Sunday, June 30, 2013

Sen. Fritz Hollings: The Economists

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JUNE 18, 2013 -- In 2006, the Princeton economist Alan Blinder estimated that in 10 years the U.S. would offshore 30-40 million jobs.

Today, Corporate America continues to enfeeble the U.S. economy as it builds China's -- offshoring our innovation, research, technology, production and jobs. The economists ignore the offshoring and blame a lack of consumer confidence for the lethargic economy. It's lack of money -- offshoring payrolls. Worst of all, the economists ignore the responsibility of the President and Congress to make it attractive for Corporate America to invest by adopting favorable taxes, assisting research and development and protecting vital production.

Blinder says there is a fine line between protectionism and protecting vital production to make it attractive for Corporate America to invest and he's against protectionism. Today we have no choice. China with its closed market and predatory practices sets the competition in globalization and Corporate America rushes to offshore its production to China.

The economists give the impression that Washington is trying hard for jobs by yacking about the Great Recession when the recession has been over for four years. Then the economists talk about the need for education, skills and innovation. We have the best universities in the world. South Carolina has the skills to make "the ultimate driving machine" for BMW and Boeing's Globemaster but we still have 8 percent unemployment because our textile industry has been offshored.

The U.S. has the world's best research and development and had the best innovation program, The Advanced Technology Program, but Presidents Bush and Obama abolished it. Then the economists cover their backside by calling for "growth," stimulation and 10 year plans to pay down the long-term debt. Growth is "the cup of tea" for the politician. So long as the economy needs growth, 10 year plans can be submitted that don't cut spending or increase taxes; which don't pay for government; which gets Congress by the next election. All can vote for it, but later Congresses never pay. We haven't paid for government for twelve years.

Serving on the Budget Committee for 30 years, no one ever submitted a 10 year plan. We always worried about paying for this years and next year's government. Now the economists are all for tax reform. We had three: 1976, 1986 and 2003 and lost revenues. The lobbyists help you close 2 or 3 loopholes and sneak in a couple more. It took us six years to find the ethanol loophole and repeal it. That's why I insist on a Value Added Tax. It has no loopholes and is self-enforcing. You either pay the VAT or pass it on. We can cut the size of government (IRS) and a VAT gives you instant tax reform.

Everyone is for tax cuts. We can cut taxes by replacing the 35 percent Corporate Tax with a 7 percent VAT which immediately releases $2 trillion in offshore profits for Corporate America to repatriate tax-free and create millions of jobs. The VAT tax cut produces billions to balance the budget in two years rather than 10. 150 countries compete in globalization with a VAT that's rebated on exports. The Corporate tax is not rebated. Canada adopted a VAT in 1991 and has had a surplus ever since. Worst of all, not having a VAT is killing manufacture in the U.S. An entrepreneur can be making a profit but has to pay the 35 percent Corporate Tax and another 17 percent VAT when his exports reach China. A competitor can produce the same product in China, bring it back to the United States tax-free and put the entrepreneur out of business. The economists know all this but insist on borrowing, submitting 10 year plans and are all for tax reform -- that is Christmas for the lobbyists.

Paul Krugman, the Pulitzer economist, keeps calling for infrastructure stimulation. After stimulating the economy $10 trillion in twelve years, we'll stimulate another $642 billion this year to retain government jobs and the economy will still lag. I've come to know and admire economists like Paul Volker but today I feel like Jock the Butcher in Henry VI: "Kill all the economists."

Senator Hollings of South Carolina served 38 years in the United States Senate, and for many years was Chairman of the Commerce, Space, Science & Transportation Committee. He is the author of "Making Government Work" (University of South Carolina Press, 2008). You can learn more about Hollings online at www.FritzHollings.com.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/sen-ernest-frederick-hollings/the-economists_b_3521647.html

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Davis hits 2 HRs as Orioles pound Yankees 11-3

BALTIMORE (AP) ? Chris Davis homered twice to raise his major league-leading total to 30, and the Baltimore Orioles beat the Yankees 11-3 Saturday night to extend New York's losing streak to four games.

Davis hit a three-run drive in the first inning and added a two-run shot in the sixth, his third multihomer game of the season. The five RBIs gave him 79, second-most in the big leagues and just six short of his career high.

Ryan Flaherty also homered for the Orioles, who built a 9-0 lead in the third against David Phelps (5-5). Baltimore will seek to complete a three-game sweep on Sunday.

Zach Britton (2-2) limited the offensively challenged, injury-riddled Yankees to one earned run over 5 2-3 innings.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/davis-hits-2-hrs-orioles-pound-yankees-11-021625351.html

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Cardinal Dolan declares St. Ann's Parish debt-free

http://media.silive.com/worship/photo/12977939-large.jpgCardinal Timothy Dolan fanned the flames of religious fervor on Father?s Day as he officiated at a mass and debt-burning ceremony at St. Ann?s R.C. Church in Dongan Hills.

The cardinal lauded the St. Ann?s Parish family, the Rev. Joy Mampilly, pastor, and the Rev. John McCarthy, a parochial vicar, for reaching the ?historic marker? of being debt-free by retiring more than $600,000 in mortgage and other financial obligations in less than three years.?

?This is a great evening; I?m very excited,? said Carol Kelleher, who led the debt elimination effort with fellow parish trustee Joe Perri, on her way into the 7:30 p.m. mass.

Concelebrants included Monsignor Peter Finn, co-vicar of Staten Island, Monsignor Richard Guastella, pastor of St. Clare?s R.C. Church in Great Kills and the Rev. Michael Reilly, principal of St. Joseph-by-the Sea High School.

?It really is a joy and an honor for me to be with you on Staten Island,? the cardinal said, adding that his visit was an opportunity to let the parishioners know ?how proud I am of you, how grateful I am.?

Cardinal Dolan thanked the parishioners for their generosity and said that burning the mortgage was a ?tangible sign? of their love and support for their parish and the Roman Catholic Church.

?I love St. Ann?s Parish, I love Staten Island,? the cardinal said.

The archbishop of New York who has paid many visits to the borough described how he ended up with ?the earth of Staten Island? on his staff when he said mass on the rain soaked and muddy grounds of the Staten Island Irish Fair on June 8. ?

ST ANN?

Cardinal Dolan spoke of the parish?s patron saint who was the mother of Mary and how she was a favorite among the Irish people ? especially single women praying for a husband with the saintly qualities of Joseph, the husband of Mary.?

?Your presence at St. Ann?s is a gift to us,? the Rev. Mampilly said to Cardinal Dolan.
?We are grateful for your support following Hurricane Sandy,? he continued. ?You have been with us through ups and downs. You have deepened our faith and inspired our lives.?

More than 306 parish families were affected by last fall?s devastating superstorm.

Rev. Mampilly thanked his parishioners for their ?generous support to the parish and the archdiocese? and noted that his flock ?remained steady with unshakable faith in their hearts? despite the economic recession. ?When the going got tough, you gave even more,? the pastor said to his congregation.

?Where the rubber meets the road is your generous support and enthusiasm. You followed through on your promises. You talked the talk and walked the walk.? ?

A HIGH NOTE?

The mass concluded on a high note with the cardinal giving the pastor a bear hug and the crowd of more than 300 parishioners responding with a standing ovation.?

?This is my idea of a Father?s Day cookout,? Cardinal Dolan said as he invited all to watch the debt burning ceremony.

?We commit this document to the flames,? intoned Anne-Louise DePalo, an attorney and parishioner, from the podium as members of the congregation filled the lawn and spilled out onto Cromwell Avenue.?

The copy of the mortgage was handed to the cardinal by parishioner Isabella DePiero.

As the church?s debt burned, the jovial cardinal, referring to the recent selection of Pope Francis, joked, ?I trust it?s white smoke.??

The cardinal then used a pun based on the Latin ?Habemus Papam,?? ?We have a pope? ? declaring St. Ann?s parish achievement, ?Non-habemus debt ... Congratulations! Hallelujah!?

