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Topics - Bakes

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61
General Discussion / 200 Countries, 200 years, 4 minutes
« on: December 14, 2010, 08:10:37 PM »
An animated look at global advancement over the past 200 yrs.


<a href="http://www.youtube.com/v/jbkSRLYSojo" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">http://www.youtube.com/v/jbkSRLYSojo</a>


If you have a couple minutes check this out, it's an interesting look at where the world was 200 yrs ago compared to now, and how some countries have fared in terms of health and poverty over the course of that period.

62
4-Year-Old Can Be Sued, Judge Rules in Bike Case

By ALAN FEUER

Citing cases dating back as far as 1928, a judge has ruled that a young girl accused of running down an elderly woman while racing a bicycle with training wheels on a Manhattan sidewalk two years ago can be sued for negligence.

The ruling by the judge, Justice Paul Wooten of State Supreme Court in Manhattan, did not find that the girl was liable, but merely permitted a lawsuit brought against her, another boy and their parents to move forward.

The suit that Justice Wooten allowed to proceed claims that in April 2009, Juliet Breitman and Jacob Kohn, who were both 4, were racing their bicycles, under the supervision of their mothers, Dana Breitman and Rachel Kohn, on the sidewalk of a building on East 52nd Street. At some point in the race, they struck an 87-year-old woman named Claire Menagh, who was walking in front of the building and, according to the complaint, was “seriously and severely injured,” suffering a hip fracture that required surgery. She died three months later of unrelated causes.

Her estate sued the children and their mothers, claiming they had acted negligently during the accident. In a response, Juliet’s lawyer, James P. Tyrie, argued that the girl was not “engaged in an adult activity” at the time of the accident — “She was riding her bicycle with training wheels under the supervision of her mother” — and was too young to be held liable for negligence.

In legal papers, Mr. Tyrie added, “Courts have held that an infant under the age of 4 is conclusively presumed to be incapable of negligence.” (Rachel and Jacob Kohn did not seek to dismiss the case against them.)

But Justice Wooten declined to stretch that rule to children over 4. On Oct. 1, he rejected a motion to dismiss the case because of Juliet’s age, noting that she was three months shy of turning 5 when Ms. Menagh was struck, and thus old enough to be sued.

Mr. Tyrie “correctly notes that infants under the age of 4 are conclusively presumed incapable of negligence,” Justice Wooten wrote in his decision, referring to the 1928 case. “Juliet Breitman, however, was over the age of 4 at the time of the subject incident. For infants above the age of 4, there is no bright-line rule.”

The New York Law Journal reported the decision on Thursday.

Mr. Tyrie had also argued that Juliet should not be held liable because her mother was present; Justice Wooten disagreed.

“A parent’s presence alone does not give a reasonable child carte blanche to engage in risky behavior such as running across a street,” the judge wrote. He added that any “reasonably prudent child,” who presumably has been told to look both ways before crossing a street, should know that dashing out without looking is dangerous, with or without a parent there. The crucial factor is whether the parent encourages the risky behavior; if so, the child should not be held accountable.

In Ms. Menagh’s case, however, there was nothing to indicate that Juliet’s mother “had any active role in the alleged incident, only that the mother was ‘supervising,’ a term that is too vague to hold meaning here,” he wrote. He concluded that there was no evidence of Juliet’s “lack of intelligence or maturity” or anything to “indicate that another child of similar age and capacity under the circumstances could not have reasonably appreciated the danger of riding a bicycle into an elderly woman.”

Mr. Tyrie, Dana Breitman and Rachel Kohn did not respond to messages seeking comment.

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: October 30, 2010


An article in some editions on Friday about a lawsuit that claims an elderly woman was severely injured by two 4-year-olds racing their bicycles on a Manhattan sidewalk misstated the timing of the woman’s death. The woman, Claire Menagh, died of unrelated causes three months after she was struck, not three weeks.
Close


http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/29/nyregion/29young.html?_r=1&src=me&ref=general

63
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/v/zDZFcDGpL4U&amp;feature=player_embedded" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">http://www.youtube.com/v/zDZFcDGpL4U&amp;feature=player_embedded</a>


Interesting animated presentation of an earlier speech by Sir Ken Robinson.

64
Entertainment & Culture Discussion / Montserrat Franco feat. Terra B
« on: September 19, 2010, 11:37:23 AM »
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/v/8SgHLybrFNM&amp;feature=related" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">http://www.youtube.com/v/8SgHLybrFNM&amp;feature=related</a>

I like this... glad to see Terra B still doing he thing.  He's Brigo son, had a song years ago called "Ah Coming Home"

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/v/mXNrnIky-9o" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">http://www.youtube.com/v/mXNrnIky-9o</a>

65
Entertainment & Culture Discussion / Sesshoumarou... Trickster
« on: September 13, 2010, 12:15:33 AM »
Tricking


<a href="http://www.youtube.com/v/5NNxZ3svIs8" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">http://www.youtube.com/v/5NNxZ3svIs8</a>



Some of the sickest sh*t you will ever see.  The move at 1:10 is simply mindblowing.

66
So I watching some Fox Soccer Channel show or the other and Susan Sarandon was on it.  She mentioned this and I just had to look it up... the octopus grabs the camera and swims off with the vid still running.  The fella swims after it and essentially trades his spear gun to get his camera back... pretty cool stuff.

