Monday, November 28, 2011

Wendy Strgar: Language of Gratitude

"When something does not insist on being noticed, when we aren't grabbed by the collar or struck on the skull by a presence or an event, we take for granted the very things that most deserve our gratitude." - Cynthia Ozick

Our communication is the currency of our relationships, literally the energetic equivalent and the substance that drives us towards or away from the people in our lives. Couple that with the fundamental and universal needs we all share for being seen and valued and you get a glimpse of the powerful alteration that happens in the world when you express gratitude. Unleashing the energy of gratitude in your life is all about re-focusing our attention and perfecting the art of appreciation.

What we focus on multiplies. To the degree that we keep our focus on what is wrong, we often entirely overlook what is right. In this same vein, our shared fixation on the how of getting things done, often overlooks the much more crucial question of why. Allowing the why of our lives and our relationships more focus, is a place of gratitude and clear intention. Focusing our attention on the why of what we love or the why we persist with a problem that won't quite resolve opens you up to receiving, which is at once the prerequisite and the reward of feeling gratitude.

Our attention is our most powerful resource and shining that light with gratitude upon the people and events in our lives, even and maybe especially when they challenge us changes the trajectory of our experience. Fear is vanquished in our gratitude and problem-solving acquires a serendipity that resolves the how in ways that were not previously accessible or visible to us. Gratitude expressed literally re-shapes the world you live in and begets more of the same.

Meister Eckhart once wrote, "If the only prayer you said in your whole life was "Thank you," that would suffice." Some days when I am groping for the path back to a grateful way of being in the world, I will just start to repeat the word thank you and look around. It is a simple but profound practice of noticing the details of your world, appreciating the small things like the changing scent in the air as the leaves fall or the comfort of a steaming cup of tea. It's the easy banter of high school boys in the back seat of the car or the joy of my dog let loose on her walk. The more I say thank you out loud to these little events, the more there is to say thank you for. The first awkward ones that feel forced, quickly slip out of mind as my foul mood hasn't a chance against the power of gratitude expressed. Expressing our gratitude is the doorway to receiving the goodness and love in our lives.

Bringing this same practice into your personal relationships will amaze you. Even strangers light up in recognition. When was the last time you noticed a waitress or a clerk for trying to please you or even mentioning how nice it was to be met by their smile? You may well be creating the nicest, most memorable moment of the day for them. Family members and partners oddly enough are often those who miss our appreciation most. I promise you will be stunned by the reciprocity that thank you engenders. Even the most jaded teenager softens at the words thank you.

I remember childhood admonishments to say thank you and feeling more beholden than gratitude when I obliged. I wish instead, I had learned as a child the magic of appreciation. Gratitude is truly the capacity that grows in us, where we see everything, even the most painful aspects of relating to life as a gift. This is how appreciation cultivates our best selves, by offering up the gentle but critical lessons that live inside of all adversity. Gratitude is the open door.

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Follow Wendy Strgar on Twitter: www.twitter.com/goodcleanlove

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/wendy-strgar/language-of-gratitude_b_1113497.html

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Saturday Links (Theagitator)

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No. 17 Pittsburgh eases by Robert Morris 81-71 (AP)

PITTSBURGH ? Ashton Gibbs scored 21 points and Cameron Wright added a career-high 13 as No. 17 Pittsburgh rolled past Robert Morris 81-71 on Sunday.

The Panthers (5-1) won their third straight by shooting 55 percent from the field in the first half and playing with a defensive intensity they have lacked at times early in the season.

The addition of rangy freshman forward Khem Birch into the lineup helped. Birch finished with eight points, 11 rebounds and six blocks while making his second career start.

Cordon Williams led Robert Morris (4-2) with 19 points but the Panthers clamped down on Robert Morris star Velton Jones, who came in averaging 19.7 points but was held to 10 on 1-of-14 shooting.

Pitt improved to 29-0 all-time against its crosstown rival and 69-0 against Northeast Conference opponents and won despite missing forwards Lamar Patterson and Dante Taylor.

Both players sat out their second straight game, though for vastly different reasons. Patterson is serving a two-game suspension for a violation of team rules while Taylor continues to struggle with migraines.

In their absence the highly touted Birch has emerged. He had 15 points, 10 rebounds and played with boundless energy as Pitt rolled to a 20-point win in his first start on Friday at Penn.

He wasn't quite as aggressive offensively against the Colonials, though he didn't have to be considering the way his teammates were shooting the ball. Some of the confidence must have rubbed off on Birch, who knocked down a rare 17-footer early in the second half.

Birch knows learning the offense will take time. He doesn't think he needs to wait to make an impact defensively, and his six blocks against the Colonials were one off the school record.

Sophomore forward Talib Zanna posted career-highs with 10 points and 15 rebounds for the Panthers, who never let Robert Morris get within striking distance following a 16-4 burst midway through the first half.

At 31 Robert Morris' Andrew Toole is the youngest coach in Division I.

The Panthers have spent the first three weeks of the season searching for an identity. They may have found one thanks to the emergence of Birch.

Coach Jamie Dixon took his time slowly easing Birch into the fray but was left with no choice when Taylor couldn't go because of recurring headaches.

The Colonials, who have dominated the NEC over the last four seasons, tried to slow down the pace early. They worked the clock on offense and made the Panthers work to get open looks, forcing Pitt into a shot clock violation on one possession and a desperation 3-pointer on another that came nowhere close to going in.

The strategy worked for a few minutes, or about as long as it took Pitt to hit the gas.

The Panthers broke it open using their signature pressure defense, using a 16-4 run midway through the first half to take control. Wright turned two Robert Morris giveaways into a layup and a dunk, one that earned him a technical foul for swinging on the rim before letting go.

Williams knocked down two free throws as a result, but it hardly slowed the Panthers.

Pitt slowly kept extending the lead, playing efficiently on offense and aggressively on defense, something the Panthers have lacked at times. The Panthers were lit up in a loss to Long Beach State two weeks ago and struggled getting stops in wins over Rider and La Salle.

There were no such issues against the Colonials, who shot just 37 percent from the field and only briefly got within single digits over the game's final 30 minutes.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/sports/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111128/ap_on_sp_co_ga_su/bkc_t25_robert_morris_pittsburgh

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Sunday, November 27, 2011

Dentsu India Group beefs up senior team

Harjot Singh Narang appointed Delhi Branch Head, Dentsu Marcom, and Amit Wadhwa joining as Senior VP, Dentsu Creative Impact

BestMediaInfo Bureau | Delhi | November 25, 2011

(Left) Harjot Singh Narang and Amit Wadhwa (Right)

Continuing with the series of senior-level appointments, the Dentsu India Group yesterday announced two key appointments. Harjot Singh Narang has been appointed Branch Head ? Delhi for Dentsu Marcom, while Amit Wadhwa joins Delhi-based Dentsu Creative Impact as Senior VP, Dentsu Creative Impact.