The cardinal stayed until 10:30 p.m. greeting, hugging and posing for photos with parishioners at a reception afterwards in the St. Ann?s School auditorium. ?

STANDING ROOM ONLY
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A total of 300 parishioners won their tickets by lottery to attend the mass, but the cardinal at the last minute turned it into a standing-room-only event when he invited into the church the many onlookers who had shown up to catch a glimpse of the immensely popular spiritual leader of the archdiocese.?

When Father Mampilly took over leadership of St. Ann?s in July 2010, he inherited the debt, which included about $450,000 in a bank loan and about $150,000 in unpaid bills.?

The parish successfully used debt donation envelopes in addition to some large contributions.?

After the debt was satisfied about six months ago, the parish established an endowment fund which already has raised close to $100,000.

?This offsets any future need to go into debt again, by the grace of God,? the grateful pastor said.

Source: http://clericalwhispers.blogspot.com/2013/06/cardinal-dolan-declares-st-anns-parish.html

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No, manufacturing jobs won?t revive the economy

In the American imagination, the phrases ?the decline of the middle class? and ?the loss of factory jobs? are almost inextricably linked. But the promise of a U.S. manufacturing revival has gained strength and currency in policy circles, with many arguing it?s a way to turn the economy around. President Obama has trumpeted the growth of factory jobs in speech after speech.??Think about the America within our reach,? he told his audience at last year?s State of the Union address. ?An America that attracts a new generation of high-tech manufacturing and high-paying jobs!?

But, for all the optimism and nostalgia for an America that once was, it?s worth asking whether factory jobs are more likely to help workers rise to the middle class today ? or leave them stranded among the working poor.

Elena Suarez was on her lunch break, taking a walk on the side of the road in the industrial park where she works, and eating a sandwich as she walked, when I stopped her to ask about her job. She?s a machine operator at Resonetics, a manufacturing company in Nashua, New Hampshire that specializes in precision laser micromachining for the medical device industry.

I asked Suarez how her job pays.

?Poor,? she said. ?I pay for working.?

Suarez commutes from Manchester, about half an hour away, and gas and car maintenance eat up quite a bit of her pay. She said she got the job through a staffing agency three years ago at a pay rate of $11 an hour. After two years, she was hired as a direct employee of the company, which meant she got a handful of paid sick days and access to medical and dental plans that cost a significant chunk of workers? paychecks. Her hourly pay also dropped to $10.50.

Her husband also works at a factory, but even with two incomes, the family has to budget carefully to get by. Suarez said she sees other families with more kids, or with only one working parent, and wonders how they manage.

?Sometimes I ask people, ?how do you do it??? she said. ?It?s not easy sometimes.?

Overall, even as the sophistication of manufacturing jobs has grown over the past 40 years, their pay has come nowhere near keeping pace with the growth in the economy as a whole. Adjusted for inflation, the average job in the industry now pays less than it did in the mid-1970s. If there are some high-skill factory jobs, there are also plenty of low-skill ones, filled, in many cases, by a rotating cast of temps or by people whose wages never rise above the temp level.

There are arguments for paying workers better. One was made by a 2012 Brookings Institute paper that argues the future of U.S. manufacturing depends on companies? willingness to take a ?high road? approach to production. That means investing in technology, using innovative methods and ensuring that workers have the skills to contribute to process improvements.

A second argument is a more fundamental one that applies to the economy as a whole: Workers are contributing to increasingly productive companies and ought to get a fair share of what they?re making.

The $1.2 billion international plastics molder Nypro is one company that embraces the notion of high-road manufacturing. Inside the old brick walls of a former carpet mill in Massachusetts, sophisticated plastic extruding machines turn out machinery for fixing human bodies. The plant makes components for medical devices, and it requires significant sophistication from its workers. Even many floor-level production workers need to understand computers and robots and industry quality standards.

?It?s very unusual to find somebody who?s been out here for two years with less than a two-year college education level,? said company spokesman Al Cotton.

Workers come in with less education, he said, but they?re put into classes at ?Nypro University? before or after their work shifts, mostly at the company?s expense, and some go as far as a master?s degree from local colleges that have affiliation agreements with the training program. Some workers handling advanced, computer-driven machines can make more than $100,000 a year, Cotton said, although that?s partly because there?s such a shortage of people who can fill these positions that they end up working 60 hours a week.

Nypro is growing. When I talked to Cotton in late May, the company was looking to fill 100 positions at the Massachusetts location.

Atrium Medical in Hudson, New Hampshire is another growing plastics company in the medical device industry, but, at least according to some of its workers, it puts less focus on investing in its employees. (Officials at the company didn?t return my calls, which was also the case with Resonetics.)

Atrium was acquired by Maquet Getinge Group of Sweden in 2011 for $680 million, and it has plans to move to a larger building soon. When I stopped by the plant on a sunny afternoon, workers were outside, eating lunch at picnic tables. I approached two women speaking with each other quietly in Spanish and asked about their jobs. They?re assemblers, they said. When I asked if the jobs are good ones, they hesitated.

?They pay the minimum,? one said. ?Like $8 an hour.?

That?s the starting pay, she added. She and her friend have been working here for 10 years. How much do they make now? $9 an hour.

Another woman, eating lunch in her car, told me the assemblers move between standing and sitting. ?We do everything by hand,? she said, except ?the guys,? who run welding machines. ?If you can?t keep up, watch it,? she said.

?We don?t get paid much, let me put it that way,? she added. ?For the work we do, we don?t get paid much.?

When I approached another worker, a machine operator named Julio Abreu, he immediately told me ?I love this place.?

The benefits aren?t the best, he said, but, after two years on the job, he recently got a $1 raise to $11 an hour. Since his girlfriend makes a similar wage they?re able to support their son. And he likes the schedule, working 10-hour days Monday through Thursday and getting Fridays off. When I asked him if he?d like to stay at the job, though, he laughed and said it?s good enough until he can go back to college. With a slight edge of sarcasm, he added ?It?s not my dream job.?

The differences between Nypro and Atrium aren?t black and white. Ten to 15 percent of the production workers at Nypro?s Massachusetts plant are temps making as little as $10 an hour, and there are certainly some highly technical, well-paid jobs at Atrium, but the two companies begin to give a sense of how varied production jobs are.

If you want to really see how all-over-the-map manufacturing jobs can be, look no further than Craigslist. In Michigan, one of the states where the industry?s employment has been growing quickly, jobs promising $35 an hour plus benefits for running computer-operated lathes sit alongside ones like this: ?We are looking for candidates with at least one year of manufacturing experience. Candidates must be able to lift 50lbs and bend, twist, and stand all day long. All candidates must be flexible in shifts and available to work overtime and weekends when required?. Compensation: $8.00/hr.?

The current moment is an interesting one for manufacturing. The industry did a spectacular nose-dive between 2006 and 2010, losing more than 2.5 million jobs and hitting a historic low of less than 11.5 million. After that, it began a slight upswing, rising to nearly 12 million. There is much debate among economists about whether that growth will continue, but advocates, including President Obama, have begun a push to help make it happen. Obama has created several pilot programs to help companies adopt high-tech manufacturing processes and to get workers trained to participate in them.

And yet, for all the talk of good jobs in an increasingly high-tech industry, as manufacturing employment has begun to grow, pay in the industry hasn?t gone up. In real terms, the median hourly wage for production workers in manufacturing?which includes front-line supervisors and programmers of computer-controlled machinery as well as hand assemblers and meatpackers?fell from $15.87 in 2010 to $15.51 in 2012, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Those numbers are probably a bit high, since they don?t include temps.

On average, factory workers with little education still make a bit more than they might in retail or fast food, but that?s by no means always true. And, unlike service-sector employers, manufacturing plants are almost worshipped by American politicians. It?s hard to find a plant that expands or opens a new location without getting some sort of tax subsidy. Resonetics got a government-supported financing package when it opened its plant in Nashua, and when Atrium moves to its new location, it will be eligible for a New Hampshire state tax incentive.

