Saturday, January 26, 2013

'GOT' actor feels 'vividly alive' despite cancer

Andre Csillag / Rex Features via AP file

By Us Weekly

Fans will be happy to know that Wilko Johnson is in very good spirits after doctors diagnosed him with terminal pancreatic cancer. The "Game of Thrones" actor and Dr. Feelgood bandmember shared the heartbreaking news on Jan. 10 on his Facebook page, and is now opening up about how he's doing now.

In an intimate interview with Radio 4's Front Row (via BBC), Johnson, 65, explained that he went to the doctor after feeling a lump in his stomach, which he initially ignored. When his doctors gave him the shocking diagnosis, he explained, it strangely energized him.

PHOTOS: Stars who have battled cancer

"We walked out of there and I felt an elation of spirit. You're walking along and suddenly you're vividly alive. You're looking at the trees and the sky and everything and it's just 'whoah,'" Johnson said. "I am actually a miserable person. I've spent most of my life moping in depressions and things, but this has all lifted."

Johnson opted not to receive any chemotherapy after he learned such treatment could only prolong his life by two months. With about 9 or 10 months to live, according to his doctor, the star says he plans to live his life to the fullest until the end. The musician is scheduled to perform a farewell tour with shows beginning February in France.

PHOTOS: Celebrity health scares

"If the cancer kicks in before that, then I can't go on stage. I'm not going to go on stage looking ill -- I don't wanna present a sorry spectacle!" he said. "I'm not hoping for a miracle cure or anything. I just hope it spares me long enough to do these gigs -- then I'll be a happy man."

PHOTOS: British stars

The talented star says he still "bursts into tears" thinking about his late wife, Irene, who died of cancer eight years ago, but has managed to keep his spirits up when thinking about his own death.

"Right now it's just fantastic -- it makes you feel alive," Still, he observed, "This position I'm in is so strange, in that I do feel fit and yet I know death is upon me."

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Source: http://todayentertainment.today.com/_news/2013/01/25/16697307-game-of-thrones-actor-wilko-johnson-on-his-terminal-cancer-i-feel-vividly-alive?lite

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Charges won't be filed against 49ers' Crabtree

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ? Criminal charges won't be filed against 49ers wide receiver Michael Crabtree after an alleged sexual assault in a hotel after the team's playoff victory over the Green Bay Packers, San Francisco's district attorney said Friday.

After examining information submitted by police, District Attorney George Gascon said his office determined that no charges would be filed "at this time."

"The San Francisco Police Department - Special Victims Unit completed and submitted a thorough investigation of the allegations against Michael Crabtree," Gascon said.

Crabtree's attorney, Joshua Bentley, didn't immediately return a call seeking comment.

San Francisco police said Crabtree was never detained or arrested in the matter, and that he cooperated fully with their investigation.

The 49ers are preparing to meet the Baltimore Ravens in the Super Bowl on Feb. 3 in New Orleans.

49ers general manager Trent Baalke said the team was pleased that the district attorney decided to not file charges after reviewing the matter.

"Michael and the team can now put this behind us and move forward," Baalke said in a statement.

During the regular season, Crabtree became the first San Francisco wide receiver with more than 1,000 yards in a season since Terrell Owens in 2003.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/charges-wont-filed-against-49ers-crabtree-025220477--nfl.html

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White House, senators launching immigration push

FILE - In this Jan. 14, 2013 file photo, President Barack Obama gestures speaks during his final news conference of his first term in the East Room of the White House in Washington. President Barack Obama's fledgling second term agenda so far reads like a progressive wish list. In less than a week, he's vowed to tackle climate change, expand gay rights and protect government entitlements. His administration lifted a ban on women in combat and expanded opportunities for disabled students. Proposals for stricter gun laws have already been unveiled and plans for comprehensive immigration reform, including a pathway to citizenship for millions of illegal immigrants, are coming soon. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

FILE - In this Jan. 14, 2013 file photo, President Barack Obama gestures speaks during his final news conference of his first term in the East Room of the White House in Washington. President Barack Obama's fledgling second term agenda so far reads like a progressive wish list. In less than a week, he's vowed to tackle climate change, expand gay rights and protect government entitlements. His administration lifted a ban on women in combat and expanded opportunities for disabled students. Proposals for stricter gun laws have already been unveiled and plans for comprehensive immigration reform, including a pathway to citizenship for millions of illegal immigrants, are coming soon. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

White House press secretary Jay Carney gesture as he speaks during his daily news briefing at the White House in Washington, Wednesday, Jan. 23, 2013. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

(AP) ? President Barack Obama will launch a campaign next week aimed at overhauling the nation's flawed immigration system and creating legal status for millions, as a bipartisan Senate group nears agreement on achieving the same goals.

The proposals from Obama and lawmakers will mark the start of what is expected to be a contentious and emotional process with deep political implications. Latino voters overwhelmingly backed Obama in the 2012 election, leaving Republicans grappling for a way to regain their standing with an increasingly powerful pool of voters.

The president will press his case for immigration changes during a trip to Las Vegas Tuesday. The Senate working group is also aiming to outline its proposals next week, according to a Senate aide.

Administration officials say Obama's second-term immigration push will be a continuation of the principles he outlined during his first four years in office but failed to act on. He is expected to revive his little-noticed 2011 immigration "blueprint," which calls for a pathway to citizenship for illegal immigrants that includes paying fines and back taxes; increased border security; mandatory penalties for businesses that employ unauthorized immigrants; and improvements to the legal immigration system, including giving green cards to high-skilled workers and lifting caps on legal immigration for the immediate family members of U.S. citizens.

"What has been absent in the time since he put those principles forward has been a willingness by Republicans, generally speaking, to move forward with comprehensive immigration reform," White House press secretary Jay Carney said. "What he hopes is that that dynamic has changed."

The political dynamic does appear to have shifted following the November election. Despite making little progress on immigration in his first term, Obama won more than 70 percent of the Latino vote, in part because of the conservative positions on immigration that Republican nominee Mitt Romney staked out during the GOP primary. Latino voters accounted for 10 percent of the electorate in November.

The president met privately Friday morning with the Congressional Hispanic Caucus to discuss his next steps on immigration. Among those in the meeting was Rep. Linda Sanchez, D-Calif., who said Obama told lawmakers "immigration reform is his number one legislative priority."

That could bump back the president's efforts to seek legislation enacting stricter gun laws, another issue he has vowed to make a top second term priority.

The Senate immigration group is also pressing for quick action, aiming to draft a bill by March and pass legislation in their chamber by August, said the aide, who requested anonymity in order to discuss private deliberations. The Republican-controlled House would also need to pass the legislation before it went to the White House for the president's signature.

Senate lawmakers working on the immigration effort include Democrats Charles Schumer of New York, Dick Durbin of Illinois and Robert Menendez of New Jersey; and Republicans John McCain of Arizona, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Marco Rubio of Florida, according to Senate aides.

Democrat Michael Bennet of Colorado, and Republicans Jeff Flake of Arizona and Mike Lee of Utah have also been involved. It's not clear whether all those involved will sign on to the principles the group hopes to roll out next week.