Narang joins from Leo Burnett where, as Unit Business Head, he was responsible for overall operations and a team of 60 people in four offices across the country. As Dentsu Marcom?s Delhi Branch head he will be responsible for growing the client base.

Wadhwa too moves in from Leo Burnett, Delhi where he was Business Unit Head handling communication duties for Bacardi, Kohler, Indian Express and Coke Studio. At Dentsu Creative Impact, his key priority will be to partner the account management, creative and planning teams to deliver high quality creative across brands.

Commenting on the new appointments, Rohit Ohri, Executive Chairman, Dentsu India Group, said, ?At Dentsu India, we are strengthening our teams across our agencies. Seasoned professionals like Harjot and Amit bring on board diverse category knowledge, strong brand capability and a passion for creative excellence. Both are excellent cross-functional team managers. I see their skills help us deliver the best integrated communication solutions for our clients. I am delighted to welcome both Harjot and Amit to Team Dentsu India!?

Commented Narang on his new assignment, ?For me the excitement to join Dentsu comes as much from the positive energy that Rohit Ohri brings with him as from the clear vision that was shared with me in the discussions that led to this move. Dentsu is clearly looking to invest in and sustainably grow their position in the Indian market and that makes it the best place to be for any professional in this industry.?

On his part, Wadhwa said, ?The decision to join Dentsu wasn?t really a tough one. Worldwide, Dentsu is amongst the topmost communication groups. Also, in India there is a new focus and excitement about the group, a belief that got strengthened when I heard of its India plans. I believe that the joy of a successful journey is doubled when you are a part of it from the very beginning. Besides that, my role and an interesting brand mix made joining Dentsu Creative Impact even more tempting. ?

Narang began his career with an intensive three-year, grassroots experience in garment export, managing a printing press and a travel agency. He soon gravitated to advertising and over the next 14 years, worked with leading marketing communications organisations like Ogilvy & Mather, JWT and Leo Burnett in various capacities in account management. He has worked on categories as diverse as soft drinks, snack foods, insurance, consumer electronics and telecom. Some of the brands he has worked on include Coca-Cola India, Pepsico India (Flavoured Beverages & Foods Divisions), GSK, Uninor, Hutch, Nokia, SBI Life Insurance, Radio Today, Nikon India, Sony India, Samsung India and Frito Lay India, to name a few. He was an integral part of the team that pushed brand Thums Up to new heights through the Thums Up Challenge initiative and he spearheaded the launch and evolution of Mountain Dew in India

Wadhwa started his career in marketing communications in Mumbai with Pathfinders (the Research wing of Lowe) and later relocated to Delhi and moved into mainstream advertising. Over the years he has worked in various agencies including Lowe, Mudra, Bates Enterprise (then Enterprise Nexus), JWT and Leo Burnett. Some of the key brands he has worked on are Pepsi, Mountain Dew, Mirinda, Slice, Bacardi, Timejobs.com, Timematri.com, Kohler and Indian Express. He has also worked on automobile brands such as Maruti Suzuki, General Motors and Yamaha.

Info@BestMediaInfo.com

Source: http://www.bestmediainfo.com/2011/11/dentsu-india-group-beefs-up-senior-team/

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Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3


Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3 is, depending on how you're counting, either the eighth game in the Call of Duty series or the third game in the Modern Warfare subseries. It's the standard modern military game, with realistic weapons, relatively frail (i.e., not able to absorb dozens of bullets like an action hero) main characters, and intrigue involving terrorism and special forces. It offers the action formula we've been enjoying since Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare came out in 2007, with a very few tweaks. It stands against Battlefield 3 and matches it in features and content. The two games have a few significant differences, but they're a matter of taste rather than either game being better than the other.

Modern Warfare 3 picks up where Modern Warfare 2 left off. I mean, exactly where it left off. Russia is at war with America, Makarov is at large, Soap's injured, and everything is blowing up. If you didn't play Modern Warfare 2, which served as a decent starting point and didn't require the first game to understand it, you won't have any idea about what's going on, and the game doesn't do much to get you up to date. It feels very much like the third movie in a trilogy, and the second movie ended on a cliffhanger. That said, Modern Warfare 3 still tells an epic story and wraps up the Modern Warfare trilogy very nicely.

Gameplay
The gameplay, both in single player and multiplayer modes, is identical to that of Modern Warfare 2. You can carry two weapons and two types of grenades (one offensive, one special) at one time and you have to hide behind cover and employ tactical savvy in your approach firefights if you want to kill your enemies. It's an established and functional style that captures modern, "realistic" first-person shooter games. If you get hit a few times, you need to hide behind cover until you heal, or a few more stray bullets can kill you. It's unforgiving, but balanced.

The single-player campaign will last you about six hours, and it takes you everywhere from New York to Africa to Germany. It's short, but exciting and full of big set pieces and lots of action. Most of the game takes place on foot, but you'll take control of mounted guns on vehicles and drones to takes out groups of enemies during chases and attacks. The gameplay is extremely linear, with every level leading you through a set path like a guided tour of a firefight. Unfortunately, these firefights keep to the Modern Warfare Combat Randomness Pattern: any time you get pinned down by enemies, there's a 50% chance you have to kill them all and a 50% chance you have to rush through because they'll keep spawning. There's little indication which is which, and no logic for the endlessly-spawning firefights that force you to run to the next area. It gets predictable and frustrating, especially in open areas where the only way to find out the right way to move on is by trial and error.

Besides the single-player campaign, you can play Special Forces missions either solo or with a friend. These are shorter, standalone missions that give you extra challenge with time limits and different difficulty levels, along with a leveling system that gives you additional equipment as you play through them. They're a nice boost of extra content, but they play like remixed versions of the single-player campaign's levels, and you'll probably drop them after a single playthrough and move to the multiplayer game.

Multiplayer
Multiplayer is the big draw of Modern Warfare 3, and it pays off just as much as it did in the other games in the series. There are the same seemingly endless customization options, with an experience system and the ability to build your own class with different weapons and abilities. The killstreak system from previous games has been refined into a points-based system that gives players more balance. Instead of getting points for each kill, players can choose Assault, Support, and Specialist modes that give them different rewards. Assault is the traditional killstreak system, where you get new abilities like missile strikes for more kills in a single life. Support counts your kills and other actions between lives, constantly moving up and giving you support-based abilities like UAVs. Specialist gives you more perks for your kills, instead of new weapons it effectively turns you into a super-soldier who's faster, stronger, or able to take more damage.