Howard Wial, one of the authors of the Brookings Institute paper that advocates high-road manufacturing, said some state and local incentives do require that companies pay a certain wage, but they?re not common, and even when they exist there?s often no enforcement mechanism. In general, he said, the incentives are not particularly connected to creating good jobs.

?They?re just about poaching jobs from one place to another without creating any new value,? he said.

Wial, who is the head of the University of Illinois at Chicago?s Center for Urban Economic Development, said Obama?s efforts to encourage high tech manufacturing growth would also be stronger if they encouraged companies to pay well and supported unionization. Even without that, though, he said the federal programs are one way of helping manufacturers to be smart about their approach to technology. Right now, he said, technical sophistication varies dramatically from plant to plant.

?Some companies have thought very hard about how best to organize work and how to make the best use of workers? skills, how to use more skilled workers, how to involve workers in making decisions that are important for improving production and innovating,? he said. ?And some companies don?t really think very systematically about this at all.?

The difference, he said, means some companies are far more productive?and internationally competitive?than others. And, he said, there?s generally a correlation between the more productive companies and the pay levels of their workers.

?Certainly there are high-productivity companies where the workers don?t share in the benefits,? he said, ?But, in general, to reach the highest levels of productivity, you need to have workers actively involved in solving problems, and they?re not going to be willing and able to do that if they don?t share in the benefits.?

Among the report?s findings are that manufacturing wages are on the low end in the U.S. compared with other industrialized countries, and yet the nation lost more jobs between 2000 and 2010 than higher-paying countries. The study also found that even within one narrow category of workers?automotive stampers who use stamping presses to make car parts from sheet metal?U.S. wages ranged from $10 to $17 an hour.

Aside from the conclusion that high wages go along with higher productivity, the report also notes that direct labor costs typically make up ?far less than 20 percent? of a manufacturer?s total costs, making pay level a relatively unimportant factor in competitiveness.

?Overall, manufacturing is not nearly as labor-intensive as it once was, so it?s mattering less,? Wial said.

And yet, he added, that doesn?t mean companies are being particularly generous when it comes to wages.

?Over time we?ve seen this very disturbing trend of, we?ve had productivity growth and the typical worker hasn?t shared in that very much, if at all.?

Steve Sawin is one of the people who believes in a manufacturing resurgence. An old-school American businessman dressed neatly in shirt and tie and well-shined shoes, he sees high-profile companies like GE rethinking their processes and finding that it just makes more sense to make many products in the U.S. than overseas.

?Manufacturing built the middle class of this country,? he said. ?We need to rebuild that manufacturing base to rebuild our middle class.?

Sawin is the CEO of Operon, a company that, he says, is not a temp agency. It provides medical device companies, including both Nypro and Atrium, not just warm bodies to run machines and assemble parts but people who?ve been chosen for their ability to work in modern manufacturing settings and then trained for the specific companies where they?ll be working.

At Nypro, Sawin and Amy Oskirko, an Operon area manager, have a workspace set up in a corner of the factory, defined by temporary partitions enclosing several large tables. There, applicants?20 to 40 of them a week for Nypro alone?take tests in reading comprehension, basic math, manual dexterity and vision. If they do well, they move on to get trained in industry standards for documentation, use of calipers and microscopes for inspecting plastic parts and how to ?gown and degown??dressing in hygienic plastic from hair net to shoe coverings to keep the products clean. The entire process takes 6 ? to 8 ? hours over two days?unpaid?depending on the client company?s training needs, Oskirko said.

Sawin said his company offers services that help U.S. companies compete. With employees that work for Operon, they can easily add or subtract workers based on their needs at any given moment, and they can hire the ones that work out best as permanent employees. His company helps take the guesswork out of labor, the most variable component in any production process.

?You go out and buy a bag of screws, you?re confident they?re all going to work with very little exceptions,? he said. ?People on the other hand? they are all over the map.?

For the most part, Sawin said, the positions he?s filling aren?t complex, thanks partly to the automation of production functions.

?It has relegated the human role in many cases to inspecting, monitoring and controlling machines, packaging, labeling and maybe a little assembly,? he said.

Along with all the other training topics, new recruits watch a DVD labeled ?work ethic.? Sawin said it?s something you can?t really teach, but they try because it?s a big issue among the people they hire?the biggest reason they don?t get hired on full-time.

?For some reason a lot of young people have not been indoctrinated in the basic tenet of the good work ethic,? he said.

Sawin said the pay rate for the people he hires is between $9 and $12 an hour. Operon doesn?t offer health insurance?the plans it wanted to provide didn?t meet state-mandated minimums in Massachusetts or New Hampshire.

Even if the pay were only $8, a level that?s not uncommon for temps in the industry, Sawin said that?s not bad considering that the work is entry level.

?This guy could have been bagging groceries at Stop & Shop last week,? he said.

I asked Sawin if people might work harder if they were paid more, but they said he doesn?t think so.

?I don?t think it has to do with pay as much as it does with principles,? he said.

If there?s debate over whether paying production workers more increases productivity, there is also that other argument to consider.? How much does a worker contribute to a company?s success, and what kind of compensation does she deserve for her work? Companies are quite unlikely to pose this question to themselves. Raising it has, historically, been the job of the labor movement.

But few workers in manufacturing today are represented by unions?13.4 percent of production workers in 2012, down from 19.2 percent as recently as 2002.

?It?s become almost impossible to form a union through the National Labor Relations Act procedures nowadays,? said Brad Markell, executive director of the AFL-CIO Industrial Union Council.

When it comes to a real resurgence in manufacturing, Markell is skeptical that there will be much progress unless the U.S. revises its trade policies, but he said there?s no inherent reason why the production jobs that do exist in the country now don?t pay better than they do.

?The value added per employee in those areas is enough to support a well-paying job, but the question is whether the workers have the power to extract the pay from those companies,? he said. ?In an era of high unemployment, and when we?ve lost a lot of manufacturing jobs, and when people aren?t joined together in a union it?s very hard.?

Markell said it?s also not clear that more complicated products and processes in manufacturing lead to jobs that demand better training, or command better pay.

?The average 17-year-old is extremely sophisticated on computers, so how much education does it take?? he said. ?It?s certainly not the case that because jobs involve computers that they pay better. It?s more about the power dynamic.?

Resonetics, the laser micromachining company where Elena Suarez works, is a high-tech manufacturer by almost any measure. Its machines can features as small as a thousandth of a millimeter, and it does this for the medical device industry, a sector that is obsessively interested in new technology. But when I asked Suarez if the job took much training she shrugged and said, well, you have to learn to use the machines.

One of Suarez?s coworkers, who asked me to refer to her only as Judy, said running the machines isn?t particularly hard. ?If anything it?s more boring than demanding,? she said.

Judy, a woman with a look and manner that suggest an office manager more than a machine operator, has been in manufacturing for 30 years. She spent most of that time at a company that makes electronic testing equipment. She trained there as a computer programmer and went back to school for blueprint reading. Over time she brought her pay up to $20 an hour. But when that company closed the local plant, she found her skills didn?t translate. When she was hired at Resonetics four years ago, her experience won her a starting wage of $12.50 an hour. Soon she learned new skills, including inspection, which means staring into a microscope looking for flaws in the plastic products the machines produce?it?s harder on the shoulders and neck than on the eyes, she told me. Today her pay is up to $15 an hour.

She?s able to live on that, she said, partly because she paid off her mortgage over her years at the higher paying job. It also helps that she?s getting a pension from that job.

Judy said management seems to have improved at Resonetics since she started there, but in general she thinks the industry is tougher for workers than it once was.

?I think years ago loyalty played a role in it,? she said. ?That?s not the case anymore. It?s all about the money. The bottom line for the people who own the business is ?how can I make the most money by expending the least money???

