Monday, 19 July 2010

Rupee gets new symbol


India’s rupee has joined the ranks of the US dollar, British pound and Japanese yen in having its own unique symbol.
Announced 15 July, the rupee’s new symbol is an amalgamation of a letter in the Devanagari script—which is used to write Hindi—and the Roman capital “R”.
Previously, the Indian rupee was denoted by the “Rp.” tag.
The rune was designed by Indian Institute of Technology student D Udaya Kumar, after the government announced a contest to create a symbol for the rupee back in March 2009.
Kumar’s winning design was picked from 3,000 entries, and he picked up 250,000 rupees (US$5,363) as a prize.
Indian internet engineering company Foradian Technologies will develop the font for the glyph, which can be downloaded from the company’s blog.
According to India’s Ministry of Finance, the symbol will “lend a distinctive character and identity to the currency and further highlight the strength and robustness of the Indian economy.”

Ecstasy 'may help trauma victims'

She was right on target. Soaring from a thousand feet up, she hit the bull's-eye

STL - The Truth Mix

   

Antidepressants Make Shrimps See the Light

Rising levels of antidepressants in coastal waters could change sea-life behaviour and potentially damage the food-chain, according to a new study.
Research into the behaviour of shrimps exposed to the antidepressant fluoxetine, showed that their behaviour is dramatically affected. The shrimps are five times more likely to swim toward the light instead of away from it -- making them more likely to be eaten by fish or birds, which could have devastating effects on the shrimp population.
"Crustaceans are crucial to the food chain and if shrimps' natural behaviour is being changed because of antidepressant levels in the sea this could seriously upset the natural balance of the ecosystem," said Dr Alex Ford from the University of Portsmouth's Institute of Marine Sciences.
"Much of what humans consume you can detect in the water in some concentration. We're a nation of coffee drinkers and there is a huge amount of caffeine found in waste water, for example. It's no surprise that what we get from the pharmacy will also be contaminating the country's waterways."
The research is published in the journal Aquatic Toxicology. The study found that the shrimps' behaviour changes when they are exposed to the same levels of fluoxetine found in the waste water that flows to rivers and estuaries as a result of the drugs humans excrete in sewage.
Dr Ford's research was motivated by a species of parasite which can alter the behaviour of aquatic creatures through changing serotonin levels within the brains of the organisms. Serotonin is a neuro-hormone found in many animals, including humans, known to control types of behaviour, such as modulating mood and decreasing anxiety.
Drugs to combat depression in humans are often designed to target levels of serotonin which led to the question of whether they could also alter the behaviour of marine organisms.
Dr Ford said: "Effluent is concentrated in river estuaries and coastal areas, which is where shrimps and other marine life live -- this means that the shrimps are taking on the excreted drugs of whole towns."
Prescriptions for antidepressants have risen rapidly in recent years, according to the Office for National Statistics. In 2002, there were 26.3 million antidepressant prescriptions handed out by doctors in England and Wales -- yet the environmental effect of pharmaceuticals in sewage has been largely unexplored.
Dr Ford is hoping to carry out future research on a number of other prescribed drugs on the market known to affect serotonin.
Head of the School of Biological Sciences, Professor Matt Guille, said: "Dr Ford has conducted some beautifully simple research, which potentially shows huge ecological consequences. I hope it will lead the way for further study of prescribed drugs and other substances impacting on the country's marine-life."
"I could be a genius. I could be a cheat/It's a thin line and I'm fuckin with it."

Behavior Problems In School Linked To Two Types Of Families

♪♫ Micah P. Hinson - The Life, Living, Dying And Death Of One Certain & Peculiar L.J. Nichols


(Thanx Claudia!)

Marlene off the wall


Marlene Dietrich performing the German version of Pete Seeger's "Where have all the Flowers gone" back in 1963

