INSANItherapy

January 30, 2008 at 10:24 pm | In Uncategorized | No Comments
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Starting THIS WEDNESDAY AT 3 p.m. PAC/ 6 Eastern - instead of the usual episode of WWJSNL ..come get some “INSANItherapy: The unauthorized Adrianne Curry support group”.. True_Alice and JESUS of Zion are co-hosting this “Support Fest” which contends that the only way to maintain sanity in a difficult world is to go CRAZY!!!!

WARNING TO HATERS, SCAMMERS, SPAMMERS & TROLLS:
DON’T .. or “Thou shalt be ‘Biffed’!” by “Biff the Bouncer Kitty”

To all of you who want to laugh, love or just need support..

PLEASE JOIN US!

INSANItherapy “The Supportiest Show on NowLive”

BE LOVE & BE LOVED!
JoZ 

Link to the show: http://www.nowlive.com/show/100203344

Invisible RFID Ink Safe For Cattle And People, Company Says

January 28, 2008 at 2:20 am | In Uncategorized | No Comments
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Invisible RFID Ink Safe For Cattle And People, Company Says
Category: News and Politics

Invisible RFID Ink Safe For Cattle And People, Company Says
Verichip

A startup company developing chipless RFID ink has tested its product on cattle and laboratory rats. Somark Innovations announced this week that it successfully tested biocompatible RFID ink, which can be read through animal hairs. The passive RFID technology could be used to identify and track cows to reduce financial losses from Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (mad cow disease) scares. Somark, which formed in 2005, is located at the Center for Emerging Technologies in St. Louis. The company is raising Series A equity financing and plans to license the technology to secondary markets, which could include laboratory animals, dogs, cats, prime cuts of meat, and military personnel.

Chief scientist Ramos Mays said the tests provide a true proof-of-principle and mitigate most of the technological risks in terms of the product’s performance. “This proves the ability to create a synthetic biometric or fake fingerprint with biocompatible, chipless RFID ink and read it through hair,” he said.

Co-founder Mark Pydynowski said during an interview Wednesday that the ink doesn’t contain any metals and can be either invisible or colored. He declined to say what is in the ink, but said he’s certain that it is 100% biocompatible and chemically inert. He also said it is safe for people and animals.

The process developed by Somark involves a geometric array of micro-needles and a reusable applicator with a one-time-use ink capsule. Pydynowski said it takes five to 10 seconds to “stamp or tattoo” an animal, and there is no need to remove the fur. The ink remains in the dermal layer, and a reader can detect it from 4 feet away.

“Conceptually, you can think of it in the same way that visible light is reflected by mirrors,” he said, adding that the actual process is slightly different and proprietary.

The amount of information contained in the ink depends on the surface area available, he said. The U.S. Department of Agriculture calls for a 15-digit number to track cattle. The first three digits are “840″ for the U.S. country code. The remaining digits are unique identifiers. The numbers would link to a database containing more information.

“It can say where it has been, who it has talked to, who it has eaten with, and who else it has been in contact with,” Pydynowski said.

Ranchers and others in the agricultural industry can choose a covert stamping system, which would make it impossible for cattle thieves to tell which animals have been marked and easy for those checking for stolen cattle to determine a cow’s source. Pydynowski said the technology is an improvement over ear tags, which can be detached from cows and other products.

The technology could verify that cuts of meat originated in a hormone-free environment, Pydynowski said, adding that consumers would destroy the system by breaking down the ink when chewing the meat. In other words, Big Brother wouldn’t know whether someone ate a Big Mac or a filet mignon, according to Pydynowski’s explanation. However, the government and agricultural producers and retailers could track e-coli outbreaks in spinach, he said.

The ink also could be used to track and rescue soldiers, Pydynowski said.

“It could help identify friends or foes, prevent friendly fire, and help save soldiers’ lives,” he said. “It’s a very scary proposition when you’re dealing with humans, but with military personnel, we’re talking about saving soldiers’ lives and it may be something worthwhile.”