Source: http://www.salon.com/2013/06/29/no_manufacturing_jobs_wont_revive_the_economy/

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Plaintiffs in gay marriage case wed in SF, LA

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ? The four plaintiffs in the U.S. Supreme Court case that overturned California's same-sex marriage ban tied the knot Friday, just hours after a federal appeals court freed gay couples to obtain marriage licenses in the state for the first time in 4 1/2 years.

Attorney General Kamala Harris presided at the San Francisco City Hall wedding of Kris Perry and Sandy Stier as hundreds of supporters looked on and cheered. The couple sued to overturn the state's voter-approved gay marriage ban along with Jeff Katami and Paul Zarrillo, who married at Los Angeles City Hall 90 minutes later with Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa presiding.

"By joining the case against Proposition 8, they represented thousands of couples like themselves in their fight for marriage equality," Harris said during Stier and Perry's brief ceremony. "Through the ups and downs, the struggles and the triumphs, they came out victorious."

Harris declared Perry, 48, and Stier, 50, "spouses for life," but during their vows, the Berkeley couple took each other as "lawfully wedded wife." One of their twin sons served as ring-bearer.

Although the couples fought for the right to wed for years, their nuptials came together in a flurry when a three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals issued a brief order Friday afternoon dissolving a stay it had imposed on gay marriages while the lawsuit challenging the ban advanced through the courts.

Sponsors of California's same-sex marriage ban, known as Proposition 8, also were caught off-guard and complained that the San Francisco-based 9th Circuit's swift action made it more difficult for them to ask the Supreme Court to reconsider its decision.

Under Supreme Court rules, the losing side has 25 days to ask the high court to rehear the case, and Proposition 8's backers had not yet announced whether they would do so.

"The resumption of same-sex marriage this day has been obtained by illegitimate means. If our opponents rejoice in achieving their goal in a dishonorable fashion, they should be ashamed," said Andy Pugno, general counsel for a coalition of religious conservative groups that sponsored the 2008 ballot measure.

"It remains to be seen whether the fight can go on, but either way, it is a disgraceful day for California," he said.

The Supreme Court ruled 5-4 Wednesday that Proposition 8's sponsors lacked standing in the case after Harris and Gov. Jerry Brown, both Democrats, refused to defend the ban in court.

The decision lets stand a trial judge's declaration that the ban violates the civil rights of gay Californians and cannot be enforced.

The Supreme Court said earlier this week that it would not finalize its ruling in the Proposition 8 case "at least" until after the 25-day period, which ends July 21.

The appeals court was widely expected to wait until the Supreme Court's judgment was official. Ninth Circuit spokesman David Madden said Friday that the panel's decision to act sooner was "unusual, but not unprecedented," although he could not recall another time the appeals court acted before receiving an official judgment from the high court.

The panel ? Judge Stephen Reinhardt, who was named to the 9th Circuit by President Jimmy Carter and has a reputation as the court's liberal lion; Judge Michael Daly Hawkins, an early appointee of President Bill Clinton; and Judge Randy Smith, the last 9th Circuit judge nominated by President George W. Bush ? decided on its own to lift the stay, Madden said.

Its order read simply, "The stay in the above matter is dissolved effective immediately."

Vikram Amar, a constitutional law professor at the University of California, Davis, said the Supreme Court's 25-day waiting period to make its decisions final isn't binding on lower courts.

"Some people may think it was in poor form, But it's not illegal," Amar said. "The appeals court may have felt that this case has dragged on long enough."

The same panel of judges ruled 2-1 last year that Proposition 8 was unconstitutional, but it kept same-sex marriages on hold while the case was appealed. But when the Supreme Court decided Proposition 8's backers couldn't defend the ban, it also wiped out the 9th Circuit's opinion.

Proposition 8 passed with 52 percent of the vote in November 2008, 4 1/2 months after same-sex marriages commenced in California the first time. The Williams Institute, a think tank at the University of California, Los Angeles, estimates 18,000 couples from around the country got married in the state during that window.

Shortly after the appeals court issued its order Friday, the governor directed California counties to resume performing same-sex marriages. A memo from the Department of Public Health said "same-sex marriage is again legal in California" and ordered county clerks to comply by making marriage licenses available to gay couples.

Given that word did not come down from the appeals court until mid-afternoon, most counties were not prepared to stay open late to accommodate potential crowds. The clerks in a few counties announced that they would stay open a few hours late Friday before reopening Monday.

A jubilant San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee announced that same-sex couples would be able to marry all weekend in his city, which is hosting its annual gay pride celebration.

___

Associated Press writers Jason Dearen, Paul Elias and Mihir Zaveri contributed to this story.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/plaintiffs-gay-marriage-case-wed-sf-la-015212241.html

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Source: http://www.bgky.org/calendar/eventdetail.php?id=5176

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Polish Amateur Star Lukasz Wierzbicki Turns Pro in Canada Winning Debut against Veteran Dos Santos!

By Ace Freeman (28-Jun-2013)

Lukasz Wierzbicki W UD4 Antonio Dos Santos

Photo: Kevbot Falconhammer

Acclaimed European Amateur star Lukasz Wierzbicki of Zawidow, Poland, made his long awaited pro debut Friday night in Red Deer, Canada with a resounding four round shutout win over veteran spoiler Antonio Dos Santos. Wierzbicki, who now lives and fights out of Calgary, Alberta was in tough in his first professional fight against the seven fight veteran Dos Santos who looked to bring the fight from the opening bell. Wierzbicki was calm and cool under pressure and landed some beautiful and well placed power shots in the early going to get his man?s respect. Wierzbicki landed his southpaw straight left hand with authority and continuously rocked Dos Santos with a lead right hook. The Polish-Canadian import was in command the entire way on route to a decisive four round unanimous decision victory (all three cards were 40-36 for Wierzbicki). The exciting newcomer to the Canadian welterweight scene is trained by Calgary?s Eric de Guzman and is managed by Chris Ganescu of Gankor Promotions.

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Source: http://fightfan.com/2013/06/polish-amateur-star-lukasz-wierzbicki-turns-pro-in-canada-winning-debut-against-veteran-dos-santos/

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Saturday, June 29, 2013

Q&A: Beckye Sprouse on contractor classification and worker's ...

Effective July 1, Tennessee will enforce a recently passed state law (SB233) that penalizes construction services providers that misclassify employees to avoid proper classification of workers' compensation insurance premium calculations. Specifically, the new law will fine a construction services provider up to the greater of $1,000 or 1.5 times its average yearly workers' compensation premium for misstatements and inaccuracies involving payroll, employees or duties.

With the law in place, companies may need to classify some people they previously listed as contractors as employees, which could lead to additional costs due to the state's increased opportunity to crack down on worker?s comp coverage. Post Managing Editor William Williams recently talked to Beckye Sprouse, director of risk management at The Crichton Group, which bills itself as Middle Tennessee?s largest independent insurance provider. Sprouse, who is responsible for large commercial accounts and key accounts for the agency, is a certified risk manager who has worked within the insurance industry since 1968.

Do industry professionals understand the ramifications of the change and why it is being made?

Senate Bill 833 is designed to put teeth into an existing law by imposing monetary consequences for not following the already existing rules. Many construction businesses are already classifying their employees correctly as employees rather than independent contractors and allocating their payroll to the correct construction classification. However, the contractors that abuse the rules ? or make a mistake ? by misclassifying an employee as an independent contractor maintain an unfair competitive advantage because their insurance costs are lower and their payroll taxes are lower than [those of] their counterparts that follow the rules.?

How will enforcement of the law play out in the construction industry ? both in terms of cost and policy?

