ARTICLES - HOT OFF THE FAGGOT

23,000 volts go through windshield, man survives with minor injuries

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23,000 volts go through windshield, man survives with minor injuries

  • By: Ted Kortan

AKRON, Ohio - Joseph Ferrato was driving his Chevrolet Suburban home from work late Tuesday evening when he thought he saw a flash.

"There were sparks, it was red, green, yellow, boom, bang, a real loud explosion... Enough of a sound wave to knock me out," Ferrato said.

When Ferrato came to his senses, Akron police informed him his windshield had been blown out by a falling power line cut down by copper thieves.

"The policeman said I was really really fortunate," Ferrato said.

Ferrato said he was transported to the hospital, where he had broken glass removed from his eyes.

According to Akron police, Ferrato's injuries occurred because would-be copper thieves had climbed a utility pole and used a hacksaw to cut through a non-energized power cable which hung across state Route 224 near Manchester Road.

As the cable fell, it came in contact with another electrical line carrying 23,000 volts. The copper-cutting crooks fled the scene -- leaving behind their tools and several other smaller pieces of downed copper line.

Police are looking for whoever is responsible for the attempted theft. They are asking anyone with information to contact the Akron Police Department at 330-375-2490.

Meanwhile, Ohio Edison, who owns the transmission lines, told NewsChannnel5 the episode should be a warning to anyone considering the electric power infrastructure as a source for scrap metal.

"It was a crime, it was wrong, and if we find you, we'll put you in jail," said spokesman Mark Durbin. "Any time you think about making a quick buck by stealing some of our equipment, stealing some of the copper, it might end up costing you your life."

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Violence Escalates as Gunfire Breaks Out in Cairo Square

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Violence Escalates as Gunfire Breaks Out in Cairo Square
In Pre-Dawn Clashes, Frequent Gunbursts, Tank Movement and Gasoline Bombs
REPORTER'S NOTEBOOK
By CHRISTIANE AMANPOUR

CAIRO, Feb. 3, 2011
After a day of unprecedented violence, the night in
Cairo gave way to armed chaos.

The Egyptian military stood neutral as pro- and anti-
Mubarak crowds exchanged punches and rocks and
Molotov cocktails. The question now becomes: How
will the military respond now that bullets are flying
through Liberation Square?

It was a very ugly night in Cairo--and it could shape
up to be an even uglier day. This after violent
protests all day Wednesday.

It's quieter now as dawn is breaking and people now
are pouring into the square. But for at least two
hours, in the pre-dawn hours, there was shooting,
heavy shooting, into the protesters and into that
square, where women and children also had been all
night.

We will wait see how this day develops.

For Complete Coverage of the Crisis in Egypt,
Featuring Exclusive Reporting From Christiane
Amanpour,
Click Here

On Wednesday, after five days of peaceful protests,
the square suddenly was engulfed in all-out battle.

It did not look to be a spontaneous eruption. It
appeared to be deliberately orchestrated political
theater, a planned and organized bid by supporters
of President Hosni Mubarak to send a message. The
stage for the violence, Tahrir Square, was in full view
of the world audience.

Anti-government demonstrators have occupied the
square for more than a week.

The group rushing the square all came from one area
and it happened all at once. As we stood on the roof
of Associated Press television headquarters preparing
to do a broadcast, we could see that down on the
street, the throngs protesting had gone from a couple
of hundred pro-Mubarak people to what looked
thousands, all in very short order.

Then we saw men on horseback and camels rushing
the square. The whole thing had the feel of an
organized band of thugs moving in. That was when
the pro- and anti-government demonstrators began
fighting, throwing bricks with the army standing by.

Around 4 p.m., we started to hear gunshots and we
could not be sure where they were coming from.

Some of those who began beating and throwing
stones at the anti-government protesters were likely
genuine Mubarak supporters, but others were
wearing uniforms indicating they were government
workers. Many looked to be agitators. It was widely
thought that a number were police and security forces
in civilian clothes.

Each time the pro-Mubarak forces charged them, the
protesters fell back, only to inch forward again once
the pressure had receded. There were Molotov
cocktails. People the square were smashing the
pavement.

Eventually the ground all around this historic
square, in front of the Egyptian Antiquities museum,
was ripped up and turned into projectiles. After a
battle of several hours, the protesters were in control
of the square again.
Christiane Amanpour: 'A Mob
Was Swarming the Door'
Tensions erupted on a day that had begun with
some improvements. The Internet was restored and
curfew hours were shortened.

But even this morning, before the clashes, the  
jubilation of the last few days
had already given way
to an overwhelming sense of fear about how this is
now going to go.

