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Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Listeria outbreak in cantaloupes is deadliest in a decade

Health officials say as many as 16 people have died from possible listeria illnesses traced to Colorado cantaloupes, the deadliest food outbreak in more than a decade.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Tuesday that 72 illnesses, including 13 deaths, are linked to the tainted fruit. State and local officials say they are investigating three additional deaths that may be connected.



'Significant' pay gap for teachers in black schools

For U.S. schools with a large African-American and Latino population, the teachers are drastically short-changed, according to the latest Department of Education data. Nationwide, the department's Civil Rights Data Collection (CRDC) shows that these teachers are paid $2,500 less on average.
The analysis, the first of its kind to look at "fiscal equity at the school-to-school spending level" took data from 2,217 school districts that are racially diverse, out of nearly 7,000 U.S. school districts tapped for the survey.



N.J. among states that received shipments of contaminated cantaloupes

New Jersey is among several states that received shipments of whole cantaloupes contaminated with Listeria bacteria that have since caused one of the deadliest outbreaks in a decade, federal officials said.
Of the 72 people reportedly infected with four outbreak-associated strains of Listeria monoctyogenes, 13 have died as of earlier this week, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. None of them were in New Jersey.


LA Church Encourages Black Women To Test For STDs

Gonorrhea and Chlamydia outbreaks have run rampant among the black female community in Los Angeles, reports YourBlackWorld.com

 

Mortgage-Relief Scams Target Blacks, Latinos

Mortgage-relief scams target blacks, Latinos: Since the housing crisis began, nearly half the victims of mortgage loan-modification scams have been of African-American, Latino or Asian descent, according to a May study released by the Homeownership Preservation Foundation, a nonprofit that works with distressed homeowners.





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INTERESTING ARTICLE[S] TO READ
Why You Should Avoid High Fructose Corn Syrup . . .

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

free phones, blackberry, Sanyo, Motorola, LG,  Samsung, HTC, Palm and more for Sprint


Was the Associated Press transcription of Obama’s CBC speech ‘racist’?

By most accounts, President Obama gave a fiery speech at the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation's annual awards dinner in Washington, D.C., on Saturday, telling blacks to "quit crying and complaining" and support him in the fight for jobs, according to the Associated Press. But was the AP transcription of Obama's remarks racist?

Via the AP version:
"Take off your bedroom slippers. Put on your marching shoes," he said, his voice rising as applause and cheers mounted. "Shake it off. Stop complainin'. Stop grumblin'. Stop cryin'. We are going to press on. We have work to do."

 Coffee cuts depression risk in women



Women in the study who drank two to three cups of caffeinated coffee a day were 15 percent less likely to develop depression over a 10-year period compared to those who drank one cup of coffee or less per week.





Sharp Rise in U.S. Health Insurance Cost, Study Finds

The cost of health insurance for many Americans this year climbed more sharply than in previous years, outstripping any growth in workers’ wages and adding more uncertainty about the pace of rising medical costs.


No Facebook account? No Spotify!

Popular music streaming service Spotify recently revealed that it is finally no longer an invitation-only club and that it is opening its doors to everyone. Unfortunately this change comes with a catch.
You now must have a Facebook account in order to sign up for Spotify.


Irishman died of spontaneous human combustion, coroner claims

Can people suddenly and inexplicably explode into a ball of fire?

It sounds like something in a horror film, but some people believe it happens. It's also what an Irish coroner recently concluded about the death of Michael Faherty, a 76-year-old Irishman who burned to death in his home in December 2010. There were scorch marks above and below the body, but no evidence of any gasoline, kerosene, or other accelerant. The coroner, Ciaran McLoughlin, reported: "This fire was thoroughly investigated and I'm left with the conclusion that this fits into the category of spontaneous human combustion, for which there is no adequate explanation."


Study: Dads less likely to die of heart problems

Fatherhood may be a kick in the old testosterone, but it may also help keep a man alive. New research suggests that dads are a little less likely to die of heart-related problems than childless men are.


Tavis Smiley Goes Ballistic In Video Over Obama’s CBC Speech

President Obama critic Tavis Smiley went ballistic this past weekend on his TV show after Obama told African Americans to “stop complaining.”

Obama, at the Phoenix Awards Dinner at the CBC Forum, said that African Americans need to get up and fight.

“I expect all of you to march with me and press on. Take off your bedroom slippers, put on your marching shoes. Shake it off. Stop complaining, stop grumbling, stop crying. We are going to press on. We’ve got work to do, CBC,” said Obama.

Smiley, who was interviewing Rep. Barbara Lee on his nightly television show, said that Obama would never dare to say the same thing to another group of people.

View the video.




Rep. Waters Fires Back At Obama: Tell Him “We’re Not Complaining”

Representative Maxine Waters has fired back at President Obama after his speech at the Congressional Black Caucus this weekend in which he told the audience to “stop complaining.”

Waters, who recently told a group of Black voters to “unleash her on Obama,” was shocked by the president’s direct comments at the Black community.

“He would never talk to the gay, lesbian, or Latino communities in that manner,” said Waters. “I’m really kind of confused as to who he’s speaking to.”

“I’m not sure who the president was addressing. I found that language a bit curious,” Waters said today. “The president spoke to the Hispanic Caucus… he certainly didn’t tell them to stop complaining and he never would say that to the gay and lesbian community who really pushed him on don’t ask don’t tell or even in a speech to APEC, he would never say to the
Jewish community stop complaining about Israel.”

Rest In Peace! Legendary Gospel Singer Jesse Dixon Dead At 93

Jessy Dixon, a singer and songwriter who introduced his energetic style of gospel music to wider audiences by serving as pop singer Paul Simon’s opening act, died Monday. He was 73.

Miriam Dixon said her brother died Monday morning at his Chicago home. She said he had been sick but declined to provide additional details.

During a more than 50-year career, Dixon wrote songs for several popular singers, including jazz and rhythm and blues singer Randy Crawford. He later wrote songs performed by Cher, Diana Ross, Natalie Cole and Amy Grant.


Disgraceful! Racist Campus Bake Sale Sparks Outrage

During the sale, scheduled for Tuesday, baked goods will be sold to white men for $2.00, Asian men for $1.50, Latino men for $1.00, black men for $0.75 and Native American men for $0.25. All women will get $0.25 off those prices.