Enforcement with consequences for non-compliance will increase costs for the companies that misclassify. It should have no effect on the construction companies that are already properly classifying their employees, paying the taxes and paying the correct work comp premium. It will shift the cost of workers compensation insurance and coverage for injured workers to the party where it should be. According to the Tennessee Employee Misclassification Advisory Task Force, based on estimates using 2006 data, Tennessee lost between $2.1 million and $3.7 million in uncollected workers? compensation premium taxes. And its estimated losses from unpaid unemployment insurance premiums range from $8.4 million to $14.9 million.

What are you hearing from industry officials regarding the law? Do they feel it will help the construction sector? Hurt it?

There is nothing clearly announcing the change on the AGC and ABC websites. We have only heard about it from one insurance carrier. So, there needs to be some additional publicity so that those not currently in compliance can take steps to correct their situation.

Do you anticipate lots of fines?

It is difficult to predict what will happen when the law is enforced, but we know that violations will be subject to a penalty up to the greater of $1,000 or one and one half time the average yearly workers? compensation premium for such construction services provider. So the potential is there.

Source: http://nashvillepost.com/blogs/postbusiness/2013/6/28/qa_beckye_sprouse

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NKorea likely to get cold shoulder at Asia forum

BANDAR SERI BEGAWAN, Brunei (AP) ? A regional security summit in this tiny Southeast Asian sultanate is the sort of venue where North Korea has often managed to open up sideline discussions with Seoul and Washington. This time, while there will be plenty of talk about Pyongyang, there is little chance of substantive talk with it.

North Korea has sought negotiations with the U.S. and South Korea but has ignored their demands that it first honor prior commitments to move toward nuclear disarmament. At high-level diplomatic talks beginning this weekend, it can expect the cold shoulder from those countries and others frustrated by Pyongyang's insistence on developing nuclear weapons.

After a December long-range rocket launch, a February nuclear test and weeks of threats to defend itself from aggression with nuclear strikes against South Korea and the United States, North Korea earlier this month made a surprise offer for separate talks with its rivals.

Government delegates from the two Koreas met and agreed to hold senior-level talks on non-nuclear issues, but the plan collapsed over a protocol dispute. The United States responded coolly to Pyongyang's appeal for direct negotiations, which some analysts view as a familiar effort to win aid in return for ratcheting down tensions.

"While it is certainly preferable for North Korea to pursue diplomatic rather than missile or nuclear tests, all of North Korea's neighbors by now are well aware of North Korea's history of diplomatic initiatives as just another tool through which North Korea has sought to consolidate gains following periods in which North Korean brinkmanship has driven political tensions to high levels," Scott Snyder, a Korea specialist at the Council on Foreign Relations think tank, wrote in a blog post.

North Korea quit disarmament-for-aid talks with five other nations ? South Korea, the U.S., Japan, Russia and China ? in 2009 to protest international condemnation over a long-range rocket launch.

He added that agreeing to hold talks with the North "and come back to the table as though nothing has changed since the last six-party talks were held in 2008 would imply acceptance" of Pyongyang's rocket launches and nuclear tests.

Whether or not Washington and its allies ignore Pyongyang's diplomats, North Korea's atomic aspirations are on the agenda in talks surrounding the 27-country Association of Southeast Asian Nations Regional Forum, which takes place Tuesday in the Bruneian capital of Bandar Seri Begawan.

A draft of the forum chairman's statement provided to The Associated Press said that the meetings would reaffirm the importance of denuclearizing the Korean Peninsula, and that most participants urged North Korea "to abide by its obligations" under U.N. Security Council resolutions and commitments made in a joint statement following six-party talks in 2005.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and his counterparts from South Korea, China and Japan will attend the forum and could hold private meetings that touch on Pyongyang.

On Saturday, North Korea's longtime foreign minister, Pak Ui Chun, departed Pyongyang for Brunei. He was seen off at the airport by Liu Hongcai, China's ambassador to North Korea. Beijing is Pyongyang's biggest ally but has pushed its neighbor on denuclearization.

Because the ASEAN forum gathers diplomats from all six countries involved in the long-stalled disarmament negotiations it has previously provided a chance to use informal, sideline talks to break stalemates over the nuclear issue.

In 2011, top nuclear envoys from the two Koreas met on the sidelines of the forum in Bali, Indonesia, and agreed to work toward a resumption of the six-nation talks, though the negotiations remain stalled. The Koreas' foreign ministers held sideline talks in 2000, 2004, 2005 and 2007, and top diplomats from Pyongyang and Washington also met privately in 2004 and 2008.

North Korea will likely seek similar talks in Brunei, but South Korean Foreign Ministry spokesman Cho Tai-young told reporters Tuesday that officials from Seoul aren't considering meeting the North Korean foreign minister on the sidelines. In Washington, State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell said Monday that he knew of no discussions planned between Kerry and Pak in Brunei, and that such talks would be "fairly unusual."

Analysts said North Korea appeared to be repeating its pattern of following aggressive rhetoric with diplomatic efforts to get outside aid and concessions.

Chang Yong Seok, an analyst at the Institute for Peace and Unification Studies at Seoul National University, said Pyongyang must do something to show it's refraining from continuing nuclear activities, such as announcing some disarmament steps, if it wants to have talks.

Despite its recent bid for diplomacy, North Korea has raised renewed worries about a nuclear program that outsiders estimate to include a handful of crude nuclear bombs. Pyongyang followed up its February nuclear test, its third since 2006, with an announcement that it planned to restore all of its atomic bomb fuel producing facilities. The latest test drew widespread international condemnation and tightened U.N. sanctions, which subsequently led the North to issue a torrent of warlike threats and sharply raise tensions on the divided peninsula.

Recent satellite photos show signs of new tunnel work at North Korea's underground nuclear test site, the U.S.-Korea Institute at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies said in an analysis Tuesday. The analysis said it doesn't appear to indicate another atomic blast is imminent but suggests the country has continued to work on its nuclear weapons program even as tensions eased.

Other issues expected to draw keen media attention in Brunei include South China Sea territorial disputes and relations between the U.S. and China, the world's two biggest economies.

China has territorial disputes with the Philippines, Vietnam, Taiwan, Brunei and Malaysia over the South China Sea and its potentially oil- and gas-rich islands. Several claimants want group discussions in order to create a legally binding "code of conduct" to prevent clashes in the sea, but Beijing has not clearly stated when it will sit down with the 10-nation ASEAN bloc to discuss such a nonaggression pact.

China prefers one-on-one negotiations with each rival claimant to resolve the territorial dispute, something that would give it an advantage because of its size and clout.

Southeast Asian countries believe that "having bilateral negotiations with a strong guy would be a losing game," said Bae Geung-chan, a professor at the state-run Korea National Diplomatic Academy in Seoul.

The regional forum chairman's statement said ministers welcome efforts to work toward a code of conduct, and commended ASEAN nations and China for their work to maintain peace and stability.

Analysts say China and the U.S. probably won't have sensitive talks in Brunei that could change their relations. Their leaders recently held an unusually lengthy informal summit in California, during which both countries expressed optimism that the closer personal ties forged between the leaders could stem the mistrust between the world powers.

During the summit, President Barack Obama and his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping, were in broad agreement over the need for North Korea to abandon its nuclear weapons, according to U.S. officials.

___

Associated Press writers Jim Gomez in Manila, Philippines, and Kim Kwang Hyon in Pyongyang, North Korea, contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nkorea-likely-cold-shoulder-asia-forum-095914963.html

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South Africa: Mandela improved overnight

JOHANNESBURG (AP) ? Nelson Mandela's health improved overnight and although his condition remains critical it is now stable, the South African government said Thursday. One of the former president's daughters said he is still opening his eyes and reacting to the touch of his family even though his situation is precarious.

The report that the health of the 94-year-old anti-apartheid leader had taken a turn for the better came amid a growing sense in South Africa that Mandela was approaching the end of his life. Well-wishers have delivered flowers and messages of support to the Pretoria hospital where he is being treated, and prayer sessions were held around the country on Thursday.

President Jacob Zuma's office said in a statement that he received the encouraging update from the medical team that is treating Mandela. Zuma had canceled an international trip on Thursday, instead visiting Mandela for the second time in two days.