Those principles are expected to include a process toward legalizing the status of unauthorized immigrants already in the country; border security; verification measures for employers hiring workers and ways for more temporary workers to be admitted into the country.

It's unclear whether the group will back the pathway to full citizenship that the president is seeking. Schumer and Graham have previously supported requiring illegal immigrants to admit they broke the law, perform community service, pay fines and back taxes, pass background checks and learn English before going to the back of the line of immigrants already in the system in order to legalize their immigration status.

Several of the senators negotiating the immigration principles are veterans of the failed comprehensive immigration reform effort under then-President George W. Bush. That process collapsed in 2007 when it came up well-short of the needed votes in the Senate, a bitter outcome for Bush and the late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, the Democrats' leader on the legislation.

Some Republicans still lament that result as a missed opportunity for the party that could have set the GOP on a different path to reach more Latino voters.

Rubio is a relative newcomer to Senate negotiations on the issue, but he's seen as a rising star in his party and a potential 2016 presidential candidate. As a charismatic young Hispanic leader his proposals on immigration have attracted wide notice in recent weeks. And as a conservative favorite, unlike McCain or Graham, his stamp of approval could be critical to drawing in other conservative lawmakers.

A Republican aide said that Rubio has made clear in his interactions with the Senate group that he couldn't sign on to proposals that deviated from the principles he himself has been laying out in recent media interviews, including border security first, a guest-worker program, more visas for high-tech workers and enforcement in the workplace.

As for the illegal immigrants already in the country, Rubio would have them pay a fine and back taxes, show they have not committed crimes, prove they've been in the country for some time and speak some English and apply for permanent residency. Ultimately citizenship too could be in reach but only after a process that doesn't nudge aside immigrants already in line, and Rubio hasn't provided details on how long it all might take.

___

Associated Press writer Luis Alonso Lugo contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2013-01-26-Immigration/id-0634eb01168a434b8a4f70a535fd10c2

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Plane carrying 3 Canadians missing in Antarctica

WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) ? Bad weather has forced rescuers to wait until Friday to try to reach a small plane believed to have crashed in an Antarctic mountain range while carrying three Canadians between scientific research stations on the continent.

The plane was flying from a U.S. station near the South Pole to an Italian research base in Terra Nova Bay. Its emergency locator started transmitting about 10 p.m. Wednesday in the Queen Alexandra mountain range about 450 kilometers (280 miles) north of the pole, halfway to its intended destination. Authorities presume it crashed.

The locator continued to transmit Thursday and rescue crews spent some five hours circling above the site in a DC3 plane. However, heavy cloud and hurricane-force winds prevented rescuers from seeing the plane or attempting a helicopter landing.

The Calgary Sun newspaper identified the pilot as Bob Heath from the Northwest Territories, an experienced pilot in both the Antarctic and Arctic. The pilot's wife, Lucy Heath, told the newspaper that she'd been called by airline officials and told "Bob's plane was down, and they were trying to reach it." She said she was just waiting for more news: "I'm so worried."

On the online networking site LinkedIn, Heath writes that he typically spends this time of year coaching and mentoring other pilots to upgrade their skills in polar regions.

Authorities from New Zealand, Canada, the U.S. and Italy will try again Friday to find the propeller-driven de Havilland Twin Otter plane. It was carrying survival equipment including tents and food, according to New Zealand Search and Rescue Mission Coordinator John Ashby.

"Weather conditions are extremely challenging," Ashby said in a statement Thursday.

He said winds had reached 90 knots (104 miles per hour) and heavy snow was predicted. Several planes and helicopters were standing by in Antarctica, waiting until conditions improved so they could travel to the site.

Ashby said similarly bad weather is predicted through Friday morning but that rescue teams will be ready to leave at short notice if there is any break in the conditions. He said the DC3 has returned to base for the night.

The missing plane is owned and operated by Kenn Borek Air Ltd., a Canadian firm based in Calgary that charters aircraft to the U.S. Antarctic program. In a release, the National Science Foundation said the plane was flying in support of the Italian Antarctic program.

Antarctica has no permanent residents, but several thousand people live there in the Southern Hemisphere summer as a number of countries send scientists and other staff to research stations. The U.S. runs the largest program, with about 850 staff at its McMurdo Station and another 200 at its Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station, where the Canadians' flight originated.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/plane-carrying-3-canadians-missing-antarctica-051045938.html

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Friday, January 25, 2013

MoMA Art Lab, Yoga Studio and More

Burgeoning artist? Aspiring yogi? Doesn't matter what you want to be this month, we've got some apps for you in this addition of the best apps of the week. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/jj8sXELRJRY/moma-art-lab-yoga-studio-and-more

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Wall Street Legends In The Hamptons Publicly Stating: ?Buy Real ...

John Paulson, the legendary investor who was the man behind ?the greatest trade ever,? spoke yesterday in New York City at the?92nd Street Y and made it loud and clear that buying real estate is the thing to do.

Paulson stated that the housing market has shown a ?strong recovery? and that prices are up and the number of homes for sale are at a decade low. ?Those factors will likely put pressure on builders to create new product, creating some of the most positive change in housing since the Lehman crisis.?

Paulson owns a house in the Hamptons, but he could not have been clearer yesterday. His ?exact words were, ?This is probably the best time in our lifetime to consider buying a house.?

Meanwhile, Goldman Sach CEO Lloyd Blankfein isn?t using words to state his views on what will happen in the real estate market in the Hamptons, he?s using actions. The CEO?recently purchased a Bridgehampton home for a reported $32.5 million! And keep in mind, this is on top of a house that he already owns out here.

My viewpoint is that if you can afford it and it makes you happy, then definitely go out there and buy. But if you are one of those people that have to borrow a lifetime?s worth of earnings just to say that you own a house, there is no shame in renting. Luckily, here in the Hamptons, there are plenty of people who can more than afford to buy.

Source: http://danshamptons.com/2013/01/24/wall-street-legends-in-the-hamptons-publicly-stating-buy-real-estate/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=wall-street-legends-in-the-hamptons-publicly-stating-buy-real-estate

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Thursday, January 24, 2013

What Capitalism Can't Fix - Phil Buchanan - Harvard Business Review

Increasingly, I see people looking starry-eyed to business and markets to solve social problems. In so doing, they run the risk of dismissing the impact of nonprofits ? and diminishing the value of organizations that seek to make a difference without creating the potential conflicts that come with the profit motive. My view is that pretending companies and markets hold all the answers actually puts at risk our ability to deal with our most pressing societal problems ? and to help our most vulnerable citizens.

The rhetoric is everywhere ? from the trade press to the mainstream media to business school faculty to corporate titans to Silicon Valley entrepreneurs. Former GE CEO Jack Welch, writing in Business Week, characterized the nonprofit sector as a "foreign land" in which performance is not a priority and employees are guaranteed "lifetime employment." Alexis Ohanian, co-founder of Reddit, wrote last year on the Wired web site, "Let's be real: The nonprofit model is broken. The 20th-century way of "guilting" people into giving to an opaque, inefficient organization with massive overhead is no longer a viable model." In a recent blog post here on HBR.org, Dan Pallotta suggests that nonprofits should use the tools of capitalism such as high pay and providing returns to investors to increase charitable giving.

