ARTICLES - HOT OFF THE FAGGOT

China Raises 'Concern' Over U.S. Plan to Hold Joint Military Exercises With South Korea

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China Raises 'Concern' Over U.S. Plan to Hold Joint Military Exercises With South Korea

DANDONG China made its first official protest over plans by the U.S. and South Korea to hold joint military exercises involving the aircraft carrier USS George Washington in the Yellow Sea on Sunday.

But Beijing's protest, in a statement from the Foreign Ministry Friday, was noticeably more restrained than when the U.S. announced similar plans, involving the same aircraft carrier, in July.

The statement also appeared to offer all sides a face-saving compromise, by implying China did not oppose exercises outside its "exclusive economic zone," a term of international maritime law that generally extends 200 nautical miles from a country's coast.

The restrained language, and the apparent diplomatic get-out, could reflect China's concern that the North Korean crisis will overshadow a planned trip to Washington in January by President Hu Jintao.

"We hold a consistent and clear-cut stance on the issue," the statement quoted Hong Lei, a Foreign Ministry spokesman, as saying. "We oppose any party to take any military actions in our exclusive economic zone without permission."

At a routine briefing on Thursday, Mr. Hong had said only that China was "concerned" over reports about the joint exercises
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Take a sensible approach to air security

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Take a sensible approach to air security

By Peter Rez, Special to CNN
tzleft.rez.peter.courtesy.jpg
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Peter Rez: Israeli air security system focuses on suspicious passengers, not weapons
  • Rez says rather than scanning bodies, machines should be built to detect explosives
  • Rez: "Technology does have a role to play, but imaging is not the solution"
Editor's note: Peter Rez is a professor of physics at Arizona State University.

(CNN) -- Most passengers want to get to their destination. A very small number, by my estimates about one in a few billion, desire immortality and believe they will achieve some greater objective by blowing themselves up and taking hundreds of their fellow passengers with them. The problem for the authorities is how to intercept this small number of individuals and frustrate their plans.

There are two different philosophies. The Israeli view is that one looks for the perpetrator, not the tool or weapon. All passengers about to board a flight are interviewed. Many in this country erroneously describe the process as "profiling," but I think a better description would be "triage." The Israeli view is that one does not waste time and resources on passengers who do not pose any threat to safety and security.

Those doing the interviews are generally college graduates who have completed their military service and have had significant additional training. The key point is that they are trusted to use their discretion on how much to investigate any given passenger. This system clearly catches those dressed in a T-shirt, with no checked baggage who have bought a one-way ticket for travel to Detroit, Michigan, in midwinter!

The Transportation Security Administration system in the United States relies on searching for the tool or weapon. Those doing the screening have no discretion and follow a ritual ordained from above. We have now reached the point where this method is unworkable.

In the period since 9/11, the authorities have responded to a series of incidents by adding more to the screening process. Shoes are removed and X-rayed in response to the would-be "shoe bomber," liquids and toothpaste are restricted to miniscule amounts in response to the plot to use liquid explosives, and now body scans and enhanced pat-downs are deemed necessary as a response to the alleged underwear bomber.

It is interesting to note that in all the recent terrorist attempts on airplanes nothing actually happened, no one was killed or injured. The aim of terrorism is societal disruption. With these new security measures, we have handed the terrorists a victory, even when they failed to detonate a bomb that caused casualties.

I believe that these measures are based on an erroneous view of what explosives actually do. Explosives damage structures from the pressure of the expanding shock wave. This pressure depends on the amount of explosive and its yield, and falls off rapidly the farther you get from the explosion. As a consequence, small quantities of explosives will generally not damage an airplane so extensively that it falls apart.

Calculating exactly what would happen in the event of an explosion is difficult, but reasonable estimates can be made from a simple analysis.

This would show that even if the shoe bomber's shoe had exploded, the airplane would not have been destroyed and fallen out of the sky. He would likely have blown his foot off, and a small hole would have been made in the aircraft outer skin. The aircraft would have lost cabin pressure, something that occasionally happens for other reasons. Oxygen masks would drop, the pilots would descend to a lower altitude, and due to the increased fuel burn might have to land somewhere other than the intended destination.