Invisible RFID Ink Safe For Cattle And People, Company Says

January 28, 2008 at 2:14 am | In news and politics | No Comments
Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Invisible RFID Ink Safe For Cattle And People, Company Says
Category: News and Politics

Invisible RFID Ink Safe For Cattle And People, Company Says
Verichip

A startup company developing chipless RFID ink has tested its product on cattle and laboratory rats. Somark Innovations announced this week that it successfully tested biocompatible RFID ink, which can be read through animal hairs. The passive RFID technology could be used to identify and track cows to reduce financial losses from Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (mad cow disease) scares. Somark, which formed in 2005, is located at the Center for Emerging Technologies in St. Louis. The company is raising Series A equity financing and plans to license the technology to secondary markets, which could include laboratory animals, dogs, cats, prime cuts of meat, and military personnel. Chief scientist Ramos Mays said the tests provide a true proof-of-principle and mitigate most of the technological risks in terms of the product’s performance. “This proves the ability to create a synthetic biometric or fake fingerprint with biocompatible, chipless RFID ink and read it through hair,” he said.

Co-founder Mark Pydynowski said during an interview Wednesday that the ink doesn’t contain any metals and can be either invisible or colored. He declined to say what is in the ink, but said he’s certain that it is 100% biocompatible and chemically inert. He also said it is safe for people and animals.

The process developed by Somark involves a geometric array of micro-needles and a reusable applicator with a one-time-use ink capsule. Pydynowski said it takes five to 10 seconds to “stamp or tattoo” an animal, and there is no need to remove the fur. The ink remains in the dermal layer, and a reader can detect it from 4 feet away.

“Conceptually, you can think of it in the same way that visible light is reflected by mirrors,” he said, adding that the actual process is slightly different and proprietary.

The amount of information contained in the ink depends on the surface area available, he said. The U.S. Department of Agriculture calls for a 15-digit number to track cattle. The first three digits are “840″ for the U.S. country code. The remaining digits are unique identifiers. The numbers would link to a database containing more information.

“It can say where it has been, who it has talked to, who it has eaten with, and who else it has been in contact with,” Pydynowski said.

Ranchers and others in the agricultural industry can choose a covert stamping system, which would make it impossible for cattle thieves to tell which animals have been marked and easy for those checking for stolen cattle to determine a cow’s source. Pydynowski said the technology is an improvement over ear tags, which can be detached from cows and other products.

The technology could verify that cuts of meat originated in a hormone-free environment, Pydynowski said, adding that consumers would destroy the system by breaking down the ink when chewing the meat. In other words, Big Brother wouldn’t know whether someone ate a Big Mac or a filet mignon, according to Pydynowski’s explanation. However, the government and agricultural producers and retailers could track e-coli outbreaks in spinach, he said.

The ink also could be used to track and rescue soldiers, Pydynowski said.

“It could help identify friends or foes, prevent friendly fire, and help save soldiers’ lives,” he said. “It’s a very scary proposition when you’re dealing with humans, but with military personnel, we’re talking about saving soldiers’ lives and it may be something worthwhile.”

’It’s 10 p.m. Do You Know Where Your Children Are?’

January 28, 2008 at 1:54 am | In news and politics | No Comments
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’It’s 10 p.m. Do You Know Where Your Children Are?’
Category: News and Politics

‘It’s 10 p.m. Do You Know Where Your Children Are?’
Verichip Parents worry about their little ones being abducted. Later they worry about their not-quite-so-little ones driving too fast and then stopping to hang with the wrong crowd. “Sandwich” generation parents also get to worry about elderly parents wandering off or injuring themselves.

Microchips have been implanted in more than one million pets, and now humans may be next. While it may smack of Big Brother, people may soon be scanned like bread at the supermarket. Teens, too, can be “watched” using GPS technology as parents are alerted when junior exceeds the speed limit and/or goes to an unapproved location. There are infant protection systems - wearable RFID (Radio Frequency Identification) tags for mom and baby - designed to prevent infant abductions and inadvertent child mismatching. Parents can also find out everything their kids say and do online. One can track them by their cell phones, and read their text messages.

Remember “It’s 10 p.m. Do you know where your children are?” Now you can - to the exact geographic coordinates. At least five companies - Disney Mobile, Guardian Angel Technology, Verizon Wireless, Sprint, and Wherify Wireless - have built GPS tracking into cell phones. With Verizon’s Chaperone, for example, the parent can determine the location of the child’s cell phone from the Internet or from his or her own cell phone. The child’s location information will be displayed as a nearby address and on a detailed map.

Chaperone also allows the parent to establish geographic boundaries around such locations as home or baseball practice. When the child arrives near or leaves the vicinity of a predetermined location, the parent can be notified via a TXT message.

