Friday, January 6, 2012

Ind. House Democrats stall session over labor bill (AP)

INDIANAPOLIS ? Democrats determined to keep Indiana from becoming the first state in more than a decade to enact right-to-work legislation stymied the beginning of the House session Wednesday and said they planned to stall work indefinitely.

Lawmakers from the state House had blocked the bill last year through a five-week boycott during which they left the state, denying Republicans the two-thirds attendance needed to conduct business.

House Democratic Leader Patrick Bauer said Wednesday that Republicans were "railroading" the revived measure through the chamber and more public hearings should be held.

"What's the urgency?" said Bauer, who led last year's walkout. "They are ignoring the public input. They have not made the case that Indiana is need of an anti-paycheck bill."

Most Indiana House Democrats were no-shows on the floor Wednesday when House Speaker Brian Bosma tried three times to gavel the House into order. He plans to try again Thursday, and said a Democratic boycott won't lead Republicans to back off on the bill.

"We will do our very best to encourage them to do what is right, which is to show up at work and do what they were elected to do," Bosma said. "Democracy is about participating, not going on strike."

He said a joint hearing of the House and Senate labor committees on the bill will take place as scheduled Friday, although the House committee might not be able to take a vote on the proposal.

Bosma and other Republicans contend that the measure ? which would bar private employee unions from seeking contracts that mandate all workers pay union fees regardless of whether they are members ? got a thorough vetting during a series of hearings last summer.

If Indiana passes the measure, it would be the first state to enact such a law since Oklahoma in 2001, and the 23rd overall. Supporters say it would help attract new business to the state. Opponents call it an attempt to weaken organized labor.

Getting the law passed would be a major victory for national conservatives and business groups, after more than a dozen states considered such legislation last year but none adopted it. It would be another blow to unions, which have fought initiatives to curb labor rights that followed nationwide Republican legislative wins in 2010.

Bauer said his members would not leave Indianapolis this year but would "filibuster" until Bosma agrees to more public hearings. He did not specify how many, but said he wants to meet with Bosma to discuss what it will take for Democrats to return to their seats. Bosma said earlier in the day he had requested meetings with Bauer three times and had not heard back.

When asked how long the Democrats will stay out, Bauer said, "that time schedule is not in our hands."

Rep. Craig Fry, D-Mishawaka, had called a walkout "the only way" to block the bill.

After Democrats walked out last year, the Republican-led legislature adopted new fines of $1,000-a-day on each lawmaker boycotts their chamber for more than three days in a row. Concern about the 2012 elections and public response to another walkout may have made some lawmakers wary of another.

Some Democrats broke ranks throughout the day and joined Republicans in the House. Up to six Democrats could return to their seats and there would still not be enough lawmakers to conduct business.

Instead the vast majority of Democrats holed up inside a conference room just steps from the House chamber and spent more than three hours debating tactics on the first day of the 2012 session.

Union protesters packed the halls outside the room and cheered as Democrats entered the room.

Bosma has said Democrats were bowing to pressure from union leaders, and complained that Indiana AFL-CIO President Nancy Guyott spoke to Democrats at their closed-door meeting Wednesday.

However, Bosma and other Republicans pushing the measure have maintained similarly cozy relationships with the state's business lobbyists, keying them in on their plans well ahead of time.

The Indiana AFL-CIO has been airing TV and radio ads targeting Republicans who may be vulnerable in the 2012 elections if they vote in favor of the measure. Bosma and Gov. Mitch Daniels have been airing their own ads throughout the state in support of it, and the National Right to Work Committee has sent staffers to the state to build grass-roots support for the measure.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/topstories/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120104/ap_on_go_ot/us_indiana_right_to_work

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Thursday, January 5, 2012

Dr. Oz Takes A Look At Stomach Cancer

Source: http://www.wxii12.com/video/30141275/index.html

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Suspect in ranger's killing was at troubled base

The body of Iraq war veteran Benjamin Colton Barnes, 24, was found at Mount Rainier National Park, Wash. NBC's Kristen Dahlgren reports.

By M. Alex Johnson, msnbc.com

The Iraq war veteran believed to have killed a park ranger Sunday was last stationed at a Washington base considered among the military's most troubled facilities, where suicides and violence among service members have reached record levels.

Authorities said they believed Benjamin Colton Barnes, 24 ? who was?found dead Monday, apparently of hypothermia, in Mount Rainier National Park ? shot and killed Park Ranger Margaret Anderson, 34, on Sunday.?He is also believed to have?shot and wounded four people, two of them critically, earlier in the day at a New Year's party in Skyway, near Seattle, authorities said.

