Posted on 17 January 2010. Tags: black holes, Grand unification theory, gravity, light, magnetism, magnets, perpetual motion machine, Schwarzschild, time travel, wormholes
One 13 year old boy , named Gentill Abdulla, has said that he has a time machine plan that is going to work. I have personally met him and he is an extremely bright boy. Gentill says that his ingenious plans can allow time travel to be possible. He told me ” I have done a lot of research on the areas of black holes, time travel, wormholes, magnetism, light, and most importantly gravity. I have devised an experiment that if done correctly could allow time travel . Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, Arts & Entertainment, Authors, Cogent Nirvana, J.K., Science, Space, Technology, Thought of the day, Travel
Posted on 17 January 2010. Tags: CDC, H1N1, H1N1 vaccine, inflammatory chemicals, mainstream media, nervous system disruptors, Pandemic, Swine Flu, vaccination rates
(NaturalNews) The CDC is engaged in a very clever, statistically devious spin campaign, and nearly every journalist in the mainstream media has fallen for its ploy. No one has yet reported what I’m about to reveal here.
It all started with the CDC’s recent release of new statistics about swine flu fatalities, infection rates and vaccination rates. According to the CDC:
• 61 million Americans were vaccinated against swine flu (about 20% of the U.S. population). The CDC calls this a “success” even though it means 4 out of 5 people rejected the vaccines. Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, Authors, Cogent Nirvana, Cogent Nirvana, Education, Featured, Health & Fitness, J.K., Politics, Texas, US Government, World Wide
Posted on 17 January 2010. Tags: 18th Street, 1974, 2003, Alfred Lomas, American Studies, Black Dahlia, Bloods, Chicago, Connie Rice, Crips, Dennis Zine, East Coast Crips, F13, Florencia 13, Frederick "Scorpio" Smith, Gangland, Germany, Grape Street Crips, Grease, Jan Perry, LA Gang Tours, Los Angeles, Los Angeles County, Los Angeles Dream Center, Prisca Ricks, professor, Rodney King, Sieglinde Lemke, South Central, Symbionese Liberation Army, Terminator, University of Freiburg
Only miles from the scenic vistas and celebrity mansions that draw sightseers from around the globe — but a world away from the glitz and glamour — a bus tour is rolling through the dark side of the city’s gang turf.
Passengers paying $65 a head Saturday signed waivers acknowledging they could be crime victims and put their fate in the hands of tattooed ex-gang members who say they have negotiated a cease-fire among rivals in the most violent gangland in America.
If that sounds daunting, consider the challenge facing organizers of LA Gang Tours: trying to build a thriving venture that provides a glimpse into gang life while also trying to convince people that gang-plagued communities are not as hopeless as movies depict. Read the full story
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Posted on 17 January 2010. Tags: Anderson County, Chicago Bears, Clemson University, County Coroner, Football, Gaines Adams, Greenville News, Greenwood, heart attack, James T. Coursey, south carolina, tampa bay
Bears player Gaines Adams, 26, is dead, according to a report by the Greenville News of South Carolina.
Adams, a former Clemson University football star, died Sunday morning after he was taken to the Emergency Room at Self Regional in Greenwood, County Coroner James T. Coursey told the Greensville News.
Adams, a defensive end, was the fourth player chosen in the 2007 National Football League draft by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
He was traded from Tampa Bay to the Chicago Bears in October. An autopsy will be performed today by a forensic pathologist.
http://www.suntimes.com
According to the Chicago-Sun Times, Gaines passed away due to a heart attack:
Chicago-Sun Times Report
Gaines Adams, the defensive end the Bears acquired for a second-round draft pick from Tampa Bay this season, died this morning at 26.
Adams, according to reports in The Greenville News, was pronounced dead at the emergency room of Self Regional Hospital in Greenwood, S.C. according to County Coroner James T. Coursey.
Adams, 26, was a standout player at Clemson at defensive end, and was the fourth player chosen in the 2007 National Football League draft by the Buccaneers. He was traded from Tampa Bay to the Chicago Bears in October, though didn’t find much playing time with the struggling defensive unit.
An autopsy is planned by Anderson County officials following reports of a heart attack, though no cause of death has been declared yet.
In four years in the league, Adams, a native of South Carolina, recorded 13.5 sacks in 29 games.