In 2004 the FDA approved an implantable chip for use in medical applications. The microchip, the size of a grain of rice, is inserted below the skin. The chip carries medical records that can be read by a scanner ‘ information such as blood groups, conditions, allergies, and details of medications. The same company that offers this human-implantable RFID microchip (Delray Beach, Fla.-based VeriChip) also offers wander-prevention technology for long-term care facilities.

And Big Brother (or Big Mother) can now occupy the back seat of the family vehicle, at least digitally. Real-time GPS vehicle tracking allows parents to monitor their teen’s driving habits. You can determine the vehicle’s speed and location by viewing the car on a map from any computer with Internet access. The date, time, address, speed and direction are displayed. If you can’t get to a computer, the phone can also provide the teen’s last updated location and, if moving, vehicle speed. If your little darling has a different take on what occurred in the past, historical driving information can be saved.

(Naturally, these types of technological applications bring with them a whole set of privacy issues. Just this month a plan by a Rhode Island company to test a tracking system by placing computer chips in grade-schoolers’ backpacks was blasted by the ACLU as invasive and unnecessary.)

You can even remotely lock and unlock the car door from your computer, and you can disable the ignition. How humiliating would it be to your teen driver if you flashed the lights or blew the horn to get his or her attention? It simply requires the push of a key on your computer. (There’s no reason this couldn’t work on a spouse as well.) Another feature auto-notifies when your teen driver has exceeded a predetermined speed limit or drives to a restricted address.

How many of us would have had our privileges yanked if these technologies had available when we were kids? I know my mom would have used all of these tactics and more - if she could have figured out the directions.

Researchers Create DNA Walker for Biocomputational Devices

January 28, 2008 at 1:34 am | In news and politics | No Comments
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Researchers Create DNA Walker for Biocomputational Devices
Category: News and Politics

Researchers Create DNA Walker for Biocomputational Devices
DNA Database and BiochipThe fact that DNA molecules can potentially be used as nanowires and nanotransistors in DNA-based computers has already been profiled on our pages before (see here, here and here). Now a group from Caltech has synthesized a molecular structure, designed from single and double-stranded pieces of DNA, that functions as a “molecular walker,” that can be employed in dynamic molecular computational devices for therapeutic, diagnostic, and other applications (click on picture to enlarge):

Researchers at the California Institute of Technology report they are able to program the pathways by which DNA molecules self-assemble, and hence to engineer diverse dynamic functions at the molecular level. “This capability is essential for something like the memory of a DNA computer, which would need large groups of molecules that can toggle from the on/off position in a fast and reliable fashion,” said National Science Foundation (NSF) Program Manager Kathy Covert.

Researchers Peng Yin, Harry Choi, Colby Calvert and Niles Pierce, who are funded by NSF, report their research results in the Jan. 17 issue of Nature. To illustrate their approach for encoding self-assembly and disassembly pathways into DNA sequences, the researchers experimentally demonstrated the locomotion of a two-legged DNA walker that moves along a DNA track without human intervention…

The walker places foot-over-foot as each appendage is attracted biochemically to the next hairpin along the track. As foot and hairpin make contact, the hairpin unravels. The free end of the hairpin then catches a complementary hairpin that is free-floating in the solution that the whole system is immersed in. Both hairpins coil together forming a “waste duplex” (or the familiarly shaped double helix), releasing the walker’s foot for its next stride. If the walker reaches the end of the track successfully, it leaves behind non-reusable material, and the track is spent. Its travels are more perilous than may seem if it lifts the wrong foot and finds itself trapped between two open hairpins, the walker will fall off never seeing the end of its track.

They want your DNA - Why?

January 27, 2008 at 10:29 pm | In news and politics | No Comments
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They want your DNA - Why?
Category: News and Politics

They want your DNA - Why?
DNA Database and Biochip It took scientists more than a decade and about $1bn to unlock the secrets of the human genome. Now consumers are being offered the chance to get a personalised copy of their DNA - for £500 and a vial full of spit. A web-based testing service launches in Europe today after being available in the US since November, offering insights into your genetic background and likelihood of getting an inherited disease.

Subscribers to 23andMe - it focuses on 23 pairs of chromosomes - are sent a home test kit comprising a plastic tube to be filled with saliva. This is sent to a laboratory for decoding, and about four weeks later users are given password-protected access to their personal genetic analysis on the website. Tests will be able to say whether you have an increased risk of diseases such as multiple sclerosis, diabetes and certain cancers, and also provides less useful information such as the type of earwax a person has.

