Tag Archive | "government"

Medical Marijuana: Gets A Boost From Major Doctors Group


The American Medical Assn. changes its policy to promote clinical research and development of cannabis-based medicines and alternative delivery methods.

The American Medical Assn. on Tuesday urged the federal government to reconsider its classification of marijuana as a dangerous drug with no accepted medical use, a significant shift that puts the prestigious group behind calls for more research.

The nation’s largest physicians organization, with about 250,000 member doctors, the AMA has maintained since 1997 that marijuana should remain a Schedule I controlled substance, the most restrictive category, which also includes heroin and LSD.

In changing its policy, the group said its goal was to clear the way to conduct clinical research, develop cannabis-based medicines and devise alternative ways to deliver the drug.

“Despite more than 30 years of clinical research, only a small number of randomized, controlled trials have been conducted on smoked cannabis,” said Dr. Edward Langston, an AMA board member, noting that the limited number of studies was “insufficient to satisfy the current standards for a prescription drug product.” Read the full story

VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 9.5/10 (2 votes cast)
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: +2 (from 2 votes)

Posted in Archive, Authors, Cogent Nirvana, Cogent Nirvana, Environment, Featured, Health & Fitness, J.K., The WireComments (1)

Spain: Calls For Blockade of Somali Pirate Ports


2009-11-12

MADRID — Spain wants EU naval forces to blockade three Somali ports used to launch pirate attacks against ships in the Indian Ocean, Defence Minister Carme Chacon said Wednesday.

She said Spain will call on European Union foreign and defence ministers to concentrate military efforts on blockading the ports at a meeting next Monday and Tuesday.

“We know that it is from these three ports that most, if not all, ‘mother ships’ used by pirates reach up to one thousand miles away from the coast — as they did yesterday — and carry out kidnappings far from the coast,” she told RNE public radio.

Chacon also said the pirate gangs “have ties to sophisticated law firms in London,” and she called for the international community to do more to track ransoms given to pirates to release hostages.

Several law firms in London, business capital of the world’s maritime industry, have handled piracy kidnap and ransom cases in recent years.

They help ship owners deal with the legal aspects of paying a ransom and engage private security contractors to negotiate with pirates and carry out the ransom drop.

Pirates on Monday launched their longest range hijack attempt to date by opening fire on the Hong Kong-flagged oil tanker BW Lion 1,000 nautical miles east of Mogadishu, the EU naval force in the region said.

The next day pirates attacked the Danish-flagged container ship Nelle Maersk, also some 1,000 nautical miles east of the Somali capital.

Both ships escaped their attackers but the incidents demonstrated how beefed-up security off the Somalia coast appears to be leading pirates to move deeper into the Indian Ocean and its shipping lanes linking Asia and Europe.

Chacon said the attacks so far from the Somalia coast were a “giant step” for the pirates who she said were becoming bolder.

The pirates usually use “mother ships” to sail hundreds of miles out to sea and then attack in small skiffs, sometimes using high-grade weapons such as rocket-propelled grenades.

“These are not romantic pirates which some may be led to imagine, they are authentic criminal organisations which are focused on kidnappings of all types merchant ships, fishing trawlers, ships belonging to the World Food Programme,” said Chacon.

The minister said Somali pirates were currently holding 12 boats and their crews hostage, including the Spanish trawler Alakrana which was seized with its 36 crew on October 2, as well as vessles from Britain, China and Malta.

The pirates are demanding four million dollars (2.6 million euros) ransom as well as the release of two suspected pirates who were detained a few days after the trawler was seized and brought to Spain to face trial.

The Spanish government has ruled out freeing the two suspects but Chacon said they could serve their sentence back in Somalia if found guilty of any crime.

A lawyer for one of the two detained suspected pirates, Javier Diaz Aparicio, told Spanish daily newspaper El Mundo he was trying to reach a plea bargain agreement with Spanish prosecutors.