In Tahrir Square, protesters had been telling us two
things. Some were saying that President Hosni
Mubarak's announcement Tuesday night, in which he
announced that he would not seek reelection, was not
enough and that he has to go now.

Others told us that although they have protested
against him, they want him to leave in an orderly
fashion, with dignity.

A majority, it seemed, were concerned that if he left
quickly, the economy and institutions could collapse,
resulting in an explosion of crime and violence.

If Mubarak leaves precipitously, there could be real
chaos. Mubarak's party had been sending a message
on state TV regarding moves to restore law and order.
The army, in a new statement on television, had urged
the protesters to go home, "for the love of Egypt."

But when pro-Mubarak forces rushed the square, it
turned the sentiments. We had gone over to interview
Amr Moussa, the longtime President of the Arab
League. He said the demonstrators had sent a clear
message that the Arab world was ready for
democracy.

As we left the Arab League headquarters, a band of
angry pro-Mubarak demonstrators were already
gathered around the Amr Moussa's headquarters. By
the time we got to our office at the Associated Press
TV, a mob was swarming the door.

Those opposed to change have clearly turned
against the media. One of the women who works there
later told us that as she approached the building with
a camera in her hand, the crowd pulled her by her
scarf, trying to pull her to the ground.

On Tuesday, two of our colleagues were arrested and
roughed up by a plainclothes policeman who tried to
seize their camera. After several young Egyptian men
intervened and argued with them, they were let go.
Our producer heard one of the young men mutter,
"You see, we only have real freedom on the square."
Military Orders Everyone to 'Go
Home'
Today, as we were trying to film on the bridge into  
Tahrir Square
, an angry mob of pro-Mubarak
protesters
surrounded us and chased us into the car,
shouting that they hated us and America. Some of the
protesters kicked in the car doors and broke our
windshield as we drove away.

As night fell, nobody was certain what would come
next. There are fears that now the military and the
people may now be headed for a showdown. The
military amended its earlier request that "everyone go
home."

Now they have issued an order: "Leave Tahrir
Square."

Do you have questions about the mass protests in
Egypt? Submit your questions to Christiane
Amanpour
HERE.
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Katie Couric, narrowly escaping as the mob circles her

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Leave Our Katie Couric Alone! America's news anchors, most notably Anderson Cooper, are getting beaten up left and right by pro-Mubarak troublemakers today. Here's "America's Girl," Katie Couric, narrowly escaping as the mob circles her. Don't threaten our national lady-mascot, Egypt. Just don't.


Send an email to Jim Newell, the author of this post, at newell@gawker.com.

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Christiane Amanpour Gets Her Egyptian Media Beating

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Christiane Amanpour Gets Her Egyptian Media Beating Egypt's pro-Mubarak thugs are just wailing on America's anchors. ABC's Christiane Amanpour is the latest, joining Anderson Cooper and Katie Couric: "The mob chased [her crew] into the car shouting that they hate America" and smashed the windshield. Who's next?


Send an email to Jim Newell, the author of this post, at newell@gawker.com.

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Anderson Cooper Just Got Beat Up By Pro-Mubarak Thugs in Cairo

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Anderson Cooper Just Got Beat Up By Pro-Mubarak Thugs in Cairo CNN's Anderson Cooper and his camera crew were attacked and repeatedly punched by pro-government forces near Tahrir Square in Cairo today. [Updated with video]

"My team were set upon by the crowd," Cooper said on CNN this morning via telephone from the safety of a hotel balcony. "There was no rhyme or reason to it—it was just people looking for a fight, looking to make a point, and punching us." According to a Twitter post from George Hale, the English editor of the Ma'an news agency, who cited a CNN "manager," Cooper was punched "10 times in the head."Anderson Cooper Just Got Beat Up By Pro-Mubarak Thugs in Cairo

Anderson Cooper Just Got Beat Up By Pro-Mubarak Thugs in Cairo

But he seems OK! Cooper told CNN that the crowd tried to take his crew's camera; we'll see if there's video. Cooper was caught up in what appears to be rapidly escalating violence today as pro-Mubarak forces have taken to the streets to quell protests.

Update:

CNN has aired the video of the encounter, above, which consists of a lot of jostling and audio of Cooper saying, "Hey! Hey!" Below is video of Cooper recounting the attack—"suddenly a young man would come up, look at you, and punch you in the face." The thugs were trying to break or steal his crew's camera, but Cooper had been using a handheld Flip camera to film, which they didn't notice.


Send an email to the author of this post at john@gawker.com.