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/v/x5DyBkYKqnM" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">http://www.youtube.com/v/x5DyBkYKqnM</a>


Maybe is juss me find it fascinating though... I love Octopus (Octopusses... Octopi?)... incredibly smart creatures.

67
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/v/SncapPrTusA&amp;feature=related" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">http://www.youtube.com/v/SncapPrTusA&amp;feature=related</a>



Sick... the Dragon playing Ping Pong with nunchuks, then later show pin point accuracy by striking matches with the nunchuks.

68
Trinbago, NBA & World Basketball / 2010 FIBA World Championships
« on: August 23, 2010, 06:38:06 PM »
Anybody following developments, especially the brawl between Greece and Serbia on Sunday?  Nenad Krstic of the Oklahoma City Thunder pull ah real bitch move by trying tuh ress some cuff on Sofoklis "Baby Shaq" Schorsanitis of Greece's back.  Baby Shaq turn around and start to go after him, Krstic beat ah hasty retreat and when people get between dem, say he picking up ah chair to pelt it at Baby Shaq. He end up bussing ah next Greek player head and police in Turkey lock him up overnight fuh he troubles.  FIBA weighing a suspension, watch them pull ah David Stern and come down hard, b/c they know the eyes of the world on them and want to keep up appearances that they like the NBA.
 
Here's the vid:

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/v/T_wadUTZXCo&amp;feature=related" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">http://www.youtube.com/v/T_wadUTZXCo&amp;feature=related</a>



Anyways, here's the link to the site for the Games http://turkey2010.fiba.com/eng, and the ESPN TV Schedule.  The opener is set for Saturday.


The ESPN schedule:

Saturday, Aug 28 (noon): Croatia vs. U.S., ESPN Classic
Sunday, Aug 29 (9:30 a.m.): U.S. vs. Slovenia, ESPN2
Monday, Aug 30 (2:30 p.m.): Brazil vs. U.S., ESPN
Wednesday, Sept 1 (noon): U.S. vs. vs. Iran, ESPN
Thursday, Sept 2 (9:30 a.m.): Tunisia vs. U.S., ESPN2
Sunday, Sept. 5 or Monday, Sept 6 (11 a.m. or 2 p.m.): U.S. vs. TBD (eighth-round telecast date/time contingent upon U.S. performance in the preliminary round), ESPN Classic or ESPN2
Wednesday, Sept. 8, or Thursday, Sept 9 (11 a.m. or 2 p.m.): U.S. vs. TBD (quarterfinal telecast date/time contingent upon U.S. performance in the preliminary round), ESPN Classic
Saturday, Sept 11 (noon): First semifinal, ESPN Classic
(2:30 p.m.) Second semifinal, ESPN Classic
Sunday, Sept 12 (noon): Third-place game, ESPN Classic
(2:30 p.m.): Championship game, ESPN

69
General Discussion / Venezuela Deadlier than Baghdad- Murder rate soars
« on: August 23, 2010, 11:29:53 AM »
August 22, 2010

Venezuela, More Deadly Than Iraq, Wonders Why

By SIMON ROMERO



CARACAS, Venezuela — Some here joke that they might be safer if they lived in Baghdad. The numbers bear them out.

In Iraq, a country with about the same population as Venezuela, there were 4,644 civilian deaths from violence in 2009, according to Iraq Body Count; in Venezuela that year, the number of murders climbed above 16,000.

Even Mexico’s infamous drug war has claimed fewer lives.

Venezuelans have absorbed such grim statistics for years. Those with means have hidden their homes behind walls and hired foreign security experts to advise them on how to avoid kidnappings and killings. And rich and poor alike have resigned themselves to living with a murder rate that the opposition says remains low on the list of the government’s priorities.

Then a front-page photograph in a leading independent newspaper — and the government’s reaction — shocked the nation, and rekindled public debate over violent crime.

The photo in the paper, El Nacional, is unquestionably gory. It shows a dozen homicide victims strewn about the city’s largest morgue, just a sample of an unusually anarchic two-day stretch in this already perilous place.



While many Venezuelans saw the picture as a sober reminder of their vulnerability and a chance to effect change, the government took a different stand.

A court ordered the paper to stop publishing images of violence, as if that would quiet growing questions about why the government — despite proclaiming a revolution that heralds socialist values — has been unable to close the dangerous gap between rich and poor and make the country’s streets safer.

“Forget the hundreds of children who die from stray bullets, or the kids who go through the horror of seeing their parents or older siblings killed before their eyes,” said Teodoro Petkoff, the editor of another newspaper here, mocking the court’s decision in a front-page editorial. “Their problem is the photograph.”

Venezuela is struggling with a decade-long surge in homicides, with about 118,541 since President Hugo Chávez took office in 1999, according to the Venezuelan Violence Observatory, a group that compiles figures based on police files. (The government has stopped publicly releasing its own detailed homicide statistics, but has not disputed the group’s numbers, and news reports citing unreleased government figures suggest human rights groups may actually be undercounting murders).