"I canceled my visit to Mozambique today so that I can see him and confer with the doctors," Zuma said in the statement. "He is much better today than he was when I saw him last night."

In April, Zuma gave an overly upbeat assessment about Mandela's condition. At that time, state television broadcast footage of a visit by Zuma and other political leaders to Mandela's home. Zuma said at the time that Mandela was in good shape, but the footage showed him silent and unresponsive, even when Zuma tried to hold his hand.

Mandela, who was imprisoned for 27 years during white racist rule and became president in all-race elections in 1994, was taken to a hospital on June 8 for what the government said was a recurring lung infection.

Zuma urged people to pray for Mandela, and continue with their work and daily activities even while he is hospitalized.

The president's office said it was disturbed by what it called rumors about Mandela's health and appealed for respect for the privacy and dignity of the former leader. Unconfirmed reports about Mandela have swirled on social media and other forums.

Mandela's condition is acknowledged to be grave. He is on life support systems, according to a few television networks that quote anonymous sources, and presidential spokesman Mac Maharaj has declined to confirm or deny those reports.

Makaziwe Mandela, one of Mandela's daughters, echoed the criticism, saying foreign media coverage of her father's illness had become intrusive, particularly at the Pretoria hospital where many journalists have gathered.

"There's sort of a racist element with many of the foreign media, where they just cross boundaries," she said in the SABC interview. "It's like truly vultures waiting when a lion has devoured a buffalo, waiting there for the last carcasses. That's the image that we have, as a family."

She said: "We don't mind the interest. But I just think it has gone overboard."

In comments posted on the SABC web site, Makaziwe Mandela said "anything is imminent" because her father, referred to affectionately by many South Africans as "Tata," or "Father," is in a very critical state.

"I want to emphasize again that it's only God who knows when the time to go is," she said. "So we will wait with Tata. He's still giving us hope by opening his eyes, he's still reactive to touch, we will live with that hope until the final end comes."

Beginning a trip to Africa, President Obama said in Senegal on Thursday that his thoughts and prayers were with South Africans and in particular the Mandela family. He said he was inspired, as a law school student in the early 1990s, to see Mandela step forward after decades of imprisonment to help deliver democracy in a spirit of reconciliation with his former captors.

"It gave me a sense of what is possible in the world when righteous people, when people of good will, work together on behalf of a larger cause," said Obama, who described Mandela as a personal hero.

"And if and when he passes from this place, one thing I think we'll all know is that his legacy is one that will linger on throughout the ages," Obama said.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/south-africa-mandela-improved-overnight-125015077.html

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Senate immigration bill a ?pipe dream?

Illinois Republican Rep. Peter Roskam (Alex Wong/Getty Images)

The Senate is poised to pass a comprehensive immigration bill this week. Immigration reform proponents will cheer! Immigrant activists will cry tears of joy! DREAMers will dream bigger dreams!

Not to be a heartbreaker, but this party probably won't last long.

The Republican-controlled House of Representatives hasn't the slightest intention of passing the thing as a whole, says Illinois Republican Rep. Peter Roskam, a lawmaker responsible for counting Republican votes.

Roskam, who serves as the Republican chief deputy whip, made it clear on Thursday that House leaders do not plan to put the complete Senate bill to a vote on the floor of the lower chamber. Even if they did, it likely wouldn't pass.

?The House has no capacity to move that bill in its entirety. It just won?t happen," Roskam said during a meeting with reporters on Thursday morning. "It is a pipe dream to think that that bill is going to go to the floor and be voted on. The House is going to move through in a more deliberative process.?

While Senate members have agreed to take a comprehensive approach on the legislation?their bill would provide a pathway to legality for unauthorized immigrants and to spend billions on border security?House lawmakers intend to pass the bill in pieces, starting with a bill that shores up border security and then (maybe) another measure that deals with the 11 million people currently living in the United States illegally.

But that approach won't fly with Senate Democrats or President Barack Obama, who say they won't accept an immigration bill that doesn't have a pathway to legal status baked into the cake. Some might call it an impasse, a term more commonly referred to as just another day in Washington.

Unlike their counterparts in the Senate, who have taken steps to pass the bill quickly, the House is in no rush to act.

In one important way, the roles between the two chambers are reversed. There is a long-standing Washington tradition in which the House passes bills and the Senate ceremonially (and proudly) ignores them. This time, the House is the saucer that will cool the Senate's tea. Or, to put it another way, House Republicans want to slow-jam the immigration bill; Senate Democrats are thinking more Busta Rhymes.

For the moment, the House seems to be enjoying the role-reversal. Some aren't even reading the Senate version at all.

?I have not gone through chapter and verse on the Senate bill," Roskam said. "I don?t think I?m going to be voting on the Senate bill, so it?s not as if I?m marinating in study.?

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/news/senate-immigration-bill-pipe-dream-house-gop-lawmaker-155313110.html

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NASA telescope to probe long-standing solar mystery


CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida | Thu Jun 27, 2013 1:21pm EDT

CAPE CANAVERAL, Florida (Reuters) - A small NASA telescope was poised for launch on Thursday on a mission to determine how the sun heats its atmosphere to millions of degrees, sending off rivers of particles that define the boundaries of the solar system.

The study is far from academic. Solar activity directly impacts Earth's climate and the space environment beyond the planet's atmosphere. Solar storms can knock out power grids, disrupt radio signals and interfere with communications, navigation and other satellites in orbit.

"We live in a very complex society and the sun has a role to play in it," said physicist Alan Title, with Lockheed Martin Space Systems Advanced Technology Center in Palo Alto, California, which designed and built the telescope.

Scientists have been trying to unravel the mechanisms that drive the sun for decades but one fundamental mystery endures: How it manages to release energy from its relatively cool, 10,000 degree Fahrenheit (5,500 degree Celsius) surface into an atmosphere that can reach up to 5 million degrees Fahrenheit (2.8 million Celsius).

At its core, the sun is essentially a giant fusion engine that melds hydrogen atoms into helium. As expected, temperatures cool as energy travels outward through the layers. But then in the lower atmosphere, known as the chromosphere, temperatures heat up again.

Pictures and data relayed by the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph, or IRIS, telescope may finally provide some answers about how that happens.

The 4-foot (1.2-meter) long, 450-pound (204-kg) observatory will be observing the sun from a vantage point about 400 miles above Earth. It is designed to capture detailed images of light moving from the sun's surface, known as the photosphere, into the chromosphere. Temperatures peak in the sun's outer atmosphere, the corona.

All that energy fuels a continuous release of charged particles from the sun into what is known as the solar wind, a pressure bubble that fills and defines the boundaries of the solar system.

"Every time we look at the sun in more detail, it opens up a new window for us," said Jeffrey Newmark, IRIS program scientist at NASA headquarters in Washington, D.C.

The telescope is scheduled to be launched aboard an Orbital Sciences Corp Pegasus rocket on Friday at 10:27 p.m. EDT. Pegasus is an air-launched system that is carried aloft by a modified L-1011 aircraft that will take off from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California about 55 minutes before the scheduled launch.

The rocket is released from the belly of the plane at an altitude of about 39,000 feet so it can ignite and carry the telescope into orbit.

IRIS, which cost about $145 million including the launch service, is designed to last for two years.

(Editing by Kevin Gray and Bill Trott)

Source: http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/reuters/scienceNews/~3/PXL1C_zZRtQ/story01.htm

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Netflix Launches ?Max,? A Goofy Virtual Assistant To Help With Recommendations, Available Now On PS3, iPad Next Week

1-MaxRowNetflix this morning announced its own take on virtual assistants like the iPhone's Siri, with the debut of "Max," an on-screen guide for the Netflix app on PlayStation 3 devices which helps you find new movies or TV shows to watch. And yes, the guide does talk to you, but thankfully has yet to manifest itself in some more corporeal format, like Microsoft's "Bob."