Monday, September 26, 2011

Please Find Her! Chicago Police Search For Missing Black Teen Girl



Police are searching for Soulchartirya Terry who was last seen in her military uniform leaving
Phoenix Military Academy on Campbell Ave in Chicago.

Terry has been missing for a week now and police are actively looking for leads.


 

Claflin moves to new class among liberal arts schools; SCSU a top public HBCU

The U.S. News and World Report recently released its 2012 "America's Best Colleges" report, and Orangeburg's two universities show up well among others in the nation.

After being ranked as a top regional baccalaureate institution for 13 years, Claflin University's status was upgraded by the magazine to that of a top national liberal arts university.

Claflin President Dr. Henry Tisdale says the new classification indicates the university is moving toward its stated goal of becoming a "premier undergraduate teaching and research institution in the world. ... For such a lauded resource as U.S. News and World Report to place our university among the top national liberal arts institutions in America shows that vision is becoming reality," Tisdale said.

Congress Reluctantly Pulled Toward Shutdown

FEMA funding dispute threatens a government shutdown neither side wants


Why Federal Government Trumps the States

 

NYPD Can Shoot Down Planes, But With What Weapon?

The NYPD is capable of shooting down planes in the event of another 9/11-style attack on New York City, Mayor Michael Bloomberg said Monday, but it's unknown exactly what weapons the police have at their disposal, and whether their arsenal includes surface-to-air missiles.

"The NYPD has lots of capabilities that you don't know about and you won't know about," Bloomberg told reporters Monday, echoing recent comments by police commissioner Ray Kelly.

Big housing blow: New home sales fall, again

High unemployment, larger required down payments and tougher lending standards are preventing many people from buying homes. Plunging stocks and a growing fear that the U.S. could tip back into another recession are also keeping people from entering the housing market.

Facebook unfriending 'bug' gets quick fix

Facebook users who were spying on their Timeline to see who had unfriended them in the past will no longer be able to do so.


Sunday, September 25, 2011

Rekindling the spirit of the Million Man March

The Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan has chosen this city as the host site for the 16th anniversary of the Million Man March. This year's celebration (Oct. 7-9) is being called the 16th anniversary of the Million Man March weekend.


“We have the means and ability to stop street violence by collective action in our communities, not by organizational competition. In many instances we can demonstrate our strength in combating this problem by working together. We should begin finding ways where we can collectively impact this problem and stop the fragmentation that seems to plague every step toward progress. A direct-action, frontline coalition of leaders and organizations is the best way to confront this problem at the neighborhood level. It will be difficult and vocal but we must pool our talent for the greater good.”

Haley wants to end state lawmakers' pension deal

 Gov. Nikki Haley said she will move to cut special
pension treatment for legislators in the wake of a USA TODAY investigation that found legislators in South Carolina are among thousands nationwide who are positioned to benefit from special retirement laws.

Special retirement pay for lawmakers is “an absolutely terrible policy, and we intend to get rid of it as a part of larger pension reform come January,” said Rob Godfrey, a spokesman for Haley.


USA TODAY reported more than 4,100 legislators in 33 states, including South Carolina, are positioned to benefit from special retirement laws that they and their predecessors have enacted to boost their pensions by up to $100,000 a year.

How state lawmakers pump up pensions in ways you can't

Most workers must retire from their jobs before getting retirement benefits. But Thomas used a one-sentence law that he and his colleagues passed in 2002 to let legislators receive a
taxpayer-funded pension instead of a salary after serving for 30 years.
Thomas' $32,390 annual retirement benefitpaid for the rest of his life — is more than triple the $10,400 salary he gave up. His pension exceeds the salary because of another perk: Lawmakers voted to count their expenses in the salary used to calculate their pensions.

No other South Carolina state workers get those perks.


Obama tells blacks to 'stop complainin' and fight

In a fiery summons to an important voting block, President Barack Obama told blacks on Saturday to quit crying and complaining and "put on your marching shoes" to follow him into battle for jobs and opportunity.

Can this Congress do anything right?


Facebook's 'open graph': Mark Zuckerberg's social networking site to prompt users for even more info


Mortgage rates drop to once unthinkable lows at less than 4%

The Federal Reserve's latest step to prop up the economy means that 30-year fixed-rate loans are available for less than 4%. But many people are in no position to buy or refinance a home.


Libya's NTC troops enter pro-Gaddafi city of Sirte


Child actors bask in starring roles


Parents call for boycott of Ben & Jerry's Schweddy Balls flavor

The flavor is named after the classic Alec Baldwin sketch on “Saturday Night Live,” in which he plays a bakery owner named Pete Schweddy. The most famous line (and the one most often repeated by drunk frat boys) is his end note: “No one can resist my Schweddy Balls.”


Delegates slam Perry on immigration


NYPD ticket-fixing probe: Grand jury votes to indict 17 cops in scandal that's rocked police dept.



Human remains found in concrete-filled drum may be New Jersey mother missing since August



Facebook Changes Inadvertently Allow Users To See Who Defriended Them

Ever wondered who decided to end a friendship on Facebook with you over the years? A feature built into Facebook's new Timeline profile page allows users to check out previous friends. 

Assuming that a user has already enabled the new Timeline profile page on Facebook, there’s a feature built into the Timeline that allows to users to view how many friends were added each year. Go to the Timeline page and choose a year on the right side of the page. Scroll through the posts and locate the “Friends” box. Within the Timeline, Facebook groups actions that occurred over the course of the year including new friendships, photos uploaded, events attended and new likes. On the “Friends” box, click the “Made X New Friends” link and this should load a pop-up window that lists all friendships created during that year.


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Friday, September 23, 2011

How state lawmakers pump up pensions in ways you can't

Most workers must retire from their jobs before getting retirement benefits. But Thomas used a one-sentence law that he and his colleagues passed in 2002 to let legislators receive a
taxpayer-funded pension instead of a salary after serving for 30 years.
Thomas' $32,390 annual retirement benefitpaid for the rest of his life — is more than triple the $10,400 salary he gave up. His pension exceeds the salary because of another perk: Lawmakers voted to count their expenses in the salary used to calculate their pensions.