Barnes, a private first class, was discharged from the Army?for misconduct in 2009 after he was charged with drunken driving and improperly transporting a privately owned weapon at?Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash. Lewis-McChord has drawn national attention for widespread problems with post-traumatic stress disorder among service members returning from Afghanistan and from Iraq, where Barnes served in 2007 and 2008.

In July, the mother of Barnes' young daughter said in court papers seeking a protection order that he "has possible PTSD (post-traumatic stress disorder) issues,"?NBC station KING of Seattle reported. In seeking sole custody of the girl, she said Barnes was suicidal and "gets easily irritated, angry, depressed and frustrated."?

The woman said Barnes had numerous weapons in his home, including firearms and knives, adding: "I am fearful of what Benjamin is capable of with the small arsenal he has in his home and his recent threat of suicide."

A year ago, the military newspaper Star and Stripes rated Lewis-McChord as the most troubled base in the entire U.S. military, with multiple criminal and military investigations under way into troops' behavior and the quality of the medical and mental health care for service members returning from the war.


The Army directed base officials last year to focus specifically on the mental health of members of the 5th Stryker Brigade, which saw heavy action in Afghanistan in 2009 and 2010. Barnes served with a Lewis-McChord Stryker brigade, although officials said they didn't immediately know whether it was the 5th.

And that was before the base set a record for presumed suicides in 2011, with 12, according to military statistics scheduled to be released this month but obtained by The Tacoma News-Tribune.

The problem isn't confined to Lewis-McChord. In a paper for the Army War College last year (.pdf), Army Col. Ricardo M. Love reported that "veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan are diagnosed with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) at an alarming rate."

A 2008 RAND Corp. study indicated that 18 percent of all service members returning from Iraq and Afghanistan since 2001 had "PTSD or major depression." Only about half seek treatment, it said.

"Although Commanders are conducting tough and realistic training prior to deployment, the high number of returnees diagnosed with PTSD indicates we are not doing enough," Love concluded.

But the problem is especially severe at Lewis-McChord, which the Los Angeles Times profiled as "a base on the brink" just last week.

"I can tell you that in the last two years, we have had 24 instances in which we contacted soldiers who were armed with weapons," Bret Farrar, police chief in nearby Lakewood, told the newspaper. "We've had intimidation, stalking with a weapon, aggravated assault, domestic violence, drive-bys."

The issues have come to widespread public attention after Lewis-McChord's heaviest year of deployments in Iraq and Afghanistan, where 18,000 soldiers from the base served in 2009-10.

The base, near Tacoma about 50 miles south of Seattle, has seen numerous violent incidents, leading to several charges and convictions of soldiers for serious crimes. According to The Seattle Times, they include:

  • Pfc. Dakota Wolf, 19, who is charged in the stabbing death Nov. 30 of a 19-year-old woman in a Seattle suburb while AWOL.
  • Sgt. David Stewart, 38, who killed himself and his wife after leading authorities on a high-speed chase in April. Their 5-year-old son was found dead at home.
  • Spc. Ivette Gonzalez Davis, 24, who was sentenced to life in prison in August 2010 for shooting two soldiers and kidnapping their baby.
  • Sgt. Sheldon Plummer, who was sentenced to 14 years in prison for strangling his wife in February 2010.

Follow M. Alex Johnson on Twitter and Facebook

More content from msnbc.com and NBC News:

Source: http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/01/03/9923187-ex-soldier-in-mount-rainier-killing-stationed-at-deeply-troubled-base

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Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Recreate your favorite Apple events with this Steve Jobs action figure (Digital Trends)

Steve Jobs Action Figure In IconsLeaving aside the questionable timing of such a product, and the lack of the word ?official? anywhere on the site; the appearance of In Icons? Steve Jobs action figure is sure to garner plenty of interest, not least because it?s startlingly realistic.

The figure will stand 12-inches tall and it comes with a wide variety of accessories, including his trademark blue jeans and black turtleneck top, a pair of socks, a tiny pair of New Balance shoes and two pairs of glasses.

With the figure all dressed up, he needs somewhere to go, so a stool and a backdrop with ?One More Thing?? written on it provides the perfect chance to recreate your favorite Apple events from years gone by.

That?s not all either, as the set will also include two apples, one with a bite out of it (they do understand he never sold actual apples, right?), and not one or even two, but three pairs of hands. Sadly though, the pictured miniature Mac, iPhone and iPad won?t come with the figure.

