinical and angiographic outcomes at one-year follow-up in this high-risk patient population," said Dr. Mehilli.

The results of the ISAR-LEFT MAIN 2 trial will be presented on Wednesday, October 24 at 11:58 AM in the Main Arena (Hall D) of the Miami Beach Convention Center.

###

The trial was an investigator initiated trial without any industry funding. Dr. Mehilli reported receiving lecture fees from Lilly/Daiichi Sankyo, Abbott Vascular and Terumo.

About CRF

The Cardiovascular Research Foundation (CRF) is an independent, academically focused nonprofit organization dedicated to improving the survival and quality of life for people with cardiovascular disease through research and education. Since its inception in 1991, CRF has played a major role in realizing dramatic improvements in the lives of countless numbers of patients by establishing the safe use of new technologies and therapies in interventional cardiovascular medicine.

Transcatheter Cardiovascular Therapeutics (TCT) is the annual scientific symposium of the Cardiovascular Research Foundation. TCT gathers leading medical researchers and clinicians from around the world to present and discuss the latest developments in the field.

For more information, visit www.crf.org.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-10/crf-rot102412.php

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Zynga Lay Offs in Boston, Austin, Japan and Great Britain Leave Hundreds Out of Work

Zynga on Tuesday announced it was laying off 5 percent of its full-time workforce, mostly in Boston and Austin.? It will also be shutting down offices in the UK and Japan.?

Reuters News Service received a copy of the message to employees, which came a day before third-quarter earnings were to be announced.

"This is the most painful part of an overall cost reduction plan that also includes significant cuts in spending on data hosting, advertising and outside services, primarily contractors," Pincus said in his memo.

100 layoffs were anticipated in the Austin, Texas office alone.?

13 unspecified game titles will also be shelved.?

Zynga is looking to diversify into the ?real money? online poker sector at the start of 2013.?

- Aaron Goldstein, Gambling911.com

Advertisment:? Play online poker for FREE or REAL MONEY at Camasino.com here

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Source: http://www.gambling911.com/businessfinancial/zynga-lay-offs-boston-austin-japan-and-great-britain-leave-hundreds-out-work-10241

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Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Earth's Magnetic Field Made Quick Flip- Flop

Earth's magnetic field reversed extremely rapidly soon after modern humans first arrived in Europe, completely flip-flopping in less than a thousand years, new research suggests.

These findings, detailed Oct. 15 in the journal Earth and Planetary Science Letters,could shed light on how and why magnetic field reversals happen, and how they leave Earth vulnerable to solar and space radiation, the study scientists said.

Earth's metal core acts like a giant magnet that emanates a magnetic field with two poles, north and south. These two magnetic poles very roughly match where the planet's geographic north and south poles lie, which mark the axis on which Earth spins.

"The Earth's magnetic field is a highly dynamic feature," said researcher Norbert Nowaczyk, a paleomagnetist at the GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences. "Its intensity pulsates between values 50 percent higher than today, or 90 to 95 percent lower than today."

In addition, every several hundred thousand years, Earth's magnetic field reverses ? a compass that would have pointed north would instead aim south. These flips are captured by magnetically sensitive minerals in cooling lava that are literally set in stone pointing to where the poles were at that particular moment in Earth's history. [Earth Quiz: Mysteries of the Blue Marble]

Failed reversals

Full reversals of the magnetic field usually take millennia to finish, based on those frozen rock records. However, scientists now find that 41,000 years ago, shortly after modern humans first entered Europe, the magnetic poles flipped and flipped again in less than a millennium.

Scientists analyzed data in sediment from the floor of the Black Sea and compared it with other data from the North Atlantic, the Southeast Pacific and around Hawaii. Surprisingly, they found the Earth's magnetic field took about 200 years to flip, during which time it was just one-twentieth as strong as it is today.

"Former ideas about a field reversal deal with durations of 2,000 to 5,000 years," Nowaczyk told OurAmazingPlanet.

Earth's magnetic field stayed reversed for only 440 years, during which time it was just one-quarter as strong as it is today. The magnetic poles then flipped back to approximately where they were before over the course of about 270 years. The flip-flop overall is known as the Laschamp event, after the area in France where evidence of it was first discoveredin the 1960s. These new findings reveal how quick this reversal was.

The brevity of this flip overall suggests "it might represent a so-called aborted reversal," Nowaczyk said. "This means the geomagnetic field tried to reverse, but fell back." Such aborted reversals, also known as excursions, may have happened at least a dozen times during the last 780,000 years since the last full reversal, he explained.

Magnetic field shield

Earth's magnetic field helps protect the planet from energetic particles streaking out from deep space and the sun. During the Laschamp reversal, Earth was significantly more vulnerable to radiation from space, judging by higher levels of radioactive beryllium seen in ice samples from Greenland, Nowaczyk said.

Such radiation poses a particular threat in our modern world, so understanding these reversals is helpful to better understand the threats from space.