The different multiplayer options and the Hardcore and Advanced lists keep the game interesting even when you raise your levels and unlock all your weapons. While Team Deathmatch and its variants are some of the most popular, objective-based game modes can also hold your interest. Activision also offers Call of Duty Elite, a premium online service that community features, statistics tracking, and guides to the Modern Warfare 3 experience. It's free, but gamers can pay an additional $50 per year for access to monthly DLC, clan advantages, and other things that enhance the game. However, since the premium access costs almost as much as the game itself, we're not including those features as part of the game.

The multiplayer options offer a benefit over Battlefield 3, which only has six cooperative missions compared to over a dozen in Modern Warfare 3. Competitive play is pretty evenly matched, with leveling in Modern Warfare 3 universal and steadily unlocking weapons and skills and leveling in Battlefield 3 and rewarding your class as you play it. The big difference between the two games is that Battlefield 3 has vehicles, which can change the nature of a game dramatically. To go to extremes, Modern Warfare 3 is more suitable for Counter-Strike fans, while Battlefield 3 is more suitable for Halo fans, but the distinction between the two modern combat games are far smaller than the rift between the two classic shooters.

Modern Warfare 3 is a solid follow-up to Modern Warfare 2 and Black Ops, and if you loved those games you'll love this one. It doesn't change anything big, and the single-player campaign wraps up a story with most of the exposition lodged in previous games, but it offers a great multiplayer experience and a solid, if predictable and occasionally frustrating, single-player experience. It's an incremental sequel, but it's just what fans of the series need: even more of the same, with slight improvements and tweaks. If you have to choose between Modern Warfare 3 and Battlefield 3, ask yourself whether you prefer vehicles or more cooperative mission content. Those are the biggest distinctions, and they're not enough to make either game clearly better than the other.

More Game reviews:

??? Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3
??? Nintendo Wii (Fall 2008)
??? Rage
??? Madden NFL 12
??? Duke Nukem Forever
?? more

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/TEIa-pPWUH8/0,2817,2396833,00.asp

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Brain imaging, behavior research reveals physicians learn more by paying attention to failure

Brain imaging, behavior research reveals physicians learn more by paying attention to failure

Thursday, November 24, 2011

When seeking a physician, you should look for one with experience. Right? Maybe not. Research on physicians' decision-making processes has revealed that those who pay attention to failures as well as successes become more adept at selecting the correct treatment.

"We found that all the physicians in the study included irrelevant criteria in their decisions," said Read Montague, Ph.D., director of the Human Neuroimaging Laboratory at the Virginia Tech Carilion Research Institute, who led the study. "Notably, however, the most experienced doctors were the poorest learners."

The research is published in the Nov. 23 issue of PLoS One, the Public Library of Science open-access journal, in the article, "Neural correlates of effective learning in experienced medical decision-makers," by Jonathan Downar, M.D., Ph.D., assistant professor of psychiatry at the University of Toronto and Toronto Western Hospital; Meghana Bhatt, Ph.D., assistant research professor at Beckman Research Institute, the City of Hope Hospital, Duarte, Calif.; and Montague, who is also a professor of physics in the College of Science at Virginia Tech.

The researchers used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to look at the brain activity of 35 experienced physicians in a range of non-surgical specialties as they made decisions.

The doctors were instructed to select between two treatments for a series of simulated patients in an emergency room setting. "First they had a chance to learn by experience which of two medications worked better in a series of 64 simulated heart-attack patients, based on a simplified history with just six factors," said Bhatt.

Unknown to the test subjects, of the six factors, only one was actually relevant to the decision: diabetes status. One medication had a 75 percent success rate in patients with diabetes, but only a 25 percent success rate in patients without diabetes. The other had the opposite profile. The physicians had 10 seconds to select a treatment. Then they were briefly presented with an outcome of "SUCCESS: (heart attack) aborted" or "FAILURE: No response."

"After the training, we tested the physicians to see how often they were able to pick the better drug in a second series of 64 simulated patients," said Bhatt. "When we looked at their performance, the doctors separated into two distinct groups. One group learned very effectively from experience, and chose the better drug more than 75 percent of the time. The other group was terrible; they chose the better drug only at coin-flipping levels of accuracy, or half the time, and they also came up with inaccurate systems for deciding how to prescribe the medications, based on factors that didn't matter at all."

In fact, all the doctors reported including at least one of the five irrelevant factors, such as age or previous heart attack, in their decision process.

"The brain imaging showed us a clear difference in the mental processes of the two groups," said Montague. "The high performers activated their frontal lobes when things didn't go as expected and the treatments failed." Such activity showed that the doctors learned from their failures, he said. These physicians gradually improved their performance.

In contrast, the low performers activated their frontal lobes when things did go as expected, said Bhatt. "In other words, they succumbed to 'confirmation bias,' ignoring failures and learning only from the successful cases. Each success confirmed what the low performers falsely thought they already knew about which treatment was better." The researchers termed this counterproductive learning pattern "success-chasing."

"The problem with remembering successes and ignoring failures is that it doesn't leave us any way to abandon our faulty ideas. Instead, the ideas gain strength from each chance success, until they evolve into something like a superstition," said Downar.

The fMRI showed that a portion of the brain called the nucleus accumbens "showed significant anticipatory activation well before the outcome of the trial was revealed, and this anticipatory activation was significantly greater prior to successful outcomes," Montague said. "Based on the outcome of the training phase, we were actually able to predict results in the testing phase for each low-performing subject's final set of spurious treatment rules."

The authors state in the article that the formation of spurious beliefs is universal, such as an athlete's belief in a lucky hat. "But the good news is that physicians can probably be trained to think more like the high performers," said Downar. "I tell my students to remember three things: First, when you're trying to work out a diagnosis, remember to also ask the questions that would prove your hunches wrong. Second, when you think you have the answer, think again and go through the possible alternatives. Third, if the treatment isn't going as expected, don't just brush it off ? ask yourself what you could have missed."

"These findings underscore the dangers of disregarding past failures when making high-stakes decisions," said Montague. "'Success-chasing' not only can lead doctors to make flawed decisions in diagnosing and treating patients, but it can also distort the thinking of other high-stakes decision-makers, such as military and political strategists, stock market investors, and venture capitalists."