The service is likely to provoke controversy in the UK, where authorities have warned that genetic tests are often meaningless yet can provoke needless anxiety among those who take them. Last month the Human Genetics Commission condemned them as a dangerous waste of money and called for regulations to control their marketing.

Founders of the scheme Anne Wojcicki - wife of Google co-founder Sergey Brin - and Linda Avey, say it has been well received in the US and “we’re seeing very few problems”, in spite of ethical concerns that have been raised. What people receive, they say, is some fascinating if incomplete information about themselves and their family - and no dramatic revelations about hereditary diseases that will kill them before they are 40.

The analysis does not look for the single genes that predict Huntingdon’s disease or an aggressive form of breast cancer. Instead it focuses on sequences called SNPS (single nucelotide polymorphisms) on 23 pairs of chromosomes. Some of these SNPS have been linked to raised risks of particular diseases, but in most cases lifestyle and environment play as big or a bigger part.

“People have found the information was not worrying,” says Wojcicki.

In the UK, however, the Human Genetics Commission’s report on direct-to-consumer tests warned that neither exact nor complete knowledge of what differences in the chromosome pairs mean exist yet. “Our advice to the public is that with many of the tests currently on the market people are wasting their money,” said Dr Christine Patch, co-author of the report. “At the moment the science is simply not strong enough. The tests could be positively harmful if the results caused unnecessary anxiety or gave false reassurance.”

Dr Helen Wallace, director of the pressure group Gene Watch, is equally concerned. “Our main concern is that the human genome is set to become a massive marketing scam,” she said, adding that special diet foods and pills had been promoted on the back of tests. “Genetic tests like these are not regulated and the science is still poorly understood - so there is a real danger people could be misled about their health.”

The information could eventually lead to problems with insurance. At the moment there is a voluntary moratorium, brokered by the government, on the use of genetic information in deciding insurance premiums, but that expires in 2011. After that it is possible that people who have been told about their vulnerability to disease may be required to disclose this when applying for insurance.

Wojcicki and Avey argue that those who want to know about their genetic make-up should be treated as adults and given the data, together with careful explanations of what it means. The website offers a calculator to assess your increased genetic risk, but also caveats and advice.

Even so, it is not for the fainthearted. Among the conditions linked to some SNPs are certain types of cancer and incurable multiple sclerosis. When Wojcicki took the test she discovered she was a carrier of Bloom’s disease - a genetic mutation that affects one in 100 Jews of eastern European descent. But that, in her view, is useful information. Wojcicki and her husband are hoping to have children, but two carriers have a 25% chance of a child with the disease, which has physical characteristics including short stature and an increased likelihood of cancer. Fortunately, Brin was in the clear.

Wojcicki claims that understanding your genes is empowering. If she found she had a raised likelihood of type two (obesity-linked) diabetes, she would watch her diet. The real fascination for both women is in tracking back their genetic ancestry and they have talked family members into being tested too, so they can compare genes.

The website allows people to compare their genetic information. You have to send a request to somebody on the site and get permission if you want to have a look at their SNPS. “I have a friend,” says Wojcicki, “and we have a tiny bit of shared DNA on chromosome 3 and chromosome 7. It’s a little tiny piece. Yet I’m of Polish Catholic and Russian Jewish descent and he’s from Beirut.”

Bay Area has first major U.S. study of Morgellons disease

January 26, 2008 at 1:14 am | In news and politics | 1 Comment
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Bay Area has first major U.S. study of Morgellons disease
Category: News and Politics

This article found online at: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/01/17/BA0EUGEBK.DTL

Bay Area has first major U.S. study of Morgellons disease

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Bay Area researchers are beginning the first major U.S. study into a mystery disease known for its frightening symptoms - among them, open sores and unidentifiable objects poking out of the skin - that doctors have long suspected is all in patients’ heads.

The study into Morgellons will start immediately, as Kaiser Permanente contacts Northern California patients who have reported symptoms of the mystery disease in the past 18 months. The research will be funded by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Researchers are hoping to come up with a more specific definition of Morgellons and how prevalent it is in the Bay Area, which has one of the largest concentrations of self-reported cases of the disease in the country.