"Communication and GPS satellites might be damaged when the cosmic rays are less shielded by the geomagnetic field," Nowaczyk said. "Therefore, it is important to know how dynamic the geomagnetic field is in time and space. We need to know how fast changes in intensity, and thus shielding ability, can happen."

Earth's magnetic field is generated by the roiling of its outer liquid core. Research suggests that at times this outer core can behave as many magnets instead of one. These magnets can, in principle, cancel each other out, causing the magnetic field overall to weaken or flip.

"We need more data from more sites of the same reversal to get a better understanding of these processes," Nowacyzk said.

Follow OurAmazingPlanet on Twitter?@OAPlanet. We're also on?Facebook?and Google+.

Copyright 2012 OurAmazingPlanet, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/earths-magnetic-field-made-quick-flip-flop-141239721.html

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Precious Metals Analyst Launches New Website

With the release of the new SunshineProfits.com website, gold and silver investors gained numerous tools that can greatly improve their rates of return.

(PRWEB) October 24, 2012

Unique investment tools, proprietary indicators, and interactive software are only some of the features of the newly launched Sunshine Profits' gold and silver investment website (http://www.SunshineProfits.com). Sunshine Profits is a comprehensive, analytic resource for investors in the precious metals markets. The price of gold has gone up over 400 per cent in the past 10 years, but it has been a bumpy ride with some painful corrections. Proprietary indicators available at Sunshine Profits help investors spot market turning points ahead of time, key to success in this secular gold bull market. Access to these tools enables individual investors to manage risk, fine-tune position size, and make intelligent investment decisions. Rankings of gold and silver stocks are constantly updated and tailored for each investor.

The investment service was launched in 2008 by Przemyslaw Radomski, a Charted Financial Analyst (CFA). Radomski, who designs financial software, began investing in the precious metals markets as a teenager.

?I began investing for my own portfolio when I was still a teenager. My mother, a single parent, passed away when I was 17. She had left me a small inheritance. I was on my own, so to speak, so I had to make decisions about where to invest this money. It was then that I decided to study finance professionally - that was the beginning of my education in the markets and finance. I was drawn into the precious metals market when I saw gold's rally before the war in Iraq and I've been studying it ever since.?

?Even though we operate this website, we don't own it,? says Radomski. ?In fact, our subscribers own it. This website is all about the individual investor. It is his portfolio growth on which we focus our efforts.?

The subscription base has been expanding dramatically with the growth of interest in commodities investing. Sunshine Profits provides its subscribers with timely ?Market Alerts? in addition to its weekly in-depth analysis of the investment markets. The investment analysis software, which is user interactive, is updated daily and available to subscribers 24/7.

Przemyslaw Radomski, CFA
Sunshine Profits
+1-347-602-4570
Email Information

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/precious-metals-analyst-launches-website-071642073.html

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Square launches in Canada, streamlines payments on the world stage

Square launches in Canada, streamlines onthespot poutine payments

For all of Square's fast growth, it's been exclusively the domain of US shopkeeps; others had to scrounge for an alternative, if there was one at all. The payment pioneer clearly isn't content to isolate itself or anyone else, as it's making its international debut with support for Canada. Locals can immediately request the free Mobile Card Reader and swipe credit cards with an Android or iOS device at the same flat, 2.75 percent rate that more experimental American stores know very well. Complete equality isn't available to Canucks just yet, as Square Wallet won't be available until 2013, but the access remains a step forward for Canadian merchants that don't want to be tied down to a terminal any more than their southern neighbors.

Continue reading Square launches in Canada, streamlines payments on the world stage

Square launches in Canada, streamlines payments on the world stage originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 24 Oct 2012 11:42:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink TechCrunch  |  sourceSquare  | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2012/10/24/square-launches-in-canada-streamlines-payments-on-the-world-stage/

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Tuesday, October 23, 2012

iPhone and Android apps for the final presidential ... - Know Your Cell











The final presidential debate is tonight and we've rounded up our political app guides to help keep you in the loop. Whether it's a simple live stream you're looking for, or you want to fact-check the pants off every little thing each candidate claims, you'll find it here.

Watch straight from your smartphone

There are quite a few options for live-streaming tonight's final debate on your smartphone or tablet, starting with Google's freshly minted YouTube Elections Hub. YouTube's new politically-charged section also features commentary from ABC, BuzzFeed and The Wall Street Journal, to name a few. WSJ's Live app will provide a live-stream of its own to tonight's sparring. And, as always, CNN will be in on the action too, this time with new interactive elements like a clip-and-share video feature.

Read:?Presidential debates 2012: how to watch from your smartphones and tablets

Brush up on your facts

Before diving straight into any heated debates of your own, it might be wise to brush up on both candidates' viewpoints first. WP Politics stacks 'em up side-by-side for quick review. We also like the PolitiFact and Settle It! apps for double-checking all of those presidential claims. And then there's the Super PAC app for iOS, which uses audio recognition to show you exactly who's specific political ads.