There have been 43,792 homicides in Venezuela since 2007, according to the violence observatory, compared with about 28,000 deaths from drug-related violence in Mexico since that country’s assault on cartels began in late 2006.

Caracas itself is almost unrivaled among large cities in the Americas for its homicide rate, which currently stands at around 200 per 100,000 inhabitants, according to Roberto Briceño-León, the sociologist at the Central University of Venezuela who directs the violence observatory.

That compares with recent measures of 22.7 per 100,000 people in Bogotá, Colombia’s capital, and 14 per 100,000 in São Paulo, Brazil’s largest city. As Mr. Chávez’s government often points out, Venezuela’s crime problem did not emerge overnight, and the concern over murders preceded his rise to power.

But scholars here describe the climb in homicides in the past decade as unprecedented in Venezuelan history; the number of homicides last year was more than three times higher than when Mr. Chávez was elected in 1998.

Reasons for the surge are complex and varied, experts say. While many Latin American economies are growing fast, Venezuela’s has continued to shrink. The gap between rich and poor remains wide, despite spending on anti-poverty programs, fueling resentment. Adding to that, the nation is awash in millions of illegal firearms.

Police salaries remain low, sapping motivation. And in a country with the highest inflation rate in the hemisphere, more than 30 percent a year, some officers have turned to supplementing their incomes with crimes like kidnappings.

But some crime specialists say another factor has to be considered: Mr. Chávez’s government itself. The judicial system has grown increasingly politicized, losing independent judges and aligning itself more closely with Mr. Chávez’s political movement. Many experienced state employees have had to leave public service, or even the country.

More than 90 percent of murders go unsolved, without a single arrest, Mr. Briceño-León said. But cases against Mr. Chavez’s critics — including judges, dissident generals and media executives — are increasingly common.

Henrique Capriles, the governor of Miranda, a state encompassing parts of Caracas, told reporters last week that Mr. Chávez had worsened the homicide problem by cutting money for state and city governments led by political opponents and then removing thousands of guns from their police forces after losing regional elections.

But the government says it is trying to address the problem. It recently created a security force, the Bolivarian National Police, and a new Experimental Security University where police recruits get training from advisers from Cuba and Nicaragua, two allies that have historically maintained murder rates among Latin America’s lowest.

The national police’s overriding priority, said Víctor Díaz, a senior official on the force and an administrator at the new university, is “unrestricted respect for human rights.”

“I’m not saying we’ll be weak,” he said, “but the idea is to use dialogue and dissuasion as methods of verbal control when approaching problems.”

Senior officials in Mr. Chávez’s government say the deployment of the national police, whose ranks number fewer than 2,500, has succeeded in reducing homicides in at least one violent area of Caracas where they began patrolling this year.

Still, human rights groups suggest the new policing efforts have been far too timid. Incosec, a research group here that focuses on security issues, counted 5,962 homicides in just 10 of Venezuela’s 23 states in the first half of this year.

Meanwhile, the debate over the morgue photograph published by El Nacional is intensifying, evolving into a broader discussion over the government’s efforts to clamp down on the news outlets it does not control.

The government says the photograph was meant to undermine it, not to inform the public. The authorities are also threatening an inquiry into “Rotten Town,” a video by a Venezuelan reggae singer that shows an innocent child struck down by a stray bullet (see below). For all the government’s protests, the video has spread rapidly across the Internet since its release here this month.

Given the government’s stance in these cases, many here worry it is focusing on the messenger, not the underlying message.

Hector Olivares, 47, waited outside the morgue early one morning this month to recover the body of his son, also named Hector, 21. He said his son was at a party in the slum of El Cercado, on the outskirts of Caracas, when a gunman opened fire.

Mr. Olivares said Hector was the second son he had lost in a senseless murder, after another son was killed four years ago at the age of 22. He said he did not blame Mr. Chávez for the killings, but he pleaded with the president to make combating crime a higher priority.

“We elected him to crack down on the problems we face,” he said. “But there’s no control of criminals on the street, no control of anything.”


María Eugenia Díaz contributed reporting.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/23/world/americas/23venez.html?hp

<a href="http://www.youtube.com/v/ZJghFHPNjAE" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">http://www.youtube.com/v/ZJghFHPNjAE</a>

70
Entertainment & Culture Discussion / Don't play in traffic...
« on: August 16, 2010, 09:57:01 PM »
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/v/AeoOR_NWHyo&amp;feature=player_embedded" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">http://www.youtube.com/v/AeoOR_NWHyo&amp;feature=player_embedded</a>

71
General Discussion / Americans Up in Arms over Muslim 'Miss America'
« on: August 11, 2010, 11:32:57 AM »
Miss USA and Prince of Persia Movie Release –
Coincidence or Muslim/Gay Agenda?




Mon, May 17, 2010

Last night my sons and I broke into tears when we the saw the winner of the Miss USA pageant.  My precious boy Hunter, with tears streaming down his face, said, “Why are we letting Muslim freedom haters take over good Christian TV?”  I had to explain in America that you are free to be whatever religion you want to, even if it is wrong and you go to hell for it.