The rush to disparage nonprofits and the stampede to embrace the idea that for-profits ? or for-profit models ? can more easily combat our toughest social problems deny reality. Many crucial objectives simply cannot be accomplished while generating a financial return. Other objectives can but there is a price to be paid. In health care, for example, research indicates a decline in quality when non-profit hospitals switched to become profit making, as Eduardo Porter explained this month in the New York Times.

The laudable push for companies to commit more energy to dealing with social problems should not obscure the need for strong independent nonprofits that focus on mission not profit. And while nonprofits can learn from companies and companies can learn from nonprofits, it is a mistake to deny differences.

After all, there is a crucial distinction between an institution that reinvests surpluses in its mission and one that faces unrelenting pressure to distribute profit to shareholders. Consider higher education in the United States. Nonprofit universities frequently offer an education that costs more than actual tuition ? the difference made up through charitable gifts and endowment returns ? while for-profit institutions must cover their costs with tuition and create a profit margin. The results ? and the evidence from lawsuits, media reports, and congressional and GAO investigations of for-profit universities ? speak for themselves.

Despite this and many other cautionary tales, an increasing number of people both inside and outside the nonprofit world seem drunk on the Kool-Aid of business superiority. Too often people equate "business thinking" with effectiveness. Even those inside the world of nonprofits and philanthropy have internalized the idea that operating "like a business" means operating effectively (never asking which business: Countrywide Financial? BP? Enron?).

The stereotypes of nonprofits are just that: stereotypes. There are, of course, numerous examples of nonprofit influence and impact ? from work on environmental issues to citizens' rights to reductions in tobacco use to reductions in worldwide child mortality ? but also lesser known examples. Take the work of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, a nonprofit whose 18-month campaign to reduce hospital mortality rates has saved an estimated 122,300 lives by inspiring and guiding hospital executives, physicians, and nurses to adopt six basic patient-safety practices. As Peter Fader, a University of Pennsylvania professor and director of the Wharton Customer Analytics Initiative, has observed: Nonprofits often excel at using "their data to better understand their 'customer base.' In this area, big companies with lots of resources really can learn from their cash-strapped nonprofit cousins."

The point is this: No type of organization ? government, business, or nonprofit ? has a monopoly on effectiveness. And nonprofits are typically tackling the most complex problems of all. If those problems could have easily been solved by government or business, they wouldn't exist at all.

I'm a huge believer in free-market capitalism. I have an M.B.A. and have worked as a corporate consultant. But I think we're better off being sober about what markets can and cannot accomplish.

I'd suggest three practical questions to ask in sorting through how to achieve important social goals.

  • Does the pursuit of profit conflict with or facilitate the achievement of your goal? How likely are profit and social impact to be in tension? How will that tension be managed or resolved?
  • What kind of choices and information do people have? Markets work best when people have choices and when there is good information, so ask, do those conditions apply? Are you looking at an opportunity ? like creating products or technologies that will help poor people in some aspect of their lives ? that lends itself to a free-market solution? Or are you looking at something, like the management of a prison or nursing home system for a state, where a provider is likely to have a virtual monopoly ? meaning management is free to prioritize profit over the social mission without paying any kind of price?
  • Finally, are you addressing an issue that actually results from market failure, such as, environmental degradation? If you don't understand capitalism's role in contributing to a problem, you probably won't be able to rely on capitalism to chart a path to the solution.

Then decide what makes most sense, and don't assume that a pure nonprofit isn't the way to go.

Follow the Scaling Social Impact insight center on Twitter @ScalingSocial and register to stay informed and give us feedback.

Scaling Social Impact
Insights from HBR and the Bridgespan Group

Source: http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2013/01/what_capitalism_cant_fix.html

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Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Malaysian leader visits Gaza in boost to Hamas

GAZA (Reuters) - Malaysia's prime minister defied Israel's blockade of the Gaza Strip to visit the Palestinian enclave on Tuesday, part of a diplomatic push by Gaza's Islamist rulers that is irritating their secular rivals in the West Bank.

Premier Najib Razak, along with a group of Malaysian ministers, crossed into Gaza via its land border with Egypt for what he described as a humanitarian visit.

"We believe in the struggle of the Palestinian people. They have been suppressed and oppressed for so long," Najib told reporters as he was greeted by officials from Gaza's Hamas government.

He was the second world leader in recent months to defy the five-year blockade and accept an invitation from Hamas, which Western states regard as a terrorist group.

Qatar's emir, Sheik Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani, made a brief visit to Gaza in October and promised $400 million in aid for infrastructure. He too entered via Egypt, whose new Islamist leaders have historic ties with Hamas.

The high-level visits under the nose of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas and his Fatah movement in the West Bank underscore bitter divisions between the rival Palestinian movements despite efforts by Egypt to forge a reconciliation.

Najib's visit drew a stern rebuke from Abbas, who has not set foot in Gaza since his forces fought and lost a civil war against Hamas there in 2007.

"The Palestinian presidency rejects and denounces the visit ... and believes it undermines the representation of the Palestinian people," his office said in a statement. "It enhances division and does not serve Palestinian interests."

Najib visited a Gaza university and government offices, as well as the family of top Hamas military chief Ahmed Al-Jaabari, whose assassination by Israel in November started an eight-day war in which more than 160 Palestinians and six Israelis died.

Abbas and his Fatah allies have renounced armed struggle against Israel and favor a negotiated peace but have failed to draw high-level Arab and Muslim leaders to Muslim holy sites in occupied East Jerusalem.

Israel has barred top officials from Non-Aligned Movement states such as Malaysia from entering the occupied West Bank on the grounds that they do not recognize the Jewish state.

Tunisian President Moncef Marzouki, a veteran human rights activist and secularist head of state in a government dominated by Islamists, plans to visit Gaza next month.

Najib's visit came as Israel held a parliamentary election expected to deliver victory to hardline right-wing parties skeptical of Palestinian hopes for statehood and dead set against any compromise with Hamas.

"The trends of the Israeli election move from extremist government to a more extremist one and this encourages us as Palestinians and Muslims to build a unified strategy for confronting growing Israeli extremism," said Gaza's Hamas Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh.

(Writing by Noah Browning; Editing by Tom Pfeiffer)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/malaysian-leader-visits-gaza-boost-hamas-142555443.html

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Boeing's battery woes could short-circuit e-cars

3 hrs.

The ongoing investigation of faulty lithium-ion power packs on the new 787 Dreamliner could have implications far beyond the aerospace industry, some observers worrying that Boeing?s battery problems could short-circuit the nascent market for plug-ins, hybrids and other electrified automobiles.

Investigators in the U.S. and Japan have put a spotlight on the lithium backup power systems used on the new Boeing jet, linking the technology to several recent incidents, including a fire on one of the Dreamliners parked at a gate at Boston?s Logan field. Some observers are pointing to a series of fires involving the battery packs used in various electric vehicles, including the Chevrolet Volt and Fisker Karma.?