They also hope to determine once and for all whether Morgellons is a psychiatric condition. “The suffering and the impact of this condition on people’s lives, whatever you want to label it, what they’re experiencing is real,” said Michele Pearson, a principal investigator with the CDC. “That’s why this agency has decided to look into it in-depth.”

The CDC is not yet agreeing that Morgellons is a medical condition, but Pearson said there’s no debating that people are ill and need help.

In addition to the skin problems, symptoms of Morgellons include fatigue, confusion and memory problems, joint pain and a sensation of pins and needles or something crawling on the skin.

Many doctors believe that Morgellons is actually a psychiatric condition called delusional parasitosis. They say the filaments that patients report growing out of their skin are actually lint or threads from clothing, and the open sores are caused by patients scratching at skin when they perceive a crawling sensation.

San Francisco resident Pat Miller has been to more than a dozen doctors since he first developed symptoms several years ago. He’s been diagnosed with a wide variety of skin conditions, as well as delusional parasitosis, and few doctors have been willing to consider Morgellons.

He said the Kaiser study, no matter the outcome of it, feels like validation of what he’s been going through.

“It sounds to me like if they’re involving Kaiser in this study and tracing it in a systematic, methodical way, that pretty much means that, yeah, they think there’s something going on,” Miller said. “I’ve developed this lack of love for doctors and health care systems. You pretty much have to become your own doctor.”

Unofficial reports of Morgellons are becoming more common, said Pearson. The CDC has taken 1,200 calls in the past year from patients who believe they have Morgellons, and at Kaiser, doctors are increasingly frustrated trying to diagnose a condition with no known cause or treatment.

“There are many hypotheses as to what may be causing it, but there is no textbook on this condition,” Pearson said. “It’s been a very frustrating journey, not just for patients but also for the physicians treating them.”

Patients have been reporting Morgellons symptoms to the CDC regularly for the past three or four years, although it’s possible the condition has been around for centuries. A South Carolina mom who believes her three children have the illness found a reference to a similar disease in a 1674 medical study. The disease was called Morgellons in 1674, and modern-day sufferers adopted the name.

The CDC does not officially report cases of Morgellons. The nonprofit Morgellons Research Foundation says that more than 10,000 families in the United States have registered with the Web site, claiming at least one family member has the disease.

About 24 percent of registered families are in California, and the Bay Area is one of several hot spots in the country. The research foundation estimates that 150 to 500 people in Northern California have Morgellons.

The Kaiser study will perform medical exams - including dermatological tests, blood analysis and psychiatric evaluations - at offices in Oakland. Researchers hope to carefully examine skin biopsies and any fibers or other materials that patients report growing out of their skin.

“This is a descriptive study. There are no hypotheses to be tested,” said Joe Selby, director of Kaiser’s Northern California division of research. “We recognize that many people in the United States are currently suffering with symptoms and they are very frustrated as to whether there is evidence of their disease.”

Online resources

More information about Morgellons can be found at:

links.sfgate.com/ZCCO

links.sfgate.com/ZCCP

Information about Morgellons

Q: What is Morgellons?

A: It’s a mysterious condition primarily marked by skin disorders. The CDC refers to it as an “unexplained dermopathy.”

Q: What are its symptoms?

A: Unexplained sores that won’t heal; materials protruding from the skin that look like thin, multicolored threads or black sand; chronic fatigue; “brain fog,” including difficulty concentrating and short-term memory problems; muscle and joint pain; sensation of something crawling beneath the skin.

Q: What are common diagnoses of Morgellons symptoms?

A: Many doctors do not believe Morgellons exists, and patients are sometimes diagnosed with skin conditions such as scabies or eczema; Lyme disease; or delusional parasitosis, a psychiatric condition.

Q: Is there a treatment?

A: There is no standard treatment.

Q: How many people have Morgellons?

A: The Morgellons Research Foundation reports that 10,000 families in the United States have registered claiming at least one family member has the disease. Of those families, 150 to 500 are in the Bay Area.

E-mail Erin Allday at eallday@sfchronicle.com.