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/_SZW2RNe10c/

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Xbox 360 strikes live TV deal with Time Warner Cable, promises 'up to 300 of the most popular channels' later this summer

Xbox 360 strikes live TV deal with Time Warner Cable, promises 'up to 300 of the most popular channels' later this summer

Xbox Live Gold members might have yet another reason not to go outdoors this summer, as Microsoft has just detailed a new TWC TV app for launch in the next few months. Joining the console's existing HBO Go stream, Time Warner Cable subscribers will be able to watch AMC, BBC World News, Bravo, CNN, Comedy Central, Food Network and more through their Xbox 360, with Kinect controls to switch channels and more with a wave of your arms. The announcement also kindly reminds us that its incoming Xbox One will let users switch between live TV and gaming in an instant -- preorders are open now, folks!

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Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/CM9tTn6L1JU/

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Friday, June 28, 2013

7 Surprising Things You Don't Know About Migraines - Health News ...

Getty Images

Getty Images

June is Migraine Awareness Month, putting the spotlight on the pounding, nausea-producing headaches which afflict some 28 million Americans. While there?s an awful lot we do know about migraines, what you don?t know will surprise you:

1. They?ve been linked to suicide risk
Several studies have now linked migraines with an increased risk for suicide attempts and even completed suicide. The risk may be even higher among people with migraine with aura or the flashes of light and other sensory symptoms that can accompany the headaches. It?s not clear why migraines and suicide are related, but depression and migraine share a similar biology, says Dawn Buse, PhD, a health psychologist with Montefiore Medical Center in New York City. Migraine sufferers need to know that ?they?re not alone. They can get help,? says Buse.

2. Your medication could be making migraines worse
Although drugs are meant to help ease the pain of migraines, in some cases this strategy can backfire?badly. Too-frequent use of migraine medications can result in what?s known as ?medication-overuse headaches? and a quickly spiraling vicious cycle. This type of headache can occur with many different medications, including narcotics, acetaminophen, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs, like ibuprofen) and triptans, a class of drugs used specifically to treat migraines. The solution? Try not to use migraine medication, even over-the-counter varieties, more than twice a week.

3. Lightning and migraine can strike together
A study of migraine sufferers in Ohio and Missouri found that the risk of migraine went up on days when there was lightning nearby compared to days when there wasn?t. And weather-related factors such as barometric pressure and humidity, both of which have been linked with migraines in the past, couldn?t explain all of the elevated risk. The study authors speculated that electromagnetic waves from the lightning could be triggering the headaches or that lightning might increase the production of ozone or fungus spores, either of which might spur a migraine.

4. Migraines are linked to other serious health problems
People with migraines have an elevated risk of stroke and of other cardiovascular problems when compared with the general population. The risk of stroke, in particular, is higher still when the migraine is accompanied by aura and in women aged 35 or over, especially those who use oral contraceptives or who smoke. Researchers aren?t sure why stroke and migraines are linked but, regardless, ?a history of migraine with aura should be considered an important risk marker for stroke,? says Buse.

5. A drop in your stress level can bring on a migraine
If you think that finishing your finals or having that big work presentation out of the way will reduce your chance of a migraine, think again. Research by Buse?s team actually found a 20% higher risk of migraines after someone?s mood changed from sad or nervous to happy or relaxed. These ?let-down? migraines may be caused by a sudden, dramatic drop in hormones. How to reduce the likelihood of being let down in this way? Try to avoid peaks of stress in the first place. If it?s finals week, do some yoga or take copious breaks.

6. Sex can trigger migraines
That?s right. Intense physical exertion, including sexual activity, and sometimes even just arousal can actually cause a migraine. Normally this type of migraine is more common in young or mid-life men and, fortunately, usually goes away as the person ages. One obvious solution is to avoid sexual activity but there are easier ways to prevent the migraines. Some doctors will actually prescribe blood pressure medications known as beta blockers to prevent these migraines. And bear in mind that some research suggests sex can actually ease a migraine.

7. Migraines can blow in with the wind
In addition to humidity and barometric temperature, some people swear that an ill wind lies behind their migraine pain. At least one scientific study backs this up. Researchers in Alberta, Canada found an increased risk of migraine on days preceding chinook winds and on days when the winds exceeded 23 miles an hour. Chinooks are warm winds hailing from the west. Overall, about half of migraine sufferers are sensitive to weather factors such as temperature, humidity and barometric pressure, according to another study.

Read more:

Source: http://news.health.com/2013/06/27/surprising-about-migraines/

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US stocks fall in quiet end to a bumpy month

(AP) ? Given the wild trading of late, it was a calm close to the month.

After flitting between tiny gains and losses most of Friday, the stock market closed mostly lower, a peaceful end to the most volatile month in nearly two years.

"It's a dull Friday," said Gary Flam, a stock manager at Bel Air Investment Advisors. A bull market, he added, is "rarely a straight march up."

The Standard & Poor's 500 index ended its bumpy ride in June down 1.5 percent, the first monthly loss since October. The index still had its best first half of a year since 1998.

Investors seemed unsure how to react to recent statements by Federal Reserve officials about when the central bank might end its support for the economy. Mixed economic news Friday added to investor uncertainty after big stock gains.

On Friday, an index consumer confidence was up but a gauge of business activity in the Chicago area plunged.

"Investors don't know what to make of the news," said John Toohey, vice president of stock investments at USAA Investment Management. "I wouldn't be surprised to see more ups and downs."

The S&P 500 stock index closed down 6.92 points, or 0.4 percent, to 1,606.28. The Dow Jones industrial average fell 114.89 points, or 0.8 percent, to 14,909.60. The Nasdaq composite index rose 1.38 points, or 0.04 percent, to 3,403.25.

Stocks have jumped around in June. By contrast, the first five months of the year were mostly calm, marked by small but steady gains as investors bought on news of higher home prices, record corporate earnings and an improving jobs market.

By May 21, the S&P 500 had climbed to a record 1,669, up 18 percent for the year. Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke spoke the next day, and prices began gyrating.

Investors have long known that the central bank would eventually pull back from its bond purchases, which are designed to lower interest rates and get people to borrow and spend more. Last week, Bernanke got more specific about the timing. He said the Fed could start purchasing fewer bonds later this year, and stop buying them completely by the middle of next year, if the economy continued to strengthen.

Investors dumped stocks, but then had second thoughts this week as other Fed officials stressed that the central bank wouldn't pull back on its support soon. The Dow gained 365 points over the previous three days this week. The Dow has had 16 triple-digit moves for the month, the most since September 2011.

Bonds have also been on a bumpy ride in recent weeks, mostly down.

The prospect of fewer purchases by the Fed sent investors fleeing from all sorts of bonds ? municipals, U.S. Treasury securities, corporate bonds, foreign government debt and high-yield bonds. Investors pulled a record $23 billion from bond mutual funds in the five trading days ended Wednesday, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch.

Bond yields, which move in the opposite direction of bond prices, have rocketed.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose to 2.49 percent from 2.47 percent late Thursday. Last month, the yield was as low as 1.63 percent. Treasury yields help set borrowing costs for a large range of consumer and business loans.

It's been a rocky month in foreign markets, too. Major indexes in France, Germany and Britain have lost about 5 percent in June.

In U.S. economic news Friday, the University of Michigan said its index of consumer sentiment dipped to 84.1 in June from 84.5 the previous month. But that was still relatively high. May's reading was the highest since July 2007.

Meanwhile, the Chicago Business Barometer sank to 51.6 from a 14-month high of 58.7 in May. That was well below the level of 55 that economists polled by FactSet were expecting.

Bill Strazzullo, chief strategist of Bell Curve Trading, is worried stock investors will sell on any signs the Fed is slowing down its economic stimulus program.

"This rally is still very much being supported by monetary easing by central banks," he said. He added, referring to Friday's quiet trading: "It's the calm before the storm."