In an interview with news radio Cadena Ser on Tuesday he suggested that his salary was being paid for by the interior ministry.

http://www.google.com/

VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)

Posted in Archive, Arts & Entertainment, Authors, Education, History, J.K., Politics, Travel, World WideComments (0)

Jordan McFarland: 14 Year Old Boy Develops Guillain-Barre Syndrome Hours After Receiving H1N1 Vaccine


Image: Patient with Guillain-Barre Syndrome from H1N1 vacine

Follow Us On Twitter

A 14-year-old Virginia boy is weak and struggling to walk after coming down with a reported case of Guillain-Barre syndrome within hours after receiving the H1N1 vaccine for swine flu.

Jordan McFarland, a high school athlete from Alexandria, Va., left Inova Fairfax Hospital for Children Tuesday night in a wheelchair nearly a week after developing severe headaches, muscle spasms and weakness in his legs following a swine flu shot. He will likely need the assistance of a walker for four to six weeks, plus extensive physical therapy.

“The doctor said I’ll recover fully, but it’s going to take some time,” the teenager said. Read the full story

VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)

Posted in Archive, Authors, Education, Featured, Health & Fitness, J.K., The WireComments (0)

Brazil To “60 Minutes”: It Wasn’t A Hacker


Brazilian officials are disputing the claim by “60 Minutes” and others that a blackout in 2007 was caused by computer hackers. Wired magazine’s blog Threat Level, citing government and investigative sources, reports that the outage “was actually the result of a utility company’s negligent maintenance of high voltage insulators on two transmission lines.” Insulators hang from power lines and are prone to collect debris, which can cause power surges. In this case, officials say soot from nearby fires collected on the insulators.

Threat Level, which has long been skeptical of some of the more extraordinary claims by U.S. officials about cyber threats to critical infrastructure, spoke to the utility company involved in the blackout and got a denial of any hacker involvement. The company “has no knowledge of hackers acting in [the] power transmission system,” TL reported.

News of the “60 Minutes” piece hit the wires on Saturday, and over the weekend, Brazilian government officials started batting down the story. A senior homeland security official in Brazil told newspaper Folha de S. Paulo that he had investigated the allegations of a hacker causing the blackout and found no traces. Read the full story

VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)

Posted in Archive, Authors, Featured, J.K., Politics, Technology, The Wire, US Government, World WideComments (0)

Silence: About Vaccine Deaths in Media is Due to the Confidential Contracts with Vaccine Manufacturers


The Flu Case – I am a Swedish general practioner working in Belgium, and quite involved in this issue, as together with three citizens and another GP we advised the Belgian Government last Friday in court that this is a disguised pharmaceutical trial on human subjects, with real risks involved.

I put in two comments on the story (see below), that are quite relevant in the context that the Swedish Newspapers have seemingly stopped reporting the intermediary results of this disguised pharmaceutical trial. Read the full story

VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 8.0/10 (1 vote cast)
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: +1 (from 1 vote)

Posted in Archive, Authors, Education, Health & Fitness, J.K., Politics, World WideComments (0)

Polish Health Minister: A Family Doctor Tells Parliament She Will Not Allow Use of Untested Vaccines


The Polish Health Minister Eva Kopacz today told Parliament during a heated debate on the swine flu vaccination that she, as a qualified family doctor with more than 20 year of experience, will not authorise the use of untested vaccines on millions of people in Poland when there is inadequate information about the safety of the jabs.

She said the secret contract that the Polish government was supposed to sign with pharmaceutical companies had more than 20 clauses which are against the law.

Kopacz noted that governments in Western Europe had signed secret agreements with pharmaceutical companies, but suggested that the prosperity of the people of Poland was more important to her than the profits of Big Pharma. Read the full story

VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)

Posted in Archive, Authors, Education, Featured, Health & Fitness, J.K., Politics, The Wire, World WideComments (0)

Swine Flu: Outbreak Sparks Mutation Fears


British scientists are examining samples of a strain of swine flu behind a deadly Ukrainian outbreak to determine whether the virus has mutated.

