Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Britney Spears Reveals Title of Eighth Album: Britney Jean!


No 23-word album titles a la Fiona Apple for Britney Spears! The "Work Bitch" singer, 31, revealed the title for her forthcoming studio album -- her eighth -- during an Oct. 14 radio interview in London: Britney Jean.


"It's a personal album, and all my family, they always called me Britney Jean," Spears explained to 95-106 Capital FM. "It's like a term of endearment. I just wanted to share that with my fans."


PHOTOS: Find out Brit's most outrageous demand EVER


The followup to 2011's platinum smash Femme Fatale goes on sale Dec. 3, and the mother of two teamed up with the likes of mega-producers will.i.am and frequent Madonna collaborator William Orbit. As for other high-profile guest stars, like, perhaps, Miley Cyrus? "You'll have to wait and see!" she teased of Cyrus, 20, with whom she sang on "Bangerz (SMS)" for the younger starlet's new album.


PHOTOS: Brit's love life


The end of 2013 and beginning of 2014 promises to be very busy for Spears, who also kicks off her two-year Las Vegas residency at Planet Hollywood Dec. 27. "I'm really stoked about it. I've toured the world so many times and had been in different hotels every night. It's going to be nicee to ahve one place to be at for my children and my family," said Sean and Jayden's mom.


PHOTOS: Britney's hottest, sexiest looks of all time


Spears also dished a tad about Sin City downtime with "my boyfriend" David Lucado -- and she prefers spas, not gambling. "I love the oxygen facials and I love getting pampered," she revealed. "And the food is amazing! The food's crazy. I always gain, like, 10 pounds when I go. It's ridiculous."


Source: http://www.usmagazine.com/entertainment/news/britney-spears-reveals-title-of-eighth-album-britney-jean-20131510
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Analysis: Not much left for Europe's left


By Paul Taylor


PARIS (Reuters) - What is left for Europe's mainstream center-left?


Socialist and social democratic parties that shaped the protective European social model and ruled much of the continent a decade ago have been among the chief political casualties of the financial and economic crisis since 2008.


More than just a cyclical trough, this may be a longer-term decline because the left has lost its political narrative.


Many young and blue-collar voters, angry over mass unemployment and spending cuts, have deserted to protest parties of the anti-capitalist hard left or the Eurosceptical, anti-immigrant far right, as the political landscape fragments, polling evidence shows.


Others trust middle-of-the-road conservatives such as German Chancellor Angela Merkel more than the left to run the economy in tough times. And some have simply stopped voting out of disillusionment.


Most worryingly for a movement born in the 19th century of organized labor's struggle for better working conditions and living standards, the belief in collective social progress has lost much of its credibility in mature advanced economies.


Income inequality has increased across the industrialized West since the crisis began, according to OECD figures, widening social gaps that the left set out to close.


"Social democracy nowadays basically amounts to the defense of the status quo and preventing the worst," says Olaf Cramme, director of Policy Network, a think-tank for progressive center-left politics.


Germany's opposition Social Democrats (SPD) have just recorded their second worst election result since World War Two.


They now face an ugly trilemma between entering a "grand coalition" under Merkel on unequal terms, staying out and seeing her possibly team up with the Greens, the SPD's natural partner, or being punished by voters at a rerun election.


Socialists or social democrats still head 13 of the 28 EU governments and are in coalition in five others, but they are often driven to pursue unpopular policies that hit the interests of their own electorate.


"It is an extremely difficult balance," Social Democratic Danish Prime Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt told Reuters in an interview. "We had some reforms that have been seen as quite harsh, but they have also been necessary.


"I think we have found the right formula, not to be popular because we have not actually reached that yet, but to do the right thing for the country," she said.


Austria's Socialists lost votes last month, though they remain the largest party. Italy's center-left Democratic Party, which now heads a shaky left-right coalition, bled votes to the anti-establishment 5-Star protest movement in a February election and is driven by factional squabbling.


In Greece, Ireland and Spain, center-left parties are paying a high electoral price for having supported public pay and pension cuts required by international creditors.


FEWER MEMBERS, LESS MONEY


In Britain, the opposition Labour party is still distrusted because it presided over a deregulated financial market bonanza that ended in the crash of 2008, wrecking the reputation for economic competence once built by Tony Blair and Gordon Brown.


In France, one of the few countries with an absolute center-left parliamentary majority, Socialist President Francois Hollande is deeply unpopular as his government dithers between old-style tax-and-spend policies and half-hearted welfare and labor market reforms, satisfying no one.