No other South Carolina state workers get those perks.



Are the Feds Collecting Your Data? Apple, Dropbox Back Privacy Bill


With many Americans leading an increasingly digital life, it's not surprising that the government is turning to things like cell phone and email records when conducting investigations. But what rights do we have when it comes to giving up that information?

Apple and cloud storage service Dropbox are the latest companies to join an effort that calls on the government to obtain warrants before accessing email and other cloud-based data.

At this point, access to tech-based records are governed by the Electronic Communications Privacy Act (ECPA). But the bill was first enacted in 1986, well before the Internet, email, or smartphones. As a result, it is "significantly outdated and out-paced by rapid changes in technology and the changing mission of our law enforcement agencies after September 11," according to Sen. Patrick Leahy, a Vermont Democrat who introduced a bill in May that would update ECPA.




Facebook changes creeping out some customers

The fear among some users relates to what some say could become a potentially worrisome privacy situation on the social network, led by Timeline and changes to Open Graph.
Timeline provides users with a way to view "the story of your life," according to Zuckerberg, including a collection of all the "stories" uses have shared on Facebook over the years, as well as the pictures they've posted and the applications they've used.
Facebook's updated Open Graph will make the social network far more "sticky." Zuckerberg said users will have the ability--thanks to Timeline and a new addition, Ticker--to see what a friend is doing, like watching a movie on Netflix or listening to a song on Spotify, and engage in that same activity from within the social network. The Facebook CEO said he believes the improvements will help create "a completely new class of social apps" that will let users share every single facet of their lives on the social network.


Kobe Bryant remains target of Italian team

With the NBA lockout now cutting into at least part of the preseason, the Italian club Virtus Bologna continues to pursue Los Angeles Lakers star Kobe Bryant.

Team owner Claudio Sabatini had told reporters that he would like to sign Bryant even on a part-time basis. It was reported that the team would be willing to pay Bryant $600,000 per game, after taxes.

Kobe Bryant gets $6.7 million offer from Virtus Bologna in Italy, where he grew up

 

Health Buzz: FDA Banning Common Asthma Inhaler

FDA Banning Inhaler Over Environmental Concerns

Federal health officials are banning a common over-the-counter asthma inhaler because it uses ingredients that harm the environment. Primatene Mist inhalers will no longer be available after December 31, because they use carbon gas that depletes the Earth's atmosphere, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration said Thursday. The inhaler, used for temporary relief of mild asthma symptoms, is the only FDA-approved inhaler sold over the counter without a prescription. While Primatene inhalers rely on chlorofluorocarbons to propel medication into the patient's airways, alternatives use the environmentally-friendly propellant hydrofluoroalkane.

"If you rely on an over-the-counter inhaler to relieve your asthma symptoms, it is important that you contact a healthcare professional to talk about switching to a different medicine to treat your asthma," Badrul Chowdhury, director of FDA's pulmonary drug division, told the Associated Press.


Vesta Williams Prescription Pills Found at Death Scene

Multiple bottles of prescription pills were found in the El Segundo, CA hotel room where R&B singer Vesta Williams died ... law enforcement sources tell TMZ.

We're told "several bottles" were discovered -- some empty. 


All-Cash Buying Signals Demise of "Normal" Housing Market

Is the growth of all-sale purchases by investors a positive development for housing markets, or a sign that "normal" home sales by owners with equity in the property is shrinking?

 

Racist incident at preaseason game tops five hot topics

A sport that was once almost exclusively Caucasian has seen many talented African Americans and Canadians enter its ranks to the benefit of all. Thursday's disgraceful action by a yet-to-be-identified person won't set all progress back to Square One, but it doesn't help.








Sunday, September 18, 2011



Apples, Pears May Reduce Stroke Risk

Study Shows Fruits, Veggies With White Flesh May Be Best at Fighting Stroke Risk

Eating lots of white-fleshed fruit such as apples and pears may significantly reduce the risk of stroke.
In a new study, Dutch researchers set out to determine a possible link between stroke risk and eating fruits and vegetables of various colors. They took a look at self-reported information from 20,069 people between ages 20 and 65 of what they ate over a one-year period.

All of the people had no previous diagnosed heart disease or stroke at the start of the study.

During the 10 years of follow-up, 233 people had strokes. The researchers say the risk of stroke was 52% lower for people who ate a lot of white-fleshed fruits and vegetables, compared to those who didn’t.

Where All Work Is Created Equal

The two families met because of a bank — a time bank, where the unit of currency is not a dollar, but an hour.  When you join a time bank, you indicate what services you might be able to offer others: financial planning, computer de-bugging, handyman repairs, housecleaning, child care, clothing alterations, cooking, taking someone to a doctor’s appointment on the bus, visiting the homebound or English conversation. People teach Mandarin and yoga and sushi-making. Castillo-Vélez earns a credit for each hour she spends tutoring José.  She spends the credits on art classes.

NASA: Satellite pieces tumbling back to Earth

U.S. space officials say they expect a dead satellite to fall to Earth in about a week.

NASA has been watching the 6-ton satellite closely. On Friday officials moved up their prediction for its arrival to Sept. 23, give or take a day.

NASA scientists have calculated the satellite will break into 26 pieces as it gets closer to Earth. The odds of it hitting someone anywhere on the planet are 1 in 3,200.

The heaviest piece to hit the ground will be about 350 pounds, but no one has ever been hit by falling space junk in the past.


The Ten Happiest Jobs

There are also some surprises in the ten happiest jobs, as reported a General Social
Survey by the National Organization for Research at the University of Chicago.

What if the Secret to Success Is Failure?


Moving beyond 'blame the teacher'

Much of the current wave of school reform is informed by the same management myths that almost destroyed U.S. manufacturing. Instead of seeing teachers as key contributors to system improvement efforts, reformers are focused on making teachers more replaceable. Instead of involving teachers and their unions in collaborative reform, they are being pushed aside as impediments to top-down decision-making. Instead of bringing teachers together to help each other become more effective professionals, district administrators are resorting to simplistic quantified individual performance measures. In reality, schools are collaborative, not individual, enterprises, so teaching quality and school performance depend above all on whether the institutional systems support teachers' efforts.