It looks like the Muslims are taking over Hollywood and television in their attempt to infiltrate our great nation.  I try to watch the Miss USA pageant every year so that my boys can learn what to look for in a good American woman.  Boy, were we surprised.  The pageant has been going downhill over the years, with all the different colors mixing together.  Now, I’m not racist, but what happened to all the blond haired blue eyed respectable Christian ladies in bikinis? As my other son Scout pointed out, “I bet they don’t even check the other people’s paperwork to make sure they are legals.  Border jumpers are probably trying to steal away Miss America  just like they are doing with our jobs.  Who would ever want to be Miss Mexican?”  He is very bright for his age.  But it wasn’t the illegal Mexicans that we had to worry about this year.  It was the Muslims, and they aren’t even being subtle about it!

The winner of the pageant was named Rima Fakih.  What!?  Have we all gone crazy?  That’s not even an American name!  That’s not even a black person’s name.  It is obviously a Muslim name.  Now they are trying to play up her back story like she is an American (like we can’t see what she looks like).  So what if she was born here, just look at her name.  She obviously hates America, if she didn’t she would have changed her name to Jane or Sarah. They are claiming that she grew up in Michigan and sold her Ford to enter the pageant.  Right, someone from Michigan selling a Ford!  No true American from Michigan would ever sell their Ford.  What did she do, go buy a Honda, or some dang hybrid?  Oh, and they claimed because she wanted to go out for pizza after the pageant, that makes her American.  Hello!  Pizza is Italian!  Italy is part of the socialist European union, how is that at all American?  Who are these people writing this stuff!

Now the plot only gets more sinister.  She is Lebanese.  And as far as I understand, that’s the liberal “politically correct” way of saying lesbian.  So the gay agenda has teamed up with the Muslim agenda. This is a scary time for America, as the people who hate our Christian American freedom are teaming up to destroy us.  When they are done, we will all be gay and brown.


Jake Gyllenhaal purposely tempting straight boys into turning gay! How can any straight man resist, it is unfair to Christian America!
What is scarier than a gay Muslim Miss America?  The fact that during the pageant they played advertisements for the new movie “Prince of Persia”.  My son Hunter turned to me during that commercial and asked, “Where is Persia?”  I promptly told him it was made up place, or somewhere near Las Vegas, because of all the sand in the movie ad.  Boy, was I wrong.  My son fired up America Online and found the real answer.  Apparently, Persia is Iran!  Those sneaky Muslims.  They are trying to get young people to watch a movie about a Muslim hero.  And a gay one at that.  Why else would he be called Prince?  Prince in American means gay.  Just listen to Purple Rain. The movie has hunky Jake Gyllenhaal parading around showing off his sexy chest, but there is no beautiful blond-haired ample breasted leading woman.  It’s just some Persian woman.  What are my kids supposed to do, stare at sexy Jake Gyllenhaal during the whole movie?  The Muslims are trying to turn my children gay!

The gays and Muslims have teamed up and are now controlling Hollywood and good Christian television.  We need to stand up and fight against the people who hate freedom and straight people!

http://tinfoiler.com/2010/05/17/arab-miss-usa-and-prince-of-persia-movie-release-coincidence-or-muslimgay-agenda/

72
Jokes / The Creation of Tax Law
« on: July 25, 2010, 01:55:47 PM »
In the beginning was the Act, then the Regulations and interpretations.  And the Act was without form and the interpretations were void.  And darkness was upon the faces of the taxpayers.  And they spoke unto a member of the Revenue Service saying, “It is a crock of shit and it stinketh.”

And the member of the Revenue Service went to his Manager saying, “It is a crock of excrement, and none may abide by its odor.”

And the manager went to the General Director saying, “It is a container of excrement, and it is very strong, such that all are stunned by it.”

And the General Director went before the member of Congress saying, “It is a vessel of fertilizer and none may stand before its strength.”

And the member of Congress went before the Joint Committee saying, “It contains that which aids plant growth, and is very strong.”

And the Joint Committee went before the House of Representatives and Senate saying, “It promotes growth and is powerful.”

And the House of Representatives and Senate went before the President saying, “This powerful new law will promote employment and reduce the deficit.”

And the President looked upon the law and said that it was good.

And so it was written.

73
Football / AC Milan v. DC United
« on: May 26, 2010, 06:06:05 PM »
About to begin on Comcast Sports Network- Channel 642 on DirecTV (US).

Seems a weird time for an international club friendly... MLS in the middle of its season still; Milan's season ended just a couple weeks ago; many stars away on international duty... of course Ronaldihno playing  :D

Would expect this match in August or something... after the World Cup.

74
Other Sports / French Open time...
« on: May 24, 2010, 04:04:40 PM »
Have to admit, one of the happiest time of the year for me is when the Grand Slams start b/c it means summer is here.  I'm not a huge Tennis fan, but like it enough to follow the French, Australian and U.S. Open in particular.

Hopefully Monfils or Tsongas do something at the French this year... and that the Williams sisters stand up and take back dey crown.

75
Entertainment & Culture Discussion / Steve Nash "Training Day" video
« on: December 26, 2009, 11:25:00 AM »
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/v/8VwiRnQ0M4M&amp;feature=player_embedded" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">http://www.youtube.com/v/8VwiRnQ0M4M&amp;feature=player_embedded</a>

77
December 13, 2009, 3:41 pm
 
Video of Attack on Berlusconi in Milan

By ROBERT MACKEY

Updated | 6:45 p.m. Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi was struck in the face after a political rally in Milan on Sunday and rushed from the scene with blood on his face.