At the time of the failed underwear bomb plot, the passengers in nearby rows reported seeing a flash and hearing a bang. These are signs of a detonation. Press reports indicated that there were 80 grams of the explosive PETN, although not all of that material appears to have exploded.

No damage was done to the aircraft structure -- something that is not surprising since this happened at low altitude. That is because the airframe is already designed to withstand the pressure differential between a low altitude and maximum cruising altitudes.

Even if the device had detonated at cruising altitude it is unlikely to have resulted in structural failure. Again it is probable that a hole would have been punched in the outer skin, followed by a loss of cabin pressure. There could have been injuries and even fatalities among passengers who were sitting next to him.

So where do we draw the line? With the way the TSA is structured, it's not possible to change to the Israeli system. Clearly everything should be done to prevent explosives getting on board an aircraft in quantities sufficient to cause structural failure and bring the plane down. But is it worth chasing lesser quantities that would result in zero or minimal damage? The enhanced pat-down that some find so offensive is designed to search for these small amounts. It often ends with a swab being taken to test for explosive residues.

Technology does have a role to play, but imaging is not the solution. Operator fatigue sets in after short periods of time staring at computer images. That's why there are reports that contraband items have been smuggled through X-ray units used to scan carry-on bags.

The aim should be to detect high explosive in quantities that are sufficient to cause significant damage. We don't need a machine that takes pictures of the human body. It makes more sense to develop a detector that clearly discriminates between high explosives and human tissue or water. In principle, millimeter-wave scattering, used in some of the body scanners, could do that.

If you direct these high frequency radio waves at a human being and at high explosives, the intensity of the signal coming back is different. A simple system that combines millimeter-wave scattering and the conventional metal detector would adequately screen for guns, knives and high explosives. Anomalies could be resolved by a light pat-down.

Of course, some individuals will want the extra reassurance that the more thorough screening can give. The solution is to let the markets decide. Make some concourses at airports, and the flights that leave from them, high security flights. Other concourses would just have the normal metal detectors and X-ray scanning of carry-on baggage. Extra layers of security cost money, and this will mean higher fares for those flights. I expect most passengers will opt for the speed, convenience and lower cost of the lower security option.

The optimal solution would be to accept that small amounts of explosive do not bring airplanes down, and to concentrate screening procedures on detecting those quantities of explosive that, when detonated, will result in mass casualties. Technology designed to detect, rather than image, high explosives will achieve this objective as well as being less costly and intrusive.

The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Peter Rez.












Does TSA need to close a loophole?

















Overlooked hole in airport security?

















Bikini wearer goes through TSA check






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China appears to criticize U.S.-South Korean military exercise - CNN


California Officials Pull Out of Homemade Bomb Factory, Citing Danger

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California Officials Pull Out of Homemade Bomb Factory, Citing Danger

ESCONDIDO, Calif. –  Explosives experts have pulled out of a northern San Diego County home with a large quantity of bomb-making materials because it's too dangerous.

The Sheriff's Department says "proactive operations on site have been suspended" and local, state and federal explosives experts are making plans to re-enter the home and remove hazardous materials.

No further action is expected until Dec. 1, at the earliest. Investigators say there is no immediate danger to the community.

Among other things, bomb technicians found what is believed to Pentaerythritol tetranitrate, or PETN, which was used in the 2001 airliner shoe-bombing attempt as well as in last month's airplane cargo bombs.

Fifty-four-year-old George Djura Jakubec is in jail after pleading not guilty on Monday to running a bomb factory at his home.

Nov. 24, 2010: Image provided by KSWB-TV shows San Diego County Sheriff Bomb Squad officers at the site of a discovery of explosive material inside a home in Escondido, Calif. The officers also seized evidence that suggested use for armed robberies.

Nov. 24, 2010: Image provided by KSWB-TV shows San Diego County Sheriff Bomb Squad officers at the site of a discovery of explosive material inside a home in Escondido, Calif. The officers also seized evidence that suggested use for armed robberies.

