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Wednesday, May 20, 2015

IN THIS WAY RHINO GET LOW IN POPULATION , NEXT YEAR

 
US hunter who paid $350,000 to kill a black rhinoceros in Namibia successfully shot the animal on Monday, saying that his actions would help protect the critically-endangered species.
Corey Knowlton, from Texas, downed the rhino with a high-powered rifle after a three-day hunt through the bush with government officials on hand to ensure he killed the correct animal.
Knowlton, 36, won the right to shoot the rhino at an auction in Dallas in early 2014 -- attracting fierce criticism from many conservationists and even some death threats.
He took a CNN camera crew on the hunt to try to show why he believed the killing was justified.
"The whole world knows about this hunt and I think it's extremely important that people know it's going down the right way, in the most scientific way that it can possibly happen," Knowlton told the TV channel in footage released Wednesday.
"I think people have a problem just with the fact that I like to hunt... I want to see the black rhino as abundant as it can be. I believe in the survival of the species."
Since 2012, Namibia has sold five licences each year to kill individual rhinos, saying the money is essential to fund conservation projects and anti-poaching protection.
The only rhinos selected for the hunts are old ones that no longer breed and that pose a threat to younger rhinos.
The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) says there were about 850,000 black rhinos alive through much of the last century before hunting left only about 2,400 in 1995, but numbers have since edged up to about 5,000.
"These are incredibly majestic creatures, and their worth alive is far greater than (when) they are dead," said Azzedine Downes, of the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW), one of the conservation groups opposed to the hunt.
Both black rhinos and the more common white rhino have recently suffered from soaring poaching in South Africa's Kruger Park where hundreds are killed each year for their horns which are used in traditional Asian medicine.
The exact location of Knowlton's hunt was kept secret to avoid tipping off poachers.
Television footage showed Knowlton accompanied by a professional hunter and local trackers as they tried to find a rhino that was approved for killing.
His first shots injured the animal before he fired the fatal bullets.
"I felt like from day one it was something benefiting the black rhino," Knowlton said just after the hunt ended, his voice croaking with emotion.
"Being on this hunt, with the amount of criticism it brought and the amount of praise it brought from both sides, I don't think it could have brought more awareness to the black rhino."

Real names on the account and not be under 13, facebook

 
Video of a mother shaming her 13-year-old daughter for having a hidden Facebook account has gone viral.
Val Starks found out that her daughter had a secret Facebook account on which she said she was 19 years old and used a photo of herself in a bra as her profile image.
She confronted her daughter about the account and the adult men who had asked to be her friend, bringing up the dangers of Internet predators.
"I just told her how disappointed I was in her and there's no reason for her to want that kind of attention," Starks told ABC News.
The Denver mom went on to give her daughter the choice of being spanked or making a video that she would post to Facebook.
"She said she'd rather have a whoopin', so I chose the latter," Starks said.
In the video made as a result, which runs more than five minutes, Starks is seen loudly confronting her daughter, making her repeat her real age to the camera. Starks notes that her daughter does not have lingerie, still watches children's shows and has a bedtime, among other assertions.
The daughter starts crying in the middle of the video, and tried to get out of going to school on Monday, the day after the video was posted, Starks said.
Starks added that she is shocked by how quickly the video has spread and how much support she has received from parents worldwide. In three days, the video has been viewed more than 10 million times.
Starks' popularity has gone up as well, jumping from having only 45 Facebook friends to more than 5,000 requests two days later. After the surge, Facebook suspended her account temporarily and stopped her from adding any more friends.
In a second video that Starks, a cosmetology student, posted Monday to thank supporters, she said that she is a convicted felon who cannot get a job because of her record. She told ABC News that she spent nearly eight months in jail after being convicted for complicity to trafficmarijuana.
She said she told her daughter, "I'm an adult who made a bad decision and I had to suffer the consequences, and I'm still suffering the consequences. And you're a kid who made a bad decision and there are consequences to that."
Starks said she first got the idea of posting a shaming video to Facebook when her daughter "got in a little trouble" with the social media site last year when she was "messaging too many boys."
Facebook's user agreement states that users must have their real names on the account and not be under 13.
While there have been thousands of messages of support for Starks, she said that she has also gotten comments from people who believe she went too far.
To her critics, Starks said, "It was coming from a place of love."
"Anybody could have coerced her into meeting her in a park, and she would have thought it was a 13-year-old boy but it [could have been] a grown man who wants to do bodily harm -- and the coroners could have been coming to my house," Starks told ABC News. "I would rather embarrass her and done this than to go to a morgue and verify my child's body."