The tragic news comes less than 24 hours after fellow Bears defensive lineman Dusty Dvoracek was arrested in relation to a bar brawl in Oklahoma.
http://blogs.suntimes.com/

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Posted in Archive, Authors, Featured, J.K., Sports, Sports News
Posted on 12 January 2010. Tags: Arnold Schwarzenegger, California, California Highway Patrol, Danny Gilmore, Drug Policy Alliance, health committee, Marijuana, marijuana legalization ballot proposition, mountain view, pro-legalization group, richard lee, San Francisco, Stephen Gutwillig, Tax and Regulate Cannabis 2010 campaign, Tom Ammiano, United States
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A bill seeking to legalize marijuana in California won initial approval from a legislative committee Tuesday in what may be a purely symbolic vote because a second committee likely won’t take it up in time.
The state Assembly’s public safety committee voted 4-3 on the measure that would tax and regulate marijuana in the same way alcohol is controlled.
But the health committee also must approve the measure by Friday before the full Assembly can consider it, an unlikely scenario. Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, Authors, Education, Environment, Featured, Health & Fitness, J.K.
Posted on 12 January 2010. Tags: Baxter International Inc., David Gauthier-Villars, france, Germany, GlaxoSmithKline PLC, H1N1, Jeanne Whalen, Netherlands, Novartis AG, Roland Jopp, Sanofi-Aventis SA, Spain, Swine Flu, Switzerland, vaccination, World Health Organization
Just months after rushing to order enough swine-flu vaccine to protect their citizens, European governments are canceling orders and trying to sell or give away extra doses as they sit on a glut of the vaccine.
The main reason: European health officials decided that only one shot per person was needed, instead of the two originally planned. Low demand is also to blame. Many Europeans believe the pandemic has turned out to be fairly mild, and don’t see a reason to get vaccinated. Some are also concerned that they will suffer side effects from the shots, despite assurances otherwise from global health officials. Read the full story
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Posted on 12 January 2010. Tags: AIDS, cancer, Crohn’s disease, Department of Health and Senior Services, epilepsy, glaucoma, HIV, inflammatory bowel disease, Jon Corzine, Legislature, Lou Gehrig’s disease, Medical Marijuana, multiple sclerosis, muscular dystrophy, new jersey, seizure disorders, severe muscle spasms
TRENTON — The bill legalizing medical marijuana, which was passed by the New Jersey Legislature today, will go into effect six months after Gov. Jon Corzine signs it, as he promised to do before he leaves office Tuesday. New Jersey will become the 14th state to legalize marijuana for medicinal purposes, and each state’s laws have their own idiosyncrasies.
Until medical marijuana becomes legal here, the state Department of Health and Senior Services will face intense lobbying from advocacy groups as it outlines a wide range of rules, such as where marijuana can be grown in the state, how much it will cost and who gets to distribute the drug. Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, Authors, Business, Environment, Featured, Health & Fitness, J.K., Politics, US Government
Posted on 12 January 2010. Tags: Barack Obama, Bernard Kouchner, Bogota, Brazil, Canada, Colombia, Dominican Republic, Foreign Affairs Minister, Foreign Minister, france, Haiti, Hispaniola, Joint Chiefs of Staff, Juan Carlos Varela, Latin America, Lawrence Cannon, Leonel Fernández, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, MINUSTAH, Nicolas Maduro, Panama, Paris, Peru, Port-au-Prince, President, UN Stabilization Mission, United States, venezuela, Vice President
To Help Support:
Text YELE to 501501 to donate $5 to help the people of Haiti.
http://www.yele.org/
PORT-AU-PRINCE — The United States, France, Canada and governments across Latin America were gearing up to help Haiti, after a massive 7.0 earthquake leveled buildings and caused an unknown number of casualties.
US President Barack Obama said his government stood “ready to assist the people of Haiti,” as the State Department, USAID and United States Southern Command mobilized, the White House said, “to coordinate an assessment and any such assistance.”
In Paris, Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner said France “expresses its complete solidarity” with Haiti, adding that his ministry’s crisis center had begun working “to mobilize and dispatch without delay urgent aid to Port-au-Prince.” Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, Authors, Environment, Featured, History, J.K., Politics, World Wide
Posted on 12 January 2010. Tags: arachnids, Arava, biologists, Cerbalus aravensis, Israel, Middle East, nocturnal, Sands of Samar, University of Haifa-Oranim, Uri Shanas

With a lanky legspan of up to nearly a half foot, a newly discovered spider species is the largest among its family of arachnids in the Middle East.