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Resurrection: Origin of Belief

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Resurrection: Origin of Belief by Elaine Nelson
The Resurrection is central to Christianity, for without the Resurrection there would be no Christians. While the Jews at the time of Christ believed in an afterlife, the first evidence is found in the Old Testament with God’s promise to Abraham that he would have descendants as the sand of the sea, and would inherit the land. This was the only immortality held by most ancient peoples, although there is evidence in their tombs that there was belief in an afterlife requiring food, servants, even animals.


The writer of Ecclesiastes wrote of death that came to everyone: “The living know at least that they will die, the dead know nothing; no more reward for them, their memory has passed out of mind. Their loves, their hates, their jealousies, these all have perished, nor will they ever again take part in whatever is done under the sun” (Ecc. 9). Death was final: “while man goes to his everlasting home. And the mourners are already walking to and fro in the street….or before the dust returns to the earth as it once came from it, and the breath of God who gave it" (Ecc. 11).



Christianity was born out of Judaism, but as the writer of Ecclesiastes wrote: “There is nothing new under the sun” and all religions have gradually developed their beliefs, often building on earlier ones. Judaism originated in the Sumerian and Assyrian cultures where Ur is located, the place where Abraham lived and was called by God. At that time there was still idol worship and practices differing greatly from later established Judaism.



While Abraham is revered by the Jews, it is Moses whose name is a synonym for the Law given to them at Sinai. This is considered to be the birth of the Jews as a distinct ethnic and religious group. God gave them very specific rules by which to live and practice their religion. Even then, there was only the promise of a long life and posterity as their blessing. Moses died without knowing of a resurrection and it was long afterward before the idea gradually was introduced into their religious beliefs.

 

Job is often cited as believing in a resurrection with his famous words: “I know that my redeemer lives.” (Some translations have “avenger). But the correct translation should be “vindicator” a Hebrew word which refers to the next of kin who has the duty of avenging the blood of a brother or protecting his title to property after his death. The role of the vindicator is to insure justice for his own kinfolk, bound to him by ties of blood. “Yet from my flesh shall I see God” is an ambiguous phrase which can mean either :“away from my flesh” (after death) or “from the vantage point of my flesh” (in this present life). The text is so corrupt that we can only conjecture what the original may have been. There is nothing in the book of Job indicating who is the author; the time when he lived; nor that he was a Hebrew. Because “Yahweh,” the divine name used by the Hebrews, and the other common designations for God: Elohim, El, and Eloah and Shaddai are not used; Bible scholars are unable to ascertain these answers. The Jewish Talmud has long observed the tradition that Moses was the author but it is impossible to confirm that. The one identifying feature is that the name “Satan” was never used in Jewish history until the late 6th or 5th century B.C., which would indicate that no earlier date could be authenticated.

 

During the Diaspora in Babylon and later Persia, the Jews came under the influence of those cultures. Those beliefs included the concepts of both good and evil; Heaven and Hell, and a Satan that were not in the Jewish religion. Up to that time, the Hebrews had attributed all that happened to their God, and there was no personal hereafter, it was only the nation that would be blessed. In their sacred scriptures, Heaven was the exclusive abode of Yahweh, God of the Israelites and they believed that after bodily death their abode was in Sheol, the place of the dead (Gen: 37:35, Job 7:9, Ps. 49:15), Prov. 15:11: Is. 38:10, Ezek 32:27, Hab. 2:5). This became a common belief when Jesus told the parable of the Rich man and Lazarus (Luke 16: 19-31), where the poor man died and was in Hades, another synonym for Sheol. In the Hebrew Scripture there is no direct reference to a postmortem Hell--or to a Heaven. These terms enter Jewish lore after the destruction of the First Temple in 586 B.C., and the subsequent Exile of Jews to Babylon when they fell under the influence of Persian dualism and Zoroastrianism--which made a profound impression on Jews, and later Christians, and Muslims.



