Posted on 12 April 2010. Tags: al-Qaida, Barack Obama, Johannesburg, london, new york city, Nuclear Security Summit, nuclear weapons, President, terrorist organization
WASHINGTON – If al-Qaida acquired nuclear weapons it “would have no compunction at using them,” President Barack Obama said Sunday on the eve of a summit aimed at finding ways to secure the world’s nuclear stockpile.
“The single biggest threat to U.S. security, both short-term, medium-term and long-term, would be the possibility of a terrorist organization obtaining a nuclear weapon,” Obama said. “This is something that could change the security landscape in this country and around the world for years to come.” Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, Authors, Environment, Featured, J.K., Politics, US Government, World Wide
Posted on 12 April 2010. Tags: Associated Press, Edward Kilduff, Fire Chief, Manhattan, Red Cross, seven-alarm fire
NEW YORK (Associated Press)– Officials say 13 people, including 10 firefighters, have been injured in a seven-alarm fire on Manhattan’s Lower East Side that burned for more than four hours before being declared under control.
Fire Chief Edward Kilduff said two elderly residents were hospitalized in critical condition with smoke inhalation and a third was being evaluated. He said 10 firefighters were hurt, including one whose hands were burned. Nine others suffered minor injuries. Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, Authors, Environment, Featured, J.K.
Posted on 12 April 2010. Tags: Afghanistan, Ahmad Farid Ayubi, Bala Buluk, Farah, Kandahar, NATO, Taliban, Zelmai Ayubi
KANDAHAR, Afghanistan – International troops opened fire on a bus carrying Afghan civilians Monday, killing four people, officials said, setting off anti-American protests in a key southern city where coalition forces hope to rally the public for a coming offensive against the Taliban.
NATO and Afghan authorities declined to identify the international forces involved by nationality, although numerous Afghans said they were American.
Elsewhere in the city of Kandahar, three suicide bombers attacked an Afghan intelligence services compound, but security forces who opened fire repelled them, said the spokesman for the government of the surrounding province, also called Kandahar. Four intelligence agents and six civilians, including a teacher at a nearby school were wounded in the attack, said the spokesman, Zelmai Ayubi. Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, Authors, J.K., Politics, US Government, World Wide
Posted on 12 April 2010. Tags: 1998, bipartisan, black market, Congress, David Brinkley, District of Columbia, Maryland, Medical Marijuana, Senate
The Maryland Senate voted on Saturday to allow patients access to medical marijuana at state-licensed dispensaries. The bill now moves to the state’s lower chamber.
The bill was approved overwhelmingly, with bipartisan support and without objections or discussion, by a 35-12 margin.
Maryland would join 14 other states in legalizing medical marijuana. The neighboring District of Columbia legalized it in a 1998 referendum that was only recently allowed by Congress to go into effect. The District’s city council is writing rules to establish the city’s medical marijuana policy.
Current Maryland law allows defendants charged with pot possession to cite a medical necessity defense. If a judge deems the drug to be beneficial, a maximum hundred dollar civil fine is imposed. Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, Authors, Environment, Featured, Health & Fitness, J.K., Politics, US Government
Posted on 05 April 2010. Tags: CIA, government, journalist, Julian Assange, murder, National Press Club, Pentagon, Russia Today, Video, whistleblower, Wikileaks
Posted in Archive, Authors, Cogent Nirvana, Cogent Nirvana, Featured, History, J.K., Politics, Technology, Texas, US Government, World Wide
Posted on 09 March 2010. Tags: 5 Star, A Night Like This, Baby By Me, Call Me, Catch Up, Everywhere She Go, Feel The Breeze, Forgot About H-Town, freestyle, Houston, Hustle, Nasty Chic, Paccinno, Rhythm & Blues, Rollin Up, Sherro, The Present Future, Welcome, Young Sym, Young X
Young Sym decided to release some tracks before his debut album soon to come (date will be announced later). The tracks are hot and available for free download, so why not? Young Sym is a producer so if you hear anything you like, or would like to put something together, send us an email and we’ll be in contact. Enjoy.
1. Sherro (Feat. Young Sym) – Everywhere She Go (VERY HOT)
2. Young X (Feat. Paccinno) – Rollin Up (HOT)
3. Young X (Feat. Young Sym) – Call Me (HOT)
4. Young X – Catch Up
5. Young Sym (Feat. Young X) – Welcome
6. Young Sym (Feat. Young X) – Baby By Me
7. Young Sym (Feat. Que & Hustle) – Forgot About H-Town (VERY HOT)
8. Young X – Hustle (VERY HOT)
9. Young X (Feat. Young Sym) – A Night Like This
10. Young X – Feel The Breeze (VERY HOT)
11. Young X – Nasty Chic (HOT)
12. Young X (Feat. Young Sym) – 5 Star
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Posted in Archive, Authors, Featured, Hip-Hop, J.K., Katy, TX, Music, R&B, Rap
Posted on 03 February 2010. Tags: 1703, 1870, 1883, 1888, 1896, 1909, 1914, 1930, 1936, Amsterdam, australia, Bryan Nelson, carnivorous marsupial, Catholic bishop of Quebec, Cincinnati, fossil reconstructions, Hobart Zoo, London Zoo, Martha, Netherlands, ohio, Passenger Pigeon, Plains Zebra, Quagga, Tasmania, Tasmanian Devil, Tasmanian Tiger, Thylacine, Wilf Batty
Written by Bryan Nelson
The current rate of extinction is 100 to 1000 times higher than the average, or background rate, making our current period the 6th major mass extinction in the planet’s history.