The spider, now dubbed Cerbalus aravensis, was discovered in the dunes of the Sands of Samar in the southern Arava region in Israel by a team of biologists from the University of Haifa-Oranim. The scientists say C. aravensis is nocturnal and mostly active during the hottest months of the year. Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, Authors, Environment, Featured, J.K., Science
Posted on 12 January 2010. Tags: China, DARPA, Dutch, Russia, thunderstorm, United States

China and Russia try to control rain clouds and the Dutch use technology to keep low-lying inland areas from flooding, so why shouldn’t the United States be able to manipulate lightning? In an attempt to better understand one of nature’s most powerful processes, DARPA issued abroad agency announcement yesterday asking for ideas on how to best protect American personnel and resources from dangers and costs associated with lightning strikes. To wit:
Lightning causes more than $1B/year in direct damages to property in addition to the loss of lives, disruption of activities (for example, postponement of satellite launches) and their corresponding costs. A better understanding of the physics underlying lightning discharge, associated emissions, and related processes (for example, tribocharging in the clouds) may lead to revolutionary advances in the state of the art of lightning protection. Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, Authors, Environment, J.K., Science, Technology
Posted on 12 January 2010. Tags: 1980, 9 to 5, Allen St. Pierre, Basic Instinct, Classification and Rating Administration, Dan Glickman, Dan Isett, director of public policy, Dolly Parton, executive director, Federal Trade Commission, Hollywood, It’s Complicated, Jane Fonda, Joan Graves, Lily Tomlin, Los Angeles, Marijuana, Martin Kaplan, Medical Marijuana, Meryl Streep, Motion Picture Association of America, movie economics, Movie-Made America, Nancy Meyers, National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, New York University, Norman Lear Center, Parents Television Council, Robert Sklar, Rutgers University, S. Abraham Ravid, Starbucks, Steve Martin, Texas Chainsaw Massacre, Universal Pictures, University of Southern California
LOS ANGELES — The romantic comedy “It’s Complicated” arrived at the multiplex on Friday complete with an R rating, ranking it in the same category as “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre” and “Basic Instinct” in the eyes of the Motion Picture Association of America.
But there is no violence in “It’s Complicated,” and the bedroom scenes are decidedly tame by contemporary standards. Instead, the R rating — which experts say could limit the box-office potential of the Universal Pictures film — comes largely from a sequence in which Steve Martin and Meryl Streep smoke marijuana. Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, Arts & Entertainment, Authors, Business, Health & Fitness, J.K., Movies
Posted on 12 January 2010. Tags: Barack Obama, Obameter, President
As of 01/12/2010 here’s how our President has done:

Take a look at the website:
http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/promises/
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Posted in Archive, Authors, Education, History, J.K., Politics, Texas, US Government, World Wide
Posted on 12 January 2010. Tags: alcohol, Bay Area, California, Colorado, Compton, criminal justice system, George F. Will, Georgia, Golden State, headaches, Indiana, Inglewood, insomnia, Lake Merritt, Los Angeles, lver City, Marijuana, medical dispensaries, menstrual cramps, New York Times, oakland, Oaksterdam, opium, San Francisco, Santa Monica, Silver Lake, Sonoma, tobacco, Washington Post, West Hollywood

About 80 percent of Americans approve of medical marijuana laws, but some conservatives are incensed that state legislatures keep passing them. In a recent column, George F. Will, the Washington Post’s bow-tied curmudgeon, decried the reefer madness he sees taking over California, sweeping across Colorado and perhaps even coming to a normal state near you. Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, Authors, Cogent Nirvana, Environment, Health & Fitness, J.K., Politics, Texas, Thought of the day, US Government
Posted on 12 January 2010. Tags: 2004, American Association of Variable Star Observers, Austin, australia, Australia Telescope Compact Array, Brian Cameron, Bryan Gaensler, Cambridge, Canadian Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics, Dick Hunstead, Dr. Bryan Gaensler, Dr. Christopher Thompson, Dr. Chryssa Kouveliotou, Dr. David Palmer, Dr. Robert Duncan, Earth, exotic neutron star, galaxy, gamma ray flare, Greenbank Radio Telescope, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, High Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager, India, ionosphere, Los Alamos National Laboratory, magnetar, Magnetic field, Maura McLaughlin, Mike Garrett, Milky Way, Molonglo Observatory Synthesis Telescope, moon, NASA, NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, Neil Gehrels, Netherlands, New Mexico, Parkes radio telescope, Ralph Wijers, Rob Fender, Sagittarius, scientists, Shri Kulkarni, Socorro, solar system, United Kingdom, United States, University of Hawaii, University of Texas, University of Toronto, West Virginia, Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope
Scientists have detected a flash of light from across the Galaxy so powerful that it bounced off the Moon and lit up the Earth’s upper atmosphere. The flash was brighter than anything ever detected from beyond our Solar System and lasted over a tenth of a second. NASA and European satellites and many radio telescopes detected the flash and its aftermath on December 27, 2004. Two science teams report about this event at a special press event today at NASA headquarters. A multitude of papers are planned for publication.
Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, Authors, Cogent Nirvana, Cogent Nirvana, History, J.K., Science, Space, Technology
Posted on 27 December 2009. Tags: American National Institute of Standards and Technology, Earth, electrocardiogram, heart, Institute Berlin, Magnetic field, magnetocardiogram, optical magnetic field sensor, Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt
ScienceDaily (Dec. 26, 2009) — The “magnetically best shielded room on earth” has the size of an apartment block and is located on the site of the Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB), Institute Berlin. Magnetic fields such as that of the earth are kept out here as effective as nowhere else. Such ideal conditions allow to measure the tiny magnetic fields of, e.g., the human heart.
This was the motivation for the American National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) to ask PTB to jointly test a newly developed optical magnetic field sensor. It is based on a physical principle very different from SQUIDs, which are usually applied for biomagnetic field measurements. The optical sensor does not need advanced cooling and has the size of a lump of sugar. A high-quality measurement of the human heart signal was demonstrated using this optical sensor. The sensor’s suitability was thus proven for biomagnetic measurements in the picotesla range. In future magnetocardiographic measurement devices — to be used as a supplement or an alternative to the ECG — could become simpler and less expensive.
Up until now one had to cool as much as one could for biomagnetic measurements. This was necessary as SQUIDs, superconducting quantum interference devices, work optimally at -269 degrees Celsius and can only then fulfil their purpose of measuring tiny magnetic fields. SQUIDs are the best suited sensors to record the magnetic fields arising during the electrical activity of the human heart. A magnetocardiogram (MCG) can be compiled supplementing a conventional electrocardiogram (ECG). (The same applies to the magnetoencephalogram, MEG, which is a recording of the magnetic field of the brain.) Yet to use SQUIDs requires well-shielded rooms and complicated cooling systems. The latter might become obsolete in the future if the optical magnetometer developed by NIST continues to fulfil expectations.
Read More:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/
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Posted in Archive, Authors, Cogent Nirvana, Featured, Health & Fitness, J.K., Technology, Thought of the day
Posted on 19 December 2009. Tags: 2006, American Academy of Pediatrics, autism, Autism Speaks, behavioral health scientist, Catherine Rice, CDC, chief science officer, Geraldine Dawson, Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, United States
Dec. 18, 2009 – Autism disorders increased by 57% in just four years, the CDC today reported.
By the end of 2006, one in 110 U.S. kids had an autism disorder diagnosed by age 8: one in 70 boys and one in 315 girls, reflecting a nearly fivefold higher risk for males.
The new CDC estimate of autism prevalence, obtained from analysis of child evaluation records in 11 states, is virtually identical to autism numbers reported for 2007 from a huge telephone survey reported last October. Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, Authors, Education, Featured, Health & Fitness, J.K., Politics, US Government
Posted on 19 December 2009. Tags: Chris Brown, Connecticut, Grafitti, Rhythm & Blues, Rihanna, Twitter, Wallingford, Walmart
It looks like the tagline “Chris Brown album in stores everywhere on December 8th” was a bit of an overstatement - at least in his opinion. The R&B singer is accusing Walmart of intentionally not selling his new album, Grafitti. It all started two weeks ago when fans of the 20-year-old singer claimed that they were having difficulty finding the album at mainstream CD retailers. To investigate what he determined as “major retailers blackballing his album”, Brown visited a Walmart store in Wallingford, Connecticut last weekend and found that the store did not have his album on shelves and also did not have any copies of his CD in stock. Read the full story
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Posted in Archive, Authors, Business, Cogent Nirvana, Featured, Hip-Hop, J.K., Music, R&B, Technology, Thought of the day
Posted on 17 December 2009. Tags: Associated Press, Beltran Leyva, cartel, Copenhagen climate summit, Cuernavaca, drug war, Felipe Calderon, Marines, Mexico, Mexico City, navy, President
CUERNAVACA, Mexico – Two hundred Mexican Navy marines stormed an upscale apartment complex and killed a reputed drug cartel chief in a two-hour gunbattle, one of the biggest victories yet in President Felipe Calderon’s drug war.
Arturo Beltran Leyva, the “boss of bosses,” and six members of his cartel died in the shootout Wednesday in Cuernavaca, just south of Mexico City, according to a navy statement Thursday. Read the full story
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