###

Virginia Tech: http://www.vtnews.vt.edu

Thanks to Virginia Tech for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

This press release has been viewed 114 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/115461/Brain_imaging__behavior_research_reveals_physicians_learn_more_by_paying_attention_to_failure

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Saturday, November 26, 2011

Brain imaging, behavior research reveals physicians learn more by paying attention to failure

Brain imaging, behavior research reveals physicians learn more by paying attention to failure

Thursday, November 24, 2011

When seeking a physician, you should look for one with experience. Right? Maybe not. Research on physicians' decision-making processes has revealed that those who pay attention to failures as well as successes become more adept at selecting the correct treatment.

"We found that all the physicians in the study included irrelevant criteria in their decisions," said Read Montague, Ph.D., director of the Human Neuroimaging Laboratory at the Virginia Tech Carilion Research Institute, who led the study. "Notably, however, the most experienced doctors were the poorest learners."

The research is published in the Nov. 23 issue of PLoS One, the Public Library of Science open-access journal, in the article, "Neural correlates of effective learning in experienced medical decision-makers," by Jonathan Downar, M.D., Ph.D., assistant professor of psychiatry at the University of Toronto and Toronto Western Hospital; Meghana Bhatt, Ph.D., assistant research professor at Beckman Research Institute, the City of Hope Hospital, Duarte, Calif.; and Montague, who is also a professor of physics in the College of Science at Virginia Tech.

The researchers used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to look at the brain activity of 35 experienced physicians in a range of non-surgical specialties as they made decisions.

The doctors were instructed to select between two treatments for a series of simulated patients in an emergency room setting. "First they had a chance to learn by experience which of two medications worked better in a series of 64 simulated heart-attack patients, based on a simplified history with just six factors," said Bhatt.

Unknown to the test subjects, of the six factors, only one was actually relevant to the decision: diabetes status. One medication had a 75 percent success rate in patients with diabetes, but only a 25 percent success rate in patients without diabetes. The other had the opposite profile. The physicians had 10 seconds to select a treatment. Then they were briefly presented with an outcome of "SUCCESS: (heart attack) aborted" or "FAILURE: No response."

"After the training, we tested the physicians to see how often they were able to pick the better drug in a second series of 64 simulated patients," said Bhatt. "When we looked at their performance, the doctors separated into two distinct groups. One group learned very effectively from experience, and chose the better drug more than 75 percent of the time. The other group was terrible; they chose the better drug only at coin-flipping levels of accuracy, or half the time, and they also came up with inaccurate systems for deciding how to prescribe the medications, based on factors that didn't matter at all."

In fact, all the doctors reported including at least one of the five irrelevant factors, such as age or previous heart attack, in their decision process.

"The brain imaging showed us a clear difference in the mental processes of the two groups," said Montague. "The high performers activated their frontal lobes when things didn't go as expected and the treatments failed." Such activity showed that the doctors learned from their failures, he said. These physicians gradually improved their performance.

In contrast, the low performers activated their frontal lobes when things did go as expected, said Bhatt. "In other words, they succumbed to 'confirmation bias,' ignoring failures and learning only from the successful cases. Each success confirmed what the low performers falsely thought they already knew about which treatment was better." The researchers termed this counterproductive learning pattern "success-chasing."

"The problem with remembering successes and ignoring failures is that it doesn't leave us any way to abandon our faulty ideas. Instead, the ideas gain strength from each chance success, until they evolve into something like a superstition," said Downar.

The fMRI showed that a portion of the brain called the nucleus accumbens "showed significant anticipatory activation well before the outcome of the trial was revealed, and this anticipatory activation was significantly greater prior to successful outcomes," Montague said. "Based on the outcome of the training phase, we were actually able to predict results in the testing phase for each low-performing subject's final set of spurious treatment rules."

The authors state in the article that the formation of spurious beliefs is universal, such as an athlete's belief in a lucky hat. "But the good news is that physicians can probably be trained to think more like the high performers," said Downar. "I tell my students to remember three things: First, when you're trying to work out a diagnosis, remember to also ask the questions that would prove your hunches wrong. Second, when you think you have the answer, think again and go through the possible alternatives. Third, if the treatment isn't going as expected, don't just brush it off ? ask yourself what you could have missed."

"These findings underscore the dangers of disregarding past failures when making high-stakes decisions," said Montague. "'Success-chasing' not only can lead doctors to make flawed decisions in diagnosing and treating patients, but it can also distort the thinking of other high-stakes decision-makers, such as military and political strategists, stock market investors, and venture capitalists."

###

Virginia Tech: http://www.vtnews.vt.edu

Thanks to Virginia Tech for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

This press release has been viewed 104 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/115461/Brain_imaging__behavior_research_reveals_physicians_learn_more_by_paying_attention_to_failure

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Pope: sex abuse 'scourge' for all society (AP)

VATICAN CITY ? Pope Benedict XVI insisted on Saturday that all of society's institutions and not just the Catholic church must be held to "exacting" standards in their response to sex abuse of children, and defended the church's efforts to confront the problem.

Benedict acknowledged in remarks to visiting U.S. bishops during an audience at the Vatican that pedophilia was a "scourge" for society, and that decades of scandals over clergy abusing children had left Catholics in the United States bewildered.

"It is my hope that the Church's conscientious efforts to confront this reality will help the broader community to recognize the causes, true extent and devastating consequences of sexual abuse, and to respond effectively to this scourge which affects every level of society," he said.

"By the same token, just as the church is rightly held to exacting standards in this regard, all other institutions, without exception, should be held to the same standards," the pope said.

An official of a U.S. group advocating for victims of clergy abuse lamented that Benedict, with his remarks, was setting a "terrible example" for bishops.

"No public figure talks more about child safety but does little to actually make children safer than Pope Benedict," David Clohessy, national director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, told The Associated Press in an emailed statement.

"The pope would have us believe that this crisis is about sex abuse. It isn't. It is about covering up sex abuse," Clohessy said. "And while child sex crimes happen in every institution, in no institution are they ignored or concealed as consistently as in the Catholic church."

The pedophile scandal has exploded in recent decades in the United States, but similar clergy sex abuse revelations have tainted the church in many other countries, including Mexico, Ireland, and several other European nations, including Italy.

But the most high-profile sex abuse case in the United States at the moment doesn't involve the church. Penn State university's former defensive football coordinator Jerry Sandusky has been charged with sexually abusing eight boys, and the fallout has led to the firing of longtime coach Joe Paterno and the departure of university president Graham Spanier.

College football in the U.S. is highly popular. The scandal has shaken the reputation of a college program that long had prided itself on integrity.

An advocacy group for those who have been sexually abused cited the Penn State scandal in its scathing criticism of the pope.