Al Qaeda leader's surveillance worries, document

 
U.S. intelligence officials on Wednesday released a trove of documents recovered during the 2011 raid on Usama bin Laden's compound -- offering a rare window into the operations of Al Qaeda and bin Laden's involvement in leading the network from his Pakistan hideaway. 
The documents include dozens of letters, some from bin Laden himself, as well as accounting information and even what appears to be an application form for prospective Al Qaeda members.That form, which asks a series of detailed questions, includes the line: "Who should we contact in case you became a martyr?"
The correspondence itself shows bin Laden continued to be engaged from his hideout and sought to direct operations. Shortly before he was killed in the May 2011 raid, a letter shows him celebrating the Arab Spring revolutions which had toppled Tunisia's leader at that point and were mounting in several other countries.
"These are gigantic events that will eventually engulf most of the Muslim world, will free the Muslim land from American hegemony, and is troubling America whose Secretary of State declared that they are worried about the armed Muslims controlling the Muslim region," bin Laden wrote, according to a translated version.
Bin Laden,writing to a follower identified as Atiyah, called for more Al Qaeda involvement in these countries once their leaders were deposed.
He described the events as "critical to our nation," advising against being "fully occupied with the Afghanistan front." Bin Laden wrote, "we should give our main attention to the Muslim nation's revolution ..."He called for supporting the rebellions and pursuing an "education stage" whenever rulers were deposed, by "mobilizing" writers and technicians to guide those nations.
Another message, undated and unsigned, speaks to similar themes.
The letter lashes out against Hosni Mubarak, the former Egyptian president who would soon be toppled. "The regime destroys the souls of the people from the palace," it says. "Just as an unarmed man is killed by gunfire. [Mubarak] does as he wishes with the blood of the Muslims." The letter details Al Qaeda's plans, including a call to immediate action and an ominous warning that "disagreeing is bad for all."
The letter says Ayman al-Zawahiri, now believed to be running Al Qaeda, is the appropriate person "from our ranks" to intervene because he is a "man of Egypt."
The correspondence also includes letters among the bin Laden family members. One 2010 letter offers a glimpse into the Al Qaeda leader's surveillance worries. In it, he urges his wife to "leave everything behind, including clothes, books, everything that she had in Iran" before arriving, warning about eavesdropping and the possibility that the Iranians would "implant a chip in some of the belongings that you might have brought along with you."
Other documents show the day-to-day operations in Al Qaeda. One identified as "Instructions to Applicants" appears to be a form for Al Qaeda prospects. It asks for basic biographical information, as well as for information about "hobbies," whether they know experts in chemistry, where they've traveled, and even "do you wish to execute a suicide operation?"This is followed by the question about whom to contact in case the applicant becomes a "martyr."
Yet another document, a message in response to one of then-President George W. Bush's State of the Union addresses, warned that the "motives that led to 9/11 are still there." The message, presumably from bin Laden, said the 9/11 hijackers "are not exceptional freaks of history, but are the vanguards of a nation that rose up for Jihad, and there are millions of their brothers eager to seek the same path."
The Office of the Director of National Intelligence said the document release, titled "Bin Laden's Bookshelf," follows a "rigorous interagency review."
The office said the intelligence community "will be reviewing hundreds more documents in the near future for possible declassification and release."
The documents, recovered from the compound four years ago, are being released now because legislation mandated their declassification.

YOU NEED TO FORGET ALL OTHER........