Eight of the 10 industry groups in the S&P 500 were down for the day, led by health care companies. They fell 0.9 percent.

In commodities trading, gold gained $12.10 to $1,223.70 an ounce. The price of crude oil fell 49 cents to $96.56 a barrel. The dollar rose against the euro and the Japanese yen.

Among stocks making big moves:

? BlackBerry maker Research In Motion plunged $4.02, or 28 percent, to $10.46 after the company posted a surprise loss in the first quarter and warned of future losses despite releasing its new line of smartphones this year. The company also discontinued making new versions of its slow-selling tablet device, The Playbook.

? Accenture fell $8.26, or 10 percent, to $71.96. The consulting firm cut its revenue and profit outlook for its fiscal year ending in August. Revenue was hurt by lower demand in Europe as well as its communications, media and technology division.

? Hospira rose $2.16, or 6 percent, to $38.31. The drug company said it had received a positive opinion from a European drug regulator for a drug to treat rheumatoid arthritis, among other illnesses. A final decision could come three months.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2013-06-28-Wall%20Street/id-f2cec0729cad44a0ac56d7785f323680

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Verizon Galaxy S4 32GB available for $299 starting tomorrow

Samsung Galaxy S4

Online orders of the new higher storage capacity version will ship by July 3

Verizon has made an update to its Galaxy S4 availability post indicating that the larger capacity 32GB version of the device will become available starting tomorrow, June 29th. As you would expect, the price takes the usual $100 jump up to $299 with a 2-year contract for the increased storage. The post doesn't indicate which colors will be available, but we have to assume it'll be the same white and black varieties as currently offered for the 16GB model.

The post specifies that the device will go on sale at Verizon's online store tomorrow, with devices shipping no later than July 3rd for those who order on day one. No details on in-store availability at the moment, but we would expect them to become available there soon also. Keep an eye out on the Verizon site late tonight if you want to be the first to get your order in.

Source: Verizon

    


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/GYsYFIRGCcY/story01.htm

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Reaction to court ruling on marriage provision

Reaction to the Supreme Court's decisions Wednesday in two gay marriage cases:

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"The laws of our land are catching up to the fundamental truth that millions of Americans hold in our hearts: when all Americans are treated as equal, no matter who they are or whom they love, we are all more free." ? President Barack Obama.

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"While I am obviously disappointed in the ruling, it is always critical that we protect our system of checks and balances. A robust national debate over marriage will continue in the public square, and it is my hope that states will define marriage as the union between one man and one woman." ? House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio.

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"The Supreme Court's decision affirms that all couples, regardless of their sexual orientation, deserve the same rights and opportunities under the law that my wife and I enjoy. The Defense of Marriage Act was a discriminatory law that unfairly treated LGBT couples differently, and has rightly been relegated to the dust bin of history." ? Sen. Michael Bennet, D-Colo.

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"We are devastated that the Supreme Court succumbed to political pressure by voting to weaken the sacred institution. They neglected our most precious children who need a mother and a father united in marriage for healthy development." ? Rev. William Owens, president of Coalition of African-American Pastors.

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"At long last, the legal marriages of countless gay and lesbian couples will be afforded the same federal recognition and protections as any other. Today is a cornerstone for justice and equality? when our nation once again moved closer to recognizing and celebrating all LGBT Americans for their contributions to our great country." ? GLAAD spokesperson Wilson Cruz.

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"While we are disappointed in the Supreme Court's decision to strike down part of the federal Defense of Marriage Act, the court today did not impose the sweeping nationwide redefinition of natural marriage that was sought. Time is not on the side of those seeking to create same-sex 'marriage.' As the American people are given time to experience the actual consequences of redefining marriage, the public debate and opposition to the redefinition of natural marriage will undoubtedly intensify." ? Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council.

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"This is a watershed moment for equality and a clear statement from the highest court in the land that discrimination and hatred have no place in a country founded on the principles of liberty, justice and equality." ? Rick Jacobs, chair of the California-based CourageCampaign.org.

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"At the heart of the gay marriage argument is an untruth: unions of two men or women are not the same as unions of husband and wife. The law cannot make it so, it can only require us to paint pretty pictures to cover up deep truths embedded in human nature." ? Maggie Gallagher, fellow at the American Principles Project and co-founder of the National Organization for Marriage.

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"Today's ruling affirms what we stand for as Americans ? the guarantee that every person and every family is given equal respect under the law. It means that married same-sex couples can participate fully in federal programs that provide much-needed security for American families. ? Rep. Jerrold Nadler, D-N.Y.

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"We are deeply saddened by today's decision to not only allow but encourage same-sex marriage in our country? a country that was founded on biblical principles. We mourn for America's future, but we are not without hope." ?Tim Wildmon, president of American Family Association.

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"Marriage is the true foundation for strong families. Every loving, committed couple deserves the basic human right to get married, start a family, and be treated equally under the law. No politician from this day forward should try to stand in the way of this fact." ?Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y.

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"The House defended this law, which passed with a large bipartisan coalition and was signed by President Clinton, because courts should determine the constitutionality of laws, not presidents. I'm disappointed in this decision, and the marriage debate will continue in the states." ? House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va.

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"The Supreme Court bent the arc of history once again toward justice. The court placed itself on the right side of history by discarding Section 3 of the defenseless Defense of Marriage Act and by allowing marriage equality for all families in California. The highest court in the land reaffirmed the promise inscribed into its walls: 'equal justice under law.'" ? House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif.

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"It is a sad day when the same court that upheld Obamacare decides to reverse course on thousands of years of tradition and a strong bipartisan coalition in Congress by striking down the Defense of Marriage Act. This Supreme Court ruling marks a low point in judicial activism where unelected judges turned against traditional marriage which has been a hallmark of American society since our nation's founding." ? Steve Scalise, chairman of the Republican Study Committee.

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"Today's rulings advance civil marriage equality, but they should also serve as a call for Christians to embrace religious marriage equality. Countless faithful Christians have lived out their lives in committed same-sex relationships, and we have seen the fruits of their fidelity in our families, our congregations and our communities. If we use this historic moment to see more clearly how their faithfulness contributes to the common good, we will better be able to walk with our LGBT sisters and brothers as an act of Christian faith." ? Rev. Gary Hall, dean of Washington National Cathedral.

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"The court's decision does not silence the voices of Americans. Marriage? the union of husband and wife? will remain timeless, universal, and special, particularly because children need mothers and fathers." ? Austin R. Nimocks, senior counsel for the Alliance Defending Freedom.

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"Today's decision is a step in the right direction for same-sex couples who have made legal commitments to each other... It seems almost unthinkable that such a blatantly unfair law would exist today." ? David Dinielli, deputy legal director at the Southern Poverty Law Center.

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"I firmly believe that preserving the institution of traditional marriage is crucial to the stability of our society and serves the best interest of American families... Today's decision is certainly a setback for the traditional values that make up the backbone of our country." ? House Judiciary Chairman Bob Goodlatte, R-Va.

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"We still have a long way to go, as far as marriage equality throughout the country, but as a military spouse it is a great day to be an American." ? Ashley Broadway, a mother of two small children and married to Lt. Col. Heather Mack, stationed at Fort Bragg, N.C.

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"The Supreme Court got it wrong when it said that the state can tell the federal government how it must define marriage. The federal government, on behalf of those who elected them, should be able to recognize the unique value of relationships that provide children a mother and father." ? Joseph Backholm, executive director of the Family Policy Institute of Washington.

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"The U.S. Supreme Court's decision today puts the court on the right side of history. DOMA is unjust, un-American, and out of step with the values of our country." ? Rep. Jim Moran, D-Va.

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"Sadly, the courts have chosen to follow at a time when our nation most needs strong leaders? leaders who wish to promote strong families instead of dismantling them." ? Rev. William E. Lori, Archbishop of Baltimore.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/reaction-court-ruling-marriage-provision-161019974.html

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