../articlecontent –>

This article appeared on page B - 1 of the San Francisco Chronicle

Dow Bounces Back From Early-Morning Plunge

January 23, 2008 at 1:39 pm | In news and politics | No Comments
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Dow Bounces Back From Early-Morning Plunge
Category: News and Politics

Dow Bounces Back From Early-Morning Plunge

Asian Markets Tumble On U.S. Worries

POSTED: 3:31 am EST January 22, 2008
UPDATED: 4:30 pm EST January 22, 2008

Wall Street struggled to steady itself Tuesday, climbing back from an early plunge after the Federal Reserve implemented an emergency interest rate cut in hopes of restoring stability to a faltering U.S. economy. The Dow Jones industrials, down 465 points at the start of the session, recovered to a loss of more than 120 points. The Fed lowered its target for the federal funds rate three-quarters of a point to 3.5 percent, the first cut of that size since 1984. The discount rate, the interest it charges to lend directly to banks, was cut to 4 percent comes a week before the central bank’s regularly scheduled meeting. In a statement on its Web site, the Federal Reserve took the action in view of a weakening economic outlook and increasing downside risks to growth. “While strains in short-term funding markets have eased somewhat, broader financial market conditions have continued to deteriorate and credit has tightened further for some businesses and households,” the statement said. “Moreover, incoming information indicates a deepening of the housing contraction as well as some softening in labor markets.” It was the Fed’s first move between scheduled meetings since the markets reopened after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in 2001. The rate cut was the biggest one-day rate move by the Fed since it lowered rates by a full percentage point in December 1991, when the country was trying to emerge from recession. The move came as global stock markets extended their shakeout into a second day on Tuesday. The declines in Asia come amid worries that a possible U.S. recession could cause a worldwide economic slowdown. Japan’s benchmark Nikkei index was down 5.65 percent at the close after dropping almost 4 percent Monday. Tuesday’s drop was the worst one-day loss since Sept. 11, 2001. Trading was halted in India when the Sensex index plummeted almost 10 percent within minutes of opening. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index dropped 8 percent by midday after diving 5.5 percent the day before. A senior economist in Tokyo said chances are slim for stocks to bounce back without some positive — even “drastic” — measures from the U.S. government. Oil prices have declined amid expectations that slower U.S. growth will weaken demand for crude. The U.S. markets were closed Monday in observance of the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday.

Stimulus Package Needed

In the wake of the sharply lower opening, the White House said President George W. Bush isn’t ruling out a larger economic stimulus package than the $150 billion already envisioned. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said Congress and the White House need to agree quickly on a package of tax cuts and other measures to boost the economy. Paulson told the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Tuesday morning “time is of the essence” and that Bush “stands ready to work on a bipartisan basis” to enact legislation as soon as possible. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and leaders in both parties are meeting with Bush at the White House Tuesday to discuss a stimulus bill. The package presumably would involve tax rebates, business tax cuts and funding for a Democratic-led call for additional food stamp and employment aid.

..stopindex–>

Tens of thousands cross downed Gaza wall

January 23, 2008 at 12:50 pm | In news and politics | 22 Comments
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Tens of thousands cross downed Gaza wall
Category: News and Politics

Tens of thousands cross downed Gaza wall

.. BEGIN STORY BODY –>

By IBRAHIM BARZAK, Associated Press Writer 9 minutes ago

.. end storyhdr –>RAFAH, Gaza Strip - Masked gunmen destroyed about two-thirds of the seven-mile-long metal wall separating the Gaza Strip from Egypt in the town of Rafah and tens of thousands of Palestinians poured across the border to buy supplies made scarce by an Israeli blockade of the impoverished territory.

The gunmen began breaching the wall dividing Rafah before dawn, according to witnesses and Hamas officials, who told The Associated Press that they later closed all but two of the gaps in the wall. The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the matter, said they were allowing Palestinians to move freely through the two gaps.

Thousands of Gazans began crossing into Egypt and returning with milk, cigarettes and plastic bottles of fuel, the Hamas officials and witnesses said.

An Associated Press reporter arrived after first light and saw that about two-thirds of the seven-mile-long wall at Rafah had been demolished. The reporter also saw the crowd of Palestinians crossing into Egypt swell into the tens of thousands.

The Gazans went on foot in cars or riding donkey carts and Hamas police assumed control of the border traffic.

Guards directed the crowds over the fallen metal through two main crossing areas, inspecting some bags. One man returning to Gaza carried seven pistols that were confiscated by Hamas police. Others walked unhindered over the piles of scrap metal that once made up the border wall.