With the membership and funding of mainstream parties dwindling in many countries, the center-left has rarely kept pace with new vectors of political action via social media and grassroots initiatives.


Some of the center-left's woes may be temporary. When voters tire of center-right governments implementing austerity policies and scandal and attrition in office take their toll, the pendulum may swing back to the mainstream opposition.


But the center-left can no longer offer much prospect of a rosier future through state intervention.


There are fewer fruits of economic growth to redistribute, globalization continues to exert downward pressure on wages and working conditions in developed countries, and the demographics of ageing societies with shrinking workforces make welfare benefits and pensions ever harder to sustain.


Compounding the left's problems, some conservative leaders such as Merkel and Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt have successfully occupied the middle ground.


"(Merkel) has taken any political polarization away by reverse-engineering the social democratic Third Way strategy," said Henning Meyer, editor of the Social Europe Journal.


"Similar to what Tony Blair and Gerhard Schroeder did in the 1990s and 2000s, she has adopted the most popular policies of her opponents - at least rhetorically."


Merkel embraced the phasing out of nuclear power, increased public spending on childcare and family benefits and offered a watered-down form of minimum wage to neutralize the center-left.


A lurch to the left did not help the SPD regain much ground as core voters are still angry over painful reforms in the last decade that cut unemployment benefits and raised the retirement age, even though they are now credited with restoring German competitiveness.


CREDIBLE SOCIAL JUSTICE?


The policy dilemma confronting the European left is how to offer a credible, modern vision of social justice.


Reformers such as Policy Network's Cramme argue that the only salvation lies in emphasising "pre-distribution" through investment in childcare, education and job training, rather than perpetuating blanket welfare handouts.


"Defending acquired rights may be legitimate, but it no longer makes you a catch-all people's party," Cramme said. "If you want to be a big-tent party again, you will have to combine reformist elements with social protection."


This leaves the center-left with awkward choices.


Its big batallions of supporters tend to be among public employees and unionized industrial workers with strong job protection and secure pensions who fear privatization, and resist easier hire-and-fire regulations and later retirement.


In some northern European countries such as Denmark, social democratic parties have pinned their fate on embracing an open, globalised economy and making social protection more selective.


"We are trying to do four things at the same time," Thorning-Schmidt said in an interview in her Copenhagen office, drawing four points on a piece of paper.


"Fiscal constraint - call it austerity - (and) on the other side growth measures. Then social welfare for the most in need and the restructuring of our welfare model."


The Dutch Labour party is the latest to risk electoral wrath by embracing a long-term shift from a generous welfare state to a "participatory society" in which people provide for themselves more, as outlined in the king's speech to parliament last month.


The SPD's bitter experience of being flayed at the polls for Schroeder's reforms may explain why France's Hollande and British Labour party leader Ed Miliband are espousing a more traditional left-wing platform, despite conventional wisdom that elections are won in the center.


(Additional reporting by Alistair Scrutton in Copenhagen; Editing by Louise Ireland)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/analysis-not-much-left-europes-left-063345263.html
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Asian stocks gain on US debt deal hopes

In this Thursday, Oct. 10, 2013 photo, trader Sean Spain works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Three days from a deadline to increase the U.S. debt ceiling, investors were fidgety and stocks drifted lower, Monday, Oct. 14, 2013. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)







In this Thursday, Oct. 10, 2013 photo, trader Sean Spain works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. Three days from a deadline to increase the U.S. debt ceiling, investors were fidgety and stocks drifted lower, Monday, Oct. 14, 2013. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)







(AP) — Asian stock markets rose Tuesday, tracking gains on Wall Street, where shares were boosted by signs that Washington was moving closer to a deal that would avert a debt default by the U.S. government.

Two days from a deadline to increase the U.S. debt ceiling, investors remain focused on developments in Washington. Most think a deal will be reached in time and stock markets were holding up.

The U.S. has to increase the amount of debt it can sell by Oct. 17 or face a possible default, a scenario that could derail the U.S. economic recovery and roil international markets.

Investors in Asia "are hoping that the US can have a deal done to resolve the debt limit problem in coming days, so I think that's the biggest news for the Asian markets," said Jackson Wong, vice president at Tanrich Securities in Hong Kong.

Negotiations between Republicans and Democrats over the weekend failed to reach a conclusion either on raising the debt ceiling or the partial shutdown of the U.S. government, which has now entered a third week.