With the Boeing story getting a lot of airplay, ?This is definitely an issue,? said Joe Phillippi, of AutoTrends Consulting. ?This could be particularly bad timing,? the analyst cautioned, considering the push to increase sales of battery-based vehicles in the years ahead.?

The Detroit Bureau:?Truck Wars: Automakers' Tough Battle is Great News for Pickup Buyers

All 50 of the new jets Boeing had so far delivered have been grounded and investigators yesterday visited GS Yuasa, the Japanese manufacturer of the lithium batteries on the 787. While some aircraft have used the technology before, Boeing?s is the most advanced and extensive.? One of two batteries involved in recent Dreamliner incidents shows signs of having been overcharged though the other did not, according to investigators.

?We are in the midst of collecting information, so as to whether there is a problem or not has not yet been determined,? said Tatsuyuki Shimazu, the chief air worthiness engineer at Japan?s Civil Aviation Bureau?s Aviation Safety Department.?

The Detroit Bureau:?Mazda Betting on Alliances with Toyota, Alfa Romeo

Several investigations continue into fires involving lithium-ion batteries involved in automotive applications.? That includes a fire that destroyed a Fisker Karma plug-in hybrid parked in a Texas garage last year, and another involving Fiskers that were caught in flood waters during Superstorm Sandy last autumn. Several other battery based vehicles also caught fire in a storage lot at a port outside Newark, New Jersey, and it appears salt water short-circuited their electric systems.

The Chevrolet Volt plug-in hybrid also became a target of investigators in 2011 when the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration revealed a battery pack caught fire weeks after a Volt was crash tested. A second battery later started smoking after it was tested.

Eventually, investigators concluded the Volt problem was largely the result of NHTSA?s testing procedures. Nonetheless, General Motors subsequently made significant changes to further reduce the likelihood of problems following a crash.?

The Detroit Bureau:?Biff...Bam...Pow. The Original Batmobile Auctioned Off for $4.2 Million

Separately, Fisker announced changes to its battery pack design following a fire linked to a cooling fan system. And the California-based start-up was forced to order a recall of early versions of the Karma when a manufacturing defect was discovered by battery supplier A123.

Fisker has struggled with sales significantly lagging initial expectations.? Chevy, meanwhile, suffered a short-term decline in sales after the initial report of the fire at a NHTSA test center. ?Demand soon rebounded, however.? Sales of the plug-in more than tripled last year compared to 2011 levels ? but still came to barely half of GM?s initial 45,000 target for the U.S. market.

?No questions, these kinds of headlines (surrounding the Boeing batteries) are not going to help battery vehicle sales,? contends analyst Phillippi and others.

Even without such concerns, the auto industry has struggled to boost demand for the high-mileage technology.? Nissan, which also has struggled to meet expectations for its Leaf battery-electric vehicle, or BEV, last week announced it would introduce a new version that comes in $6,000 below the price tag of the 2012 model. With various state and federal incentives, the maker announced, some buyers could purchase the Leaf for less than $20,000.

(For more on Nissan?s plans for the Leaf, Click Here.?

As for the Volt, which is currently the best-selling ?advanced propulsion? vehicle on the U.S. market, company officials insist they?re pleased with the way sales are trending.? Countering skeptics, Mark Reuss, GM?s president of North American operations, told reporters ?The electric car is not dead.?

(Click Here for that story.)

He?s not the only one hoping that?s the case.? A variety of manufacturers have begun rolling out new electrified products, from conventional hybrids to full battery-electric offerings.? That includes the new Ford Fusion Energi, the Toyota RAV4-EV and a plug-in version of the Honda Accord.

Those two Japanese makers have previously preferred to use less advanced nickel-metal hydride batteries, officials expressing concerns about potential problems with lithium technology. The Boeing issue underscores such concerns, though battery technology proponents hope the issue will soon be resolved.?

Copyright ? 2009-2012, The Detroit Bureau

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/boeings-battery-woes-could-short-circuit-e-cars-1B8039399

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Thursday, January 17, 2013

The cuts pain goes on: 830 jobs to go at Manchester town hall and council tax to rise

Libraries, swimming pools and bonfire nights all face the axe in Manchester?s latest wave of brutal council cuts.

A total of 830 jobs will be lost and council tax hiked by 3.7 per cent if an ?80m new savings package, revealed today, is approved.

Miles Platting would lose both its swimming pool and library under the plans. Four other pools,? including Broadway near New Moston, and five other libraries ? including New Moston ? also face the axe.

The 3.7pc council tax rise ? an average of ?2.68 a month ? is planned from this April.

Public bonfire displays would no longer be free, and could be axed altogether, saving ?25,000 a year. Council bosses hope to find sponsors for the events instead.

Green bin collections would go fortnightly between September and March and some city-centre parking charges would rise ? although bosses insist others will fall.

Roughly half the savings and job losses ? around ?40m and 400 posts ? will come from merging two of the council?s biggest directorates, for children?s and adults? services.

Council chiefs say a large chunk of the job losses from those departments will be managerial ? and no social workers will go. The move follows the government?s latest budget cuts, which the council says have savaged Manchester unfairly for the second time.

It has already slashed ?170m since 2010, axing? 2,000 jobs.

Now bosses say a further 8.5pc funding cut over the next two years has left them with an ?inescapable? crisis ? meaning a fresh wave of services must go.

But they say the package will protect the city?s most vulnerable residents.

Council leader Sir Richard Leese said: ?Manchester has again been one of the places hit hardest by the government?s financial settlement.

?It is inescapable that the funding gap we have been left with, coming as it does on top of the severe budget reductions imposed on us in the previous two years, means the council has to make very real cuts and at the same time make fundamental changes to the way it operates.?

Coun Jeff Smith, executive member for finance, said: ?The last time we had to make savings on this scale, the severity of the settlement came as a shock.

?This time we were braced for it and have been planning for it and have been planning for some time the new ways of working which will help mitigate against the worst effects of the reduction in our funding and help us plan for the future.

?But those savings come on top of the significant cuts we have already had to make and there is no way to achieve this through efficiency and innovation alone.?

The draft plans would see Miles Platting, Broadway, Levenshulme and Withington pools shut this year, with Chorlton closing in 2015.

An already-announced? new centre will open in Beswick next year, along with new baths in Levenshulme and Hough End, Chorlton, in 2015.

Six libraries will shut, but council bosses plan to move five of them into existing community buildings such as SureStart centres ? Miles Platting, New Moston, Burnage, Fallowfield and Northenden.

They say a similar move two years ago has proved successful in other areas, including Clayton.

Levenshulme library would move into a new purpose-built leisure facility, also housing a new pool. The library and pool closures would save ?12m a year. Council bosses say merely cutting opening hours in a bid to save cash has not worked, as visitor numbers have fallen as a result.

Coun Smith added: ?I?d stress this is just a draft budget and, just as we did last time, we will listen carefully to people?s views before putting forward definitive proposals. But this scale of saving is not optional.?

Leader of the opposition, Lib Dem councillor Simon Wheale, said ?Labour bosses in Manchester shouldn?t need to close baths, libraries and other facilities if they bear down on wasteful expenditure and make savings on administrative costs more evenly across departments.