"It takes hubris for Pope Benedict to tell his bishops that the Catholic Church has led in the fight against sexual abuse of children," said Kristine Ward, chair of the National Survivor Advocates Coalition. "Issuing self-satisfied pats on the back while children remain in danger only further diminishes the church's credibility and deepens the laryngitis in its moral voice."

"The church to this day, while waving a moral flag, hasn't even come close to the Penn State Board of Trustees response ? no bishop has been fired," Ward said in a statement.

Benedict didn't address accusations by many victims and their advocates that church leaders, including at the office in the Vatican that Benedict headed before becoming pontiff, systematically tried to cover up the scandals, and that they have rarely been held accountable for that.

Investigations, often by civil authorities, revealed that church hierarchy frequently transferred pedophile priests from one parish to another.

Benedict told the bishops that his papal pilgrimage to the United States in 2008 "was intended to encourage the Catholics of America in the wake of the scandal and disorientation caused by the sexual abuse crisis of recent decades."

Echoing sentiment he has expressed in occasional meetings with victims of the abuse on trips abroad, Benedict added: "I wish to acknowledge personally the suffering inflicted on the victims and the honest efforts made to ensure both the safety of our children and to deal appropriately and transparently with allegations as they arise."

Benedict seemed to be reflecting some churchmen's contentions that the church has wrongly been singled out as villains for the abuse, a view that angered victims' advocates.

"The pope is again setting a terrible example for the world's bishops, echoing the claim by some of them that the church hierarchy is somehow being picked on by the public, the press and their parishioners," Clohessy said .

Despite criticism over U.S. bishops' handling of the abuse scandals, Benedict exhorted the churchmen to be moral compasses for U.S. society. The bishops, in Rome for consultations with the pope that are scheduled every five years, were urged to speak out "humbly yet insistently in defense of moral truth."

Benedict lamented what he called efforts to stop the church from speaking out publicly.

Earlier this month, U.S. Roman Catholic bishops vowed to defend their religious liberty in the face of growing acceptance of gay marriage and what they called attempts by secularists to marginalize faith.

In Illinois, for example, government officials ceased working with Catholic charities on adoptions and foster-care placement because the religious agencies refuse to recognize a new civil union law. Illinois bishops are suing the state.

Bishops have also pressed federal officials for broader religious exception to U.S. President Barack Obama's health care overhaul, which mandates that private insurers to pay for contraception.

"Despite attempts to still the church's voice in the public square, many people of good will continue to look to her for wisdom, insight and sound guidance in this far-reaching crisis," Benedict said, citing what he called a "growing sense of dislocation and insecurity" in the face of economic woes.

But he acknowledged that some of the bishops' own flock are turning away from the church, which he blamed on effects of a "secularized culture." Many U.S. Catholics shun Sunday Mass attendance or disregard such Vatican positions against contraception and divorce.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/europe/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111126/ap_on_re_eu/eu_vatican_sex_abuse

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Arizona Border Fence Will Be Built, State Lawmakers Claim

By AMANDA LEE MYERS and JACQUES BILLEAUD, The Associated Press

PHOENIX -- Arizona is taking on immigration once again, with state lawmakers collecting donations from the public to put fencing along every inch of the state's porous Mexican border in a first-of-its-kind effort.

The idea came from state Sen. Steve Smith, a Republican who says that people from across the nation have donated about $255,000 to the project since July, when the state launched a fundraising website that urges visitors to "show the world the resolve and the can-do spirit of the American people."

Smith acknowledges he has a long way to go to make the fence a reality. The $255,000 collected will barely cover a half mile of fencing. Smith estimates that the total supplies alone will cost $34 million, or about $426,000 a mile. Much of the work is expected to be done by prisoners at 50 cents an hour.

The fence is Arizona's latest attempt to force a debate on whether the federal government is doing enough to stop undocumented immigration. Key provisions of the state's contentious immigration bill were suspended by a judge, and Gov. Jan Brewer is appealing to the U.S. Supreme Court to get them reinstated. Brewer also signed the fencing bill.

Critics of the private fence plan say the idea is a misguided, piecemeal approach to border issues that will prove to be ineffective and hugely expensive. They point to the billions of dollars spent by the federal government to build fencing that hasn't stopped undocumented immigration.

"You're going to get 50 yards of fencing, if that," says Alfredo Gutierrez, a former Democratic state senator and immigrant-rights advocate who ran for governor in 2002.

But Smith and other supporters don't care.

They say the federal government has done little to secure the border and that additional fencing will close gaps exploited by smugglers and undocumented immigrants. Even if the fence isn't completed, Smith and others believe the project will send a message to Washington.

They have found support for the idea from Border Patrol agents.

"I take my hat off to them," says George McCubbin, a Border Patrol agent in Casa Grande and president of the National Border Patrol Council, the agency's union. "I don't believe it's the state's responsibility, but by them attempting this, they will continue to have this problem brought out, and hopefully someone will take notice of it."

Although he praises the effort, McCubbin thinks building more border fencing is "a waste of time."

"A fence slows down traffic. It doesn't stop it," he says. "You need to put your money in effective resources that you know will work."

He believes the federal government needs to crack down on employers who hire undocumented immigrants, increase penalties against those caught in the country without documents, cut off social services for others and put more agents at the border.

The fence project is being overseen by the 15-member Joint Border Security Advisory Committee, comprised of lawmakers, state law enforcement officials and four sheriffs, including Maricopa County's Joe Arpaio. The committee meets once a month and will decide when and where to put up the new fencing and what construction firms win bids.

Wherever they put it ? private, state, or federal land ? they will need to get approval.

Smith is confident the state will comply, so he's focusing his efforts on private landowners. It isn't clear if the federal government will allow the fence on land it manages.

"In light of their doing nothing, I would hope they wouldn't want to deter a state from protecting its own border," he says.

The project's first priority is to build fences at busy border-crossing points. Other plans include constructing fences along the 80 miles of border where none currently exist.

The law also allows Arizona to enter an agreement with California, New Mexico and Texas to build fencing in those states, although there's no immediate plan to do that.

Fencing currently covers about 650 miles, or one-third, of the 2,000-mile U.S.-Mexico border. Nearly half sits in Arizona ? the busiest gateway for both undocumented immigrants and marijuana ? with the rest equally divided among California, New Mexico and Texas.

Existing border fencing varies in quality from simple barbed wire or vehicle barriers to carefully engineered, 18- to 30-foot-high fences.

On top of $2.5 billion spent by the federal government to build the fence, a government report projects it will cost another $6.5 billion over the next 20 years to maintain.