The jobless young left behind

The harm today’s youth unemployment is doing will be felt for decades, both by those affected and by society at large

Ms Ulldemolins belongs to a generation of young Spaniards who feel that the implicit contract they accepted with their country—work hard, and you can have a better life than your parents—has been broken. Before the financial crisis Spanish unemployment, a perennial problem, was pushed down by credit-fuelled growth and a prolonged construction boom: in 2007 it was just 8%. Today it is 21.2%, and among the young a staggering 46.2%. “I trained for a world that doesn’t exist,” says Ms Ulldemolins.


Myth: Men Who Still Live At Home Are Wack

Friday, September 16, 2011

Thank God - Someone Got it Right!
A happy ending in Detroit: 101-year-old Texana Hollis is getting her house back. HUD foreclosed on the home Monday and evicted the bewildered woman, who was unaware that her son had failed to pay property taxes to keep a reverse mortgage afloat. After the story made national headlines, HUD officials said today they would pay the taxes, get rid of the padlocks, and allow Hollis to return to the home she lived in for nearly 60 years, reports the Detroit News. "We just want to make sure that Mrs. Hollis knows that her home of many years is hers to live in for as long as she wants," said a HUD spokesman. Hollis has been in the hospital since the eviction.


Dr. Oz slammed over apple juice arsenic warning

Arsenic in apple juice! Fed to babies! And it probably came from China! Television's Dr. Mehmet Oz is under fire from the FDA and others for sounding what they say is a false alarm about the dangers of apple juice.

Oz, one of TV's most popular medical experts, said on his Fox show Wednesday that testing by a New Jersey lab had found what he suggested were troubling levels of arsenic in many brands of juice.

The Food and Drug Administration said its own tests show no such thing, even on one of the same juice batches Oz cited.

"There is no evidence of any public health risk from drinking these juices. And FDA has been testing them for years," the agency said in a statement.

Tim Sullivan, a spokesman for Oz's show, said in an interview: "We don't think the show is irresponsible. We think the public has a right to know what's in their foods."

Publisher's Note:


Again, it's not about Dr. Oz is being accused of inflating the numbers of arsenic levels found in apple juice, thus informing his audience and the public about it, but instead it is about the fact that he has INFORMED his audience and the public that indeed there IS arsenic IN apple juice, which is approved by our own overseeing agencies, that is being consumed by the American public! 


NYPD scores major pot bust: Cops arrest reggae star Denroy Morgan, seize 310 pounds of marijuana

Jamaican-born reggae star Denroy Morgan was busted on drug charges after cops saw him leaving a Bronx house carrying 25 pounds of ganja, police said Thursday. Morgan's capture led to the seizure of a 310-pound stash of marijuana and the arrest of another man caught toting 16 pounds of pot, cops said.

Known for his 1981 reggae-disco hit "I'll Do Anything For You," Morgan, 66, told cops he was flush with weed when they pulled his car over Wednesday afternoon and got a whiff of the drug, police said.

A source insisted the unraveling of the cannabis caper did not stem from a surveillance sting but was the result of eagle-eyed narcotics detectives.

The detectives were working on an unrelated case in Soundview when they saw Morgan walking out of a building at 4p.m. carrying what appeared to be a brick of marijuana in shrink-wrap packaging, the source said.

High court halts Duane Buck's Texas execution

The U.S. Supreme Court halted the execution Thursday of a black man convicted of a double murder in Texas 16 years ago after his lawyers contended his sentence was unfair because of a question asked about race during his trial.


Duane Buck, 48, was spared from lethal injection when the justices, without extensive comment, said they would review an appeal in his case. Two appeals, both related to a psychologist's testimony that black people were more likely to commit violence, were before the court. One was granted; the other was denied.

"Praise the Lord!" Buck told Texas Department of Criminal Justice spokesman Jason Clark. "God is worthy to be praised. God's mercy triumphs over judgment. I feel good."


The jobless in New Jersey find refuge in Tent City

Lakewood, New Jersey (CNN) -- Cars and trucks cruise along Cedar Bridge Avenue, drivers listening to radio anchors reporting the headline that a record 46 million Americans are living in poverty, while 50 feet from the bustling boulevard, hidden by the woods that border the road, lies a shocking example of that shameful statistic.

Behind the trees, six dozen homeless Americans have set up camp, in tents, teepees and huts, residents of what they call Tent City. It's a place where those out of work and out of luck can drop out of society while living as cheaply as possible.

"It's a community here," said the Rev. Steven Brigham, who founded Tent City in 2006 as part of his Lakewood Outreach Ministry Church. "They have a sense of belonging."

In the past year Brigham has seen Tent City's population nearly double as the jobs recession drags on.


EDUCATION

GOOD NEWS: Black Quadruplets All Accepted To Yale

Boola Boola, Boola Boola: Yale Says Yes, 4 Times 

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Post Office closings could move Ga. mail operation to Ala. 

The U.S. Postal Service said Thursday it will conduct a study at the Columbus (Ga.) Customer Service Mail Processing Center to determine the feasibility of consolidating its operations into the Montgomery, Ala., Processing and Distribution Center, reports the Columbus Ledger Enquirer.

 

APNewsBreak: SC employers to get insurance refunds

South Carolina's unemployment insurance agency will be sending refund checks to businesses or giving them credits for past overpayments, the agency said Thursday.

Agency director Abraham Turner said "this is a very good news story for businesses in this state."
"Businesses will be able to invest a little bit more of their money because of the refund that's coming their way," said Turner, who just started the job a week ago. They will be "able to feel more confident about the future going forward."

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Job seekers, get ready for personality tests

More employers are using pre-hire assessments

As it turns out, your childhood misdeeds, along with whether you care about someone else’s bad day and how much you read, may have an impact on how a prospective employer views you.
To get a read on applicants, more employers are using pre-hire assessments, which can check personality, cognitive ability, and competency, among other areas. About 56% of companies are using some sort of assessment tool as part of the hiring process this year, up from 48% in 2010, according to Aberdeen Group, a Boston-based research firm. 