Daniel is apparently the last writer of the Old Testament who first introduced a hope for the afterlife. As an apocalyptic, he wrote of a coming kingdom with the “ancient of days appearing on a throne to pass judgment. At the end, “those who lie sleeping in the dust of the earth many will awake to everlasting life, the others to disgrace and everlasting contempt” (Dan. 12).



There is no consensus on the date of Daniel. Actually, the professors of Old Testament History at Wheaton College (Walton) and Harvard University (Kugel); professors of the Bible as Literature (Gabel, et al); and the Interpreter’s Bible Commentary all place the date no earlier than the second century B.C. the SDA Bible Dictionary gives a much earlier date, ca. 6th or 5th century B.C., although in its comments there is acknowledgment that a majority of Christian scholars attribute it to an anonymous author of the time of the Maccabean revolt during the middle of the 2nd century B.C. and agree that scholars recognize that the historical sections of the book contain “numerous historical inaccuracies, anachronisms, and misconceptions,” and that some of the prophetic specifications seem to fit Antiochus (and many commentators who accept the book as genuine prediction by Daniel will allow at least some application to Antiochus in ch. 8 or 11) does not prove that a later fulfillment might not fit the requirements even better and more completely.“



Thus Adventists are  hold a minority view in their adoption of Daniel as being written in the 5th or 6th century B.C., perhaps because of major doctrines that are based on the acceptance of Daniel as being the last apocalyptic prophet in the OT. The interpretation of Daniel 9 and the specific date for the cleansing of the sanctuary is accepted by most scholars as the history of the time of the Maccabean Revolt and the description of Antiochus Epiphanes that polluted the altar. The unique Adventist interpretation totally discounts the Jewish Revolt in the second century and moves it almost a millennia later. This particular interpretation resulted in what Adventists have described as the “Great Disappointment” of 1844: that being the year predicted when God would come to claim His people. Had they been students of history, as well as fluent in Greek and Hebrew, and had not depended solely on the KJV with its often faulty translations. those mistakes would not have been made.



It is Paul, the earliest NT writer, who first wrote of Christ’s resurrection in what is considered to be his first epistle: “We believe that Jesus died and rose again, and that it will be the same for those who have died in Jesus: God will bring them with him (1 Thes. 4:14). More than a generation later, the Gospel writers told the story of the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus. By the time they were written (not earlier than 60 A.D.), there were already many Christians throughout the Middle East and the Resurrection became the central theme of Christianity, giving hope to all.



This most important of all Christian doctrines: life after death and the hope of eternal life--was only a gradual dawning of the earliest inklings in late Judaism that found its fulfillment in the Resurrection of the Messiah; the beginning of Christianity; and the culmination of all men’s hopes and dreams of the possibility of life after death. All this, because of the belief in what happened 2,000 years ago in a small and remote region of the vast Roman Empire and that revolutionized the world since that time.



 

Sources: Kugel, James L. How to Read the Bible: A Guide to Scripture Then and Now.

Gabel, John B., et al. The Bible as Literature: An Introduction.

Panati, Charles. Sacred Origins of Profound Things.

The SDA Bible Commentary

The Interpreters One Volume Bible Commentary

Walton, John H. Ancient Near Eastern Thought and the Old Testament.

 

---------------------------- 

Comment:
It was only recently during a study of the book of Ecclesiastes that I realized that perhaps the book was written to not only reveal the wisdom the writer had acquired with regard to the world but also that the book may have also provided fodder for subsequent ideas to develop. That it might have been the necessary step in the progressive understanding which God used to reveal the concept of a resurrection. The book asks the question where does the spirit of man go? His answer is that it returns to God.


(Eccl 3:21 NIV)  Who knows if the spirit of man rises upward and if the spirit of the animal goes down into the earth?"





(Eccl 12:6-7 NIV)  Remember him--before the silver cord is severed, or the golden bowl is broken; before the pitcher is shattered at the spring, or the wheel broken at the well, and the dust returns to the ground it came from, and the spirit returns to God who gave it.