Dynamo fans wear face masks during Champions League match against Inter Milan in Kiev

Fans at the Champions League match between FC Dynamo and Inter Milan in Kiev

More than 80 people have died in Ukraine in the last two weeks and there have been 450,000 cases of respiratory illness.

The World Health Organisation has sent an emergency team to monitor the epidemic and says it assumes most of the illness in the country has been caused by H1N1 swine flu. Read the full story

VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)

Posted in Archive, Authors, Education, Health & Fitness, J.K., Politics, Science, World WideComments (0)

Quietly: The United States is Legalizing Marijuana


Marijuana

You know things are shifting in America when Fortune magazine, the bible for business journalism, runs a cover story titled “Is pot already legal?”. You also know it when Barack Obama’s Department of Justice publishes a long-expected memo signalling that the federal government will no longer raid medical marijuana dispensaries if they are legal under state law. That happened formally this month. Read the full story

VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 10.0/10 (2 votes cast)
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: +2 (from 2 votes)

Posted in Archive, Authors, Business, Cogent Nirvana, Cogent Nirvana, Environment, Health & Fitness, History, J.K., Politics, US GovernmentComments (0)

Russia: Nuclear Spaceship


Russia’s space agency is planning to build a new spaceship with a nuclear engine, its chief said Wednesday.

Anatoly Perminov told a government meeting Wednesday that the preliminary design could be ready by 2012. He said it will then take nine more years and 17 billion rubles ($600 million, 400 million euros) to build the ship.

“The implementation of this project will allow us to reach a new technological level surpassing foreign developments,” Perminov told a meeting which focused on communications and space technologies.

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev urged the Cabinet to consider providing the necessary funding.

“It’s a very serious project,” Medvedev said. “We need to find the money.”

Perminov’s ambitious statement contrasted with the current state of the Russian space program, and sounded more like a plea for extra government funds than a detailed proposal.

Russia is using 40-year old Soyuz booster rockets and capsules to send crews to the International Space Station. Development of a replacement rocket and a prospective spaceship with a conventional propellant has dragged on with no end in sight.

Perminov described the proposed spaceship as a “unique breakthrough project,” but offered few details.

He said that the ship will have a megawatt-class nuclear reactor, as opposed to small nuclear reactors that powered Soviet satellites. The Cold-War era Soviet spy satellites had reactors which produced just a few kilowatts of power and had a lifespan of just about a year.

Perminov didn’t say what the new spaceship will be used for.

He and other officials have said that Russia needs a new spaceship to replace the old Soyuz for missions in Earth orbit, but they only have talked about a ship powered by a conventional rocket fuel so far.

Russian space agency also has mulled over prospective future missions to the moon and Mars, but hasn’t yet set a specific time frame yet.

http://www.askmen.com/

VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)

Posted in Archive, Arts & Entertainment, Authors, History, J.K., Politics, Space, Travel, World WideComments (0)

Nigerians: In Space?


Nigeria’s space agency is no joke. It has launched satellites and aims to put Africans into space.

LONDON, U.K. — Recently I received an email labeled “Strictly Confidential” from Dr. Bakare Tunde, who said he was astronautics project manager at Nigeria’s space agency. He also told me he was the cousin of the first African in space, Air Force Major Abacha Tunde, and that this poor intrepid astronaut had been stranded on a secret Soviet military station ever since the Soviet Union dissolved in 1990.

“He is in good humor,” read the email, “but wants to come home.” No wonder he was keen to hurtle back earthwards, Tunde told me his cousin had accumulated almost $15 million in pay. For the price of my bank account details, I could claim 20 percent and fly the brave chap home to collect my portion of the earnings and transfer the rest on to him like the good space-supporter that I was.

This classic 419 scam is indeed far-fetched but one aspect of it is true.