OTHER THINGS REMAINING THE SAME.....
1.Apple unveiled a new 15-inch MacBook and 27-inch iMac.The MacBook features a Retina display and a Force Touch trackpad.
2.Samsung could release its next Galaxy Note smartphone in July.It wants to try and undercut Apple, which is rumored to be releasing a new model of iPhone in September.
3.Yahoo stock was down 7.6% after an IRS reviewer said that it could change the rules regarding spinoffs.That could hurt Yahoo's planned spinoff of its stake in Alibaba.
4.Etsy shares were down after the company reported a net loss.Analysts say that counterfeit goods are hurting the business.
5. The first software update for the Apple Watch has been released. It fixes bugs and performance issues, and also includes improvements to the fitness tracking feature.
6.Former RadiumOne CEO Gurbaksh Chahal was reportedly arrested in October for kicking a woman.He previously pleaded guilty to misdemeanor charges for allegedly assaulting his girlfriend in 2013.
7.Jeff Bezos has hired Amazon veteran Maria Renz to be his new "shadow."Renz will become his closest advisor.
8.Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer explained why it never made sense for the company to merge with AOL."While some people on the outside saw similarities between the companies, we didn't," Mayer said on stage at Fortune's Most Powerful Women event.
9.On-demand helicopter startup Blade has raised $6 million in funding from investors including Eric Schmidt and Barry Diller.Flights cost around $650.
10.Spotify is teaming up with Starbucks.Starbucks employees in the US will receive premium accounts and will be able to create playlists to play in store.

TEACHER ATTACKED THE STUDENT FOR SEX IN CLASSOOM

An Atlanta-area teacher has been arrested after a parent complained he allowed middle school students to have sex in a storage unit in his classroom.

Multiple news outlets report 25-year-old Quentin Wright, a math teacher at The Champion School in Stone Mountain, was taken into custody Tuesday. He has been charged with four misdemeanor counts of contributing to the delinquency of a minor.

An arrest warrant says Wright arranged times with students when the classroom would be empty and gave them condoms.

The investigation began after a mother said she found text messages between Wright and her son.

A DeKalb County Schools spokesman says they are cooperating with the District Attorney's Office and Wright has been removed from the classroom.

What about serving with Human Heads in dinner ? Feel ohhh

 
Police who raided the restaurant found the heads, still dripping with blood, stuffed inside plastic bags on a kitchen counter.  
Officers had been tipped off that something gruesome might be going on at the eatery, which is located inside a hotel, by customers who were suspicious of the high prices it was charging.  
A local priest who ate at the restaurant, in south-eastern Nigeria, said he was initially alarmed by the extortionate bill he was handed at the end of his meal. 
He was charged 700 Naira - around £2.20 - for the food at a time when the daily wage for tens of millions of Nigerians is just 60p. 
In an interview for BBC Swahili he said: "The attendant noticed my reaction and told me it was the small piece of meat I had eaten that made the bill that high.
"I did not know I had been served with human meat, and that it was that expensive."
A local resident added: "I am not surprised at the shocking revelation. Every time I went to the market, I observed strange activities going on in the hotel.
"People who were never cleanly dressed and who looked a bit strange made their way in and out of the hotel, making me very suspicious of their activities."
Alongside the grisly human remains, police also found a terrifying arsenal of weapons including grenades stashed inside the restaurant. 

He kissed me and then I got angry , said 16 years girl.

 

The alleged victim of an Asian child sex ring in Aylesbury told jurors today how she was first abused by a nursing home worker who chatted her up in Woolworths at the age of 12.