Japan's Nikkei 225 stock average added 0.2 percent to 14,425.04 and Hong Kong's Hang Seng gained 0.6 percent to 23,351.84. South Korea's Kospi was 0.8 percent higher at 2,036.56. Taiwan's stock index rose 0.9 percent to 8,347.55.

China's Shanghai Composite index bucked the trend, down 0.3 percent at 2,230.62.

Wong said recent economic data from China has been mixed, with investors still not sure whether the Chinese economy will stabilize after a prolonged slowdown.

Markets in Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and the Philippines were closed for holidays.

On Wall Street, the Dow Jones industrial average rose 64 points, or 0.4 percent, to close at 15,301 on Monday.

The Standard & Poor's 500 rose seven points, or 0.4 percent, to 1,710. The Nasdaq composite rose 23 points, or 0.6 percent, to 3,815.

In energy trading, benchmark crude for November delivery was down 13 cents at$102.28 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

The euro rose to $1.356 from $1.3554 late Monday. The dollar dropped to 98.45 yen from 98.67 yen.

Associated PressSource: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-10-15-World%20Markets/id-1367014ed79b4d3c9e5826ccaa143f89
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Monday, October 14, 2013

Sharing Hearts Ranch

I was thinking of making an immortal creature possibly a vampire or something similar maybe. If that's ok?


Follow me down the path
I will walk beside you
Guiding and showing you the way
I will not leave you
I will be standing on the path watching you
If you ever feel alone
Close your eyes
You will see 6 sets of foot prints
2 belonging to you, 4 to me
Then you will know that I have not left you

For the strength of the Pack is the Wolf...
And the strength of the Wolf is the Pack


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/CIz7GN1dY-I/viewtopic.php
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Sunday, October 13, 2013

Will Syrian refugees transform or threaten Jordan's economy?


It’s early in the day, before the afternoon rush, so the server at one of Jordan’s newest shawarma stands takes time to carve a carrot into a reasonable representation of a rose before presenting a platter of marinated and grilled chicken slices to a customer.


The fast food restaurant, Enis Chicken, is one of the latest Damascus imports to Amman. Just down the street is the Syrian shop Bakdash, where the rhythm of wooden paddles beating against metal tubs rings out in tune with a centuries-old recipe that turns milk, rose water and Arabic gum into ice cream.


The shawarma stand, competing with a shop selling the more basic local version of the chicken sandwich nearby, is part of a wave of Syrian entrepreneurship that both promises and threatens to change the face of Jordan.



Over the past two years, an estimated 1 million Syrians have fled fighting in their homeland for their tiny neighbor, the latest of several waves of refugees from Jordan's neighbors – Palestinians at various points since Israel's founding, Iraqis in the wake of the US invasion, and now, Syrians. Fewer than half of those are in Zataari, the desolate, still-growing refugee camp that is now Jordan’s fourth biggest city.


“The people of Jordan were very much against us being here,” says Madian al-Jazerah, a business owner who was among the wave of Jordanians of Palestinian origin who resettled in Amman after being expelled from Kuwait in 1991. “Now with the Syrians it’s the same pattern."


Faced with the biggest refugee crisis in the region since the creation of Israel in 1948, the Jordanian government has warned that its population of 6 million population won’t be able to absorb more Syrian refugees and that the influx is a dangerous drain on resources. Jordanians slammed by higher prices for fuel, electricity, water and consumer goods due to the lifting of government subsidies are blaming the Syrian refugees for disappearing jobs and rising prices. 


During the 2003 war in Iraq, poorer Iraqis fled to Syria – the only place they could afford to live. Those Iraqis who sought refuge in Jordan tended to be well-educated and many of them wealthy – building and buying large companies and creating jobs.


The Syrians – who are setting up small businesses and working in shops, restaurants and construction – are a different breed.


“The Iraqis definitely had money,” economist Yusuf Mansur says. “The Syrians are more craftspeople. They come from a socialist economy in a country that was large, diverse and closed for the longest time and because they were closed they learned to do things.”


FILLING IN THE GAPS


Wedged between Iraq, Syria, Saudi Arabia, Israel and the Palestinian territories, Jordan has little water and few other natural resources. But it has parlayed its traditionally close relations with the United States and its position as a buffer state between Israel and the Arab world – and as a major recipient of refugees – into foreign aid that is its biggest source of income.


Many of the products sold in Jordan – from clothing and food to inlaid wooden boxes and handmade glass-- were Syrian. Until the 1990s, a ban on imported cars filled Damascus streets with vehicles from the 1950s and 60s kept running through ingenuity.   