Nigeria really does have a space agency. The west African nation’s National Space Research and Development Agency is already celebrating its 10th anniversary. And as America and Europe’s space agencies set their sights on joint exploration of Mars, Nigeria has big plans of its own: It wants to send a Nigerian up into space in 2015, making Nigeria home to the first black African astronaut.

Sitting across from Gerald Okeke, it’s hard to fathom that the quietly spoken fellow might one day fly beyond the earth’s atmosphere. Okeke, 28, is one of 27 Nigerian engineers being trained how to design and build an earth observation satellite in the U.K., at private British company Surrey Satellites Technology in Guildford, southeast of London. We are sitting in the canteen of the spacecraft-mad company, from whose ceilings dangle silver starburst lights and whose rubbish bins are shaped like shiny rockets.

“There is much to learn but we are coping,” says Okeke, whose father was also a scientist. “It’s a big challenge. Talking about space in Africa is kind of a new field but it’s a very big opportunity for us to explore.”

He says it would be an honor to be picked as Africa’s first black space sailor — who must be aged 27 to 37 at the time of lift-off and whose selection will begin next year ahead of four years of training. Okeke has already spent several years studying in the U.K., which he says is challenging. “The weather can be trouble and we try to cope with the food even though it’s not what we eat in Nigeria,” said Okeke.

His is not the only sacrifice in an expensive and widely questioned mission. Nigeria spends $20 million a year on its space program, in a country in which for every thousand children born, 137 will die before they are five years old. A collapse in the value of Nigeria’s naira currency — in part attributable to the global downturn — has meant the costs of its payments in U.S. dollars have also rocketed by a third.

“Even in the U.S. some people are opposed to the space program so we are not surprised this happens here,” says Seidu Onailo Mohammed, CEO of the Nigerian space agency. “But we want to assess the problems that have devastated this land. We need to monitor our environment, assess problems of flooding, deforestation — all this can only be done if we have a viable space program. Plus after so many years it’s a good idea to think of an astronaut.”

The country jetted up a $13 million earth observation satellite, made in the U.K. and launched from Russia, in 2003. A much more expensive communications satellite, costing hundreds of millions of dollars, was launched from China in 2007. It failed within 18 months but a replacement is due to be propelled into space by 2011, paid for by insurance.

But still the Nigerian agency wants more money. The government believes it will all pay off in the end.

Already the earth observation satellite has taken some pretty impressive snaps including pictures of poppy growing in Afghanistan, the state of cyclone damage after Myanmar’s authorities restricted access to international rescue teams in 2008 and, closer to home, identifying the whereabouts of illegal tankers parking far out at sea to steal Nigeria’s oil supplies.

Nigeria has managed to sell about 1,000 of its satellite images and hopes over the course of each satellite’s lifetime such data sales will cover the costs of manufacture and operation.

“We are bringing down space to apply it on the ground,” says Francis Chizea, Director of the Nigerian space agency. “It’s going to be very very important for the economy. We can map the wetlands and advise on areas very good for rice production; monitor desertification in the north; find the best place to locate dams; assess the environmental impact of oil drilling; locate oil spills and track movements on the border.”

It’s all been made possible by a new approach to space science that has let developing nations in on the extra-terrestrial act.

“We’ve been able to shrink a satellite from a double-decker bus down to the size of a TV set,” says Martin Sweeting, the British founder of Surrey Satellites Technology, a radio fanatic as a child who decided space shouldn’t be the privilege of the rich nations. “It’s now possible for an African country to have its own satellite for $10 to $15 million. It can yield real benefits at the right price.”