 
Vikram Singh, pictured, is at trial at the Old Bailey

Vikram Singh, pictured, is at trial at the Old Bailey
She said she was just a schoolgirl looking at Batman toys in the store when Vikram 'Bicky' Singh approached her.
The witness, who is now 21, described how Singh, now 45, said hello and gave her his phone number.
She later told police that he was one of 11 men who sexually abused her in Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, between the ages of 12 and 16 years.
Giving evidence from behind a curtain shielding her from the dock, she said: “I was looking at Batman stuff. He [Singh] just sort of appeared and said hello. I was about 12. At the time I wasn't thinking about his age but he was between 35 and 40.
“I think I called him a couple of days later from a phone box.”
When they met in his car he told her he had a wife and two children, the court heard.
“I told him I was 11 and he told me he was 32. He wasn't shocked.”
The pair next met up after he arranged to take her to the cinema to watch one of the Santa Clause movies in late 2006, jurors heard.
“We sat right at the back. I wanted to watch the film. He was stroking my leg and trying to kiss me, trying to turn my head to kiss me.”
“He bought me a couple of milkshakes from McDonalds. He bought me a DVD, Stormbreaker. He was friendly.”
Two weeks later he arranged to come round to her house in and had sex with her on a single bed in the 'toy room', the court heard.
She said: “He told me to give him a blowjob so I did. Then he got a condom out and we had sex on the single bed.
“I think he took a tablet a while before he came. I didn't know what it was at that point, he said it was Viagra.”
The alleged victim said they had sex up to three or four times a week until she was 14.
The court heard she also had sex with him in his car outside a care home where Singh said he worked.
The court has heard that Singh did in fact work a carer and is married with two children.
On several occasions he took her to a house and told her not to speak because there were children upstairs.
Asked how long these visits took, she replied: “Sometimes it would be two hours, but not always having sex.”
Later Singh told her that he wanted to have sex 'the other way round', the court heard.
Singh also gave her a drink which made her feel 'numb and sleepy' a couple of times before they had sex, she said.
“I didn't know what it was, it tasted like syrup. Sometimes I would fall asleep during sex.”
The alleged victim said she stopped having sex with Singh after she met another older man, Mohammed Imran.
But in around 2008 when she was still 14 Singh pulled up alongside as she walked to Imran's home in Aylesbury.
She told the court: “He told me to get in the car. After him saying it about 30 times I got in the car.
“I told him I'm not having sex with him. I told him Imran would be angry and that's where I needed to be.
“He kissed me and then I got angry and I got my phone out and tried to call the police. He grabbed my phone. He grabbed my hands. Then he raped me.”
Singh then dropped her off at Imran's house and drove off with her phone, the court heard.
She said she only got her phone back two weeks later.
The alleged victim told police she believes she had sex with 60 'mainly Asian' men by the age of 16.
Eleven men are accused of sexually abusing her while she was living with her mother in Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire.
A second girl was also sexually abused by two of the 11, it is claimed.