Facebook Organizes Friends into Lists Automatically

According to information posted to the Facebook blog , the new friends list feature – labeled Smart Lists – will automatically create groups for users' friends based on things they have in common: Workplace, school, city or family.
Additionally, users will be able to create lists for close friends and acquaintances. Though these lists won't update themselves, this innovation means that you'll be able to view photos or posts from those you really care about while skimming over information from more distant connections. You'll only receive major news – like engagements – from those flagged as acquaintances.


Georgia has 3rd highest poverty rate among states

New Census data shows that Georgia's poverty rate was the third highest in the country in 2010, up two spots from last year, with more than 1.8 million residents counted among the poor.

The only states with higher poverty rates in 2010 were Louisiana and Mississippi. Nationally, 15.1 percent of Americans were living in poverty last year.

Georgia also ranked eighth in the nation in the number of uninsured residents, at a rate of 19.4 percent. Roughly 1.9 million Georgians did not have health insurance last year when the state joined a challenge to President Barack Obama's health care plan, meant in part to address rising numbers of people without health insurance.

SAT scores drop in Georgia, South Carolina, U.S.

More high school graduates are trying to go to college, if SAT results released Wednesday are any indication.
But that doesn’t necessarily mean more graduates are ready for college.

Across Georgia, South Carolina and the nation, 2011 high school graduates posted lower SAT scores on average than students who graduated a year earlier. On the other hand, no graduating class has ever had more students take the SAT than last year’s.


Ohio has country's 11th highest foreclosure rate

Ohio had one of the nation's highest foreclosure rates last month as banks stepped up their actions against homeowners behind on their mortgage payments.

Foreclosure listing firm RealtyTrac Inc. said Thursday that the number of U.S. homes that received an initial default notice - the first step in the foreclosure process - jumped 33 percent in August from July.

Six Things the Film Industry Doesn't Want You To Know About

You may already be a film industry cynic. Maybe you think Hollywood is a barren wasteland, devoid of creativity and originality. Maybe you’re sick of seeing talented people get ignored and vapid hacks get splashed all over the trades. Maybe you’re tired of 3D everything and having to re-buy your movies every five to ten years.

I’m not here to dissuade you of any of that. Hell no, I’m here to make it worse. Get ready, because this is some of the rottenest shit of which the film industry is capable. These are the things so terrible that Hollywood has to cover them up, lest God see their sin and smite them accordingly (and keep various government entities and lawyers off their backs, of course). If you still had any kind thoughts toward Hollywood, I suggest you prepare yourself for crushing disappointment.

NLRB costing South Carolina jobs

The National Labor Relations Board is alleging that Boeing violated labor laws by locating its new 787 Dreamliner facility in North Charleston, S.C. For years, Boeing has operated predominantly in Washington state, where it has invested billions of dollars and created thousands of jobs.


New local plant will provide 350 jobs 

South Carolina's top-flight aerospace team got a boost from a hometown player Wednesday when The InterTech Group Inc. announced its subsidiary's plans for a major manufacturing facility in North Charleston that would bring 350 jobs to a region hungry for employment and new investment.

10 Things Social Security Won't Tell You

The secret of bigger benefits, and the truth about the agency's bottom line.

A Social Security spokeswoman points out that interest income from the Treasury bonds held in the trust fund will allow it to keep growing until 2022 -- even if the agency has to siphon off some money to offset any shortages in tax revenue -- and won't be exhausted until 2036, when the first Gen Xers begin retiring. But that's already one year earlier than previous projections. After that, the agency says tax income under the current system will only cover about 75% of benefit payments through 2085.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011



Record 46.2 million Americans live in poverty, Census Bureau says

High joblessness and the weak economic recovery pushed the ranks of the poor in the U.S. to 46.2 million in 2010 -- the fourth straight increase and the largest number of people living in poverty since record-keeping began 52 years ago, the Census Bureau reported Tuesday.


The share of all people in the U.S. who fell below the poverty line rose to 15.1% last year from 14.3% in 2009. That matched the poverty rate reached in 1993 before falling steadily to 11.3% in 2000. Since then the poverty rate has risen, accelerating after the recession began in late 2007, and is now approaching levels not seen since Lyndon B. Johnson launched the War on Poverty in 1965.

Last year the share of children under 18 living in poverty jumped to 22%, from 20.7% the previous year.


Poverty rate hits 18-year high as median income falls

The report comes as President Barack Obama has embarked on a campaign to boost U.S. jobs growth to shake the economy out of an unemployment rate that has stagnated at around 9 percent for months. On Monday he sent a $447 billion jobs creation bill to Congress, asking lawmakers to pass the bill as soon as possible.


Publisher's Note:

The following are reprints of two articles I'd wrote regarding how families can beat the economic crisis.

Sunday, January 10, 2010
 

BEATING THE ECONOMIC WOES IN YEAR 2010Beating Economic Woes Through Family Unityby Miriam G. Aw

The days when a young 18 year old carted him or her self to college away from home to receive a solid education, thus graduating with a degree in their chosen field with the expectation, or assurance, of getting employed, and earning a decent wage is gone! Long gone!













Friday, March 5, 2010
 

Family Selfishness vs Family Selflessness vs Self RighteousnessIt's Not Looking Good: And It's Not Good Looking!by Miriam G. Aw

Granted, every one of us have the right to choose what to believe, whom to believe, and state our case as to why we believe in an unseen Spirit or God, or in a person that cites self-proclaim wisdom based on his, or her's views of life.















Wednesday, September 7, 2011

SC Alcoa plant to close without lower power rate

Alcoa officials say the company's aluminum smelting plant in this Charleston suburb consumes $4 million a week in power and will close at a loss of more than 600 jobs if they can't negotiate a lower rate with Santee Cooper, South Carolina's state-owned electric utility.

S.C. Has Fewest Female Lawmakers

Group urges women to run for office, says long session deters female candidates

South Carolina has the fewest female lawmakers of any state in the nation, but a coalition of several women’s advocacy groups are trying to change that statistic.

The Southeastern Institute of Women in Politics, a South Carolina non-profit, launched its “Take Your Seat” campaign Wednesday, urging women to run for elected office in 2012. The non-partisan group provides campaign training for women across the state.