Smugglers often circumvent the barriers by cutting or driving through them, climbing over them, launching drugs with catapults over them, or digging tunnels under them. In the last week alone, two drug tunnels were found in Nogales in southeastern Arizona.

Despite the relatively low amount of money raised so far, Smith says work will begin sometime next year. One company has pledged to donate materials for a mile or two, another has promised to sell supplies at a discontinued rate, and some construction firms say they'll contribute free labor.

"Something will be in the ground by 2012," he says.

___

Online:

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/11/24/arizona-border-fence-mexico_n_1112053.html

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Friday, November 25, 2011

Lern2Play


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Lern2Playhttp://www.lern2play.com Lern2Play.com features a large MMORPG Forum with over 265,000 posts. Active MMORPG and MMO community and MMO Games Forums. Join now to talk about Lord of the Rings Online, World of Warcraft, Age of Conan, Star Wars Galaxies and more.enhttp://www.lern2play.com/images/lern2play/misc/rss.jpgLern2Playhttp://www.lern2play.com A Very Harold Kumar 3D Christmas 2011http://www.lern2play.com/movies-tv-and-music/122325-a-very-harold-kumar-3d-christmas-2011-a.html A Dangerous Method (2011) DVDRIP XViDhttp://www.lern2play.com/movies-tv-and-music/122324-a-dangerous-method-2011-dvdrip-xvid.html The Way (I) 2011http://www.lern2play.com/movies-tv-and-music/122323-the-way-i-2011-a.html <link/>http://www.lern2play.com/movies-tv-and-music/122322-madeas-big-happy-family-2011-eng-dvdrip-xvid-max-for-free.html <description/></item><item><title>The Muppets (2011) DVDRIP XViDhttp://www.lern2play.com/movies-tv-and-music/122321-the-muppets-2011-dvdrip-xvid.html The Lie (I) (2011) DVD ENG DVDRip HQ 1 Link NO RARhttp://www.lern2play.com/movies-tv-and-music/122320-the-lie-i-2011-dvd-eng-dvdrip-hq-1-link-no-rar.html Hugo (II) (2011) DVDRIP XViDhttp://www.lern2play.com/movies-tv-and-music/122319-hugo-ii-2011-dvdrip-xvid.html Friends With Benefits 2011 720p.BRRip.XviD.AC3-ViSiONhttp://www.lern2play.com/movies-tv-and-music/122318-friends-with-benefits-2011-720p-brrip-xvid-ac3-vision.html Tyrannosaur (2011) DVDRIP XViDhttp://www.lern2play.com/movies-tv-and-music/122317-tyrannosaur-2011-dvdrip-xvid.html Rascals (2011) DvDRip xvid-MAX for free 1 linkhttp://www.lern2play.com/movies-tv-and-music/122316-rascals-2011-dvdrip-xvid-max-for-free-1-link.html The Rum Diary (2011) DVD ENG DVDRip HQ 1 Link NO RARhttp://www.lern2play.com/movies-tv-and-music/122315-the-rum-diary-2011-dvd-eng-dvdrip-hq-1-link-no-rar.html Tocar y Luchar ,To Play and to Fight (2006) DvDRip xvidhttp://www.lern2play.com/movies-tv-and-music/122313-tocar-y-luchar-to-play-and-to-fight-2006-dvdrip-xvid.html Another Happy Day (2011) DVDRIP XViDhttp://www.lern2play.com/movies-tv-and-music/122314-another-happy-day-2011-dvdrip-xvid.html Happy Feet Two 2011http://www.lern2play.com/movies-tv-and-music/122312-happy-feet-two-2011-a.html The Descendants (2011) DVDRIP XViDhttp://www.lern2play.com/movies-tv-and-music/122311-the-descendants-2011-dvdrip-xvid.html

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Plane carrying 6 crashes in remote Ariz. mountains

Associated Press

A small plane carrying three adults and three children crashed in flames in the Superstition Mountains east of Phoenix on Wednesday night, leaving one child confirmed dead and no signs of survivors, authorities said.

Preliminary reports indicate the twin-engine plane flew from Safford to Mesa's Falcon Field to pick up three children for the Thanksgiving holiday and was headed back to Safford in southeastern Arizona, said Pinal County Sheriff Paul Babeu.

A pilot, a mechanic and another adult were also on board, Babeu said.

The children reportedly were between the ages of 5 and 9.

Calls to Falcon Field, which mostly serves small, private planes, weren't immediately returned Wednesday night.

Sheriff's spokesman Elias Johnson said the body of one child was recovered late Wednesday night from the crash scene.

Rescue personnel were using infrared devices to search for bodies, but had not been able to detect any sign of movement, according to Johnson.

PhotoBlog: Helicopter searchlight scours Superstition Mountains

"It does not look promising," Babeu said at a news conference. "We will search throughout the night."

Authorities started getting calls reporting a mushroom-like explosion near the peak of a mountain, 40 miles east of downtown Phoenix, at about 6:30 p.m. MST.

Flames could still be seen hours after the crash.

Burning mountain
Rescue crews flown in by helicopter to reach the crash site in rugged terrain reported finding two debris field on fire, suggesting that the plane broke apart on impact.

"The fuselage is stuck down into some of the crevices of this rough terrain, and we're doing our best at this point in the darkness," Babeu said. "This is not a flat area, this is jagged peaks, almost like a cliff-type rugged terrain."

Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Allen Kenitzer said the Rockwell AC-69 was registered to Ponderosa Aviation Inc. in Safford. A man who answered the phone Wednesday night at Ponderosa Aviation declined comment.

Some witnesses told Phoenix-area television stations they heard a plane trying to rev its engines to climb higher before apparently hitting the mountains. The elevation is about 5,000 feet at the Superstition Mountains' highest point.

Kenitzer said the FAA and National Transportation Safety Board would be investigating the cause of the crash.

Video showed several fires burning on the mountainside, where heavy brush is common.

The region near Lost Dutchman State Park and the Superstition Wilderness is filled with steep canyons, soaring rocky outcroppings and cactus. Treasure hunters who frequent the area have been looking for the legendary Lost Dutchman mine for more than a century.

Source: http://usnews.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/11/24/8990570-plane-carrying-6-crashes-in-remote-ariz-mountains

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Consulting firm sues Lionsgate over Kidman Oscar nomination (Reuters)

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) ? Can too much success be a bad thing? In the case of the critical acclaim received by the 2010 film "Rabbit Hole," perhaps so.