Once the idea that the spirit returns to God the possibility of God doing whatever He wants with the spirit becomes possible. The spirit is in the control of God and if God wanted to reanimate a spirit He could and it would make sense for Him to do that with the ones He loves. At least looking back from our perspective as we try and determine the ways in which a religion grew in understanding and principles. We may well never know exactly how some of these doctrines developed but we must realize that they did develop they had a growth in small increments. That after all is the way humans work, we learn by a step by step process where we apply information in a way that builds upon previous information. That is what the Bible does and we misread it when we pretend that there was some kind of ultimate truth presented from the beginning and people simply forgot that truth. Because in fact that is not what the Bible does and that is not what the Bible ever taught. It is an assumption based upon poor logic and poor assumptions.  ---RC
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Woman Kicks off Black Friday by Threatening to Kill Other Shoppers with Gun

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Woman Kicks off Black Friday by Threatening to Kill Other Shoppers with GunA Wisconsin woman was arrested at a Toys "R" Us for telling fellow shoppers she would get her gun and shoot them after they objected to her butting in line. No gun was found. Happy Black Friday, America! [via johne]


Send an email to Max Read, the author of this post, at max@gawker.com.

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Man Stabbed, Hit with Frying Pan Over Facebook Post

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Man Stabbed, Hit with Frying Pan Over Facebook PostReason you should delete your Facebook account, #4,679: It can get you hit in the head with a frying pan, and then stabbed. Just ask Aaron Calhoun of Toldeo, Ohio!

Calhoun, who is 25, apparently read something written about his sister on Facebook that he did not "like" so much. Unfortunately, instead of following the time-honored internet tradition of posting passive-aggressive Facebook statuses, he decided to confront the woman who'd posted the thing about his sister—Taresa O'Neal, a 20-year-old Toledo woman (pictured).

It didn't go so well. He was apparently hit with a frying pan (is he a cartoon character?), and then stabbed. (He was treated by Toledo hospital for non-lifethreatening injuries.) O'Neal and "another man" were arrested.


Send an email to Max Read, the author of this post, at max@gawker.com.

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Facebook can...


The Church of England must relinquish its association with power and pomp

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The Church of England must relinquish its association with power and pomp

Anglicans must accept they no longer deserve royal privileges but are just another group of believers

Cole Moreton
Ninth Inauguration Of The General Synod
The Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh at the ninth inauguration of the General Synod. Photograph: Dan Kitwood/PA

This week, and with it the Queen's visit to the General Synod, has been a chance for high-ranking Anglicans to imagine they still matter. And they have another thrill to come, playing host to the biggest royal wedding in a generation – another occasion for silk and grandeur.

But look beyond the pomp and what you actually see is a group of men clinging to the royal skirts while their institution falls to pieces. This really is the endgame for the Church of England as we know it. I don't mean the break-up of the worldwide Anglican Communion, although that too seems likely. African leaders have refused to sign up to a new covenant that was meant to prevent a cataclysmic split over homosexuality.

I'm talking about something close to home, a far more important issue than warring clergy. It's about all of us in England and in Britain, whose language, laws, culture and lives have been shaped by a deal that lasted for 500 years.

The Church of England was made keeper of the nation's soul, with countless special privileges, in return for stating that a succession of monarchs were appointed directly by God.

The trouble is, we just don't believe in that stuff any more. The extent it has been devalued was revealed earlier this week when a bishop declared himself a republican, denouncing the fuss about the wedding as "nauseating tosh".

Peter Broadbent, Bishop of Willesden, was foolish to say such things on Facebook. He was "withdrawn from public ministry". But there was enormous support for his views, even among Anglicans. The fact that a bishop even felt able to say such things at all shows how devalued the trinity of church, state and crown has become.

Some of his fellow bishops see David Cameron's nebulous "Big Society" as a rescue package, a way of getting their old clout back. While others were buffing their mitres, the bishop of Leicester, Tim Stevens, was on the Today programme discussing it (with me, as it happens).