There are currently no female state senators and only 15 of the 124 house representatives are women.


free phones, blackberry, Sanyo, Motorola, LG,  Samsung, HTC, Palm and more for Sprint



Working-age adults make up record share of U.S. poor

Counting adults 18-64 who were laid off in the recent recession as well as single twenty-somethings still looking for jobs, the new working-age poor represent nearly 3 out of 5 poor people - a switch from the early 1970s when children made up the main impoverished group.
While much of the shift in poverty is due to demographic changes - Americans are having fewer children than before - the now-weakened economy and limited government safety net for workers are heightening the effect.
Currently, the ranks of the working-age poor are at the highest level since the 1960s when the war on poverty was launched. When new census figures for 2010 are released next week, analysts expect a continued increase in the overall poverty rate due to persistently high unemployment last year.
If that holds true, it will mark the fourth year in a row of increases in the U.S. poverty rate, which now stands at 14.3 percent, or 43.6 million people.

Four Hidden Heart Attack Symptoms, Know the Signs

Most people associate heart attack symptoms with chest pain, pain in the shoulder, or other well-known signs. However, according to renowned cardiologist Dr. Chauncey Crandall, there are some signs that are so minor, many people ignore them or chalk them up to symptoms of a less threatening ailment.

Each year, about 785,000 Americans suffer a first heart attack. And 470,000 more people who’ve already had at least one attack suffer yet another one. Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death in the United States. In fact, it kills more men and women each year than all cancers combined, and is responsible for nearly a third of all deaths.

Read more on Newsmax.com: Four Hidden Heart Attack Symptoms, Know the Signs
Important: Do You Support Pres. Obama's Re-Election? Vote Here Now!
Read more on Newsmax.com: Four Hidden Heart Attack Symptoms, Know the Signs
Important: Do You Support Pres. Obama's Re-Election? Vote Here Now!

Study of the Day: One Drink a Day May Lead to One Long Life 

PROBLEM: Many studies have documented the heath benefits of red wine and other alcoholic beverages. Relatively few, however, have looked into the optimal amount of alcohol for middle-aged women to avoid major chronic diseases, cognitive and physical impairment, and mental health limitations. In other words, how much alcohol is really necessary for successful aging?
TEMPLATEStudyoftheDay.jpg
METHODOLOGY: The authors, led by Qi Sun from the Harvard School of Public Health and the Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, used information from the U.S. Nurses' Health Study, which began in 1976. For that study, 121,700 female nurses answered periodic food frequency questionnaires to assess their alcohol consumption during middle age. The researchers focused on participants who drank less than 45 grams of alcohol a day when middle-aged (average age: 58), examining the health status of those who lived to 70 years and over.

Stroke

A stroke occurs when a blood vessel supplying your brain becomes blocked (ischemic stroke) or when a blood vessel ruptures (hemorrhagic stroke), causing interrupted or reduced blood supply to your brain. This deprives your brain of oxygen and nutrients, which can cause your brain cells to die. Some people may experience a transient ischemic attack (TIA), which is a brief period of symptoms similar to those experienced in a stroke.

Do You Know You're Having a Stroke?


Symptom awareness can improve recovery

Researchers studied 400 patients who were diagnosed at Mayo Clinic's emergency department with either acute ischemic stroke or a transient ischemic attack (TIA), a temporary interruption of blood flow to part of the brain.

Less than half of the patients — 42 percent — thought they were having a stroke. In fact, most in the study did not go to the emergency room when symptoms appeared. The median time from onset of symptoms to arrival at the hospital was over three and a half hours. Most said they thought the symptoms would simply go away. The delay in seeking medical help was the same among men and women.


Can the Middle Class Be Saved?

In October 2005, three Citigroup analysts released a report describing the pattern of growth in the U.S. economy. To really understand the future of the economy and the stock market, they wrote, you first needed to recognize that there was “no such animal as the U.S. consumer,” and that concepts such as “average” consumer debt and “average” consumer spending were highly misleading.

In fact, they said, America was composed of two distinct groups: the rich and the rest. And for the purposes of investment decisions, the second group didn’t matter; tracking its spending habits or worrying over its savings rate was a waste of time. All the action in the American economy was at the top: the richest 1 percent of households earned as much each year as the bottom 60 percent put together; they possessed as much wealth as the bottom 90 percent; and with each passing year, a greater share of the nation’s treasure was flowing through their hands and into their pockets. It was this segment of the population, almost exclusively, that held the key to future growth and future returns. The analysts, Ajay Kapur, Niall Macleod, and Narendra Singh, had coined a term for this state of affairs: plutonomy.

The Limping Middle Class


Invest in Workers

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

Free Cell Phones


The School of ‘Self Teaching’ Is The Answer for The Unemployed or Displaced Worker, and Young Students!

Replace Facebook By Reading ‘Faceless Books’ of Math, Science, and English To Further Your Educational Career- Oriented Goal!

by Miriam G. Aw

Seemingly it appears that there are more youngsters (And adults) worrying about getting onto the ‘Facebook’ social network site at every chance they get than hitting ‘faceless books’ of mathematics, science, English, and so forth!

Something has terribly gone wrong with prioritizing objectives and goals in life. What is considered to be more important in the long run when it comes to furthering one’s own education is becoming a distancing second or third on the achievement list of accomplishments.

Have society become so desperate to the point that socializing on a pretentious social network via the Internet is given more credence than academic and vocational books that can help to elevate their awareness in any career choice they chose to pursue in life?

One generational group of youngsters I have in mind are those who attend middle school/junior high school, which is the perfect time for them to begin learning practically any field of interest, such as nursing, pharmacology, medical terminology, legal research, engineering, computer programming, and so forth.

During this time in these youngsters lives when they should begin studying a particular field of interest, and by the time they enter high school, these same area of studies can be continued to heighten their knowledge.

Wherefore, by graduation time, these same youngsters can further educational goals, academically or vocationally, by attending a post-secondary educational institution of their choice to advance their skills, and/or begin working in their chosen field at an entry-level, and/or attend school on a part-time basis getting both work experience, and an advancing education.