Video of the attack soon surfaced, since Mr. Berlusconi was surrounded by television cameras as he left the rally.

Initially The Associated Press reported that Mr. Berlusconi, who is 73, was hit by “by a man holding a small statue in his hand.” Soon after the incident a report from the Italian state broadcaster RAI said the attacker may have struck the prime minister with a miniature reproduction of the Duomo, the city’s cathedral, which is near the spot where Mr. Berlusconi was signing autographs when he was attacked.

Earlier on Sunday, Britain’s Channel 4 News published this raw video, which shows a brief glimpse of Mr. Berlusconi seconds before the attack — which apparently took place just as the camera panned away to the right — and then in the chaos after he was struck:

The Italian newspaper La Repubblica reported that a 42-year-old man who was immediately detained after the attack, Massimo Tartaglia, has no criminal record but has been treated for mental problems for a decade. La Repubblica’s article was illustrated by a photograph of Mr. Tartaglia being restrained after the attack. The same man seems to appear in the video above, about 20 seconds into the clip.

Soon after he was bundled into his car, Mr. Berlusconi briefly reappeared, standing and looking back at the crowd, perhaps to show that he was not badly injured.

According to The Associated Press, police officials “said the premier was conscious and apparently not badly injured.” Mr. Berlusconi’s spokesman said that doctors at San Raffaele hospital in Milan had decided to keep the prime minister there overnight for observation.

http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/12/13/video-of-berlusconi-after-attack-in-milan/?pagemode=print

78
Other Sports / Rio de Janeiro has been awarded the 2016 Summer Olympics!!
« on: October 02, 2009, 10:54:58 AM »
http://msn.foxsports.com/olympics/story/10154098/Chicago-loses-in-bid-to-host-2016-Olympics

World Cup for Brasil in 2014... Rio to host the summer games in 2016.  Niceness ontop of niceness.

God-willing I'll be there for both.

80
General Discussion / Justice Souter to leave Supreme Court in June
« on: May 01, 2009, 01:42:07 AM »
May 1, 2009
Souter Said to Be Leaving Court in June



By PETER BAKER and JEFF ZELENY

WASHINGTON — Justice David H. Souter plans to retire at the end of the term in June, giving President Obama his first appointment to the Supreme Court, four people informed about the decision said Thursday night.

Justice Souter, who was appointed in 1990 by a Republican president, the first George Bush, but became one of the most reliable members of the court’s liberal wing, has grown increasingly sour on Washington and intends to return to his home state, New Hampshire, according to the people briefed on his plans. One official said the decision might be announced as early as Friday.

The departure will open the first seat for a Democratic president to fill in 15 years and could prove a test of Mr. Obama’s plans for reshaping the nation’s judiciary. Confirmation battles for the Supreme Court in recent years have proved to be intensely partisan and divisive moments in Washington, but Mr. Obama has more leeway than his predecessors because his party holds such a strong majority in the Senate.

Replacing Justice Souter with a liberal would not change the basic makeup of the court, where he and three other justices hold down the left wing against a conservative caucus of four justices. Justice Anthony Kennedy, a moderate Republican appointee, often provides the swing vote that controls important decisions.

White House officials contacted Thursday night declined to comment. But Mr. Obama and his team have been thinking for a long time about whom he might put on the court. Among the people whose names have been floated in recent months are Elena Kagan, whom Mr. Obama named as his solicitor general, and two federal appeals court judges, Sonia Sotomayor and Diana Pamela Wood.

Justice Souter, 69, has been the subject of intense speculation in recent weeks because his discontent in Washington has been no secret. He was the only justice who had not hired clerks for the fall term.

Friends said Thursday evening that he had often spoken of his intentions to be the court’s first retirement if Mr. Obama won the election last fall. He told friends he looked forward to returning to New Hampshire while he was young enough to enjoy climbing mountains and other outdoor activities.

One senior administration official said Mr. Obama’s aides had gotten a hint of Mr. Souter’s plans, which were first reported by National Public Radio. “He indicated he may a while ago,” the official said. But many senior officials contacted Thursday night said they had not yet been informed.

Mr. Obama is getting his first court opening early in his tenure. President George W. Bush had no seats to fill until deep into his second term, when he appointed Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. and Justice Samuel A. Alito Jr., bolstering the conservative side of the court.

While Democrats will be happy to have a chance to put another liberal on the court, a confirmation battle could prove to be one more challenge for a president already engaged on multiple fronts to pass health care, energy and other legislation. Mr. Obama would need to name a nominee early enough for the Senate to hold hearings and vote by the beginning of October to fill the seat in time for the next term.

During a campaign debate last fall, Mr. Obama said the selection of a new justice would be “one of the most consequential decisions of the next president.” He said he would look for judges who had a strong judicial record and “who hopefully have a sense of what real-world folks are going through.”

On the always explosive issue of abortion, he said he would “not provide a litmus test,” but added, “I am somebody who believes that Roe versus wade was rightly decided.”