Read:?Android and iOS apps for the presidential debates

Root for your own

Look, we don't realy care who you're voting for, we're just happy that you're paying attention. Folks who lean left can get their liberal news fix with the Democratic Party's official app for iOS and Rachel Maddow's mobile app. Republicans can get the latest in GOP news with apps from Fox News and RedState.?

Read: iPhone and Android apps for Democrats; iPhone and Android apps for Republicans

Get ready to vote

No matter which way you're leaning, it's important to stay on top of the latest news for both sides. Political apps like?PollTracker?will help keep you in the loop by offering up election news in real time. The app also provides specific data on both Obama and Romney. Speaking of the men in question, each has his own mobile app;?Obama for America?is available for iOS and Android, while?With Mitt?is iOS exclusive. And while it's not exactly a political app, we love keeping track of the presidential chatter with?Slices for Twitter.?

Read:?iPhone and Android apps for the 2012 presidential election?

For more nerdy tidbits and updates on all things mobile, follow Stacy on Twitter.

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Source: http://www.knowyourcell.com/news/1645345/iphone_and_android_apps_for_the_final_presidential_debate.html

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Google's Android event: 'Nexus 4,' 'Nexus 10' and more Nexus

38 min.

Google's got an Android?event scheduled for Oct. 29, about a year following the announcement of the Galaxy Nexus smartphone and Android 4.0 (better known as Ice Cream Sandwich). As with every event of this magnitude, there's a host of rumors about what might be announced. Here are the best ones:

Nexus 4
Based on photos posted to Google+ by LG and Google employees, the next Google Nexus smartphone will be made by LG and called the Nexus 4.?Given that the Nexus 7 is a 7-inch tablet, we could assume that the Nexus 4 will be a 4-inch device.

The Next Web's Matt Brian says that a "source with knowledge of Google's plans" claims that the Nexus 4 will have a quad-core 1.5 GHz ?processor, 2GB RAM, 16GB storage, an 8-megapixel rear-facing camera (and 1.3-megapixel front-facing camera). According to this individual, the device will have a?a?4.7-inch display with a?1280 x 768 pixel resolution. (If that's the case, we wonder why Google didn't round up and dub the device the Nexus 5.)

Like prior Nexus devices, the Nexus 4 is expected to be among the first to run Google's latest and greatest mobile operating system, Android 4.2.

Nexus 7
The Nexus 7 has been around since late June, after being announced during Google I/O, and Google's giving it extra attention nonetheless. According to multiple reports, the tablet will now come in two 32GB versions, ?one of which will offer HSPA+ connectivity.?

Nexus 10
Google and Samsung have been working together on a 10-inch tablet, writes the Next Web's Matt Brian. This tablet will supposedly be dubbed the Nexus 10 and offer a higher resolution display than the third-generation iPad, as previously suggested by analysts.

Android 4.2
Google is expected to show off Android 4.2 during the Oct. 29 event and, according to the Next Web's Matt?Brian, this latest version of Google's mobile operating system is expected to compete directly with Apple's iOS 6 (though that's pretty much a given). Brian's mystery source says that Android 4.2 will offer new panoramic camera features, a way to access Play Store content from a widget, and multi-user support for tablets.

Want more tech news?or interesting?links? You'll get plenty of both if you keep up with Rosa Golijan, the writer of this post, by following her on?Twitter, subscribing to her?Facebook?posts,?or circling her?on?Google+.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/googles-oct-29-android-event-nexus-4-nexus-10-still-1C6612162

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MBS Chart, VA Loans, Capacity Constraints, HARP Helps, Housing ...

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email signup???????? ?RSS News Signup????????? Fay Servicing???????? ?BC?s profile

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(elegant chart says it all for MBS) QE3 begins ? Sober Look Blog
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V.A. Loans Surge in Fiscal Year ? by Coester VMS ? Mortgages guaranteed by the Department of Veterans Affairs surged by 50 percent in the fiscal year ended Sept. 30, as tighter credit standards on conventional financing made these programs all the more attractive to current and former military members. The department guaranteed almost 540,000 loans in fiscal year 2012, the most since 1994

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(paperwork + capacity constraints = profits) Analysis: Mortgage demand too much for U.S. banks, who respond slowly ? Dan Wilchins and Rick Rothacker ? Reuters ? Chicago Tribune

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(HARP helped) U.S. Bancorp Pumps Out Record Results As Mortgage Revenues Jump ? Trefis Team ? Forbes

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(beautiful charts) Housing Starts And Building Permits Exceed Forecasts ? Bespoke Investment Group ? Seeking Alpha