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Spray-On Skin: A Demonstration

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Spray-On Skin: A DemonstrationMilitary scientists have invented spray-on skin: By applying a thin film of stem cells over a burn victim's wound, they can regrow skin in a matter of days. National Geographic documents one man's recovery.

We first heard about the skin cell gun three years ago, when it was still just an idea. Since then, the futuristic procedure has been used a dozen times.

Jörg Gerlach, a researcher with the McGown Institute for Regenerative Medicine, explained the technology to National Geographic's Explorer: Doctors mix stem cells from the patient's healthy skin with water to create a serum, which they then load into the skin cell gun and apply "like paint spray" to the wounded area. The result is likened to a salamander growing a new tail: The tissue regenerates. A clip is below. Warning: It contains graphic medical images.

Matthew Uram, a Pennsylvania state police officer, is one of the first people to use the gun. After suffering third-degree burns from a bonfire gone awry, Uram's doctors used the skin cell gun on him: "They did it on a Friday, and my follow up was that Monday, and the burn unit said it was healed. Completely healed." He described the technology as "like Star Wars." [National Geographic]


Send an email to Maureen O'Connor, the author of this post, at maureen@gawker.com.

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The buck stops here? Virginia eyes switching off dollar

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REBELLION IN AMERICA

The buck stops here? Virginia eyes switching off dollar

Cites 'inevitable destruction of the Federal Reserve System's currency'

Kelly O'Meara




© 2011 WorldNetDaily









Virginia Delegate Robert G. Marshall

WASHINGTON – Virginia state Delegate Robert G. Marshall has introduced legislation to study whether the Commonwealth should make the preparations now to switch suddenly to an alternative currency in the event of an implosion of the Federal Reserve System and the destruction of the dollar.

House Joint Resolution 557 is another piece of a growing movement among state legislators who are concerned about the dollar's demise. Ten states have considered similar bills, recommending a return to some form of a commodity-based currency, using either silver or gold.

Marshall's Resolution 557 offers a list of worst-case scenarios to support the need for such a study, including:


  • "Many widely recognized experts predict the inevitable destruction of the Federal Reserve System's currency through hyperinflation in the foreseeable future.



  • "In the event of hyperinflation, depression, or other economic calamity related to the breakdown of the Federal Reserve System, for which the Commonwealth is not prepared, the Commonwealth's governmental finances and Virginia's private economy will be thrown into chaos…"



  • To avoid economic, social and political shocks Virginia can adopt an "alternative sound currency that the Commonwealth's government and citizens may employ without delay in the event of the destruction of the Federal Reserve System's currency."

"Inevitable destruction," "economic calamity" and "chaos" are not words used lightly when considering the fate of the nation's currency.

Marshall chose them for good reason and tells WND, "I read the financial pages and I see the coverup that the Obama administration is engaging in, eliminating the cost of food and energy from CPI to fool the public (about the rate of inflation), and the fact that China is seeking to become an international currency and Russia, Japan, Saudi Arabia and China have all met to discuss this possibility."

The Virginia legislator also is aware of the recent report from the International Monetary Fund politely warning the U.S. to bring its public debts under control, and also Moody’s Investors Service, which recently hinted that the U.S., with its $1.5 trillion deficit and debt approaching $14 trillion, (not including the $70 trillion off balance sheet commitments of Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid) could be next to lose its AAA credit rating, ultimately making it much more difficult for the U.S. to borrow money needed to pay its debt.

"The fact that the Federal Reserve has resorted to the printing presses, well; these are the ingredients, the precursors to hyperinflation. We can't predict when it will happen, but we should be prepared for it if we're serious about being in public office," Marshall says.

The kind of study Marshall is proposing never has been popular among politicians who get elected and stay elected by making promises to the voters, usually with lofty price tags.

On the other hand, a commodity-backed currency – a gold standard - forces governments to spend only as much money as its country has in gold and provides a self-regulating and stabilizing effect on the economy.

So, what are the chances of moving the bill through the Virginia legislature?

"It's puzzling," says Marshall. "I presented it to the subcommittee and ... they just sat there smiling like Cheshire cats, they didn't move to kill it and didn't move to report it to the committee. So, I'm going to try and move it along and get the attention of someone on the full committee to report it.

"This proposal," says Marshall, "is about being prepared. If you're crossing the Atlantic on the Titanic somebody should think about a life preserver. This is about asking the simple questions 'does Virginia need some life boats, can we build them and how long will it take?'"

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Vikings May Have Navigated Using Polarized Skylight

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Vikings May Have Navigated Using Polarized Skylight

The Vikings may have used the ancient equivalent of polarized glass to navigate in cloudy weather, suggest new reports on a long-hypothesized but never-tested “sunstone compass.”