The identity of the gunmen who breached the border was not immediately clear. But in a statement, Hamas expressed support for the move, saying, “Blowing up the border wall with Egypt is a reflection of the … catastrophic situation which the Palestinian people in Gaza are living through due to the blockade.”

Egyptian border guards took no action. Egypt has largely kept its border with Gaza closed since the violent Hamas takeover of the territory in June, amid concerns of a spillover of Hamas-style militancy into Egypt.

However, Gaza’s Hamas rulers have orchestrated daily demonstrations on the Gaza-Egypt border, in an apparent attempt to appeal to Arab public opinion and pressure Egypt to open the passage.

The chaotic scenes came on the sixth day of a complete closure of Gaza, imposed by Israel and backed by Egypt, in response to a spike in Gaza rocket attacks on Israeli border towns.

On Tuesday, Israel eased the closure slightly, transferring fuel to restart Gaza’s only power plant, and also sent in some cooking gas, food and medicine. Israel has pledged to continue limited shipments because of concerns that a humanitarian crisis could develop in the already impoverished coastal territory.

However, Gazans are still facing critical shortages of electricity, fuel and other supplies. The territory has been largely cut off from the world since June, when Hamas seized power in Gaza by force.

With the latest blockade, Israel is trying to halt rocket fire that has sent residents in Israeli border communities scrambling for shelter several times a day. The rockets have traumatized many area residents and killed 12 Israelis in six years. Rocket fire has persisted despite the closure.

Israeli officials would not immediately comment on Wednesday’s incident.

Before dawn Wednesday, Palestinian gunmen began blowing holes in the border wall running through Rafah, along the Gaza-Egypt border. There were 17 explosions in all, Hamas security officials said.

All Egyptian security and police officers were pulled out from the immediate vicinity of the border, Egyptian security officials said on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the issue. They did not explain why the officers had been withdrawn.

Gazan Ibrahim Abu Taha, 45, a father of seven, was in the Egyptian section of Rafah with his two brothers and $185 in his pocket. “We want to buy food, we want to buy rice and sugar, milk and wheat and some cheese,” Abu Taha said in a telephone interview, adding that he would also buy cheap Egyptian cigarettes.

Abu Taha said he could get such basic foods in Gaza, but at three times the cost.

An off-duty Hamas security officer who identified himself as Abdel Rahman, 29, said this was his first time out of Gaza. “I can smell the freedom,” he said. “We need no border after today.”

Abdel Rahman said no weapons were being smuggled in from Egypt. “You can buy weapons in Gaza, guns and RPGs,” he said.

Weapons are generally brought into Gaza through smuggling tunnels under the Gaza-Egypt border.

Governments, aid agencies and the U.N. issued urgent appeals for an end to the closure. Israel’s Defense Ministry ruled late Tuesday that 60,000 gallons of diesel fuel will be transferred into Gaza daily, but the crossings will remain closed to other goods and people until further notice.

In a clash early Wednesday with Israeli forces near the closed Sufa crossing into Gaza, a Hamas militant was killed, Palestinian officials said. The Israeli military said soldiers exchanged fire with Palestinian militants in the area.

US moves to avert economic meltdown

January 23, 2008 at 12:15 pm | In news and politics | 1 Comment
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US moves to avert economic meltdown
Category: News and PoliticsUS moves to avert economic meltdown

By TERENCE HUNT, AP White House Correspondent 19 minutes ago

.. end storyhdr –>WASHINGTON - Jolted by global recession fears, the Federal Reserve slashed interest rates Tuesday, and President Bush and leaders of Congress joined in a rare show of cooperation in promising urgent action to pump up the economy with upwards of $150 billion in tax cuts and government spending.

Market meltdowns overnight around the globe and growing anxiety at home stirred lawmakers and the administration toward swift action, possibly within a few weeks. Wall Street plummeted as the day began, following Asian stocks, then warily eased its sell-off after the Fed ordered the biggest cut on record in a key interest rate. The Dow Jones industrials, down 465 points at one point, closed the day off 128.

The Fed, announcing its action after an emergency video conference Monday night, indicated further rate reductions were likely, aimed at encouraging people and companies to start spending again.

“The urgency that we feel at home is now even more urgent as we see the impact of our markets on others,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said after both Democratic and Republican lawmakers met with Bush at the White House.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said the goal was to get a deal through Congress and on Bush’s desk within roughly three weeks — lightning speed compared with the usual snail’s pace on Capitol Hill. His Republican counterpart, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, agreed the aim was action in the next few weeks and said, “That, by the standards in Congress, is pretty fast.”