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Study: Falling Home Prices Not Improving Affordability ? BY: TORY BARRINGER ? However, a study released by Interest.com shows homes are only truly affordable in about half of the nation?s major cities. ? - The M Report?
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(hedge funds buy) Property Flippers Are Back as Housing?s Middle Men ? By Diana Olick | CNBC ? ? Blomquist says the difference for today?s flippers is that they must add value to the home before selling, because price appreciation alone won?t net the profit they seek. That means rehabbing,? ?
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(has details) FHA: Reverse Mortgage Program Changes on Six-month Horizon ? by Elizabeth Ecker ? ? (HUD) is actively seeking meaningful change to its Home Equity Conversion Mortgage program in an effort to protect its mortgage insurance fund and sustain the program long-term, a HUD representative told reverse mortgage professionals ? ? Reverse Mortgage Daily
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No, Virginia, Consumers Delevering via Default is Not a Reason for Economic Cheerleading -Matt Stoller ? Naked Capitalism

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Are we seeing an echo housing bubble in California? The low inventory low interest rate mania. The psychology of buying in a perpetual bubble machine. ? Dr. Housing Bubble

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Homebuilder Blues: NAHB/Wells Fargo Home Builder Ratings October 2012 - Paper Economy ? A US Real Estate Bubble Blog
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NAHB Builder Confidence increases in October, Highest since June 2006 ? by Bill McBride ? Calculated Risk?
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FHFA: HARP leaps forward with 99,000 refinancings in August ? By Kerri Ann Panchuk ? Housingwire
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(White paper) Berkery Noyes: Upturn Just Starting for Mortgage Sector ? BY: TORY BARRINGER ? ? In a white paper from the firm, managing director John Guzzo wrote that rising home equity, lower excess vacant homes, and more flexible FHA refinance qualifications are all leading the originations sector to ?the beginning of an upward cycle in terms of both volume and dollars.? ? ? The M Report
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FHFA should help pursue Fannie, Freddie strategic defaulters: Report ? By Jacob Gaffney ? The Inspector General for the Federal Housing Finance Agency concludes that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac would benefit from getting some help in pursuing those who walk away from their mortgage, despite their ability to pay ? Housingwire
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HARP on Track to Reach 1M Borrowers This Year ? BY: CARRIE BAY ? DS News

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For Rob Chrisman?s latest daily post, click here.

To subscribe to Joe Garrett?s news letter, send an email to jgarrett at garrettmcauley dot com

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Source: http://mortgagenewsclips.com/2012/10/22/mbs-chart-va-loans-capacity-constraints-harp-helps-housing-start-charts-affordability-flippers-back-reverse-changes-delevering-by-default-ca-echo-bubble-builder-confidence-up-harp-strategi/

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Monday, October 22, 2012

Abortion in Central America: Where women don't have a say or ...

  • Health, Lifestyle, Ludotheque Medicinal Ecstasy: Is class a really the solution?

    Medicinal Ecstasy: Is class a really the solution?

    Recently the debate surrounding MDMA has resurfaced, with many therapists believing that the properties of MDMA make it a better choice for use in psychotherapy than other psychoactive drugs like LSD. Georgina Campbell MDMA (short for 3,4- methylenedioxymethamphetamine) was first discovered...

    Read more ?
  • Globe, Trade Unions, United Kingdom, Workers The case of Lenin Escudero: sweeping inequalities

    The case of Lenin Escudero: sweeping inequalities

    Labor leaders throw their support behind Lenin Escudero, a man whose only crime was standing up for his rights as a worker - - Kile Robertson - Since the early days of the Industrial Revolution, low-paid workers doing dangerous jobs for too many hours a day have found strength in numbers. By forming...

    Read more ?
  • Struggles, Trade Unions, Workers Showing solidarity

    Showing solidarity

    Workers of Britain aim to show their government that their way isn?t always the right way for everyone. - - As it does in many countries across the world, the economic recession in the UK continues and doesn?t show signs of improving any time soon. Political leaders have attempted to deal with the...

    Read more ?
  • Culture, Listings, Multiculture, Our People, Pages Santiago Gamboa ?Colombiage? anniversary

    Santiago Gamboa ?Colombiage? anniversary

    This broadcasting platform of the Colombian art scene celebrates it?s fifth anniversary with the presence of the famous writer. The event will take place on the 25th October. - - To feel alive, the writer Santiago Gamboa (Bogota, 1965) travels and reads. From these experiences, which have made him...

    Read more ?
  • Globe, Human Rights, Latin America, Politiks Guantanamo?. Throwing away the key

    Guantanamo?. Throwing away the key

    International organizations fight against a system of oppression and torture that flies in the face of decency and justice. Amnesty International is sponsoring an event called ?Guantanamo Outside the Law? October 21st. - - In human rights law worldwide, one of the trickiest provisions in both moral...

    Read more ?
  • Globe, United Kingdom Digging too deep

    Digging too deep

    Greed and disregard for the impact of their actions are causing executives to deal irreparable harm to delicate lands. UK?s Colombia Solidarity Campaign has set a day of action for October 19. - - In many countries exploitation of the native peoples by foreign corporate interests is an unfortunate...