"The church has been doing the 'Big Society' for years," said the bishop, who was right, historically speaking. Before the creation of the welfare state, the health service and education for all, you were best off doing good through the church.

Even now, let's be clear, there are brilliant people in the parishes working hard for their communities. There are also priests who refuse to leave desperate places, because they care. But to suggest that the Church of England is an answer to David Cameron's prayers is deluded.

The truth is it no longer has the money, priests or people to do its historic job of caring for every soul in every community. Disastrous investments, bitter rows and plummeting attendance figures have seen to that.

We don't want it, either. The British have changed dramatically in the 30 years since the last royal wedding, the last great festival of the old certainties. The Church of England is no longer our national church, in the sense of being an institution whose values we all share and which is intimately bound up in all our lives.

That doesn't mean we're atheists, whatever Richard Dawkins might hope – there are tens of millions who say they believe in God but don't want to be part of a religious organisation.

In view of all this, Prince Charles is right to want to call himself defender of faith rather than defender of the faith, as his mother did. There is no way he can take the exclusively Anglican coronation vows she took. The ancient deal is off. Even the Tories accept that the bishops can't go on having such a large automatic presence in the House of Lords. Disestablishment is happening by default.

However, there may yet be salvation of the Church of England in the "Big Society": if it can accept that it no longer deserves special privileges but is just another group of believers doing their best. If its leaders are really serious about learning from those good-hearted people who already open up churches as rural post offices, arts centres and refuges. If it rolls out ideas like those across the country and once more demonstrates its duty of care by doing things people actually want and need.

But most of all, if the bishops put away the gilded robes at last – and finally end their long love affair with royalty, with power and with pomp.

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Dutch Catholic order admits abuse case hush money

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Dutch Catholic order admits abuse case hush money

Reuters

AMSTERDAM (Reuters) – An order of Dutch Catholic priests admitted on Friday to paying hush money to a victim of sexual abuse but the Dutch Catholic Church denied one of its bishops was involved in the case.


The NRC Handelsblad daily and Radio Netherlands Worldwide reported on Friday they had documents showing the victim was paid 16,000 euros ($21,200) in 2003 to keep the case quiet.


The report said that the unidentified victim, now 76, was abused by seven priests -- including the late Bishop Johannes ter Schure -- between 1948 to 1953.


Cornelis Oosterwijk, lawyer for the Salesian order of priests, accused the victim of breaking his silence deal with unproven allegations in order to obtain more money.


"A settlement was agreed on condition he would not make the matter public," he told Reuters. "Now he is seeking 100,000 euros and the order has said it now wants to look at the facts."


The Dutch Church faces a string of complaints after 900 victims came forward this year to report abuse by priests. A special commission will report on the scandals next month.


The Dutch bishops conference denied its chairman, Rotterdam Bishop Adrianus Van Luyn, had ignored the victim's 2008 request that his case be made public.


"The victim wrote to Van Luyn in January and April of 2008 and the bishop's staff replied in July," spokesman Pieter Kohnen said, adding the bishop had referred him to the Salesian order.


In a new book published this week, Pope Benedict said the wave of recent revelations of sexual abuse by priests in Europe was "an unprecedented shock" for him and "a tremendous cloud of filth" soiling the Church and its priests.


Five bishops in Ireland, one in Germany and one in Belgium have stepped down because they mismanaged abuse cases.


No Dutch bishops have quit over the latest abuse cases. Van Luyn has admitted he dealt with abuse cases while head of the Dutch Salesian province in 1975-1981 but did not publicize them.


Oosterwijk said ter Schure, who was ordained a priest in 1951, was in Rome during the period when the abuse occurred and did not work at the boarding school in question when he returned to the Netherlands the following year.


In May, Dutch Catholic Church authorities gave the go-ahead for an independent one-year investigation into allegations of sexual abuse by priests and promised it their full cooperation.


The investigators, headed by former education minister and Rotterdam mayor Wim Deetman, will look into allegations of abuse over the past 65 years and try to establish who is accountable.


(Editing by Tom Heneghan and Maria Golovnina)

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