?The council should be looking to accept the funding from government to freeze the council tax, to avoid compulsory redundancies and to keep our facilities open even if we have to think more inventively about how to run facilities which will always need general council underwriting to cover their costs.?

A final proposal will go before councillors on Wednesday, March 6.

Source: http://feeds.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/~r/menews/news/~3/3PvMIqhvTc0/1598241_the-cuts-pain-goes-on-830-jobs-to-go-at-manchester-town-hall-and-council-tax-to-rise

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Moody's Gives Higher Education Outlook Downgrade, Now Seen As Negative

-- Moody's Investors Service on Wednesday downgraded its outlook for the higher education sector to negative across the board, saying even prestigious, top-tier research universities are now under threat from declining enrollment, government spending cuts and even growing public doubts over the value of a college degree.

Previously, its outlook had been stable for those better-positioned institutions, and negative for the rest.

The report explaining the decision outlines a range of financial challenges now burdening virtually all institutions, though in different measures in different places ? stagnant family income that limits pricing power, substantial state funding cuts, a demographic dip in the population of new high school graduates and a federal budget standoff that almost certainly bodes ill for the future flow of dollars for research and student-aid programs like Pell Grants.

And despite the obvious pressure, Moody's says too many college leaders still haven't made the bold choices required to survive and thrive.

"The actions that have been taken right now are fairly reactionary ? cutting expense in order to align with the revenue declines, but not looking at the structural changes to how universities do business," said Moody's vice president and senior analyst Karen Kedem in a telephone interview.

The report speaks to a painful reality in the field: While institutions continue to increase tuition much faster than overall inflation, angering parents and politicians, most are in fact struggling to collect much more tuition revenue.

While colleges raise their list prices and collect more from those who can afford to pay, most simply cannot fill seats without offering substantial discounts. The report cites federal data showing the average American family's net worth declined 39 percent in the three years ending in 2010, dropping to its lowest level since 1992. Increasingly, price is a factor for families.

A separate survey of about 300 colleges released last week by Moody's found about one-third were expecting tuition revenue this year either to decline or fail to keep pace with inflation. A few years ago, virtually all colleges were seeing tuition revenue rise.

Enrollment fell this fall in about half of colleges, and there have been sharp drop-offs in graduate business and law programs, which traditionally have been key revenue sources for many institutions.

Even at brand-name universities "all of their revenue streams, whether it's research or fundraising or patient care, all of them are pressured in this environment," Kedem said.

Much of higher education has always operated on the financial edge, and with endowments recovering, times now may well be better than at the height of the recent recession. (Moody's also gave the entire higher ed sector a negative outlook in 2009-2010, returning to a stable outlook for top-tier universities the next year.)

But lately there have also been growing challenges involving the public's perception of the value of college.

In particular, the report notes "alarm over a potential student loan bubble and diminishing affordability of higher education has reached a fevered pitch over the last two years." While acknowledging postsecondary education "remains a valuable long-term investment," the report argues burgeoning student loan debt and seemingly endless tuition increases are raising public doubts that may continue to affect colleges even if the economy recovers strongly.

"It's been such a massive outcry that has caught the public's attention, and it has just intensified the stress on colleges and their ability to grow net tuition revenue," said Moody's analyst and assistant vice president Eva Bogaty . "The public discourse and the scrutiny has attracted so much attention, that's not going to just fall away in the next year or two. "

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/16/moodys-higher-education-outlook_n_2492361.html

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Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Oops, he did it again: Man arrested in 2010 for stealing from churches arrested for stealing from North End church

ShinerA man charged with stealing donations from churches across Boston in 2010 was arrested this morning on charges he stole envelopes from donation boxes at St. Leonard's Church in the North End last month, Boston Police report.

Police say church video shows Richard Shiner:

Standing in front of a wooden candle box, sticking a white wooden stick through the money slot, removing cash bills, and placing them in his pocket. Upon seeing the witness, Shiner fled the scene on foot with a large canvas bag and shouting, "Please do not call the police."

Police do not have an estimate on just how much money was taken, but add he also took envelopes out of another collection box. Shiner will be arraigned on a charge of larceny over $250.

Innocent, etc.

Source: http://www.universalhub.com/2013/man-charged-stealing-donations-north-end-church

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VW unveils CrossBlue plug-in SUV with iPad mini headrests and 85MPGe efficiency (eyes-on)

VW displays CrossBlue plugin SUV concept with iPad mini headrests and 85MPGe efficiency

America is the land of the SUV and so it's no surprise that Volkswagen came here to launch its CrossBlue plug-in concept. The SUV features a front-mounted diesel engine paired with an electric motor in a traditional hybrid configuration, plus a second, more powerful electric motor in the rear to drive those wheels in the back. This configuration gives it all wheel drive and also allows the ECU to either send power to or retrieve power from (in the form of regeneration) either motor to recharge the on-board battery pack -- which can also be juiced up by plugging into the wall.

The system is said to deliver an estimated 85MPGe efficiency, which is pretty amazing for an SUV, and 14 miles of pure electric driving should you wish. As it's a concept, it's anybody's guess just how it'll actually perform when it goes into production, but we couldn't help but notice something very much available today in the back seats: iPad minis. Yes, one was embedded in each of the headrests, rear-facing for maximum efficiency in keeping the kids busy during a long cruise. Again, this is just a concept, so no guarantees we'll ever see this on the road, but a VW rep commented that they hope to see this in production in a year or two.

Continue reading VW unveils CrossBlue plug-in SUV with iPad mini headrests and 85MPGe efficiency (eyes-on)

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/01/14/vw-crossblue-ipad-mini/

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VR Business Brokers Franchise | Brokerage for Business Sales ...

Some economic news to report this morning with the Germany economy surprisingly contracting in the fourth quarter on the continuing woes of the region. The German economy is the strongest of in the region and most are predicting it will be the first to bounce back later in the year. Euro markets are off about a point on the news.

The news out of the US however is stronger as Retail Sales advanced in December greater than expected increasing 0.5% vs. 0.2% estimated. November was also revised higher. The good news however is not moving futures higher as they are trading down currently by about a half a point on continued concern over the debt ceiling and appropriations bills that are required to be passed in the next couple of months.

Gold is trading higher on the news by about 1% while oil is off about a quarter point.

In Canada, more news on the real estate market as existing home sales fell 0.5% in December. While the number is negative, December is usually a quiet month in the industry with the holiday season. More importantly, Average Home Prices in Canada, year over year were down 1.1% and for December down 1.6%. The trend continues.

In earnings news, Corus Entertainment beat estimates, but reported lower revenues for Q4.

EnCana Corp the big Natural Gas company has come out and stated that it is not for sale on the heals of the retirement of the CEO this week.

As I mentioned yesterday the Nortel criminal ruling was to be released and it was exonerating the three former executives charged with financial misrepresentation. The decision was met with very different views but for the most part surprise was the dominant reaction. We shall see how the money is distributed at the end of the week.