    Read more ?
  • Globe, United Kingdom Coming together? Workers wage war

    Coming together? Workers wage war

    Labour groups vote to take civil action as attacks on their jobs and living wages continue. The march will occur on October 20. - - The UK?s continuing regimen of budget cuts to social services is wearing on many people?s nerves. Under the current coalition government, austerity measures meant to...

    Read more ?
  • Globe, Latin America, Multiculture, Our People Changing climates in Central America

    Changing climates in Central America

    A once-troubled area of the world shows that the only way to move forward is together. SICA will hold an event on October 17. - - The area of the globe known as Central America is a narrow corridor of land, situated between Mexico to the north and Venezuela to the south, surrounded by two oceans. Though...

    Read more ?
  • Culture, Globe, Listings, On Stage, United Kingdom ?Catch?, Spanish surrealism on the British scene

    ?Catch?, Spanish surrealism on the British scene

    It is an abstract work by the choreographer, Ana Lujan. It is her first original work for the Phoenix Dance Theatre. It will be shown between the 25th and 27th October at the Royal Opera House in London. - - The enigmatic painting ?El hijo del hombre?(1964) by Rene Magritte was the inspiration for...

    Read more ?
  • Comments, EdgeNotes, In Focus Betrayal by degrees

    Betrayal by degrees

    Two weeks ago we took our son back to university. A long drive, then several mad minutes ferrying heavy boxes of books, computer equipment, and musical instruments.- - Steve Latham - The campus appeared smart, and affluent. Middle class parents, like us, giving lifts to their offspring. Do we look as...

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  • Health, Lifestyle, Uncategorized Flu, that familiar, unwanted guest

    Flu, that familiar, unwanted guest

    The majority of people in the world will spend many months of their lives with this illness. While it is a relatively inoffensive ailment, some people should take more precautions due to the severity of its effect on them. - - Miriam Valero - Each year 15 million people contract the flu in the UK....

    Read more ?
  • Multiculture, Our People Cuba? A legacy crossing cultures

    Cuba? A legacy crossing cultures

    A UK group hopes to rally support through demonstration of one Latin American nation?s diverse contributions. - - Among Latin American countries, the history of Cuba is especially rich and diverse. Some of this is simply because there is more evidence in the island nation to remind citizens of their...

    Read more ?
  • Globe, United Kingdom Anonymous? A November to remember

    Anonymous? A November to remember

    A shadowy group of citizens are coming together to fight for the oppressed and right what they see as the evils of modern society.- - They are called Anonymous; a mysterious group characterized as combined hackers and political activists (termed ?hackivists?) and made up of people from all over the...

    Read more ?
  • Culture, Listings, Multiculture, Our People, Screen ?Going up the Stairs? or the Search for Freedom

    ?Going up the Stairs? or the Search for Freedom

    After premi?ring at the Sheffield Film Festival, Rokhsareh Ghaem has arrived in London with her masterpiece, a film that explains the restrictions with which women have to live in Iran. - - At 8:30 pm on Thursday the 18th of October, the Lexi Cinema Hall will be the setting for the screening of this...

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  • Globe, World The impact of Israel?s occupation? Nowhere to go

    The impact of Israel?s occupation? Nowhere to go

    A human rights group rallies to take back the homes stolen from residents of Gaza and the West Bank. The talk will take place on October 16th. - - In 1967, a six-day battle across the relatively young nations of Israel and Palestine resulted in a near-total repossession and occupation of all formerly...

    Read more ?
  • Lifestyle, Youth Living with loss?.

    Living with loss?.

    A London foundation reaches out to young people suffering from a lack of compassion or understanding. - - When someone close to a person is lost, they often face an enormous amount of grief and sorrow that can sometimes be so severe as to lead to depression or other mental health problems. While these...

    Read more ?
  • Migrants, Multiculture London?s invisible Latin America

    London?s invisible Latin America

    Due to a lack of official recognition as an ethic minority, London?s Latin American community are prevented from integrating further into mainstream society. - - Georgina Campbell - The shadowy life of early mornings and late nights spent hauling a bucket and mop around schools, offices and hotels...

    Read more ?
  • Human Rights, Lifestyle, Politiks, Youth ?The Kingdom of Silence?

    ?The Kingdom of Silence?

    The UN?s annual report on children and armed conflict notes that they are never exempt from violence, as the plight of Syrian children becomes ever more shocking. - ? Georgina Campbell - With boys as young as 10 years old being detained, infants facing execution in their beds, at least 1,000...

    Read more ?
  • Human Rights, Lifestyle, Ludotheque, Movement, Politiks The invisible army of the United States

    The invisible army of the United States

    Journalist and writer Nicholas Kralev launches his book ?America?s Other Army?, in which he reveals secrets from behind the scenes of U.S. diplomacy after being a correspondent and following the Secretaries of State for years. - -Thanks to the filtration by Wikileaks, as citizens we have gotten...