Archaeologists know Vikings used sundials to steer between Norway and Greenland, but this method could only have worked in sunshine. How Vikings found their way in clouds or fog remains a mystery.

In the 1960s, Danish archaeologist Thorkild Ramskou suggested that the Vikings used a “sunstone” to filter sunlight  so that it all had the same polarization, or direction. Polarized sunglasses work in a similar way.  The explanation was plausible, even elegant, but untested.

“This theory of polarimetric Viking navigation is accepted and frequently cited, in spite of a total lack of experimental evidence,” wrote researchers led by optics expert Gábor Horváth of Hungary’s Eötvös University in a paper published online Jan. 31 in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B. “Since these claims were never tested, we decided to investigate.”

The idea of navigating by polarized skylight originated with a Viking saga, in which the Norse hero Sigurd “grabbed a sunstone, looked at the sky and saw from where the light came, from which he guessed the position of the invisible Sun.” The stone would like have been made of a so-called birefringent material, like calcite or certain plastics, that can split light into separate rays.

The atmosphere similarly splits sunlight into a pattern of concentric rings. Looking through the crystal and rotating it would make the sky appear to brighten and fade, as certain directions of light were transmitted or blocked. When the light coming through the crystal was polarized the same way as through the atmosphere, the crystal would appear brightest and points toward the sun. By checking the polarization at two different points in the sky, the navigators could determine the invisible sun’s location, and hold a torch in that position to cast a shadow on the sundial.

Between 2001 and 2007, Horváth and colleagues ran five experiments to see if the proposed method worked. On expeditions to Tunisia, across the Arctic Ocean and at home in Hungary, the researchers used a device that measures polarization to computed the difference between the angles of sunlight when it was cloudy, clear, foggy and completely overcast.

They found that the position of the sun in the sky could be calculated even in clouds and fog. When the sky was completely overcast, though, the sun was harder to find.

A number of questions remain, such as how accurately Vikings could have found north, or how well different candidate sunstones would have worked.

“Since the psychophysical experiments, outlined above, cannot be performed with Viking navigators, we plan to measure the error function by using male German, Hungarian and Swedish students,” the authors conclude. “These measurements are in progress.”

Image: flickr/Charles Hutchins

See Also:

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Unknown, Uncontacted Tribe Photographed in Brazilian Jungle

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Unknown, Uncontacted Tribe Photographed in Brazilian Jungle

Uncontacted Family: Full

A previously uncontacted tribe has been found in Amazon jungle, with aerial photographs giving a glimpse of people who've had no known contact with anyone except their tribal neighbors.

Taken by Brazil's Indian Affairs department, the photographs were released Jan. 31 by Survival International, a tribal-advocacy group.

About 100 uncontacted tribes are believed to exist worldwide. They live in remote, resource-rich areas, and are threatened by invasive development. The last such discovery was made in 2008, also in the Amazon. This tribe was spotted at the mouth of the Envira river in western Brazil, not far from the Peruvian border.



"We're trying to bring awareness to uncontacted tribes, because they are so vulnerable. Governments often deny that they exist," said Tess Thackara, Survival International's U.S. coordinator. "We're releasing these images because we need evidence to prove they're there."

Uncontacted Family: Closeup

Possibly Panoan

Judging by their haircuts, the Indians appear to be Panoan, a tribe native to eastern Peru and western Brazil, said Survival International research director Fiona Watson. They're probably descended from Indians who escaped contact during the Amazon rubber boom of the late-19th and early-20th centuries, a period of near-genocidal exploitation. Though they haven't had direct contact with the outside world, they'll know about it.

"I've interviewed people who have gone through the process of contact," said Watson. "One of the things that struck me is that they know more about us than we think they do. They've been watching us. The world is full of dangers, and they've made this decision to remain isolated for survival. But there's a lot of curiosity."

Trade with tribes who have made contact likely explains the machete carried by a young boy at center, and the pot atop a stone below. More traditional is a basket containing papaya at left. Above it is a pile of bitter manioc, peeled prior to soaking. At top right are baskets with carrying straps, with banana leaves used as covers.

From the picture, the people appear in good health, said Watson. "These people look healthy. They're not obese, they're not thin. There's not a decrease in the population. The communal houses are still there," she said.

Uncontacted Man in Garden: Full

Garden Clearing



A garden clearing is clearly visible from above. A man painted red with annatto-seed dye can be seen on a path leading to the garden. Red paint is a common body decoration among Amazon tribes.