South Africa, Algeria and Egypt are all marshaling their own satellite facilities, so there’s no question Africa’s scientists are reaching for the stars.

http://www.globalpost.com/

VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)

Posted in Archive, Arts & Entertainment, Authors, Environment, J.K., Politics, Space, Travel, World WideComments (0)

Ecuador: Want The Amazon To Survive? Pay Us Not to Pump Oil


The tropical rainforest in the eastern lowlands of Ecuador assaults the senses: the sunlight dazzles the eyes, the heat is so fierce that within seconds one’s clothes are soaked in sweat. Then there are the sounds: a hypnotic symphony of frogs, crickets and other insects and birds which continues unabated day and night. There are sudden glimpses of the jungle’s abundant wildlife: a spectacular flash of a blue morpho butterfly at the river’s edge, a flock of green parakeets screeching.

This stunning region, which covers more than a third of Ecuador’s area, almost the size of England, and which is one of the world’s richest biospheres, with a huge diversity of animals and plants, some found nowhere else on Earth, faces a double threat: from the logging industry, which would strip it bare, and from the oil industry, which for nearly 40 years has been exploiting the huge resources of crude beneath the soil. Now, however, Ecuador is betting it can keep what is left of the oil in the ground and hang onto its biosphere into the bargain.

The South American country has learned the hard way that oil brings human misery and environmental devastation along with billions in export earnings. Every new oil field is an invasion that brings tens of thousands of outsiders into the forest’s heart, polluting the air, soil and water, destroying wildlife, and assaulting the support systems of indigenous tribes, which can lead to their extermination. And the damage is not confined to the immediate vicinity of the wells.

The Via Auca is the main highway cutting through the Ecuadorean Amazonia region, and it has been a lifeline of the oil industry for nearly 40 years, slicing through the countryside like a badly healed wound, the roadside lined with hellish flares, murky waste pits and corroded pipelines. Accidents involving the pipelines are frequent, and their consequences harrowing. On the far side of the town of Dayuma, which sprang up as an oil workers’ shantytown and is still riddled with crime and prostitution, one of the ageing pipelines has ruptured, sending a jet of oil shooting 30 metres into the air, staining the vegetation black all around.

The sickly stench of crude oil is overwhelming in the midday tropical heat. A house and a field across the road have also been soaked by the filthy gusher. Sebastian Ortiz, whose elderly father owns the simple wooden house by the roadside on the edge of the jungle, points out where the oil has drenched the field and seeped into the ground. Petrobel, one of many oil companies now operating in the region, has said it will pay his father US$5,000 (£3,000) towards the clean-up costs. But Ortiz says: “I don’t know when he will be paid, or even if it is still safe for him to carry on living here.”

Pollution is only one of the many ills that the oil business brings with it. Fernando Moreno, an anthropologist with the Ministry of the Environment, has been monitoring the oil industry’s effect on the local community for years. “The people have become beggars” he says. “They have become accustomed to demanding whatever they need and more from the oil companies, just because they are in the same territory. Weighing up the benefits and drawbacks of the oil companies, I think it would be better not to have them. They lead to many bad habits, they make people avaricious, they increase the differences between people – and they are a source of contamination: for the land, the water and the people themselves.”

For the last 16 years Ecuador has been embroiled in a bitter battle over a huge $27.3 billion environmental damages claim brought against US oil giant Chevron by 30,000 Amazonian inhabitants. The plaintiffs accuse Texaco (which Chevron acquired in 1993) of dumping more than 18 billion gallons of toxic waste into the rainforest between 1964 and 1990, and claim that 1,400 deaths occurred in the region as a result of the contaminated soil and water, which brought unaccountably high levels of cancer, skin and breathing conditions. The Amazon Defence Coalition, which represents the plaintiffs, says the scale of the pollution makes it the biggest environmental disaster in the world, dwarfing the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill and leading some experts to dub it “South America’s Chernobyl”. It is certainly shaping up to become the world’s biggest environmental lawsuit.

Chevron robustly refutes the allegations. It says Texaco spent US$40 million on a clean-up before it handed over operations to the state oil company in 1992. Ecuador’s government then signed a release freeing Chevron from any liability for subsequent damages from potential oil contamination.