    Read more ?
  • Multiculture, Our People Bolivian Foreign Minister in London and the indigenous people

    Bolivian Foreign Minister in London and the indigenous people

    David Choquehuanca is giving a talk ?Indigenous Peoples Cultural Rights? on the 15th of October. During the talk the minister will defend the rights of his country?s natives and argue in favour of the decriminalisation of chewing the coco leaf in its natural state. - - David Choquehuanca. Since...

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  • Source: http://www.theprisma.co.uk/2012/10/21/abortion-in-central-america-where-women-don%E2%80%99t-have-a-say-or-rights/

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    Saints LB Vilma active for game vs. Tampa Bay

    TAMPA, Fla. (AP) ? New Orleans linebacker Jonathan Vilma is active for Sunday's game against Tampa Bay, meaning he'll make his season debut while appealing a suspension for his role in the Saints bounty program.

    Vilma has been rehabbing his surgically repaired left knee and practiced for the first time Wednesday. He was moved from the physically unable to perform list to the 53-man roster Saturday.

    The ninth-year pro's return could wind up being relatively brief. His appeal hearing on a season-long suspension has been scheduled for Oct. 30.

    Saints tight end Jimmy Graham is inactive with a sprained right ankle. Running back Chris Ivory, cornerback Elbert Mack, linebacker David Hawthorne, tackle Bryce Harris, defensive tackle Bryce Harris and defensive end Turk McBride also are inactive for New Orleans.

    Running back Michael Smith, defensive back Keith Tandy, center Cody Wallace, receiver Chris Owusu, tight end Danny Noble and linebackers Jacob Cutrera and Najee Goode are inactive for Tampa Bay.

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/saints-lb-vilma-active-game-vs-tampa-bay-161346742--nfl.html

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    Sunday, October 21, 2012

    'Rust and Bone,' 'Beasts of the Southern Wild' win prizes at London Film Festival

    LONDON - "Rust and Bone," Jacques Audiard's soaring story of love, loss and killer whales, was named best picture at the London Film Festival on Saturday.

    The movie is a thriller-cum-melodrama about the unlikely relationship between a bare-knuckle boxer (Matthias Schoenaerts) and a whale trainer, played by Academy Award winner Marion Cotillard, who suffers a tragic workplace accident.

    The president of the award jury, British playwright David Hare, praised it as "a film full of heart, violence and love."

    French filmmaker Audiard won the same award at the London festival in 2009 for his prison drama "A Prophet."

    American director Benh Zeitlin took the best debut feature prize with his atmospheric bayou saga "Beasts of the Southern Wild." Juror Hannah McGill praised the "daringly vast, richly detailed" film, which has won wide praise since its Sundance Film Festival debut earlier this year.

    The trophy for best British newcomer went to Sally El Hosaini for "My Brother the Devil," the story of British-Egyptian brothers struggling with conflicting loyalties and identities in modern-day London. The best documentary prize went to Alex Gibney's "Mea Maxima Culpa: Silence in the House of God," an investigation of sexual abuse within the Roman Catholic church.

    Director Tim Burton and actress Helena Bonham Carter ? real-life partners as well as creative collaborators ? received career honours known as British Film Institute Fellowships during an awards ceremony at London's Banqueting House.

    Founded in 1957 to show the best of the world's cinema to a British audience, the London festival has in recent years tried to carve out a place on the international movie calendar with bigger pictures, more glittering stars and more high-profile awards.

    Highlights 12-day festival included Ben Affleck's Iran hostage drama "Argo," Michael Haneke's Cannes Palme d'Or winner "Amour," Rolling Stones documentary "Crossfire Hurricane" and Roger Michell's "Hyde Park on Hudson," a comedy-drama with Bill Murray as U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt.

    The festival wraps up Sunday with a gala screening of Mike Newell's adaptation of Charles Dickens' "Great Expectations," starring Bonham Carter and Ralph Fiennes.

    ___

    Online: http://www.bfi.org.uk/lff

    Source: http://news.yahoo.com/rust-bone-beasts-southern-wild-win-prizes-london-220018856.html

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    Soldiers' arrest marks shift in Guatemala

    In this Oct. 11, 2012 photo, detained soldiers waits to testify at their court hearing related to the killing of Indian protesters in Guatemala City. Nine soldiers were arrested in connection with the Oct. 4, 2012 killings of Indians from the town of Totonicapan who were protesting high electricity prices on the highway. Experts said the recent actions mark a dramatic shift in a country once known for its reluctance to punish its military. (AP Photo/Moises Castillo)

    In this Oct. 11, 2012 photo, detained soldiers waits to testify at their court hearing related to the killing of Indian protesters in Guatemala City. Nine soldiers were arrested in connection with the Oct. 4, 2012 killings of Indians from the town of Totonicapan who were protesting high electricity prices on the highway. Experts said the recent actions mark a dramatic shift in a country once known for its reluctance to punish its military. (AP Photo/Moises Castillo)