Lastly, it would seem that the communications sector is heating up again as Shaw and Rogers are swapping some properties in various markets which may suggest that possible deal could be in the works down the road. The BCE Astral deal which is still in committee discussion is causing the entire media group in Canada to look at consolidation.

Kenneth A. Dick, BA, CIM, CFP, FCSI
www.canaccord.com

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Source: http://vrbusinessfranchise.com/1125/germanys-economy-down-december-retail-sales-in-the-usa-up/

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Monday, January 14, 2013

Exclusive: Brazil wants Venezuela election if Chavez dies - sources

SAO PAULO/BRASILIA (Reuters) - Brazil is urging Venezuela's government to hold elections as quickly as possible if President Hugo Chavez dies, senior officials told Reuters on Monday, a major intervention by Latin America's regional powerhouse that could help ensure a smoother leadership transition in Caracas.

Brazilian officials have expressed their wishes directly to Venezuelan Vice President Nicolas Maduro, the officials said on condition of anonymity. Chavez has designated Maduro as his preferred successor if he loses his battle with cancer.

"We are explicitly saying that if Chavez dies, we would like to see elections as soon as possible," one official said. "We think that's the best way to ensure a peaceful democratic transition, which is Brazil's main desire."

Chavez is in Cuba receiving cancer treatment and he has not been seen in public for a month, prompting speculation that he is near death.

Venezuela's constitution says a new election must be held within 30 days if the president dies. Before leaving for Cuba, Chavez urged Venezuelans to back Maduro should the cancer leave him incapacitated, and Chavez's backers and the opposition appear to be preparing behind the scenes for a possible new vote.

Yet some foreign officials in the region, and some activists in more radical Venezuelan opposition circles, have privately expressed fears that the government could bend the rules if it wants, especially if polls show Maduro might lose.

The Supreme Court's controversial decision to postpone Chavez's inauguration last week reinforced concerns that loopholes could be used to keep the current government in power.

Venezuela's government said Sunday that Chavez's health has improved somewhat, though his lung infection still requires special care.

Brazil's stance on Venezuela is critical because it is by far Latin America's biggest country and it enjoys growing economic and diplomatic clout in the region.

Its president, Dilma Rousseff, is a moderate leftist whose party has strongly supported Chavez over the past decade. Yet she is also perceived as neutral and democratic enough to be a credible broker in helping Venezuela chart a path forward if a political crisis erupts.

The Brazilians have also communicated their desire for quick elections via "emissaries" to main opposition leader Henrique Capriles. By clearly supporting a democratic solution now, they hope to dissuade Capriles and others from inciting civil unrest in the event Chavez dies, the officials said.

"We're working very hard to ensure there's peace," the first official said.

Capriles, whom most assume would run against Maduro in an election, has so far taken a relatively subdued tone despite the political uncertainty. He said last week that Chavez's supporters would "win" politically if there was a violent confrontation.

BRASILIA WANTS TO TAKE THE LEAD

Brazil is keeping the United States apprised of its efforts, and is hoping to convince Washington to allow it to take the lead in managing a potential leadership transition in Venezuela. Chavez is one of the world's most vocal anti-U.S. leaders, and the Brazilian officials said they fear that any direct U.S. intervention in Venezuelan affairs could backfire.

Venezuela's opposition is demanding that Chavez step aside and name a caretaker president while he recovers - but those complaints have so far been ignored by governments around the region, including the Rousseff administration.

Brazil's push for quick elections in a post-Chavez Venezuela marks another important step in its emergence as a diplomatic heavyweight and champion of democracy in Latin America. Rousseff led a strong regional backlash last year when Paraguay's Congress impeached and removed then-President Fernando Lugo.

Under Rousseff's predecessor and mentor, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Brazil also took a proactive role in trying to resolve a political crisis in Honduras following the ouster of former President Manuel Zelaya in 2009.

Previously, Brazil had been more shy about taking the lead in regional crises, preferring to emphasize the right of countries to determine their own fates - long the bedrock principle of Brazilian diplomacy.

Lula, who remains an influential power broker in the region, will travel later this month to Cuba, where some speculate he could meet with Chavez, his longtime friend.

(Editing by Todd Benson and David Brunnstrom)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/exclusive-brazil-wants-venezuela-election-chavez-dies-sources-195128201.html

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2013 NFL Conference Championship Games Now Set: Broncos Fall, Seahawks Come Close

By Danny Cox

With one more weekend down in the 2012 NFL season, there are now only four teams remaining. The San Francisco 49ers, Atlanta Falcons, New England Patriots, and Baltimore Ravens are all that have survived into the AFC and NFC Conference Championship weekend, and it?s going to be a good one.

Starting off the action in the divisional round of the playoffs was an upset of unexpected proportions. Peyton Manning had led his Denver Broncos to a fantastic 13-3 regular season and a first-round bye in the playoffs, but it wasn?t enough to make Ray Lewis hang up the cleats just yet.

DENVER, CO - JANUARY 12: Ray Lewis #52 of the Baltimore Ravens looks on prior to playing against the Denver Broncos during the AFC Divisional Playoff Game at Sports Authority Field at Mile High on January 12, 2013 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Jeff Gross/Getty Images)

(Credit, Jeff Gross/Getty Images)

In what is always ?one last game? for Lewis, the Baltimore Ravens defeated the Broncos 38-35 in double overtime. With less than a minute left to go, Joe Flacco through a 70-yard touchdown pass to tie the game at 38 and send it into overtime.

Both teams were able to stalemate the other in the first extra session, but it took less than two minutes for the Ravens to kick a field goal in the second overtime and win it to stay alive. They will now head out to New England for an AFC Conference Championship game with the Patriots.

New England was able to take down the mighty Houston Texans 41-28 in a game that never quite seemed as close as the final score shows. Even though Tom Brady and the Pats won by 13, the Texans could never quite stay in it.

Whether it was needing a stop on that third down or recovering an onside kick; it was New England getting the big play instead of Houston. With that, the Patriots were able to overcome some injuries and make it within one game of the Super Bowl in New Orleans.

Over in the NFC, upsets weren?t in the cards, but record-breaking was. San Francisco defeated the Green Bay Packers 45-31 due to the play of quarterback Colin Kaepernick. While he did perform admirably with 263 yards passing and two touchdowns, it was actually his rushing game that took over the contest.

Kaepernick set an NFL record for a quarterback as he rushed for 181 yards on 16 carries and two touchdowns in a dominating performance at CandlestickPark. Michael Crabtree helped his totals through the air with 119 yards on nine receptions, but an all-around fantastic game from the young quarterback helped the Niners advance to their second straight NFC Conference Championship game.

San Francisco has looked great this season, but they?re going to have to travel to Atlanta and defeat the Falcons in order to advance to the Super Bowl.

The second NFC divisional game saw the Falcons build a 20-0 halftime lead, but then have to fend off the Seattle Seahawks? monster rally. Russell Wilson and the Seahawks dominated the second half and even went ahead 28-27 to make it a second straight playoff game in which they had come back from 14 or more points.