It?s yours for $99 and will be available from February, provided that in the meantime, the operation isn?t shut down by Steve Jobs? estate, who?ve previously taken a dim view of similar action figures.

Do you consider In Icons? figure to be a touching tribute, or tasteless cash-in?

Steve Jobs Action Figure In Icons2

This article was originally posted on Digital Trends

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/applecomputer/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/digitaltrends/20120103/tc_digitaltrends/recreateyourfavoriteappleeventswiththisstevejobsactionfigure

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NKorea holds rally, shows young Kim meeting troops (AP)

PYONGYANG, North Korea ? Pumping their fists and chanting, tens of thousands of North Koreans packed the snowy main square of the capital Tuesday to pledge their loyalty to new leader Kim Jong Un as the campaign to consolidate his power deepened.

State television also aired footage of Kim's recent visit to an elite tank unit with family and historical ties that showed him interacting with soldiers with ease and carrying out inspections much like father Kim Jong Il and grandfather Kim Il Sung did before him ? footage that aimed to show off his youth and health and put his confidence and authority on display.

The rally and the footage were the latest steps in a carefully choreographed campaign to build support for North Korea's new leader that began the day news broke of Kim Jong Il's death last month. In swift succession, top officials from the powerful military and ruling Workers' Party have pledged their loyalty to the son, leaving no room for doubt about whether the young man would take power.

Kim Jong Il died Dec. 17 of a heart attack, leaving the nation of 24 million in the hands of his youngest son, who was a mystery even to the North Korean people until his emergence in September 2010 as his father's favored successor.

Since Kim Jong Un, who is in his late 20s, was made a four-star general and a vice chairman of the Central Military Commission of the Workers' Party, the campaign to groom him has been fast. Within a year, Kim Jong Un had become a fixture at his father's side for inspection visits to military units and factories and at official events.

However, Kim Jong Il's sudden death catapulted the son to the limelight at a delicate time for North Korea. It was discussing with Washington much-needed food aid in exchange for nuclear disarmament. North Korea has tested two atomic devices since 2006.

Kim Jong Un did not have the benefit of 20 years of grooming like Kim Jong Il did when his father, North Korea founder Kim Il Sung, died in 1994 of a heart attack.

Instead, North Korea has sought to highlight Kim Jong Un's heritage as heir to North Korea's founding fathers, underlining his physical resemblance to the late President Kim Il Sung and characterizing him as an "identical" extension of his father.

In the documentary of his military visit Sunday, he was dressed in a long, dark overcoat similar to the coat his grandfather used to wear. He is shown in an exhibition room lined with black-and-white photos, including an image portraying a young Kim Il Sung.

The footage also served to show the confidence of Kim, who mingled easily with soldiers and appeared to be giving them pointers in the documentary shown just days after the ruling party officially proclaimed him supreme commander of the 1.2-million-strong Korean People's Army.

Soldiers cheered and chanted his name as Kim made an inaugural solo trip to provide "on-the-spot guidance" in the first official documentary of the new leader shown on North Korean TV. At one point, Kim leaned in to pull one man close to him to share a few words, leaving the officer in tears.

"Kim Jong Un's telling the world that even though he's young, he's in charge and capable of wielding a saber like this father did," said Kim Jin-moo, a North Korea expert at the Korea Institute for Defense Analyses in South Korea.

Unlike his father, Kim Jong Un is not observing a three-year mourning period after his father's death. He has been active, using his youth as an advantage, and distinctly public in stark contrast to his father, whose appearances were carefully calculated in the final years of his life.

Even the choice of the tank unit was a nod to history: The Seoul Ryu Kyong Su 105 Guards Tank Division was one of the first North Korean units to enter Seoul in the early days of the 1950-53 Korean War, according to military experts. It was one of Kim Jong Il's favorite bases to visit.

In Pyongyang, meanwhile, Premier Choe Yong Rim and other old guard figures who are Kim's inner circle led a rally in support of the leader and the country's goals for the new year.

"We once again keep deep in our minds that the victory of building a powerful and prosperous nation is certain, as long as there is the ... wise leadership of respected Comrade Kim Jong Un," senior Workers' Party official Mun Gyong Dok told the crowd at Kim Il Sung Square, according to Associated Press Television News.

Beating drums and carrying huge North Korean flags, they paraded across the square in central Pyongyang as snow fell, pumping their right fists as they chanted. Some held huge placards calling for loyalty to Kim and supporting efforts to improve the economy.