    In this Oct. 5, 2012 photo, relatives mourn over the body of slain protester Francisco Ordonez during a funeral service in Totonicapan, Guatemala. Experts said the arrest of soldiers in connection with the Oct. 4 killing of Indians protesting high electricity prices mark a dramatic shift in a country once known for its reluctance to punish its military. (AP Photo/Moises Castillo)

    In this Oct. 5, 2012 photo, blood stains remain on the highway where protestors from the town of Totonicapan and soldiers clashed a day earlier on the outskirts of Santa Catarina Ixtahuacan, near Totonicapan, Guatemala. Experts said the arrest of soldiers in connection with the Oct. 4 killing of Indians protesting high electricity prices mark a dramatic shift in a country once known for its reluctance to punish its military. (AP Photo/Moises Castillo)

    In this Oct. 5, 2012 photo, the shell of a a torched army truck sits at the scene where protestors from Totonicapan and soldiers clashed a day earlier on the outskirts of Santa Catarina Ixtahuacan, near Totonicapan, Guatemala. Experts said the arrest of soldiers in connection with the Oct. 4 killing of Indians protesting high electricity prices mark a dramatic shift in a country once known for its reluctance to punish its military. (AP Photo/Moises Castillo)

    In this Oct. 11, 2012 photo, Guatemala's Attorney General Claudia Paz y Paz arrives for a press conference to address the deadly clashes between soldiers and Indian demonstrators from Totonicapan, in Guatemala City. Experts said the arrest of soldiers in connection with the Oct. 4 killing of Indians protesting high electricity prices mark a dramatic shift in a country once known for its reluctance to punish its military. (AP Photo/Moises Castillo)

    (AP) ? GUATEMALA CITY (AP) ? Chanting and waving signs in protest of high electricity prices, thousands of unarmed indigenous demonstrators blockaded a highway in western Guatemala, forcing a standoff with police. Two truckloads of soldiers arrived and gunfire erupted, killing eight protesters and wounding 34.

    What happened next after the Oct. 4 incident was virtually unprecedented in a country scarred by decades of civil war as well as violence against its indigenous majority and years of impunity for its powerful military. Authorities actually investigated the violence, and the alleged perpetrators were arrested.

    The country's attorney general, a former human rights activist known for her bold pursuit of criminals, dispatched at least 175 prosecutors and investigators to the scene, and many of them collected shells, blood samples and DNA evidence. Others travelled to two nearby hospitals to interview wounded demonstrators and witnesses.

    Within a week, prosecutors had detained eight army privates and a colonel on criminal charges. Two privates and the colonel could each face a maximum penalty of 500 years in prison for extrajudicial assassination while six privates could face up to 320 years each for attempted murder with intent. An accompanying report said soldiers had ignored police instructions to stay away from the protest.

    The soldiers involved were not recipients of any U.S. aid or training in a Central American country in which the United States has spent $85 million fighting drug traffickers since the civil war ended in 1996.

    President Otto Perez Molina pushed to end an earlier U.S. ban on military aid that was imposed during the conflict over concerns about human rights abuses. To fight the drug trafficking problem, Perez has since approved the creation of two new military bases and the upgrading of a third to add as many as 2,500 soldiers. He's also signed a treaty allowing a team of 200 U.S. Marines to patrol Guatemala's western coast to catch drug shipments.

    Perez, a former army general who's been investigated for human rights abuses during the country's civil war, lent his support to the investigation into the shooting of protesters earlier this month, saying he would accept the attorney general's actions. He also pledged never to use troops again to quell the protests, blockades and land takeovers frequently employed by Guatemala's mostly poor majority to denounce government policy.

    Outside observers said the prosecution, after a series of government attempts to exculpate the soldiers, is largely attributable to the political power of Claudia Paz y Paz, 46, an aggressive attorney general who enjoys support from the U.S. and other countries that provide essential aid to Guatemala. That's given her the clout to face down the president and the military and ward off obvious attempt to thwart or quash her prosecution.

    Within 24 hours of the shooting outside the town of Totonicapan, Paz had deployed prosecutors from five offices spanning three different states, crime scene specialists and investigators. The overwhelming majority of the teams had received international training funded by the Spanish and Canadian governments, said Jose Arturo Aguilar, the attorney general's secretary of strategic and private affairs.

    "The role of the public ministry is to consolidate justice as a fundamental mechanism for strengthening our democracy," Paz told The Associated Press.

    A spokesman for Perez said his acceptance of the prosecutor's actions showed his commitment to reforming a country marred by corruption and impunity.

    "The president's reaction ratifies his promise of strengthening the rule of law that will fortify Guatemala's democracy," spokesman Francisco Cuevas said.

    Guatemala has widespread institutional corruption, "including unlawful killings, drug trafficking, and extortion; and widespread societal violence, including violence against women and numerous killings, many related to drug trafficking," according to a recent State Department report.