A field goal in the final minute helped Atlanta prevail and win 30-28, but they did not look as dominating as they had at points throughout the season. Well, they did for the first 30 minutes, but not for the second 30. If they?re looking to advance to New Orleans, it is going to take a full game from the Falcons to take down the mighty 49ers.

  • Sunday, Jan. 20, 2013 at 3:00 p.m. ? San Francisco 49ers at Atlanta Falcons on FOX
  • Sunday, Jan. 20, 2013 at 0:00 p.m. ? Baltimore Ravens at New England Patriots on CBS

For more Local Football Bloggers and the latest NFL news, see?CBS Sports Las Vegas.

Danny Cox knows a little something about the NFL, whether it means letting you know what penalty will come from the flag just thrown on the field or quickly spouting off who the Chicago Bears drafted in the first round of the 1987 draft (Jim Harbaugh). He plans on bringing you the best news, previews, recaps, and anything else that may come along with the exciting world of the National Football League. His work can be found on Examiner.com.

Source: http://houston.cbslocal.com/2013/01/14/2013-nfl-conference-championship-games-now-set-broncos-fall-seahawks-come-close/

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Sunday, January 13, 2013

Teacher Sues School District After Officials Demand She Remove ...

A Christian high school teacher in Cheektowaga, N.Y., is suing her employer after district officials told her to take personal signs and religious items out of her classroom. Joelle Silver, a science educator who has been working in the?Cheektowaga Central School District for seven years, decided to take legal action after receiving a letter (read it here) asking her to?comply?with officials??request.

So, what are the contentious messages and items in the classroom that were seen by officials as being problematic, you ask? WIVB-TV explains:

Silver had four small posters in her room with psalm verses on them, a poster with a religious quotation from Ronald Reagan, a drawing that the district said is reference to the crucifixion, a poster that had a Bible verse superimposed on the American flag and school books, among other items. The letter Silver received instructed her to take the items down and warned that failing to do so could lead to serious disciplinary consequences.

Superintendent Kane, who says he respects Silver?s teaching abilities, says the materials were found to be inappropriate and the district determined they needed to be removed.

Silver is being represented by the?American Freedom Law Center, a group that handles religious liberty cases. The lawsuit, which has already been filed against the district, also names Board of Education President Brian J. Gould and Superintendent Dennis Kane.

Officials apparently became aware of the religious messages after a student complained to the Freedom From Religion Foundation, an atheist activist group devoted to church-state separatism. The group subsequently threatened to sue if proper action was not taken to address the matter.

?I believe that my First Amendment rights were violated last June when I was asked to do some things regarding taking some posters down and to censor my speech in the classroom,? Silver said of the actions that led her to file lawsuit. ?As a Christian and as an American I feel it?s incredibly important to fight to protect the rights that people have died to give them.?

Joelle Silver Sues Cheektowaga Central School District Over Religious Messaging

Photo Credit: WIVB-TV

The teacher also claims that she was told that participating in the school?s Bible study club was forbidden, as it would look as though the district endorsed her actions. She also had a prayer box that WIVB-TV reports was ordered removed from her classroom as well, as it was being used during the school day.

Read more about the case here.

(H/T: WIVB-TV)

Source: http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/01/13/teacher-sues-school-district-after-officials-demand-she-remove-bible-verses-religious-items-from-her-classroom/

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asbestos causes cancer: Mortality due to asbestos-related causes ...

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HBT: The most Scott Boras quote of all time

Agent Scott Boras, talking to Jerry Crasnick of ESPN.com about representing the three free agents with draft pick compensation attached who remained unsigned in Kyle Lohse, Rafael Soriano, and Michael Bourn:

People call me all the time and say, ?Man, your players aren?t signed yet.? Well, it doesn?t really matter what time dinner is when you?re the steak.

That?s a pretty great quote?I imagine a Gordon Gekko-like character saying it from behind a huge desk in a movie?but the notion that Kyle Lohse is ?the steak? at this point is obviously laughable.

I won?t be surprised if Bourn finds a big multi-year deal, but Soriano finding a decent landing spot is looking very iffy and Lohse himself has talked publicly about his disappointment in how things have gone this offseason, with reports last week suggesting that he?s yet to even receive a single offer.

Source: http://hardballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/01/11/behold-the-most-scott-boras-quote-of-all-time/related/

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Analysis: Israel left wing sees Jewish state's end

An Israeli ultra-orthodox Jewish man walks past an election campaign billboard of Israeli Prime Minister and Likud Party leader Benjamin Netanyahu, in Bnei Brak, near Tel Aviv, Israel, Sunday, Jan. 6, 2013. A strikingly apocalyptic tone has emerged in Israel's hitherto muted election season, with opposition leaders and others desperately warning that a few more years of rule by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's heavily favored right wing might actually destroy the Jewish state. The idea is that by holding onto the lands Palestinians want for their state -- avoiding negotiations and continuing to sill them with Jewish settlers -- the Israeli right is marching blindly toward a future in which Arabs could outnumber Jews in the country and ultimately take over. (AP Photo/Oded Balilty)

An Israeli ultra-orthodox Jewish man walks past an election campaign billboard of Israeli Prime Minister and Likud Party leader Benjamin Netanyahu, in Bnei Brak, near Tel Aviv, Israel, Sunday, Jan. 6, 2013. A strikingly apocalyptic tone has emerged in Israel's hitherto muted election season, with opposition leaders and others desperately warning that a few more years of rule by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's heavily favored right wing might actually destroy the Jewish state. The idea is that by holding onto the lands Palestinians want for their state -- avoiding negotiations and continuing to sill them with Jewish settlers -- the Israeli right is marching blindly toward a future in which Arabs could outnumber Jews in the country and ultimately take over. (AP Photo/Oded Balilty)

FILE In this Jan. 8, 2013 file photo, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu visits the electronic accelerator lab in the Ariel University Center which had recently been formally upgraded to university status, becoming the first university in the West Bank Jewish settlements. A strikingly apocalyptic tone has emerged in Israel's hitherto muted election season, with opposition leaders and others desperately warning that a few more years of rule by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's heavily favored right wing might actually destroy the Jewish state. (AP Photo/Dan Balilty, Pool, File)

(AP) ? An apocalyptic tone has crept into Israel's hitherto muted election season, with opposition leaders and others sounding increasingly desperate warnings that a few more years of rule by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's heavily favored right wing might well destroy the Jewish state.

The idea is that by holding onto the lands Palestinians want for their state ? and continuing to settle them with Jews ? the Israeli right is marching blindly toward a future in which Arabs could outnumber Jews in the country and ultimately take over.

Perhaps the most strident proponent of this message is former Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, who four years ago led peace talks with the Palestinians and recently founded a new party whose primary message is that the Zionist project is in danger. "Netanyahu is leading us toward the end of the Jewish state," she said in a statement Friday. "Israelis must choose between extremism and Zionism. Israel is in great danger and everyone must wake up now."

Outgoing opposition leader Shaul Mofaz, a former military chief and defense minister, warns at campaign appearances that Arabs will soon outnumber Jews in the Holy Land and the main strategic priority must be to partition the land to prevent the emergence of a "binational state." Leaders of the main center-left Labor Party say much the same.