Although fossil reconstructions or pictorial representations can sometimes be difficult to connect with, it’s impossible to ignore the experience of seeing a photograph of an animal on the brink of extinction.
Thus, what follows is a list of 11 extinct animals that were photographed while still alive.
Tasmanian Tiger

The last Tasmanian Tiger, or Thylacine, known to have existed died in the Hobart Zoo, in Tasmania, Australia, on September 7th, 1936. Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, Authors, Education, Environment, Featured, History, J.K.
Posted on 03 February 2010. Tags: 1995, Earth, European Space Agency, extrasolar planet, extroplanet, Geneva University, Kepler, Michel Mayor, Milky Way, NASA, Orion spiral arm, Outer Space Affairs, professor, Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence
Professor Michel Mayor, the scientist who led the team that identified the first extrasolar planet in 1995, believes a planet similar in size and composition to Earth will soon be found.
Prof Mayor, of Geneva University, said that the prospect of finding a planet habitable for humans had come a step closer through rapid technological advances allowing observation of planets outside the solar system.
Addressing a Royal Society conference to mark the 50th anniversary of the Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence (SETI) programme, he said: “The search for twins of Earth is motivated by the ultimate prospect of finding sites with favourable conditions for the development of life. Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, Authors, Cogent Nirvana, J.K., Space, Technology, Thought of the day
Posted on 03 February 2010. Tags: 2010, australia, donations, europe, human rights campaigners, non-profit organization, South Africa, Sunshine Press, Taiwan, whistleblower, Wikileaks
WASHINGTON — Whistleblower website WikiLeaks has temporarily shut down because of financial difficulties.
WikiLeaks.org announced it was suspending operations in a message on its homepage that included an appeal to the public for donations. Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, Authors, Business, J.K., Technology
Posted on 19 January 2010. Tags: Australian Open, college hoops, disney, espn, ESPN 360, ESPN2, microsoft, New York Times, NFL, Time Warner Cable, Xbox Live
I’ve long said that there’s only one thing holding me back from tossing my cable box in favor of getting all my TV online: live sports.
In particular, I’d really miss ESPN, the legendary all-sports cable and satellite network that keeps me company at lunchtime, gets me all prepped for the NFL on Sunday, and serves up more live tennis that you could swing a racket at. Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, Arts & Entertainment, Authors, Business, Featured, J.K., Sports, Technology, Television
Posted on 18 January 2010. Tags: 9/11, Core of Corruption, In the Shadows, New World Order, Pentagon, pictures, whistle blowers, Zbigniew Brzezinski

Here’s one of the photos, click the links to read more about the article and for more photos check out the archive link.
Article
Archives
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Posted in Archive, Authors, Featured, History, J.K., Politics, Texas, US Government, World Wide
Posted on 18 January 2010. Tags: 1867, Dr Mark Dennis, Glasgow University, holograms, laser technology, Lord Kelvin, Miles Padgett, optical vortices, professor, Sir Michael Berry, University of Bristol
Understanding how to control light in this way has important implications for laser technology used in wide a range of industries.
Dr Mark Dennis from the University of Bristol and lead author on the paper, explained: “In a light beam, the flow of light through space is similar to water flowing in a river. Although it often flows in a straight line – out of a torch, laser pointer, etc – light can also flow in whirls and eddies, forming lines in space called ‘optical vortices’.
“Along these lines, or optical vortices, the intensity of the light is zero (black). The light all around us is filled with these dark lines, even though we can’t see them”. Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, Authors, Cogent Nirvana, Featured, J.K., Science, Technology, Thought of the day
Posted on 18 January 2010. Tags: Allen St. Pierre, Amsterdam, California, California Narcotic Officers Association, California Peace Officers' Association, California Police Chiefs' Association, Democrat, executive director, John Lovell, Jon Corzine, Justin Scheck, Kirkland, Marijuana, Massachusetts, medical-marijuana dispensaries, National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, New Hampshire, Nick Wingfield, NORML, oakland, Oaksterdam University, Olympia, Oregon, prohibition, richard lee, Riley Harrison, Roger Goodman, SurveyUSA, Washington
SEATTLE—A push to legalize marijuana on the West Coast is picking up steam as Washington lawmakers and pot proponents in California and Oregon propose separate measures.