Lionsgate Films was slapped with a lawsuit in Los Angeles Superior Court this week by a consulting firm that claims it wasn't compensated for helping to secure "Rabbit Hole" star Nicole Kidman an Oscar nomination.

According to plaintiffs GBB Consulting, the company was retained by Lionsgate in August 2010 to provide "logistical services in support of Liongate's 2010 slate of theatrical releases with the goal and purpose of obtaining awards, including but not limited to Academy Awards."

The suit claims that it was to receive $12,000 a month through the end of February 2011, plus $5,000 for each major Academy Award nomination in the major categories, and $2,500 for any guild-related award nomination.

However, according to GBB, Lionsgate terminated the agreement in November 2010 for "financial reasons."

Kidman went on to score a Best Actress Oscar nomination and a SAG Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Leading Role for "Rabbit Hole." Now GBB wants what it claims it was promised for its services -- and then some.

In the suit, which alleges breach of contract, GBB is asking for $61,500 -- an amount that includes the allegedly agreed-upon fees from August 2010 through February 2011, plus the bonuses for the award nominations. The suit also seeks 10 percent annual interest, court costs and attorneys' fees.

The suit might be trying to wring blood from a stone -- despite whatever award nominations the film might have received, "Rabbit Hole" took in just $3.4 million worldwide on a $5 million budget, according to BoxOfficeMojo.com.

GBB Consulting and Lionsgate did not immediately respond to TheWrap's request for comment.

(Pamela Chelin contributed to this report)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/enindustry/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111123/media_nm/us_lionsgate

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Thursday, November 24, 2011

Woman disappears after "People's Court" argument airs (Reuters)

ORLANDO, Fla (Reuters) ? Hundreds of volunteers searched on Monday for a 33-year-old mother who disappeared the same day as the airing of an episode of "The People's Court" in which she and her ex-fiance argued over a $5,000 engagement ring.

Michelle Parker was last seen Thursday afternoon at about the same time the courtroom reality show aired on the local FOX-TV affiliate. Her car was found Friday, according to Orlando police Sgt. Jim Young.

Young said police are treating her disappearance as a missing person's case rather than a crime. Young said investigators have spoken to Parker's ex-fiance Dale Smith, and reviewed the episode of "The People's Court" during which Parker called her relationship with Smith "poison."

"That (the episode) is just one thing they're looking into. We're not ruling anything out," Young said.

In the episode, which FOX said was taped several months ago, Smith sued Parker for $5,000, the value of her engagement ring. Both agreed the ring was lost when Parker threw the ring at Smith on the 9th floor of an Atlanta hotel. The ring sailed off the atrium balcony and fell into about 500 conventioneers gathered below in the hotel lobby. Both Parker and Smith agreed they had been drinking and fighting to the point that police and hotel security intervened.

"My 14-year-old daughter has a more mature relationship with her boyfriend than you guys do," television judge Marilyn Milian told them.

Milian ruled that they were both at fault, and ordered Parker to reimburse Smith for $2,500, half the value of the ring. Parker told the TV host that she accepted half the blame, but Smith said he remained "a little upset."

Young said neither Smith nor any other person is considered a suspect in Parker's disappearance. He said Smith is taking care of the couple's 3-year-old twins. Parker also has an 11-year-old child from a different relationship, Young said.

Carol Wick, who heads an Orlando domestic abuse center, said victims of domestic abuse are at greatest danger when they stand up to their partners in court. Wick said their partners often become enraged when they feel they are losing control of the relationship.

"We would never recommend that a victim of domestic violence go on television and try their case in public. It's just not safe. If you've got someone who is very angry at you, you've got to be careful about bringing that out on national television," Wick said.

Parker's mother believes her daughter is being held against her will. Yvonne Stewart made a public plea Monday for her daughter's safe return.

"I know for a fact right now she is not dead. I know that she is alive. She is somewhere scared and I want her home. Somebody has her," Stewart said.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/tv/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111122/tv_nm/us_peoplescourt

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Samsung Galaxy Nexus gets 'opened'

Unlocked

It’s not “rooting,” it’s openness

-- Nick Kralevich, Android security engineer

There's a bit of brouhaha on the Internet today about the Samsung Galaxy Nexus being "rooted."  While I applaud the gentlemen who take the time to build binaries needed to flash the superuser/switchuser files to the GNexus, I think it's more important to re-visit something from the past.  Namely, you don't need to exploit a Nexus device to root it.  The tools to unlock the potential of a Nexus phone are included, so pushing new software that allows more access to the system isn't really a surprise.  Hopefully, someone can go further with this access and do something that does surprise us. 

Mr. O'Brien, I tip my hat to you for taking the time to build your superboot image.  Most users wouldn't take the time needed to learn how do it, and you've provided the easy path for them.  Now there's no excuse for anyone with a GNexus to not jump in feet first and see what Android can do when given the proper tools, and openness.

More: MoDaCo



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/yDosbVo5JM8/story01.htm

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Fired CEO of embattled Olympus returns to Japan (AP)

TOKYO ? Former Olympus Corp. Chief Executive Michael Woodford returned to Japan Wednesday for the first time since his firing last month triggered one of the biggest scandals to ever hit corporate Japan.

Woodford will meet with Japanese officials probing the camera and medical equipment maker after revelations it made a $687 million payment to an obscure Wall Street firm for financial advice.

His itinerary includes the Tokyo District Public Prosecutors Office, the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department and the Securities and Exchange Surveillance Commission, according to Kyodo News agency.

On Friday, the Briton will attend an Olympus board meeting to face the group that abruptly ousted him for questioning dubious past deals and fees. He remains a director at the company and can only be removed by shareholders.

The scandal has cast a harsh light on corporate governance in Japan, which has been repeatedly criticized as falling behind global standards. Recent media reports have also pointed to possible ties between Olympus and organized crime.

Woodford told the throngs of media gathered at Narita International that he is not afraid to be back in Japan and would press for answers during his stay.

"This isn't going to go away, the truth will come out," he said. "Please now have the dignity, at least the dignity, to accept that the game is up."

Woodford went public with his concerns after his sacking.

Olympus initially denied wrongdoing but eventually acknowledged that exorbitant payments for financial advice and expensive acquisitions were used to cover up heavy investment losses from the 1990s.

Tsuyoshi Kikukawa resigned as president on Oct. 26 and was replaced by Shuichi Takayama. The company blamed the accounting scheme on Kikukawa, former executive vice president Hisashi Mori and ex-auditor Hideo Yamada. It has established a third-party panel to conduct an inquiry.

Olympus now risks being delisted from the Tokyo Stock Exchange unless it can rectify past filings with regulators by reporting revised earnings by Dec. 14. The company's shares have plummeted 65 percent since the scandal broke in mid-October.