Bush expressed confidence that he and the Democratic-led Congress could put aside bitter differences that have marked his presidency.

“I believe we can find common ground to get something done that’s big enough, effective enough so that an economy that is inherently strong gets a boost — to make sure that this uncertainty doesn’t translate into more economic woes for our workers and small business people,” Bush said in the Cabinet Room.

Later, announcing the creation of a panel to educate people about their finances, Bush said he thought there would be an agreement “in relatively short order.”

The White House meeting was intended to show the world that Bush and his Democratic adversaries recognize the gravity of the economic slowdown and are serious about protecting consumers and investors who have watched their holdings shrink. Wall Street and global markets fear the stimulus package outlined by Bush is not enough to avert a recession. The Dow Jones industrial average is down nearly 10 percent since the beginning of the year — its worst first 14 trading days ever.

Official Washington was accentuating the positive.

“I really feel good that we have an opportunity to do something together,” Reid said, standing in the White House driveway with Pelosi after talking with Bush. Reid said the size of a deal suggested by Bush was “a good number.”

Administration officials are focusing on rebates of $800 to $1,600 for individuals and couples and so-called bonus depreciation to allow companies to deduct 50 percent of business investments made this year. Democrats say the package also should include boosts in unemployment benefits, food stamp payments and the Medicaid health care program for the poor and disabled. Talks between Pelosi and Minority Leader John Boehner, R-Ohio, have focused on smaller tax rebates of perhaps $500 for individuals.

Like Bush, lawmakers would not discuss what a compromise plan would look like, stressing cooperation rather than potential differences over details.

“This is about one thing in this package: Is it a stimulus?” Pelosi said “So whatever it is that we are considering, it must meet that one criterion: Does it stimulate the economy? Does it put money into the hands of those who will spend it?”

When the Democratic leaders were asked if they agreed with Bush’s statement that the economy is inherently strong, Pelosi said, “I certainly hope so.”

Reid said the House would pass a package first and send it to the Senate. Pelosi, Boehner and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson planned to talk over breakfast Wednesday.

Paulson went to Capitol Hill for talks on the ingredients of the economic package. “Time is of the essence and the president stands ready to work on a bipartisan basis to enact economic growth legislation as soon as possible,” he said earlier in a speech at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

Many analysts say the United States already has tumbled into a recession — a notion rejected by the White House. “We are not forecasting a recession,” spokeswoman Dana Perino said. “Clearly there is a slowdown.”

Leaving open the possibility of a bigger stimulus package, she said, “I’m not going to close the door but I’m not suggesting that anyone believes it has to be bigger” than the roughly $150 billion figure already discussed. Later, she said the White House has not “seen higher numbers floated by members of Congress” and that Bush believes the package he has outlined is “the right amount.”

The Fed’s rate cut caught Washington by surprise. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and his colleagues approved the cut Monday night after global markets were slammed by rising concerns that weakness in the world’s largest economy was spreading worldwide.

“The world’s stock markets are in meltdown, so the Fed came in with an inter-meeting move to try to stop the panic,” said Christopher Rupkey, senior economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi.

The reduction in the federal funds rate from 4.25 percent to 3.5 percent marked the biggest reduction in this target rate for overnight loans on records going back to 1990. It marked the first time the Fed has changed rates between meetings since 2001, when the central bank was battling the combined impacts of a recession and the terrorist attacks.

Commercial banks responded by announcing similar cuts of three-quarter of a percent in their prime lending rate, the benchmark for millions of business and consumer loans. The action will mean the prime lending rate will drop from 7.25 percent down to 6.50 percent.

Analysts said the fact that the Fed did not wait until its meeting next week to cut rates underscored the seriousness of the situation. The Fed was expected to cut rates further, possibly as soon as their next meeting on Jan. 29-30, if there are continued signs that the economy is weakening.

“This move by the Fed was essential,” said Lyle Gramley, a former Fed governor who is now a senior analyst with the Stanford Financial Group in Washington. “Bernanke promised in a speech earlier this month to take substantive action in a timely and decisive manner.”

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Associated Press writers Martin Crutsinger, Andrew Taylor, Deb Riechmann and Ben Feller contributed to this report.

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