Justice Souter was confirmed as the 105th justice on Oct. 2, 1990. He replaced Justice William J. Brennan Jr., the court’s liberal leader, who abruptly retired on July 20, 1990, at age 84 after suffering a stroke.

The nominee was little known even in Washington legal circles when the president introduced him to the country. He was a 50-year-old Harvard Law School graduate and former Rhodes scholar who had been confirmed to a federal judgeship only two months earlier and had barely moved into his chambers at the federal appeals court in Boston. For 12 years before that, he had been a state judge in New Hampshire.

Mr. Souter became a favorite of liberals during his tenure and a source of enormous frustration to conservatives who believe he betrayed them.

During his confirmation hearing, Judge Souter said that he had no agenda on abortion and that he had not made a decision on how he would vote if the issue of Roe v. Wade was put before him.

A major abortion case, Planned Parenthood v. Casey, arrived at the court in his second term and was argued on April 22, 1992. It was widely expected that Roe would be formally or functionally overturned because by then another abortion rights supporter, Justice Thurgood Marshall, had retired, and he was replaced by Justice Clarence Thomas.

But the result was just the opposite. Justice Souter, joined by two other Republican-appointed justices, Sandra Day O’Connor and Anthony M. Kennedy, who had earlier both expressed strong doubts about Roe, collaborated to produce a highly unusual joint opinion that reaffirmed the constitutional right to abortion. With Justices Harry A. Blackmun and John Paul Stevens joining the central parts of the joint opinion, the vote was 5 to 4.

Justice Souter was in the minority, and a bitter dissenter, in the case of Bush v. Gore, the 5-to-4 decision that ended the disputed Florida recount in the 2000 presidential election and effectively declared George W. Bush the winner.

“There is no justification for denying the state the opportunity to try to count all disputed ballots now,” he wrote.

Senator Patrick J. Leahy, Democrat of Vermont and the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, praised the justice on Thursday night. “Justice Souter is a first-rate legal talent,” Mr. Leahy said, “and I am very proud of him.”

Jim Rutenberg and Adam Nagourney contributed reporting.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/01/us/01souter.html?hp

81
Gunman holds hostages on plane in Jamaica: report

Reuters
Monday, April 20, 2009 2:28 AM



WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A gunman was holding five crew members and two passengers hostage on an airplane in Montego Bay, Jamaica, on Monday after 167 passengers were released, CNN reported, quoting a Radio Jamaica reporter.

The Radio Jamaica reporter said a shot had been fired, but no one was hit on the Halifax, Nova Scotia-bound CanJet charter flight at Sangster International Airport. Negotiations were under way, according to the report.

Media reports said the suspect breached airport security with false identification and boarded the plane as it was getting ready to take off about 10:30 p.m. local time (0330 GMT Monday).

it was unclear what the gunman's demands were.

© 2009 Reuters

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/04/20/AR2009042000110.html?hpid=moreheadlines

-----------------

(CNN) -- A hostage-taker released all but two passengers and five crew members early Monday from a charter plane at a Jamaican airport, officials said.

Police had the plane surrounded and were negotiating with the hostage-taker. It was not immediately known what the man's demands were.

Passengers were boarding the CanJet flight at Sangster International Airport in Montego Bay late Sunday when the man took an undisclosed number of them hostage, said Elizabeth Scotton, a spokeswoman for the company managing the airport.

About 150 people were scheduled to be on the flight, said Jamaican police Lt. Col. Derek Robinson, and it was not known how many were on the plane.

A passenger, Brenda Grenier, called her husband and said a man apparently had sneaked aboard the plane and had taken hostages. Grenier and her daughter were safe, her husband said by phone from his home in Nova Scotia, Canada.

http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/americas/04/20/jamaica.security/index.html


82
Entertainment & Culture Discussion / Support your local skrippers...
« on: April 15, 2009, 09:07:47 PM »
Wonder if dey'll ban de French judge from de skripper pole competition too...

http://www.worldstarhiphop.com/videos/video.php?v=wshh0t9ZB042QATPe8Dw


<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch/v/1PUppAaLCCs&amp;feature=player_embedded" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">http://www.youtube.com/watch/v/1PUppAaLCCs&amp;feature=player_embedded</a>


http://www.worldstarhiphop.com/videos/video.php?v=wshh1RH4e36yg9nn1q9w

Sign de petition

83
Football / ESPN to host UEFA Viewing parties for fans
« on: April 12, 2009, 10:43:12 PM »
April 12, 2009, 5:55 pm

Party Over for ESPN? Not So Fast

By Jack Bell
For ESPN, it’s only a precious few more match days in the UEFA Champions League, so, hey, let’s party.

The network’s 15-year run will end with this season’s final from Rome on May 27. After that, Champions League games next season will be seen across a number of Fox channels, including FSC, FX and the Fox Sports Net.

So in a nod to fans who have watched the world’s premier club tournament on ESPN/ESPN2 and its broadband service ESPN360, your friends at 360 in Bristol, Conn., will host viewing parties of the second-leg quarterfinals matches on Tuesday (Chelsea vs. Liverpool) and Wednesday (Porto vs. Manchester United) in bars in New York, the Boston area and the Washington area. (The broadband service usually garners extra eyeballs simply because the games are played during working hours in the United States and not too many people can cut out for a couple of hours to watch some games from Europe.)