Whatever the outcome of the legal battle Ecuador is now banking on a new idea to help it shed its poisonous dependency on oil. The Yasuni-ITT Initiative aims to keep the region’s remaining oil reserves untapped and underground, in return for financial compensation from the international community and carbon offsets from the carbon markets.

The crux of the scheme is simple: to keep the oil beneath the Yasuni National Park where it is, in perpetuity. Covering nearly 2.5 million acres of primary tropical rainforest, Yasuni is the ancestral territory of the Waorani people and two other tribes, the Tagaeri and the Taromenane. It was named a Unesco biosphere reserve in 1989, and scientists regard it one of the most biodiverse places on earth.

It is also the home of Ecuador’s largest oil reserve. But by not extracting the estimated 846 million barrels of oil in the reserve, Ecuador will keep an estimated 410 million metric tons of carbon dioxide from entering the atmosphere, makinga big contribution to the fight against global warming.

It will also pledge to respect the territories of the indigenous cultures living in the national park, as well as protecting its flora and fauna. In return, the Ecuadorean Government has asked for compensation of $350 million a year for 10 years, which would be invested in environmental and social development programmes, helping the country move towards a sustainable economy.

After a slow start the plan has begun to attract serious promises of commitment. Amazon Watch, an organisation dedicated to protecting the rainforest and its indigenous inhabitants, calls it “a landmark proposal … a precedent-setting effort by an oil-exporting nation to preserve a global biodiversity hotspot, protect indigenous rights and set the stage for its own economic and energetic shift away from fossil fuels”.

Some big international players agree: Germany has offered $50 million on condition that other nations stump up similar sums. Ecuador’s President Rafael Correa, and Yolanda Kakabadse, a senior member of the Yasuni commission, have been in London and continental European capitals this week spreading the word. And in December Ecuador’s former chancellor Francisco Carrión, the Government’s envoy on the initiative, will present it at the UN Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen.

Among Ecuadoreans themselves, the initiative is welcomed particularly by the flourishing tourist industry. With a spectacular range of natural attractions, from the Galapagos Islands to the snow-peaked Andes, Ecuador has long been a pioneer in ecotourism.

Fander Falconi the foreign minister and one of the founders of the initiative, says the scheme will work on the basis of shared responsibility, locally and globally. “What we are aiming for is global sustainability, but with a distinction drawn between those who harm the environment and those who suffer the consequences of this harm.”

Luz Coloma, Yasuni-ITT’s press officer, added, “Ecuador has had sad experiences with the exploitation of oil and no one wants any more environmental disasters like the Chevron-Texaco case.”

On the banks of the Shiripuno river, to the west of the Yasuni National Park, is the Huaorani Ecolodge run and owned by formerly nomadic hunters who only came into contact with the outside world 50 years ago. Omene Paa, a tour guide at the lodge, tells how oil has been a curse for his people from the time “the path-cutters” first arrived. The “petrolera” companies brought disease and contaminated the water, he claims. One of his cousins died of a lung infection. Now Omene says his people, who first fought off the US oilmen with axes, just want to be allowed to live in peace. “Our battle should continue; we the Huaorani must look after our territory.”

http://www.independent.co.uk/

VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 10.0/10 (2 votes cast)
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: +2 (from 2 votes)

Posted in Archive, Authors, Business, Cogent Nirvana, Cogent Nirvana, Education, Environment, Featured, Health & Fitness, History, J.K., Politics, US Government, World WideComments (0)

New York: Governor Declares H1N1 To Be a State Disaster Emergency


That’s a week after granting that status to the closing of the Champlain Bridge — the disasters are coming more often — and President Obama’s declaration that the swine flu was a National Emergency.

The executive order has these effects:

  • Allows health care workers who are not doctors, nurses or nurse practitioners to administer the vaccine
  • Allows school-based health centers to handle vaccinations Read the full story
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)

Posted in Archive, Authors, Education, Health & Fitness, J.K., Politics, US GovernmentComments (0)

Deaths: From Philippine Storms Nears 1,000


2009-10-19

MANILA — The death toll from two devastating storms that struck the Philippines over the past month has risen to 858, with ensuing disease outbreaks killing 89 others, the government said Monday.