The issue surged 20 percent on Tuesday after the independent committee commissioned by Olympus issued a statement saying it has found no evidence so far linking any past acquisition funds to organized crime syndicates.

Woodford said a delisting is "the last thing I want" because it would hurt employees and shareholders, according to Kyodo.

He has scheduled a press conference Friday at the Foreign Correspondents' Club of Japan in Tokyo.

___

Follow Tomoko A. Hosaka on Twitter at http://twitter.com/tomokohosaka

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/japan/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111123/ap_on_bi_ge/as_japan_olympus

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Wednesday, November 23, 2011

FACT CHECK: Hyperbole on terror interrogations (The Arizona Republic)

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World Blog - High finance comes bearing gifts for Occupy London

Ian Johnston, msnbc.com editor

LONDON ??Like two?emissaries of capitalism on a sensitive diplomatic mission, they came to the Occupy London protest camp?bearing gifts: a bundle of free books each with a dollar bill inside, sparkling chocolate coins and a message?about how some within the world of corporate finance are ready to change.

Michael Mainelli. Occupy London, St. Paul's Cathedral. November 22 2011.

Professor Michael Mainelli and Ian Harris, co-founders of Z/Yen, a commercial think-tank?with "intimate links" to some of London's "oldest and largest" financial institutions, might have been?forgiven for feeling a little nervous.

After all, the Occupy movement was sparked at least in part by anger at the?role of banks in the world's current financial troubles.

But they were not there to defend their industry ? instead, they addressed a crowd of Occupiers in the shadow of St. Paul's Cathedral?to express their admiration for a movement that?was getting people talking about the need to reform the financial system.

"We want you to know there are a lot of people in the City who are thinking about the same things (as the Occupy protesters are) in a different way," the be-suited Mainelli told the audience of around 15 people in the so-called "Tent City University"?? a cluster of tents filled with books where protesters exchange their ideas.

"There is a group of people in the City, several thousands, who are interested in reform ... maybe not revolution," he added.

Mainelli and Harris also distributed an open letter to protesters, which asserted that "things in the world of finance worry us too."

"We care deeply," they wrote in the letter, acknowledging?that people are deeply uncertain about their?futures and the wisdom of their governments and economies.

"We believe in asking uncomfortable, impertinent questions in search of pertinent and permanent answers," they said. "Naturally we applaud others, like yourself, who care deeply enough about these vital issues to insist firmly on debating them."

However, Mainelli?made a point of saying on Tuesday,?"I'm not going to be down here sleeping with you."

Financial model 'unsustainable'
Inside?a large canvas tent, protesters sat on old sofas and cushions on the floor?as?Mainelli and Harris handed out copies of their book, "The Price of Fish: A New Approach to Wicked Economics and Better Decisions."?They said it was?"a gift and contribution to the worthwhile debate you have initiated."

The title of the book, which was published last week, comes from the apparent inability to come up with an accurate price for fish,?Mainelli explained. Had this been done, the book argues, the Grand Banks of Newfoundland and other fishing grounds would not have been over-exploited.

The books came with dollar bills inside. Mainelli and Harris also?handed out chocolate coins wrapped in golden foil.

But not everyone in the crowd seemed convinced. Suspicion of authorities is commonplace in the camp?and,?from the Occupiers'?point of view, it is?warranted: the?City of London Corporation is planning?to take the protesters to court Wednesday, seeking to evict them.

One listener, a bald-headed man sitting toward?the back of the?tent,?commented that "people in positions of power" appeared to "feel so secure in their military might that they can suppress any dissent."

"How do we convince them it's not in their interest to put themselves against the whole of the planet?" he asked.

Referring to the charging of interest on loans the man added, "Your whole system (of finance) ... has got something at the root of it which is fundamentally injust."

Harris responded, saying?this was?"not necessarily the way finance has to be."

"There's no question in my mind that Western humanity has progressed on the back of that type of financial institution," he said, but added: "We would question whether the fundamental elements (of the system) are sustainable."

Katherine Stanley. Occupy London, St. Paul's Cathedral. November 22 2011.

"Should there be interest at all? Does the notion of interest mean necessarily that wealth accumulates in greater and greater quantities to the few?" Harris wondered.

He said?there was talk?among London's financial institutions about Islamic?Sharia finance, and?noted that Christianity and Judaism also reject the charging of?interest on money.

But could the financial system really exist without the widespread practice of charging interest on loans?

Mainelli said the idea was far from fanciful. "Extremely senior people"?at large institutions "are actually really, really trying to ponder how we would rebuild [the financial system]," he told msnbc.com after the meeting.

Harris also?pointed out that most state banks had reduced interest rates to nearly zero and with inflation greater than interest,?those with savings were effectively losing money.

Third World War?
Protester Katherine Stanley, 49, of London but originally from Canada,?saw hope?in Mainelli's approach to the protesters.

"I think it's fantastic actually. He has some very good ideas about the economy ... it's a good thing he gets the ear of people who can actually make change," she told msnbc.com, expressing the hope that Mainelli or someone like him would convince?those in the corridors of power.

For her part, Stanley said?she goes?to the Tent City University?to support the movement and hear new arguments that might?convert more ordinary people to the cause.?

"People who aren't involved get to hear me talk about it whether they want to or not," she said.

John McCafferty. Occupy London, St. Paul's Cathedral. November 22 2011.

Her 17-year-old son, she admitted, is among the skeptics of the Occupy movement.

"He listens to my stories and I bring him down occasionally," she said. "He tolerates it. He's not a fan of it, but who really wants their mother to be doing crazy stuff like this?"

Another in the audience, John McCafferty, 59, saw little chance for real change without major conflict.

McCafferty,?a carpenter, said he?became homeless last year after work dried up in the recession.?He said he was "now reduced" to?playing his guitar on the street for money.

"If we continue on our own present path, we are going direct into a Third World War," McCafferty said. "... I suspect we are heading towards a Third World War, I think that's where we are going and when the dust settles ... the hopes and aspirations of people here may be fulfilled."

Source: http://worldblog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/11/23/8952170-high-finance-comes-bearing-gifts-for-occupy-london

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A Walkable Roller Coaster for the Coaster-phobic, and More from TreeHugger [EcoModo]

This week on TreeHugger, a giant robotic snake teaches us a lesson about climate change, a walkable roller coaster, new iPhone apps to try, and more! More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/-7_tw0KA8-4/a-walkable-roller-coaster-for-the-coaster+phobic-and-more-from-treehugger

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