Here’s the rundown (parties, free of charge, begin at 2 p.m. and wrap up at 6):

Tuesday

New York
Nevada Smiths, 74 Third Ave.
The Irish Pub, 839 Seventh Ave.
Jack Dempsey’s, 36 W. 33rd St.

Boston
The Phoenix Landing, 512 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge
The Banshee, 934 Dorchester Ave.
McGann’s Pub, 197 Portland St.

Washington
Lucky Bar, 1221 Connecticut Ave. NW
Summers Bar, 1520 N. Court House Road, Arlington, Va.
Ireland Four Courts, 2051 Wilson Blvd., Arlington

Wednesday

New York
Nevada Smiths, 74 Third Ave.
OldCastle Pub, 160 W. 54th St.
Tonic Bar & Restaurant, 727 Seventh Ave.

Boston
The Phoenix Landing, 512 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge
The Banshee, 934 Dorchester Ave.
Lir, 903 Boylston St.

Washington
Lucky Bar, 1221 Connecticut Ave. NW
Summers Bar, 1520 N. Court House Road, Arlington, Va.
Fado, 808 Seventh St. NW

http://goal.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/04/12/party-over-for-espn-not-so-fast/?hp

84
Football / U.S. Soccer Makes World Cup Bid
« on: April 10, 2009, 04:33:22 PM »
U.S. Soccer Pitches Big Tent for World Cup Bid

By Jack Bell


This week, the United States Soccer Federation offered up 50 metropolitan areas and 70 stadiums in its bid to host either the 2018 or the 2022 World Cup.

From the north (Green Bay, Wis.), south (Birmingham, Ala.), east (East Rutherford, N.J.), west (Los Angeles) and places in between (Cedar Rapids, Iowa; Dallas; Salt Lake City; Baton Rouge, La.), the list is an opening salvo in an effort to show officials at FIFA that the United States has the chops to practically put on multiple tournaments simultaneously.

The extensive list also includes several stadiums that are under construction: the new Giants and Jets stadium in the New Jersey Meadowlands; TCF Bank Stadium in Minneapolis); the new Dallas Cowboys cathedral in Arlington, Tex.

There are also relatively buildings used almost exclusively for American football, which would be vacant during the time of the World Cup such as Reliant Stadium in Houston, Sanford Stadium in Athens, Ga., M&T Stadium in Baltimore and others.

“We no doubt will end up considering venues, stadiums, that don’t exist today,” said Sunil Gulati, the U.S. Soccer Federation president, during a telephone conference call on Thursday. “Not in the same way that some of the other countries bidding are, because they’re talking about building venues for the World Cup, but given the turnover with top N.F.L. stadiums and top university stadiums that are likely to be built between now and 2018 and 2022, we think that eminently possible.”


Gulati has often said that the United States could host the World Cup in 2018 or 2022 in stadiums that did not exist when it last hosted the World Cup in 1994, breaking the overall attendance record for a final tournament, which still stands, with 3,587,538 million spectators attending games.

With next summer’s World Cup to be played in South Africa and Brazil expected to host the tournament in 2014, the morning line is that the 2018 World Cup is most likely to return to Europe, where it was last played three years ago in Germany. Perhaps the leading, sentimental bid from Europe is England, which played host once, in 1966, when it won the tournament on a controversial goal in extra time against West Germany.

Other bids have been submitted to FIFA by Australia, Belgium and the Netherlands, Indonesia, Japan, Mexico, Russia, Spain and Portugal. South Korea and Qatar have submitted bids for the 2022 World Cup, according to the FIFA Web site.

There is certain to be horsetrading, politicking and campaigning between now and when FIFA’s executive committee, which has three members from the Concacaf region, votes to award the 2018 and 2022 tournaments at the same time in December 2010. Consider this scenario: the United States (and Concacaf) lends its support to England’s bid in 2018 in return for English and European support for 2022.

The USA Bid Committee mailed letters to public officials and stadium operators from coast to coast to provide public affirmation and show of confidence for the U.S. bid.

“We’re not expecting people to spend, you know, $500 million or $1 billion to build a stadium for four, five, six, seven games if it doesn’t make economic sense in the long term in the United States, nor would we encourage that,” Gulati said during the conference call.

“Given the nature of the United States, we’re not going to need to build any hotels, any highways, any telecommunications centers, any training fields or any of those sorts of things to support a World Cup,” he added. “Clearly, they’ll be some modifications or upgrades will be needed in some venues, but that’s eight, 10, 12 years from now.”

The United States used nine stadiums in 1994, when the tournament included 24 teams. The World Cup was expanded to 32 team in 1998.

“The range I think people are talking about is nine to 12,” Gulati said. “I think in a country like the United States, it’s possible that that could be a little bit more. That would ultimately be FIFA’s call. But a number of candidate cities we would put forward to FIFA would be greater than that.”

http://goal.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/04/10/us-soccer-pitches-big-tent-for-world-cup/

85
Football / Puerto Rico Islanders play Giant Slayers
« on: April 07, 2009, 12:23:10 AM »
April 7, 2009
Team From Puerto Rico Is in the Land of the Soccer Giants


By KEYVAN ANTONIO HEYDARI VÁZQUEZ

MEXICO CITY — One game from the final of a continental club tournament, a surprising soccer team from Puerto Rico is turning heads in the sport throughout North America and the Caribbean.