Do you agree with same sex marriage , its now increasing in America

 
Public support for the legality of same-sex marriage first reached a majority in 2011, when 53% supported it. Since then, support has ranged from 48% to 55%. The five-percentage-point increase in this year's Values and Beliefs poll, conducted May 6-10, is the largest year-to-year climb since 2011, when support rose by nine points.
Support for the legality of gay marriages in the U.S. has been a fast-changing trend. Just two decades ago, only 27% of Americans backed gay marriage, while 68% opposed. By 2005, the percentage in favor had increased by 10 points to 37%, and by 2010 it had reached 44%.
The record high in support comes roughly one month before the Supreme Court is to issue a ruling on the constitutionality of same-sex marriage. Americans, at this point, are not highly familiar with the case, with 42% following it closely -- well below the average 60% for news issues Gallup has measured over the past two decades. Attention to the case is similar among supporters and opponents of gay marriage.
Though same-sex marriage continues to be politically divisive, support for its legal status has reached new highs among Americans of all political stripes -- with Democrats at 76% support, independents at 64% and Republicans at 37%.
Support for Same-Sex Marriage, by Party
In general, Democrats have been the most likely to say gay marriage should be legal, and Republicans have been the least supportive. Independents typically fall in between but side closer to Democrats than to Republicans.
From a long-range perspective, Democrats' support has increased the most, by 43 points since 1996. That was the year Democratic President Bill Clinton signed into law the now-overturned Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), which barred federal recognition of state-granted gay marriages. Since then, the Democratic Party has undergone a complete makeover on the issue, and its members have been champions of marriage equality on the state level. Democrats' support for same-sex marriage first reached majority level in 2004, the same year Massachusetts became the first state to legalize it.
Republicans have consistently been the least likely to say same-sex marriage should be legal, and their support has increased the least since 1996, by 21 points. Between 1996 and 2009, no more than 20% of Republicans believed same-sex marriages should be legally valid. Since then, support has ranged from 22% to 31%, leading up to this year's high of 37%.
The party divide between Democrats and Republicans may hinge largely on the age groups that compose each party. Gallup has found that younger Americans are significantly more likely to lean Democratic, while older Americans skew Republican. And while majorities of each age group under 65 support marriage equality in 2015, those aged 65 and older are still more likely to oppose it. This is a new phenomenon for the 50- to 64-year-old group. Last year, just 48% of these middle-aged Americans supported legally recognizing gay marriage. But in 2015, this figure has climbed to a majority of 54%.
About a quarter of Americans (26%) say they vote for a political candidate solely based on his or her stance on gay marriage. Many others say it is but one of several important factors (43%), and about one in four say it is not a major issue influencing how they vote (26%).
The 26% of American adults who say a candidate must share his or her views on the issue of same-sex marriage is up from just 16% in 2004 and 2008.
National support for marriage equality has been fairly steady in its upward climb, and is more than double what it was in 1996 when Gallup first polled on the issue. A clear majority of Americans now support the issue. The increase among Americans -- an increase seen in all major political parties -- comes in the midst of a string of legal victories ruling in favor of same-sex couples seeking to be treated equally under the law.
The Supreme Court may issue the final word on the constitutionality of same-sex marriage next month, although it's certainly possible that it may issue a narrow ruling on technical aspects of same-sex marriage law rather than say it should be legal in all states. With the ideological make-up of the court, it could decide that same-sex marriage is not a constitutionally supported right -- though this is a less likely outcome, and would go against prevailing public opinion.
While there has been uneven growth in support among Republicans versus Democrats, both groups have become more supportive. The remaining broad partisan divide, however, underscores how contentious the issue will continue to be as the 2016 election process unfolds.
As Hillary Clinton seeks the Democratic nomination in 2016, her support for gay marriage may be even more important as her party embraces the platform more closely than it has in the past. Clinton, like President Barack Obama, changed her stance in 2013 upon her exit from the State Department.
So far, none of the Republicans who have announced their 2016 candidacy support gay marriage, and neither have any potential candidates who are expected to officially throw their hats in the ring. Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, who is widely viewed as a top 2016 contender, recently doubled down on his stance against gay marriage -- a move consistent with the opinions of rank-and-file Republicans who, despite showing increased support for gay marriage, still oppose it outright. While an anti-same-sex marriage position should not present a challenge for GOP candidates in the primary, it could be more challenging in a general election setting given majority support among all Americans. At the same time, same-sex marriage, like many other moral issues, tends to rank well behind issues such as the economy, terrorism and education when Americans name the issues that are most likely to influence their vote.

Tuesday, May 19, 2015

Qin and Meng applied for permission to have a child , CHINA

A schoolteacher who gained permission to have an additional child in her hometown in one Chinese province has been ordered to have an abortion because the province where she is teaching has different rules, a family planning officer confirmed Tuesday.
The case illustrates how different areas have different family planning regulations and how unyielding China's birth limits continue to be despite a recent loosening in the 35-year-old policy to allow more couples to have two children.
Both pregnant Qin Yi and her husband Meng Shaoping had a daughter with their previous spouses, so the newly married couple is not allowed to have their own child according to Guizhou province's regulations, the education bureau and health and family planning commission in Guizhou's Libo county said in a notice Monday.
Qin must have an abortion by the end of the month otherwise she will be fired from her job, said the notice circulated online and carried by a local newspaper, which reported that Qin was five months pregnant.
An officer from the county's health and family planning commission confirmed the case.Qin and Meng applied for permission to have a child from authorities in Huangshan city in eastern Anhui province, where her residency is registered, said the officer, who gave only his surname, also Qin.
The authority is investigating whether Qin transferred her residency to Anhui earlier this year in order to gain permission to give birth, said the officer.
Anhui province allows couples to have a child if they don't have more than two children from previous marriages, whereas Guizhou only lets a couple have a child if there is just one previous child.
Different areas draw up their own family planning rules that fit into a national policy. In late 2013, China's leadership announced it would allow two children for families in which one parent is an only child, and different provinces and cities have implemented the change at different paces.
China credits the unpopular "one-child" policy as preventing 400 million births, whereas many demographers argue the birth rate would have fallen anyway as China's economy developed and education levels rose.