The Washington state legislature will hold a preliminary vote Wednesday on whether to sell pot in state liquor stores, though even its authors say the bill is unlikely to pass. The same day in California, backers of a well-funded ballot measure to legalize marijuana are expected to file more than enough signatures to put the initiative before state voters in November. Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, Authors, Business, Environment, Featured, Health & Fitness, J.K.
Posted on 18 January 2010. Tags: 2035, Cambridge University, Canada, China, climate change, Delhi, Dokriani glacier, Earth, Fred Pearce, geographer, Graham Cogley, Himalayan glaciers, Himalayas, India, Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, IPCC, Jawaharlal Nehru University, Julian Dowdeswell, Murari Lal, Nepal, New Scientist, ontario, professor, scientist, Scott Polar Research Institute, Syed Hasnain, Trent University, United Nations
A WARNING that climate change will melt most of the Himalayan glaciers by 2035 is likely to be retracted after a series of scientific blunders by the United Nations body that issued it.
Two years ago the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) issued a benchmark report that was claimed to incorporate the latest and most detailed research into the impact of global warming. A central claim was the world’s glaciers were melting so fast that those in the Himalayas could vanish by 2035.
In the past few days the scientists behind the warning have admitted that it was based on a news story in the New Scientist, a popular science journal, published eight years before the IPCC’s 2007 report. Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, Authors, Cogent Nirvana, Education, Environment, Fact of the day, Featured, J.K., Science
Posted on 18 January 2010. Tags: 2001, Afghanistan, britain, Canada, Drug Control Headquarters, drug trade, General Hamid Reza Hossein-Abadi, Iran, Taha Taheri, Tehran, United Kingdom, United States
A senior Iranian anti-drug official has accused the US, Britain and Canada of playing a major role in Afghanistan’s lucrative drug trade.
On the sidelines of an anti-drug conference in Tehran, deputy head of Iran’s Drug Control Headquarters Taha Taheri said that Western powers are aiding the drug trade in Afghanistan.
“According to our indisputable information, the presence of the United States, Britain and Canada has not reduced the drug trade and the three countries have had major roles in the distribution of drugs,” IRIB quoted Taheri as saying on Thursday. Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, Authors, Business, Environment, Health & Fitness, J.K., Politics, US Government, World Wide
Posted on 18 January 2010. Tags: 2006, Andy Gould, Earth, Institute for Astronomy, jupiter, Michael Meyer, MicroFUN, Microlensing Follow-Up Network, Milky Way, Ohio State University, saturn, Switzerland, Zurich
Of the billions of stars in our Milky Way galaxy, 15 percent may host “twins” of our solar system, a new study says.
While that might not sound like much, the find suggests that several hundred million star systems look a lot like the one we call home, the study authors say.
The research is based on surveys of stars with gas giant planets—similar to Jupiter and Saturn—that orbit far from their stars. Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, Authors, Cogent Nirvana, Featured, J.K., Science, Space, Thought of the day
Posted on 17 January 2010. Tags: 1994, 2004, 22nd Marine Expeditionary Unit, 82nd Airborne division, Admiral Mike Mullen, Barack Obama, CIA, counterinsurgency, coup d'état, Cuba, Department of Defense, disaster relief, Dominican Republic, DynCorp, france, General Douglas Fraser, Haiti, Haitian National Police, humanitarian, Jean Bertrand Aristide, Joint Chiefs of Staff, Junta, Latin America, Miami, Michel Chossudovsky, parliament, Pentagon, Port-au-Prince, President, State Department, U.S. Agency for International Development, U.S. Army, US Southern Command, USS Bataan, USS Carl Vinson, USS Fort McHenry, USS Normandy, venezuela, World Food Program
Haiti has a longstanding history of US military intervention and occupation going back to the beginning of the 20th Century. US interventionism has contributed to the destruction of Haiti’s national economy and the impoverishment of its population.
The devastating earthquake is presented to World public opinion as the sole cause of the country’s predicament.
A country has been destroyed, its infrastructure demolished. Its people precipitated into abysmal poverty and despair.
Haiti’s history, its colonial past have been erased. Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, Authors, Business, Environment, Featured, History, J.K., Politics, US Government, World Wide
Posted on 17 January 2010. Tags: diamond, Discovery News, Earth, magnetic fields, Neptune, Pandora, Uranus

Future humans won’t have to wait to travel to Pandora for the chance to mine unobtanium, because Neptune and Uranus may have diamond icebergs floating atop liquid diamond seas closer to home. The surprise finding comes from the first detailed measurements of the melting point of diamond, Discovery News reports.
Scientists zapped diamond with a laser at pressures 40 million times greater than the Earth’s atmosphere at sea level, and then slowly reduced both temperature and pressure. They eventually found that diamond behaves like water during freezing and melting, and that chunks of diamond will float in the liquid diamond. Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, Authors, Featured, J.K., Science, Space
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