The team, Puerto Rico Islanders, will attempt to eliminate the Mexican power Cruz Azul on Tuesday in Mexico City in a semifinal series of the Concacaf Champions League, the continental club championship. The team, which competes in the United Soccer Leagues First Division, won the first game at home, 2-0. The Islanders have thrived while Major League Soccer mainstays like the New England Revolution, D.C. United, Chivas USA and the Houston Dynamo have been eliminated.

“We show up in different cities and countries, and people wonder, who are these guys with the orange shirts?” Andrés Guillemard, the team president, said. “After we beat them, they say, ‘I didn’t know Puerto Ricans could play soccer.’ ”

The decisive match against Cruz Azul, a five-time Concacaf champion, could propel the Puerto Ricans to the tournament final, then a possible matchup with soccer powers like Barcelona or Manchester United in the FIFA Club World Cup later this year.

“Some M.L.S. teams watching may look down on us,” said Islanders forward Nick Addlery, who has played for D.C. United. “But they don’t have the grit and heart that we do, and that’s why we’re here.”

The team plays a compact and hard style in the image of Coach Colin Clarke, who played in the 1986 World Cup for Northern Ireland. Clarke signed on with Puerto Rico in 2008 and guided the Islanders to the best regular-season record in U.S.L. 1 last year. The Islanders lost the U.S.L. final at Vancouver.

A victory in the Concacaf tournament would earn the Islanders a reported $1 million and a ticket to the FIFA championship alongside the champions of Asia, Africa, South America and Oceania in December in the United Arab Emirates. On the way to the semifinals, Puerto Rico got the better of the champions of Costa Rica, Honduras, Guatemala and Panama.

Long recognized as a breeding ground for boxers and baseball players, Puerto Rico is shifting its sporting priorities, with soccer making a run to be the sport of the future.

“The fastest-growing sport is soccer, and kids who used to play baseball will now play soccer, which gives them nonstop movement,” said Henry Neumann, the secretary of the Puerto Rican Sports and Recreation Department. “Modern kids need action, and a kid could spend all afternoon in the outfield and not get a single ball to play.”

The Islanders’ roster features players from Liberia, Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago, Ecuador, Italy, Northern Ireland and the United States. Several are from Puerto Rico’s national team, including Noah Delgado, Alexis Rivera, Andrés Cabrero and Petter Villegas, a New Jersey native who played for the MetroStars and D.C. United in M.L.S.

The team’s home field, Juan Ramón Loubriel Stadium in Bayamón, was converted from a baseball park to a soccer stadium and was best known for staging a bloody fight between Alfredo Escalera and Alexis Arguello in 1978. The crowds are easygoing, animated and musical.

The Islanders’ last game against Cruz Azul drew a standing-room-only crowd of more than 12,500. Overflow crowds watched from a train platform overlooking the stadium.

“The fans make the stadium rock,” said defender Cristian Arrieta, a veteran of Italy’s second division. “I’m not used to playing in a baseball park with fans on just two sides, but we have a huge advantage at home.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/07/sports/soccer/07soccer.html?ref=sports

86
General Discussion / Scenes from the recession...
« on: March 26, 2009, 12:30:47 AM »

87
Entertainment & Culture Discussion / Desiderata...
« on: March 24, 2009, 04:59:05 AM »
<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch/v/-bbQUDFkdsU" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" class="bbc_link bbc_flash_disabled new_win">http://www.youtube.com/watch/v/-bbQUDFkdsU</a>

88
General Discussion / The Thug's Lawyer- P'Ta Mon
« on: March 17, 2009, 12:14:14 AM »


It seems kinda funny... but dude is straight up and clearly knows his clientele.  I only dock him some points for rocking dat yardie belt buckle... he's Cruzan.  Here's a blogpost on him from this legal blog that I follow

Above the Law - A Legal Tabloid - News, Gossip, and Colorful Commentary on Law Firms and the Legal Profession - Lawyer of the Day: Peter 'P'Ta Mon' John

The comments are priceless... some are ignorant (as you may expect), but most had me cracking up :rofl:

Dude's a definitely a unique character

Quote
And yes, he is wearing a cowboy hat with real dreads a mexico belt and shoes. P'Ta Mon is I N T E R N A T I O N A L; he respects all color and races.

P'Ta Mon Reggae Bad Boy

89
General Discussion / Brownsugar... come here
« on: March 10, 2009, 02:53:34 PM »
Yuh ent tell mih 'bago woman nice so... good lawd!  :notworthy:

90
Football / Serie A broadcasts in TnT...
« on: February 15, 2009, 02:31:19 PM »
Anybody remember when they started?  I use to say I cyah ever remember Italian football being broadcast in TnT, only English football with 'Road to Wembley' and 'FA Cup'.  But now ah taking dat back, ah (vagues) remember Sampdoria as ah big side back den and seeing matches between dem and Napoli when Maradonna (cheating bastard) join de Naples squad.  By my recollection that was after Mexico '86...

Anybody recall de earliest they see Italian football regularly broadcast in TnT?

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