Some people might say that this is already being done - it’s called getting a “Vocational education.”  I should know.  I graduated from a vocational high school where it prepared students upon graduating to pursue a career as a licensed practical nurse, registered nurse, laboratory technician, or any other facet of the medical field.  Also, photography, cosmetology (Without the letter “R’s“ as good old Madea (Madea‘s Big Happy Family) illustrates in the play version - Very funny stuff I might add), secretarial with short-hand, and many more fields of interests.

By having these youngsters to start learning specific areas in the medical field, legal field, math, or science field, for example, it will give them ample room to advance themselves by the time they graduate from high school, thus answering the call of various employers who seek knowledgeable individuals fresh out of high school, or college, to fulfill much needed positions with ease.

However, during these difficult jobless times for so many individuals who have found themselves between a rock and a hard place raising a family, caring for their elderly parent(s), and/or are seeking employment on a daily basis only to exhaust their funds by doing so, are seeking ways to improve their educational status by attending college, or through some program designed to advance themselves on a socio-economic level in order to increase their chances of becoming employed.

But what if you cannot afford yourself to attend college, or partake in a program geared to advance your preparedness skills for the work place?  What happens when taking ‘online courses’ is not an option due to cost?

It has been my experience that when you take the initiative to learn more about something, or someone for that matter, this “Self-Taught” method helps you to increase your chances and knowledge multi-fold, which is a positive plus whenever you are propelling yourself toward fulfilling an objective, or goal, in life.

To take the initiative of ‘teaching yourself’ or to be ‘self-taught’ can be one of the best things a person can do for him, or her self, especially when you cannot attend college for whatever reason, or you cannot sign-up to register for a program that is geared toward helping others to advance themselves for the work place.

Although there are millions of books to choose from that details specific information about any field of interests that are pertinent to your course of action, it is still one of the best avenues to take whenever you need to learn more than what you currently know, or think you know, or to brush-up on a few things that you use to know.

Today, the emphasis of getting a college education have discouraged a large population of people to the point of increasing hopelessness in so many individuals.  As a result of this outcry in the U.S. to get a college degree, it is literally unraveling this country’s moral of feeling useful.  To be blunt, it is insulting!

When does having a college degree mean that you are smarter than a fifth grader?  I know a lot of people who hold college degrees, and believe me, a great majority of them are dumber than those who do not have a high school diploma!

And yes, I am speaking about EVERYONE, and no one in particular!  So please, it is time to get off the college degree ‘soap box’ and get down to the nitty gritty!

I do not believe that a cashier who has a college degree is better than a cashier who doesn’t have a degree.  Period!  A bank teller who has a college degree does not mean that she or he can count better than a person who does not have a college degree!  And to take it a step further: A custodian who works at a hospital who have a college degree does not mean that he has better custodial skills than a person who’ve been doing the same job twenty-years earlier without a degree!

Point fuckin’ blank!

Granted, there are myriad of positions that warrant degrees, but not in the way you, nor I, believe.  If you are talking about a person who seek to become a physician, for example, which you and I know will take some years of intense schooling, and hands-on experience at a teaching hospital, then yes, a college degree may be necessary (And passing the state board examinations).  The same thing is applicable for an individual who is interested in becoming an attorney.

By all means, yes, a degree is necessary, but it should only be applied toward a field interest that involve intricate formulated equations that involve measurements, building, and so forth, such as engineering, architecture, bio-chemist . . . You get the gist.

And for all of you who tend to nit-pick credentials of the highest order, perhaps a degree may be warranted in the field of “Tattooes.”  Don’t laugh.  This is an expression of Art, although home girl here will not ever entertain the thought of getting tattoos on my body, but there are needles involved, sterilization, and if I had it my way, I would involve OSHA (Occupational Safety Hazard Association) in the licensing process.  But I digress.

Tattooed New Yorkers: 20 locals with incredible ink  

Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/galleries/tattooed_/tattooed_.html#ixzz1XC3LbVb5

Although ‘self-teaching’ yourself medical terminology, office procedures, how to take vital signs, research basic information pertaining to a legal case for rebuttal (Defense or Prosecution), just to give a couple of examples, is one of the best avenues to take.  It will, however, take discipline and drive in order to achieve the level of understanding.  And whenever you find yourself not understanding what it is you’re reading, then there are a plethora of information that are available via Internet, the library, and yes, through your local lawyer, medical practitioner, nurse, etc.

Never be embarrassed about asking questions, especially when it pertains to your academic or vocational growth.  To learn is to ask.  And when you do not ask, you will not know, nor grow in your quest to learn more.  Plain and simple.

‘Self-teaching’ or to be ‘self taught’ is ignored and dismissed having no importance deemed by educational institutions throughout the U.S.  To ‘teach yourself’ a particular career area is not considered, nor deemed, valid.  Therefore, only if you have attended an accredited school deemed by the State you live in can validate your credentialing course of learning is acceptably embraced, and counted as bona fide education.

However, there is another avenue you can take, and that is “Credit by Examination,” which is simply taking a test, and if you pass, you can upgrade your educational status by receiving a degree, such as an Associate’s degree, or a Bachelor’s degree.  Cool, huh?  But not many people are aware of this bit of info, but it is noted in many of the post secondary educational institutions’ catalogues.  Take a read when you get a chance to do so.  Try EduNation at www.edunation.com to learn more about it!

Did you know that the majority of wealthy business men you know of, or heard about in the media, do not hold college degrees?  And to add insult to injury, they achieved their level of wealth by simply “teaching themselves,” about the business they are involved in, and/or have been ’Self Taught” by using sheer observation, using common sense, diligence, discipline, and spiritual awareness within themselves!

There is a lot to be said about teaching yourself the basic essence of a field of interest.  It is my stance that middle school/junior high school aged youngsters CAN and WILL learn medical terminology!  After all, don’t they use abbreviations and acronyms whenever they text their family members, friends, etc., via their cell phones, or through the use of a laptop, or desktop, computer?

So what’s the problem?

Colleges today have become greedy-minded mongrels with watered-down courses that are designed to make money, and NOT to educate our young, nor the old.  Today, you have mini-model courses that offer either certificates, or diplomas, for EACH mini-model taken in school.

For example, there are separate courses: medical billing, medical coding, medical office assistant, medical records, medical assistant, medical secretary, and so forth, all of which are certificate or diploma courses.  So, if you was to go to school and you decided on taking a class for Medical Records, but you did not take a Medical Assistant class, then the likelihood of you getting hired is low for any of the two I’ve listed above.