"They must feel relatively comfortable to have a settled community with developed gardens and structures, which is good news," said Chris Fagan, executive director of the Upper Amazon Conservancy, an environmental-and-cultural-conservation group that works in southeastern Peru.



Fagan said the photographs are important for providing documentation of the group, an essential step in pushing the Brazilian government to honor laws that promise territorial rights to indigenous tribes. Those laws can be evaded by refusing to acknowledge the tribes' existence.



Fagan also recommended a consumer boycott of Amazonian mahogany, demand for which fuels deforestation of tribal territories.
Uncontacted Man in Garden: Closeup

Man in the Garden

A closer view shows the man in clearer detail, along with details of banana plants and annatto shrubs in the garden. Papaya and manioc would also be grown there, and perhaps cotton used to make bracelets, anklets and hammocks, said Watson.

Uncontacted Men: Closeup

Three Men Look Upward

Two men painted red and another painted black look up from their village clearing. Black paint can be either decorative or a sign of hostility, but Watson doesn't believe hostility is directed at the plane overhead.

"In other photographs of uncontacted people that I've seen, you sometimes see them with bows and arrows pointed at the plane, or firing at the plane. That clearly denotes hostility," she said. "In this picture, they appear to be an isolated people, looking up with curiosity."

Uncontacted Men: Wide

Threatened by Illegal Logging

Thackara and Watson want the public to write the Peruvian government, urging a halt of illegal logging in the Amazon. With logging, ranching and mining come foreign diseases and the destruction of forests on which tribes rely.

Some uncontacted people have fled from Peru into western Brazil, where this new group was spotted. Thackara emphasized that the tribes deserve protection not as living examples of Stone Age life, but as rare and distinct cultures.

"We're trying to encourage the view that these are evolving societies," she said. "They're not stuck in the Dark Ages. We want people to see them as something that can be part of our future."

See Also:

Images: Gleison Miranda-FUNAI/Survival International.

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Vatican's Eyes on Egypt

Catholics are just as surprised as anyone, but nobody knows the endgame.

by JOHN THAVIS (CNS)
CNS photo/Goran Tomasevic, Reuters
A protester gestures in front of a burning barricade
VATICAN CITY (CNS) —



Church leaders are watching the unfolding political drama in Egypt with a mixture of hope for reform and concern over potential violence, said the head of the Franciscan Custody of the Holy Land.

Father Pierbattista Pizzaballa told Vatican Radio Jan. 30 that the widespread unrest that has weakened the 30-year rule of President Hosni Mubarak came as a surprise to Catholics in the region.



“We all sense that these are epochal changes. None of us would have imagined these kinds of developments a few months ago,” he said.



“This means that there are currents, especially in the Arab world, that now have found visible expression. This is certainly a positive sign, but it’s also worrying because we don’t know how all this will end — we hope with the least possible amount of violence and bloodshed,” he said.



Father Pizzaballa said he hoped that “respect for religious minorities will be preserved” in Egypt. His concern appeared to reflect the fact that Mubarak’s opponents include both radical and moderate Muslim groups, and it was unclear who might assume power if the president resigns.



Father Pizzaballa spoke on a Church-sponsored day of prayer for peace in the Holy Land. At the Vatican, Pope Benedict XVI marked the day with a prayer to “lead minds and hearts toward concrete projects of peace.” He did not specifically mention the unrest in Egypt.



The Pope, joined by two Italian youths, then released two doves from his apartment window as a sign of peace.



In his comments to Vatican Radio, Father Pizzaballa said the search for peace and freedom involves “not allowing oneself to be dominated by passions.”



“We all see how in the Middle East, in the Holy Land and in Jerusalem, passions can blind people. Instead, to have real freedom, we need a certain distance from things in order to see them more clearly,” he said.

He said real freedom in the Middle East needs to include religious freedom, access to places of worship and holy places, and freedom of religious expression.



Francesco Zannini, who teaches at the Pontifical Institute for Arabic and Islamic Studies in Rome, said the situation in Egypt reflected the weakening political power of Arab leaders who have ruled as “monarchs” but who are threatened by changes brought by globalization.



In Egypt, it was unclear whether the momentum of the unrest was great enough to bring lasting reforms, Zannini told the Rome-based agency AsiaNews. One big question, he said, was whether Mohamed ElBaradei, an opposition leader and Nobel Peace Prize winner, had the capacity to govern Egypt.

Zannini said that although Islamic extremists had begun to join the protests in Egypt, he doubted whether they would ever present a governing alternative there. He said he thought radical Islam was losing influence among the populations of the Middle East, and had shown itself too inflexible to have success on a political level, where consensus-building is needed.
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