Netanyahu's majority depends on his Likud party in coalition with other nationalist and religious groups known as the "right." Despite all its bewildering complications, the political spectrum ultimately resembles something of a two-party system.

The prime minister and his supporters have argued that Israel must not act in haste and many on the right stridently oppose any territorial concessions on the lands Israel captured in 1967 ? the West Bank, east Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip, where the Palestinians want to set up their state.

The author Amos Oz, who has long been viewed as an oracle of sorts in Israel, called the governing coalition "the most anti-Zionist in the history of Israel" for ignoring the demographic issue.

"If there will not be two states here, neither will it (even) be a binational state ? it will be an Arab state," he was quoted by Haaretz as saying on Friday. "They believe Jews can rule an Arab majority (but) no apartheid nation in the world survived without collapsing in a few years."

Netanyahu himself has at times conceded the logic of the argument: Israel proper has 6 million Jews living alongside almost 2 million Arab citizens; with the Palestinians of the West Bank and Gaza thrown into the mix, the populations divide about evenly and the Arab birthrate is higher. Hence, if Israel insists on ruling the entire Holy Land, Jews will be in the minority.

Even as the tipping point approaches, Israel continues to add to the Jewish settler population in the West Bank, which together with the Israelis who live in adjacent east Jerusalem now number a half million. Israelis on the left fret that too many settlers will make a partition impossible in a few years. Under this narrative, partition is not an Israeli "concession," which must await Palestinian promises of peace ? but rather a life-saving surgery for the Zionist enterprise.

The demographic message resonates with many Jewish Israelis who ? like the founding fathers of Zionism a century ago ? view themselves as an ethnic group and consider Israel its nation-state. And it seems widely supported among the country's secular elites ? in academia, the business world, major media organizations and even in the senior echelons of the security establishment.

Israel's security chiefs must generally clam up while in office, but outbursts by the recently retired have been striking: Yuval Diskin, who headed the Shin Bet security police, excoriated Netanyahu for missing a chance to pursue peace with the moderate Palestinian leadership of Mahmoud Abbas; Meir Dagan, who headed the Mossad spy agency, has portrayed the premier as a dangerous adventurer who might drag Israel into war with Iran; and former military chief Gabi Ashkenazi was so widely touted as a leader-in-waiting for the left that a law was passed freezing security officials out of politics for just long enough to keep him out of the current election season.

In an interview with the Yediot Ahronot newspaper, Diskin warned that the current lull in Palestinian violence was in danger because it depends on the Palestinian Authority's security cooperation with Israel ? and Palestinian leaders "will not be able to be seen over time as the protectors of the Israeli interests while Israel, from their perspective, every day steals more lands, builds more (Jewish) settlements, and pushes away their dream of a state, chopping up the territory into parts that it will be very difficult to connect."

"I don't know whether it is possible to achieve peace, but with these moves we are certainly diminishing even the small chance that is left," Diskin said.

Yaron Ezrahi, a political science professor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, said it was "not surprising that in Israel the officers are more moderate ... as men of war who lost (friends) they become pragmatists because they all sense very clearly the limitations of power." But he warned that the broad support of a country's elites for a given political argument would not necessarily translate into a persuasion of the masses.

Indeed, most polls show the right-wing bloc led by Likud as likely to win perhaps 65 of the 120 seats, enough to keep Netanyahu in power ? even though studies suggest most Israelis would support a formal two-state solution if one were offered.

There are several reasons that account for this contradiction and compel so many Israelis to put the demographic issue aside.

First, Israel pulled out of the tiny but crowded Gaza Strip in 2005, removing all settlers and soldiers and cutting off its almost 2 million people from Israel with a fence. Thus many Israelis feel they won some "demographic time" and dumped the troublesome territory ? yet the Palestinians see Gaza as linked to the West Bank and they consider it still occupied because Israel controls air and sea access to it.

Second, the vast majority of West Bank Palestinians live in autonomous zones set up in negotiations during the 1990s. There the Palestinian Authority enjoys a measure of self-rule, with its own services to citizens, its own police and various trappings of quasi-statehood ? enabling Israelis to view this population as not exactly under occupation and already somewhat separated from Israel. They note that Israel has not formally annexed the West Bank, the implication being that even though the territory has Jewish settlers who can vote in Israeli elections ? it is not Israel.

But the reality is messy: dozens of islands of autonomy surrounded on all sides by the 60 percent of the West Bank still fully controlled by Israel, with Jewish settlements dotting the territory and Israel controlling Palestinians' movements between the zones and into and out of the West Bank. With the settlements in place, a reasonable-looking map is already difficult to envision.

Perhaps most damaging for the left, Israelis appear to have lost faith that the lands can be traded for peace, because even when their leaders proposed what they considered far-reaching offers no deal was reached. That happened under Prime Minister Ehud Barak in 2001, and again when the government of Ehud Olmert proposed a state on almost all the Palestinian territories in 2008.

One poll conducted several weeks ago showed 60 percent of Israeli Jews support a two-state peace agreement with the Palestinians ? but 67 percent believe that "no matter which parties prevail, the peace process with the Palestinians will remain at a standstill for reasons not connected to Israel." The poll of 601 people had a 4.5 percent margin of error.

Some ? like columnist Elia Leibowitz ? argue for a unilateral pullout from at least part of the territory, if a deal is unattainable. "The fateful question now facing Israel is Hamlet's: To be or not to be," Leibowitz wrote in Haaretz. "The option of Israel 'being' exists only if it withdraws from all the occupied territories."

But the unilateral model has been discredited in the eyes of many by the example of Gaza where the Israeli handover was followed by a takeover by the Islamic militant group Hamas and years of cross-border rocket barrages.

"As opposed to the voices that I have heard recently urging me to run forward, make concessions (and) withdraw, I think that the diplomatic process must be managed responsibly and sagaciously and not in undue haste," Netanyahu said last week. He notes that he has offered peace talks but the Palestinians insist on a settlement freeze, which is politically difficult for a right-wing government.

The sense that they have run out of options ? and yet that something has to give ? has some on the left predicting the world will step in.

"Maybe we need to hit rock bottom, to be on the verge of international sanctions or a (foreign) military intervention before change can happen," said Liora Norwich, a 30-year-old in a Tel Aviv cafe, concluding that in this sense a Netanyahu victory could be for the best.

And critically, the demographic argument alienates the Israeli Arabs who are crucial to any hopes of assembling a majority in the electorate against the right.

Among that group as well, the idea that a separation is no longer possible is increasingly heard.

"Every day that passes, with the expansion of settlements ... closes the window of opportunity and sends people thinking about another option: the one-state solution," prominent Arab legislator Ahmed Tibi said.

Contemplating such as Arab-majority state, Tibi added: "That's probably the only option in which I will be prime minister."

___

Dan Perry has reported on the Middle East for two decades and currently leads AP's coverage in the region. Follow him on www.twitter.com/perry_dan . Associated Press writer Ariel David in Tel Aviv contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2013-01-11-Crisis%20of%20Zionism?/id-76159190096d4aad8ab18b1134e141c5

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