The latest National Disaster Coordinating Council toll is up from 818 on Sunday. Read the full story

VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 10.0/10 (1 vote cast)
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)

Posted in Archive, Authors, Education, Environment, Featured, J.K., Politics, World WideComments (0)

Rand Paul: Throws His Name Into Senate Race


Rand Paul Enters Senate Race

From Kentucky Public Radio’s Lisa Autry

Bowling Green eye doctor Rand Paul says he will seek the Republican nomination for the U.S. Senate seat currently held by Jim Bunning. Paul officially declared his candidacy Wednesday, ending months of speculation. Read the full story

VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)
VN:F [1.8.7_1070]
Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)

Posted in Politics, R.T.Comments (0)

advert

The Capsule (Click a word to learn more!)

The Katy Capsule

<ul><li><strong>woo_ads_rotate</strong> - false</li><li><strong>woo_ad_250_adsense</strong> - <script type=\"text/javascript\"><!--
google_ad_client = \"pub-0689640681309890\";
/* 250x250, created 8/4/09 */
google_ad_slot = \"2799027112\";
google_ad_width = 250;
google_ad_height = 250;
//-->
</script>
<script type=\"text/javascript\"
src=\"http://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/show_ads.js\">
</script></li><li><strong>woo_ad_250_image</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com/ads/woothemes-250x250.gif</li><li><strong>woo_ad_250_url</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com</li><li><strong>woo_ad_content_adsense</strong> - <script type=\"text/javascript\"><!--
google_ad_client = \"pub-0689640681309890\";
/* 468x60, created 8/4/09 */
google_ad_slot = \"3383985217\";
google_ad_width = 468;
google_ad_height = 60;
//-->
</script>
<script type=\"text/javascript\"
src=\"http://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/show_ads.js\">
</script></li><li><strong>woo_ad_content_disable</strong> - false</li><li><strong>woo_ad_content_image</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com/ads/woothemes-468x60-2.gif</li><li><strong>woo_ad_content_url</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com</li><li><strong>woo_ad_image_1</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com/ads/125x125a.jpg</li><li><strong>woo_ad_image_2</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com/ads/125x125b.jpg</li><li><strong>woo_ad_image_3</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com/ads/125x125c.jpg</li><li><strong>woo_ad_image_4</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com/ads/125x125d.jpg</li><li><strong>woo_ad_image_5</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com/ads/woothemes-125x125-4.gif</li><li><strong>woo_ad_image_6</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com/ads/woothemes-125x125-4.gif</li><li><strong>woo_ad_mpu_adsense</strong> - </li><li><strong>woo_ad_mpu_disable</strong> - false</li><li><strong>woo_ad_mpu_image</strong> - http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/we-are-the-99-percent-occupy-houston-october-6-2011.jpg</li><li><strong>woo_ad_mpu_url</strong> - http://occupyhouston.org</li><li><strong>woo_ad_top_adsense</strong> - <script type=\"text/javascript\"><!--
google_ad_client = \"pub-9286382510395736\";
/* 468x60, created 11/8/09 */
google_ad_slot = \"9947229947\";
google_ad_width = 468;
google_ad_height = 60;
//-->
</script>
<script type=\"text/javascript\"
src=\"http://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/show_ads.js\">