Why?  Simply because medical records is just that . . . Dealing with records - even though it’s in the medical field.  The medical assistant class should have had taught a bit on medical records, but more than likely, depending on the school, it would have been omitted from the course.  And yes, medical assistant versus medical office assistant are now seen today as being two different entities!  Thus, more money is shelled out to take these two separate courses.

When I attended medical office assistant school in 1976, you received EVERYTHING, to include medical records, phlebotomy, vital signs, in other words, the whole nine yards, that prepared you to work in ANY capacity in the medical field, except for being a physician, of course!

In addition, you could have worked at the hospital, medical center, private nursing home, domestic household care, etc., and got paid very handsomely I might add!

So, my point is simple: Teach yourself in your chosen field of interest.  Buy your books.  Go to the library and take some books out.  Rent your books.   The choices are there.  Options are unlimited.  If you can take the time to read magazines of no importance, or get onto to any of your social networking sites, then you can take the time to “teach yourself” to improve yourself, and increase your knowledge in a field that you believe can, and/or will, elevate you financially, economically, and spiritually.

After all, aren’t you worth the effort?  I think so.  But then again, what do I know?  A lot more than what you give me credit for . . . You can believe that, darlin’!

Peace, Miriam.

Copyright 2011.  All rights reserved.


Free Cell Phones


Barbados promotes historic ties to South Carolina

The Barbados consulate in Coral Gables, Florida, held a four-day event called "Barbados Comes (Back) to Charleston" over the weekend to promote the West Indies nation's historical ties to Charleston, South Carolina.


On Saturday at Charles Towne Landing, where the first English settlers to the Carolina colony disembarked in 1670, a "Bridgetown Market" featured a steel band, crafts, meat pies, peas and rice, and educational exhibits.

British planters settled Barbados in 1625, imported African slaves and grew cotton, tobacco, indigo and sugar cane, the crop that made them rich.

By 1670, tiny Barbados held 60,000 people, most of them enslaved Africans, according to anthropologist Toni Carrier, founder and director of the Lowcountry Africana project.

Vast tracts of available land in Carolina took the overflow, and for the next two decades, the majority of English colonists and the slaves they brought with them came from Barbados, she said.





Many baby boomers don't plan to leave their children an inheritance

Unlike previous generations, some baby boomers believe they've already given their children enough, and they plan to spend the money they've saved on themselves.

In a survey of millionaire boomers by investment firm U.S. Trust, only 49% said it was important to leave money to their children when they die. The low rate was a big surprise for a company that for decades has advised wealthy people how to leave money to their heirs.

"We were like 'wow,'" said Keith Banks, U.S. Trust president.

Whether to leave an inheritance is a decision increasingly faced by many of the nation's 77 million baby boomers, and it's becoming all the more complicated by the troubled economy.

Boomers are caught between the desire to enjoy their long-awaited golden years and the pressure of various financial concerns, such as fear of outliving their savings and the need to help parents, children or siblings who have their own money struggles.

Many boomers, who range in age from roughly 47 to 65, simply believe that after years of hard work they can spend their money as they choose, experts say.

They spent their lives building businesses and careers, often at the expense of their health or personal relationships. And after years of footing the bill for their kids' pricey educations, they see no reason to curb their spending impulses in their later years.

Besides, they figure, their kids will get something since nobody can synchronize their demise precisely to the emptying of their bank accounts.


Marijuana smokers are thinner, less likely to be obese than non-smokers, according to new study

Stoners may spend a lot of time on the couch and craving White Castle, but they apparently don't let their bodies go to pot.

People who smoke marijuana regularly are less likely to be obese than non-pot smokers, according to a new study by French researches.

"We found that cannabis users are less likely to be obese than non-users," Dr. Yann Le Strat, French psychiatrist and co-author of a new study in the American Journal of Epidemiology told MSNBC. "We were so surprised, we thought we had [made] a mistake.”

Using data from two epidemiologic studies of U.S. adults, researchers found that between 22% to 25% of participants who didn’t smoke pot were obese.

But only between 14% and 17% of those people who admitted to taking a toke at least three times a week were overweight.


Fewer Americans smoke, pace of decline slowing: CDC


Fewer American adults are smoking cigarettes, and those who still smoke have cut back on the number of cigarettes they smoke, but the rate of decline has begun to slow, health experts said on Tuesday.
Smoking and exposure to secondhand smoke is the leading cause of preventable death and disease in the United States, killing an estimated 443,000 Americans each year.

"Any decline in the number of people who smoke and the number of cigarettes consumed is a step in the right direction. However, tobacco use remains a significant health burden for the people of United States," Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Dr. Tom Frieden said in a statement.



Two cops shot in Brooklyn gun battle, caps terror-filled NYC Labor Day weekend of shootings

Two cops were wounded in a gun battle that capped off a terrifying spate of shootings that killed three and marred Brooklyn's West Indian Day Parade.

The surge of violence wounded eight and put the number of people shot over the weekend around the city to at least 48, including two people who were killed Sunday night.

It came the same day the Daily News reported that 24 people were shot in the 24-hour period beginning 6 a.m. Saturday.

The violence during the holiday weekend culminated in a deadly shootout about 9 p.m. Monday on Park Place in Crown Heights, when Leroy Webster, 32, shot Eusi Johnson, 29, to death after they had a fistfight, cops said.

A stray bullet from Webster's pistol pierced through the head of 56-year-old Denise Gay, who was sitting on her front stoop nearby with her daughter, cops said. Gay was pronounced dead at the scene.

Police arrived and Webster began firing at officers, who shot the gun-wielding man several times.


SHOPPING FLAKES - the place to buy beautiful shoes, handbags, items for the home, and more!


'Back to Eden' Books

Don't 'Sweat It' This Summer!

Enjoy The Summer in Comfort!

Django Unchained and Sparkle



'Red Hook Summer' by Spike Lee

*Alex Cross* Official Trailer (2012) [HD]

Signs of a 'Stroke' - F.A.S.T.

Drive Trucks for a Living

Learn to drive Big Trucks!