Das Kraftfuttermischwerk @ Chekov, Cottbus, 17.07.2010

Tracklist:
Butane feat. Midnight – Damned Lecherous Men
Andre Lodemann – The Light
Chris Fortier – Power of One (Power) Mikel Curcio Remix
DJ T – Bateria (Special Dub Mix)
Mathias Kaden – Roots (Luna City Express And Matthias Tanzmann Remix)
In Deep We Trust – Hopscotch – Fine Taste Remix
Harrison Crump – Deep Down Inside (Michel Cleis Remix)
D Dub – Deep Blue (Stimming Remix)
Kaiserdisco – Carambolo (Original Mix)
Mathias Kaden – Rave Strikes Back
Reference – The Best Day in Detroit
Jeff Bennett – Bone Back (Terry Lee Brown Jun. Remix)
Shonky – Bon Baiser De Bombay (Original Mix)
James Teej – Greenback Ft dOP
Bearweasel – Warmer (Lazy Dub)
Wax – WAX 30003 B
Gorge – Keya
Langenberg – Past Present
Marko Furstenberg – Juni Kk (Kollektiv Turmstrasse Vocal Remix)
Consistent – Who Did
Silicone Soul – Dogs Of Les Ilhes (Kollektiv Turmstrasse Remix)
Crystal – Loveshape
Kollektiv Turmstrasse – Grillen im Park
Elting & Lieb Drifting
Rhauder Feat. Paul St. Hilaire – No News – (Rauders Dub Mix)
Dapayk & Midnight – Emergency

direct download
(left click to play; right click to save)

via kfmw

Break Down Colors with 'Pictaculous'

Like the colors in an image you just saw but have no idea what they are? Here's an app that can you give the answers.



A web app by the people behind MailChimp, 'Pictaculous' helps you identify the colors used in an image that you've uploaded.
Simply upload an image on the site and 'Pictaculous' will break down your image into a primary color palette, in addition to a selection of up to 10 different palettes suggested by Kuler and COLORlovers.
Apparently, the web app also works on mobile phones. All you have to do is email your image to 'Pictaculous' and the results will be sent to you within minutes.

Moonshine 'tempts new generation'

Moonshine barrels line a road in 1925  
Prohibition prompted a surge in illegal moonshine production across the US in the 1920s and early 1930s
A growing number of Americans are thought to be getting involved in moonshining - distilling illegal liquor. Traditionally hidden in the backwoods, stills are now going into production in cities across the nation, as Claire Prentice reports from New York.
Against the backdrop of the recession and the current craze for artisan produce, illegal distilling clubs and "kitchen-sink" operations are popping up all over the US, from California to New York and Pennsylvania.
Making and selling moonshine is outlawed in every US state and the police treat distilling liquor without a license as a serious crime.
But while official figures are hard to come by, experts believe as many as a million Americans could be breaking the law by making moonshine - also known as white lightning and white dog.
"There's been a huge increase in the number of people making moonshine," says Max Watman, whose book, Chasing the White Dog, chronicles moonshine's colourful history.
He says that in recent years, the image of moonshine "has changed dramatically".
"The stigma has gone. It's become cool."
Moonshine has occupied a place in America's folk memory since Prohibition - the period between 1920 and 1933 when the production, sale and transporting of alcohol for consumption were banned across the US.
The term moonshine usually refers to whisky but it's a catch-all term for any spirit that is untaxed and illegally distilled.
'High-end mixologists'
Getting a distilling license can run into the tens of thousands of dollars.
But anyone found guilty of making spirits without a license faces a fine of up to $15,000 (£9,750) and up to five years' imprisonment.
Today's moonshiners are a diverse bunch. They include home distillers, high-end "mixologists", small businesses making cheap liquor to sell locally and bigger operations which sell across state lines.
Though most prosecutions continue to be in the south, many of today's new moonshiners are hipster kids, foodie enthusiasts and hobbyists on America's coasts, making booze in their kitchens and bathrooms.
One Brooklyn resident, who spoke on condition of anonymity, makes moonshine to her father's recipe.
She says: "Growing up, me and my brothers watched our dad make moonshine in the bathtub. Now we do it."
In her 20s and an aspiring musician, she is typical of the new breed of moonshiners. Rigged up in her kitchen is a gleaming copper still which she bought over the internet for several hundred dollars.
By day she works in a museum where many of her colleagues know about her illicit hobby.
"You've got to be careful about who you tell. I wouldn't go blabbing about it to someone I'd just met," she says.
'Relentless pursuit'
Private individuals distilling small amounts at home for their own consumption are unlikely to get caught, although police say they take all tip-offs seriously.
"If someone is producing illegally distilled spirits and not paying tax then we'll go after them," says Arthur Resnick, spokesman for the Federal Government's Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau.
A number of distillers have set up websites and blogs where they anonymously answer questions and give advice to first-timers or anyone having problems.
Colonel Vaughn Wilson is one of America's best known builders of copper stills. He has seen demand double for his stills in recent years.
"I can't keep up with my orders," say Col Wilson, who lives in Arkansas and whose stills range from $300 to $11,000 in price. "I've shipped stills to every state in the US."
Because prosecutions tend to be made on a state rather than federal basis, there is no record of the number of moonshine convictions made in America annually. But arrests have been made in Kentucky, Georgia and Arkansas in the past month.
A man in Bell County, Kentucky, was arrested in June after police discovered 100 gallons of moonshine (378 litres) and 500 gallons of mash on his property.
Police said it was part of an ongoing investigation and added that they hoped to make more arrests.
"It will be a relentless pursuit until the end," said Doug Jordan, of the Bell County Sheriff's Department.
A number of states have set up special moonshine task forces to combat the problem.
Arrests are usually made following tip-offs from neighbours or from local stores who report sales of unusually large quantities of sugar, a key ingredient, to the police.
Nathan Jones, of the Kentucky Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control, says: "We get cases every month or so. The ones that come to our attention are the big ones."
Lure of illegality
Though cases of moonshine causing blindness are mostly a thing of the past, health officials warn of the dangers of drinking contaminated spirits.
"You do hear stories of people blowing themselves up but if you've read the basics and are using good quality products then it's hard to poison yourself," says Mr Watman.
The biggest moonshine bust in the United States occurred not during Prohibition but in 2001.
Dubbed "Operation Lightning Strike", it resulted in the arrest of 26 people in an operation that stretched from North Carolina to Philadelphia.
The group had dodged $20m in taxes on 1.5 million gallons of alcohol.
For many of today's moonshiners, the appeal lies in the pastime's illegality.
Col Wilson's website includes a section entitled "Beat the law".
He says: "The authorities will never stop moonshine. They are wasting their time trying."  