</script></li><li><strong>woo_ad_top_disable</strong> - false</li><li><strong>woo_ad_top_image</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com/ads/468x60a.jpg</li><li><strong>woo_ad_top_url</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com</li><li><strong>woo_ad_url_1</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com</li><li><strong>woo_ad_url_2</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com</li><li><strong>woo_ad_url_3</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com</li><li><strong>woo_ad_url_4</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com</li><li><strong>woo_ad_url_5</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com</li><li><strong>woo_ad_url_6</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com</li><li><strong>woo_alt_stylesheet</strong> - darkblue.css</li><li><strong>woo_author</strong> - true</li><li><strong>woo_auto_img</strong> - false</li><li><strong>woo_cat_ex</strong> - </li><li><strong>woo_comment_posts</strong> - 5</li><li><strong>woo_content</strong> - false</li><li><strong>woo_content_archives</strong> - false</li><li><strong>woo_content_feat</strong> - false</li><li><strong>woo_custom_css</strong> - </li><li><strong>woo_custom_favicon</strong> - http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/15-LOGO.png</li><li><strong>woo_featured_category</strong> - Select a category:</li><li><strong>woo_featured_posts</strong> - 3</li><li><strong>woo_feat_entries</strong> - Select a number:</li><li><strong>woo_feedburner_id</strong> - </li><li><strong>woo_feedburner_url</strong> - </li><li><strong>woo_google_analytics</strong> - <script type=\"text/javascript\">
var gaJsHost = ((\"https:\" == document.location.protocol) ? \"https://ssl.\" : \"http://www.\");
document.write(unescape(\"%3Cscript src=\'\" + gaJsHost + \"google-analytics.com/ga.js\' type=\'text/javascript\'%3E%3C/script%3E\"));
</script>
<script type=\"text/javascript\">
try {
var pageTracker = _gat._getTracker(\"UA-9929195-1\");
pageTracker._trackPageview();
} catch(err) {}</script></li><li><strong>woo_home</strong> - false</li><li><strong>woo_home_arc</strong> - false</li><li><strong>woo_home_link</strong> - true</li><li><strong>woo_home_link_desc</strong> - </li><li><strong>woo_home_link_text</strong> - Home</li><li><strong>woo_home_thumb_height</strong> - 130</li><li><strong>woo_home_thumb_width</strong> - 260</li><li><strong>woo_image_height</strong> - 15</li><li><strong>woo_image_single</strong> - false</li><li><strong>woo_image_width</strong> - 15</li><li><strong>woo_logo</strong> - http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/16-newheader_copy.jpg</li><li><strong>woo_manual</strong> - http://www.woothemes.com/support/theme-documentation/gazette-edition/</li><li><strong>woo_popular_posts</strong> - 8</li><li><strong>woo_resize</strong> - true</li><li><strong>woo_shortname</strong> - woo</li><li><strong>woo_show_carousel</strong> - false</li><li><strong>woo_show_video</strong> - true</li><li><strong>woo_single_height</strong> - 400</li><li><strong>woo_single_width</strong> - 588</li><li><strong>woo_tabs</strong> - true</li><li><strong>woo_themename</strong> - Gazette</li><li><strong>woo_thumb_height</strong> - 15</li><li><strong>woo_thumb_width</strong> - 15</li><li><strong>woo_twitter</strong> - TheKatyCapsule</li><li><strong>woo_uploads</strong> - a:14:{i:0;s:80:"http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/16-newheader_copy.jpg";i:1;s:70:"http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/15-LOGO.png";i:2;s:73:"http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/14-Header1.png";i:3;s:73:"http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/13-Header1.png";i:4;s:73:"http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/12-Header1.png";i:5;s:78:"http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/11-header4_copy.png";i:6;s:73:"http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/10-Header1.png";i:7;s:77:"http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/9-HEADER2_copy.jpg";i:8;s:72:"http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/8-Header1.png";i:9;s:98:"http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/7-small-final-logo_black_for_banner.png";i:10;s:81:"http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/6-small-final-logo.jpg";i:11;s:98:"http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/5-small-final-logo_black_for_banner.png";i:12;s:98:"http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/4-small-final-logo_black_for_banner.png";i:13;s:75:"http://thekatycapsule.com/wordpress/wp-content/woo_uploads/3-logo-trans.png";}</li><li><strong>woo_video_category</strong> - Political</li></ul>