"This was a powerful, loud and clear statement " ,attack by a pack of dogs

A judge on Tuesday awarded a $100 million civil judgment to a man who lost most of his left arm, his left leg below the knee and his left ear in an attack by a pack of dogs outside a Detroit home.
It's unlikely that Steve Constantine will collect anywhere near the amount entered by Wayne County Circuit Judge Daphne Means Curtis, but the meaning runs deeper than money, said Mark Bernstein, his attorney."It's an enormously symbolic statement by the court that this type of conduct is unacceptable in our community," Bernstein told The Associated Press. "The ability to collect is largely irrelevant. We wanted a number that got people's attention.
 
"This was a powerful, loud and clear statement. There was a sense of enough is enough."Constantine, 50, was mauled in October as he tried to feed dogs belonging to Derick Felton at a house owned by Felton's mother.
 
Police killed one dog at the scene and said they rounded up at least 11 other pit bulls or pit bull mixes that were later euthanized.Felton faces trial in September on charges of harboring a dangerous animal causing serious injury. He and his mother, Elizabeth Collins Felton, are named in the civil case.
Felton's lawyer in his criminal case has said the dogs that police rounded up belonged to him, but they weren't the dogs that attacked Constantine.The Associated Press left a message Tuesday seeking comment from Felton and his mother.
 
Neither appeared at Tuesday's hearing, said Bernstein, who added that he would seek the house owned by Elizabeth Collins Felton as part of the judgment.He said Constantine is being treated at a psychiatric hospital and has had 22 surgeries.

First time on record, with the rate falling to -0.1%.

It is the first time Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation has turned negative since 1960, based on comparable historic estimates, the Office for National Statisticssaid.
The biggest contribution to the fall came from a drop in air and sea fares.
Bank of England governor Mark Carney said he expected inflation to remain very low over the next few months.But Mr Carney added that "over the course of the year, as we get towards the end, inflation should start to pick up towards our 2% target".The latest inflation figures show that transport costs were 2.8% lower in April than the same time a year ago, while food was 3.0% cheaper.
Chancellor George Osborne said the inflation figure should not be mistaken for "damaging deflation".
He added that the lower cost of living - driven by last year's fall in oil prices - would be a welcome relief for family budgets, in an environment in which average wages were finally beginning to rise.
Media captionShadow chancellor Chris Leslie said: "Any relief for households is welcome, but this month's figures reflect global trends and [that] doesn't change the reality that many are still struggling to pay the bills.
"The government must clearly guard against the risk that business investment might be deferred. We need stronger action now to raise productivity to deliver sustainable growth and rising living standards."
The latest inflation figure means that a basket of goods and services that cost £100 in April 2014 would have cost £99.90 in April this year.The last time CPI inflation was negative, according to estimates by the ONS, was March 1960, when prices were 0.6% lower.

The last time we saw a price fall in the UK was March 1960, before even I was born, when there was a drop (probably) of 0.6%.

So my natural impulse is to say that deflation has arrived in Britain - because there is no other word in the English language than "deflation" to describe this phenomenon.
However many of those who define themselves as "serious economists" (that's not me, by the way - I'm a hack) are desperately anxious that I and you don't use the "d" word - for two reasons.One is that they say proper deflation is a long term term trend of declining prices, and they believe - almost certainly correctly - that these current price falls won't endure much more than a month or two.
The other is that proper deflation is pernicious: if we believed that prices were set to fall month after relentless month, we would spend less - in the hope of picking up bargains later - and our bosses would pay us less.
Inflation as measured by the Retail Prices Index (RPI) in April remained unchanged from the month before at 0.9%.

'Mild and benign'

Ian Stewart, chief economist at Deloitte, said the fall was "likely to prove short-lived and positive for growth".
"Falling prices raise consumer spending power and help keep interest rates low. This looks like the mild and benign variety of deflation, which is good news for consumers and for growth," he said.
Andrew Sentance, senior economic adviser at PricewaterhouseCoopers and a former member of the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee, said he did not expect the fall in prices to be sustained.
"Once the impact of the big drop in oil prices drops out of the annual inflation rate, it will move back up to 1-2% over the next year or so. With wage inflation picking up, we may soon be considering the prospect of above-target inflation," he said.
"In the meantime, flat or slightly falling consumer prices are good for growth, boosting real consumer spending power. So a temporary period of slightly negative inflation can be good for the UK economy."