About 100,000 North Koreans attended the rally, officials said.

___

Associated Press writers Jean H. Lee, Sam Kim and Foster Klug contributed to this report from Seoul, South Korea. Follow them on Twitter: (at)newsjean, (at)samkim_ap and (at)APKlug.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/asia/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120103/ap_on_re_as/as_nkorea_rally

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Sarah Palin Stalking Suspects Shawn Christy, Craig Christy Set To Plead Guilty

ANCHORAGE, Alaska -- Two Pennsylvania men accused of harassing Sarah Palin's lawyers in Alaska by phone plan to forgo trial and again plead guilty, this time without the benefit of a plea agreement.

A federal court judge in December rejected plea deals for 20-year-old Shawn Christy and his father, Craig Christy, and ordered them to stand trial.

Craig Christy is set for a plea change hearing Friday. His wife, Karen Christy, says her son indicated he intends to also plead guilty without a deal with prosecutors.

The Christys were arrested in Pennsylvania in August. Prosecutors say the men were upset about state restraining orders issued on behalf of former Alaska Gov. Palin, the 2008 Republican vice presidential candidate.

The restraining orders were issued after Palin left office.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/01/03/sarah-palin-shawn-christy-craig-christy_n_1181764.html

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Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Incandescent bulbs dimming despite GOP efforts on Hill

New light-bulb efficiency standards kicked in Sunday, despite a last-minute Republican move that prohibits the federal government from spending money on enforcement.

And while some Republicans have championed the anti-enforcement effort as a temporary death-sentence reprieve of the traditional incandescent bulb, others say the move largely is symbolic, as manufacturers long ago had planned to adhere to the new regulations by Jan. 1.

?This decision may have little practical consequence on which incandescent light bulbs are available in stores because, starting January 1, it will be illegal to produce or import the inefficient, wasteful bulbs in the United States,? Sen. Jeff Bingaman, New Mexico Democrat and chairman of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, said in mid-December.

The senator added that the five major light-bulb manufacturers already have switched to making and selling the more efficient bulbs.

Many consumer advocacy groups agree that handcuffing enforcement likely won?t matter much.

?As a practical matter, we don?t think there?s going to be much of an impact,? said Jack Gillis, a spokesman for the Consumer Federation of America, a association of about 280 nonprofit consumer groups. ?It?s not as if you need cops out there reading the [packaging] labels.?

The Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007, which was signed into law by President Bush, mandates increased efficiency standards for common light bulbs, requiring them to use about 25 percent less energy than traditional incandescent bulbs during a phase-in period between 2012 and 2014.

The law doesn?t ban incandescent light bulbs. Instead, manufacturers beginning in 2012 no longer will make the old 100-watt incandescent bulbs, replacing them with lower wattage bulbs that produce about the same amount of light. New 75-watt, 60-watt and 40-watt incandescent bulbs will be phased in later.

Stores will be allowed to continue selling their stock of old bulbs until they run out.

Democrats say the law is a major step to help lower the nation?s energy costs. Republicans, meanwhile, have been eager to overturn many of the new regulations, saying consumers should be given the choice of buying older model bulbs if they wish.

Last month, as lawmakers hammered out a massive spending bill to keep the government funded through September, Republicans inserted an amendment that bars the Energy Department from spending money in fiscal year 2012 to enforce the new light-bulb regulations.

?When the American people gave Republicans control of the House in January [2011], one of the major issues involved was the Democratic ban on the 100-watt bulb,? said Rep. Michael Burgess, Texas Republican, who has fought to preserve the incandescent bulb. ?Republicans have fulfilled our promise to the American people by allowing them to continue to be able to choose what type of bulb they use at home. Consumers should drive the marketplace, not the government.?

But the National Electrical Manufacturers Association (NEMA), which represents more than 95 percent of the U.S. lighting-manufacturing industry and who opposed the amendment, says it?s committed to following the new lighting standards by the Jan. 1. deadline.

?All the major manufacturers have said that, yes, they will comply with the law. They made the investments, and they are law-abiding companies,? said Steven Nadel, executive director of the nonprofit American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy.

NEMA says it worries the funding ban may allow scofflaw manufacturers to escape penalties, ?creating a competitive disadvantage for compliant manufacturers.?

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Source: http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2012/jan/1/incandescent-bulbs-dimming-despite-gop-efforts-on-/?utm_source=RSS_Feed&utm_medium=RSS

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