    Experts said the president's recent actions mark a dramatic shift in a country once known for its reluctance to punish its military. In fact, the prosecutions are the first of troops accused of illegally suppressing protests since the end of Guatemala's civil war in 1996.

    "It is an important departure from Guatemala's long history of impunity for similar crimes," said Kelsey Alford-Jones, director of the Washington-based nonprofit group Guatemala Human Rights Commission/USA. "Justice in this case, along with the demilitarization of citizen security, will be a significant step toward ensuring non-violent resolution of social conflict in the future."

    Protester representatives called the prosecution a step forward but told local media that they still wanted to see the interior minister and defense minister resign.

    Since assuming leadership of the public ministry in 2010, Paz has vigorously pursued military officials and other suspects, putting four civil war-era generals on the stand for crimes against humanity and genocide charges after their cases stalled for decades. She's also pushed for international training of prosecutors to carry out science-based prosecutions.

    "We're now seeing the successes of the public ministry. It is an institution that is acting with autonomy," said Marlies Statters, director of Impunity Watch, an international watchdog organization that monitors whether governments comply with legal obligations to crime victims.

    The real test for Paz and her prosecutors will be parlaying the arrests into just trials, said Anita Isaacs, a longtime Guatemala scholar and a professor of political science at Haverford College in Pennsylvania. She pointed out that the public ministry belongs to a judicial system still considered highly inefficient and, in many ways, corrupt.

    Paz, for one, appears to be taking that charge seriously. Her aggressive prosecutions and reputation for staying above corruption have won her the backing of the U.S. government, which provides millions in aid to Guatemala and has some 200 marines in the country on anti-drug missions. Paz is the only senior Guatemalan official to have met with U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

    Diplomatic insiders say the U.S. has made no secret of its insistence that Perez keep Paz, support the CICIG and reform the country's weak national justice system.

    "Claudia Paz is backed by the international community because of her efficiency and professionalism. That's something President Otto Perez Molina recognizes and respects, too," said Rene Mauricio Valdes, resident coordinator of the United Nations in Guatemala.

    Military action against civilians is a highly sensitive topic in a country scarred by a 36-year war between right-wing paramilitary groups and Marxist guerrillas that led to the deaths of some 200,000 people ?most of them Mayan Indians. Many were raped, tortured and executed in mass killings.

    Meanwhile, conservative voices, mostly from Guatemala's business elite, warned against comparing the protester shooting outside the town of Totonicapan to the civil war.

    "We must be calm and be mindful not to use this event to rehash the past," said Andres Castillo, president of the Coordinating Committee of Agricultural, Commercial, Industrial, and Financial Businesses. His office filed an official complaint with the public ministry that the indigenous groups were violating members' right of movement by blockading the highway.

    Guatemala has also long been under international pressure to bring those responsible for war crimes to justice. A 2006 treaty-level agreement with the United Nations created the International Commission against Impunity in Guatemala, known by its Spanish acronym CICIG. The independent body has 50 international prosecutors, police officers and attorneys charged with investigating a limited number of sensitive cases.

    CICIG has successfully prosecuted several high-profile cases but its longer-term mission is strengthening the attorney general's office and other state institutions before the commission leaves Guatemala, expected after 2015. It's overseen the hiring of hundreds of prosecutors, many assigned to new investigative units, and helped train them to use forensic evidence in trials.

    According to a public ministry report, the ballistic evidence shows soldiers opened fire at the protesters, contradicting initial claims by the president and other government ministers that the soldiers were unarmed and later claims that they were armed but fired only into the air.

    The president told reporters last week that armed security guards had driven the soldiers to the protest and one of the guards apparently was the first to start shooting. Then an unspecified number of soldiers fired to protect themselves from what they considered a threatening crowd, Perez said. Paz said all soldiers who fired their weapons were arrested.

    Ricardo Guzman, deputy undersecretary general for the attorney general's office, said Guatemala's defense ministry cooperated fully with the investigation, providing the roster of every soldier present at the scene. Guzman said all of the soldiers' weapons were surrendered to his office for investigation and investigators had matched the bullet fragments from each body to specific soldiers' weapons.

    "What happened at Totonicapan was a terrible tragedy. But with this investigation we watched an independent public ministry at work," said Michael Frulhling, Swedish ambassador to Guatemala. Since CICIG's creation, Sweden has donated over $13 million to the commission.

    Alberto Brunori, a representative of the U.N. Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights in Guatemala, said the public ministry's findings match those of his office. He said such results would have been unthinkable only a few years ago.

    "Paz y Paz's investigation proves two things: CICIG's ability to provide technical training and the level of professionalism the public ministry is acquiring," Brunori said.

    ___

    Romina Ruiz-Goiriena on Twitter: http://twitter.com/romireportsAP

    Associated Press

    Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-10-21-Guatemala-Protest%20Investigation/id-44811790d7b84d1a9db88902a539758a

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