“We were originally nomadic raiders,” says Mansur, referring to Jordan’s original Bedouin population. “The Syrians were traders.”


Mansur disputes government figures that indicate the refugees are draining limited resources to a critical level, saying that those living in trailers and tents consume far less water and electricity than Jordanians. Without the influx of refugees spending money in the most impoverished areas of Jordan, he says, the kingdom’s sluggish growth rate – estimated at 2 to 3 percent – would be even lower.


Most of the Syrians work in Jordan’s “unofficial sector.” At one Amman shopping mall, a Syrian salesman who says he works a seven-day week for the equivalent of $350 a month said he had been fined four times for working illegally.


Getting a work permit “would cost me two months rent,” he says.


Many Jordanian business owners taking advantage of cheaper, experienced labor have dropped the wages they are offering.  But business owners say the Syrians offer skills that Jordanians don’t have and like Egyptian laborers in the country, are willing to take jobs Jordanians don’t consider respectable.


Mr. Al-Jazerah, who employs more than 60 people at two branches of his books@cafe restaurants, says he pays expatriate workers the same as his Jordanian employees.  His waiters include a Syrian architect.


“Jordanians have finally accepted to be waiters,” he says. “Are they willing to sweep floors, are they willing to be a guard in an apartment building, are they willing to wash dishes? No. “


ADDING FLAVOR


Damascus, one of the world’s oldest continuously inhabited cities, was on the silk road trade route and once the capitol of a powerful Islamic empire. Its cuisine and its culture also bear more recent traces of its legacy of a French protectorate.


At the shawarma shop, the simple chicken sandwich rolled in paper-thin bread is marinated in pomegranate syrup and scented with lemon and cardamom. It costs less than $2. The owners opened a branch in Amman earlier this year after two of their Damascus restaurants were destroyed.


“Syrians and the people of Damascus in particular are known for their food. It feeds the soul,” says Ayman al-Sayid al-Lahem, one of the owners.


Although it’s meant as fast food, the demand is so high that in the early evening, customers wait on the sidewalk for up to half an hour for the sandwiches.


“These people can bring in so much. I’m finally hoping to see good carpentry for instance, or good glass blowing, or just good sweets,” Jazerah, the business owner, says. “They’re bringing in culture and that’s what people don’t see – they’re just adding to our spice.”



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Source: http://news.yahoo.com/syrian-refugees-transform-threaten-jordans-economy-130004477.html
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Thursday, October 10, 2013

Joe Thornton's four-goal game celebration would ... - Yahoo Sports



Via @bonksmullet.


Two days on from his incredible, four-goal performance, capped with the early frontrunner for goal of the year, the hockey world is still buzzing about nineteen-year-old sensation Tomas Hertl. But on Thursday, the conversation took a slight turn when Washington Capitals' coach Adam Oates gave voice to a growing crowd of dissenters, calling Hertl's move disrespectful.


And that's when Joe Thornton came to Hertl's rescue. Sensing that the conversation was beginning to turn against his linemate, the Sharks' captain decided to do his captainly duty Thursday, turning the attention away from Tomas Hertl and squarely on himself.


How did he do that? He whipped out one doozy of a quote. From Jason Botchford of The Province:



Hearing a question to Marleau about Hertl and whether he was showboating, Thornton said: “Shut up, have you ever played the game?”


When the press turned his way, he then added:


“I’d have my [rooster] out if I scored four goals. I’d have my [rooster] out, stroking it.”



In Hertl's defense, he's new to this country. That's a good way to get deported.


But seriously, oh my God. Thornton can't possibly have actually said that, can he? David Pollak?



Well then.


Yeah, we can probably safely assume that Joe Thornton didn't expect to be quoted. But he was. And now here we are.


Amazingly, Thornton's never had a four-goal game. He's at nearly a point a game over his lengthy NHL career, racking up 1120 points in 1128 games with his mad dangles, and he's registered four career hat tricks, the most recent of which came October 27, 2010 versus the New Jersey Devils. But he's never dropped four on an opponent. Which is why he's never dropped trou on an opponent.


When he does, though, well, if you thought Hertl's between-the-legs move was over the top, just wait for Jumbo Joe's to rock out on his fourth tally of the night. It'll bring new meaning to the term "junk goal".



Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/nhl-puck-daddy/joe-thornton-four-goal-game-celebration-probably-better-195736956--nhl.html
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Friday, July 5, 2013

SAfrican government denies Mandela is "vegetative"

Oamohetswe Mabitsela, 4 months old, is placed by his mother next to a picture of Nelson Mandela for her to take a photograph of him with her camera phone, outside the Mediclinic Heart Hospital where former South African President Nelson Mandela is being treated in Pretoria, South Africa Thursday, July 4, 2013. The remains of Nelson Mandela's three deceased children were reburied at their original resting site on Thursday, a day after a court ordered their return two years after Mandela's grandson moved the bodies. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

Oamohetswe Mabitsela, 4 months old, is placed by his mother next to a picture of Nelson Mandela for her to take a photograph of him with her camera phone, outside the Mediclinic Heart Hospital where former South African President Nelson Mandela is being treated in Pretoria, South Africa Thursday, July 4, 2013. The remains of Nelson Mandela's three deceased children were reburied at their original resting site on Thursday, a day after a court ordered their return two years after Mandela's grandson moved the bodies. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)

Children and other well-wishers release balloons to mark former South African President Nelson Mandela completing his 27th day in hospital Thursday, correlating with the 27 years he spent in prison during the apartheid era, outside the Mediclinic Heart Hospital where he is being treated in Pretoria, South Africa Friday, July 5, 2013. The former president's health is "perilous," according to documents filed in the court case that resulted in the remains of his three deceased children being reburied Thursday in their original graves. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)

Children, a choir and other well-wishers hold balloons to release them to mark former South African President Nelson Mandela completing his 27th day in hospital Thursday, correlating with the 27 years he spent in prison during the apartheid era, outside the Mediclinic Heart Hospital where he is being treated in Pretoria, South Africa, Friday, July 5, 2013. The former president's health is "perilous," according to documents filed in the court case that resulted in the remains of his three deceased children being reburied Thursday in their original graves. (AP Photo/Muhammed Muheisen)

(AP) ? Nelson Mandela is in critical but stable condition, the South African government said Friday, while a close friend said the anti-apartheid leader was conscious and responsive earlier this week.

The government reiterated that Mandela is not in a vegetative state, contrary to recent court documents.

A court paper filed June 27 concerning Mandela family graves said affidavits would be provided from his physicians to show that Mandela "is in a permanent vegetative state." A later filing dropped that phrase. Both court filings, however, said that Mandela's breathing was machine assisted.

A close friend of Mandela's, Denis Goldberg, told Sky News on Friday that he visited Mandela on Monday and that Mandela was conscious and responsive to what he was saying. Goldberg also quoted from something Mandela's wife told him.

"There is no sign of a general organ collapse and therefore they do not recommend switching off the machine because there's every chance that his health will improve," Goldberg quoted wife Graca Machel as saying. "The matter has been discussed and the decision was against."

A "persistent vegetative state" is defined as the condition of patients with severe brain damage in whom coma has progressed to a state of wakefulness without detectable awareness, according to the New England Journal of Medicine.

Goldberg said the legal papers that said Mandela was "vegetative" might have been written when Mandela was in a coma or unconscious, and that perhaps Mandela then improved.

"Maybe he's recovered a bit and that's what I assume," he said. "The lawyers can say what they like. I'm telling you what I saw."

Still, Mandela's situation is grave. Another court affidavit said that "the anticipation of his impending death is based on real and substantial grounds." A South African doctor, Adri Kok, said it was unlikely that a person of Mandela's age ? he is 94 ? can be taken off mechanical ventilation, another word for life support, and recover.

The court filing came in a case brought by 15 Mandela family members against a Mandela grandson who had moved the remains of three Mandela children from their original burial site. A court ordered the bodies to be moved back to Mandela's hometown of Qunu.

The family feud drew a rebuke late Thursday from retired archbishop Desmond Tutu who appealed to the family of Mandela, also known by his clan name Madiba, to overcome their differences.

"Please, please, please may we think not only of ourselves. It's almost like spitting in Madiba's face," Tutu said in a statement released by his foundation. "Your anguish, now, is the nation's anguish ? and the world's. We want to embrace you, to support you, to shine our love for Madiba through you. Please may we not besmirch his name."

The leader of South Africa's anti-apartheid movement, Mandela spent 27 years in prison during white racist rule. He was freed in 1990 and became South Africa's first black president in 1994.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/cae69a7523db45408eeb2b3a98c0c9c5/Article_2013-07-05-South%20Africa-Mandela/id-b585d0ea2db8464385b4b1b664f05d0a

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