Sea Level Rise Swamps Islands 

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The Disappearing Intellectual in the Age of Economic Darwinism

We live at a time that might be appropriately called the age of the disappearing intellectual, a disappearance that marks with disgrace a particularly dangerous period in American history. While there are plenty of talking heads spewing lies, insults and nonsense in the various media, it would be wrong to suggest that these right-wing populist are intellectuals. They are neither knowledgeable nor self-reflective, but largely ideological hacks catering to the worst impulses in American society. Some obvious examples would include John Stossel calling for the repeal of that "section of the 1964 Civil Rights Act that bans discrimination in public places."[1] And, of course, there are the more famous corporate-owned talking heads such as Glenn Beck, Charles Krauthammer, Bill O'Reilly and Rush Limbaugh, all of whom trade in reactionary world views, ignorance, ideological travesties and outlandish misrepresentations - all the while wrapping themselves in the populist creed of speaking for everyday Americans.
In a media scape and public sphere that view criticism, dialog and thoughtfulness as a liability, such anti-intellectuals abound, providing commentaries that are nativist, racist, reactionary and morally repugnant. But the premium put on ignorance and the disdain for critical intellectuals is not monopolized by the dominant media, it appears to have become one of the few criteria left for largely wealthy individuals to qualify for public office. One typical example is Minnesota Congresswoman Michele Bachmann, who throws out inanities such as labeling the Obama administration a "gangster government."[2] Bachmann refuses to take critical questions from the press because she claims that they unfairly focus on her language. She has a point. After all, it might be difficult to support statements such as the claim that "the US government used the census information to round up the Japanese [Americans] and put them in concentration camps."[3] Another typical example can be found in Congressman Joe Barton's apology to BP for having to pay for damages to the government stemming from its disastrous oil spill.
This "upscaling of ignorance"[4] gets worse. Richard Cohen, writing in The Washington Post about Sen. Michael Bennett, was shocked to discover that he was actually well-educated and smart but had to hide his qualifications in his primary campaign so as to not undermine his chance of being re-elected. Cohen concludes that in politics, "We have come to value ignorance."[5] He further argues that the notion that a politician should actually know something about domestic and foreign affairs is now considered a liability. He writes:
[W]e now have politicians who lack a child's knowledge of government. In Nevada, Sharron Angle has won the GOP Senate nomination espousing phasing out Social Security and repealing the income tax as well as abolishing that durable conservative target, the Education Department. Similarly, in Connecticut, Linda McMahon, a former pro wrestling tycoon, is running commercials so adamantly anti-Washington you would think she's an anarchist. In Arizona Andy Goss, a Republican congressional candidate, suggests requiring all members of Congress to live in a barracks. This might be tough on wives, children and the odd cocker spaniel, but what the hell. Nowadays, all ideas are equal.[6]
Continue reading 
Henry A Giroux @'Truth-out'

Sorry to upload 2 posts from Truth-out.org , but find this post absolutely addresses the "Cult of Ignorance" that is daily, unremittingly propagated by the mass media (as controlled by the mega rich) to the general public at large, allowing the again daily devastation, exploitation and inhumanity that passes for modern society, to go unnoticed. The manipulation of the education system to deny democratic principles in the name of Big Business...Please read...