A Happy World Begins With a Happy You

My son just reminded me that it was Earth Day. This sparked a discussion of what one person can do to make a change. We talked about Al Gore, how recycling has grown and new ideas that could really shift our perspective. For me, the most exciting idea to affect the planet this year has come from a tiny country in the Himalayas called Bhutan. Their prime minister has been waging a campaign to measure human progress not only by how wealthy a country is, but also by the way it impacts the environment and the happiness of its people… a fascinating notion that has made it all the way to the U.N.

Earlier this month, Bhutan’s Prime Minister Jigme Thinley suggested the meeting to explore the idea of Gross National Happiness (GNH), rather than just the conventional economic measure of Gross National Product (GNP). What does that mean? The U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon summarized it this way:

“Social, economic and environmental well-being are indivisible. Together they define gross global happiness.”

The environment, social well-being and economics together in one soup — now that’s an idea that could be a game changer!

I decided to look deeper. Apparently the U.N. General Assembly mandated a World Happiness Report that described some of the problems the planet is now facing.

The Problems:

• Advances in productivity and technology exist while we relentlessly destroy the natural environment in the process.

• Sophisticated technological advancement AND more than 1 billion people without enough to eat each day.

•”If we continue mindlessly along the current economic trajectory, we risk undermining the Earth’s life support systems — food supplies, clean water, and stable climate — necessary for human health and even survival in some places.”

• Countries with great economic development (GNP) are coping with new crises of obesity, smoking, diabetes, depression and more.

• In the U.S. Windows 7 Key, even with the rise in economic and technological progress over the last 50 years, life satisfaction has remained the same.

It’s clear that material gain alone is not the shortcut to happiness or environmental issues. According to the report:

“The realities of poverty, anxiety Buy windows 7 key, environmental degradation, and unhappiness in the midst of great plenty should not be regarded as mere curiosities. They require our urgent attention, and especially so at this juncture in human history.”

An alarming fact is that the World Health Organization predicts that by 2020 Office 2011 MAC Key, depression will be the second most debilitating cause of disease, across all countries, genders and ages. This is just behind heart disease. It’s time to adopt a new approach, and there is hope. The World Happiness Report suggests that:

“… if we act wisely, we can protect the Earth while raising quality of life broadly around the world. We can do this by adopting lifestyles and technologies that improve happiness (or life satisfaction) while reducing human damage to the environment.”

Lightbulb!

The Solution

Bhutan is leading the wake-up call. Prime Minister Thinley states:

“I see this as the reflection of a world finally coming to terms with the truth that it needs a shared, human vision in place of the mindless pursuit of limitless growth in a finite world.”

It is encouraging that other governments are taking notice too. According to this article:

“The [British] government is placing ’strong emphasis’ on the impact of policies on mental health, which … costs Britain a huge amount to treat and hurts industry efficiency … The British government wants to inject well-being cost-benefit assessments into all new policies.”

Enrico Giovannini, representing Italy said:

“Big corporations are starting to talk about corporate social responsibility, saying that money is not the only parameter we should use to assess how satisfied workers are — there is also a sense of community, future employability, education.”

Jeffrey Sachs, director of the Earth Institute and co-editor of the World Happiness Report for the U.N., further explains:

“‘Sustainable Development’ is the term given to the combination of human well-being, social inclusion, and environmental sustainability. We can say that the quest for happiness is intimately linked to the quest for sustainable development.”

So, What Can One Person Do?

All this world happiness discussion may sound far away from day-to-day life, but world happiness and environmental change start one person at a time. Here are some easy ways to begin. Some of these will be familiar. It’s putting them into action that makes all the difference.

1. Personal: Focus on your personal happiness and connecting with nature and develop practices that bring that into your life and home. A few aspects to start with are:

• Get enough sleep.
• Do some physical exercise.
• Practice an attitude of gratitude.
• Make an effort to develop mindfulness and speak with kindness.
• If something doesn’t turn out ask, “What can I learn from this?”
• Get to know your strengths and what you are passionate about.
• Try to leave an area better than the way you found it.
• Spend some time in nature — it will calm you and remind you of what’s important.

2. Education: Bring the science of happiness and social and emotional learning to your schools. It is not enough to learn math, science and history. Learning resilience, self -awareness, self-mastery and taking responsibility for one’s impact on people and the environment are at least equally important to successfully navigate the ups and downs that life presents.

3. Engage: Do something that resonates with you to make the world a better place. This could be anything from smiling at a stranger, to volunteering in an animal shelter, mentoring someone, or doing one small thing to help the environment. You have more power than you may realize.

My son and I both agree: A happy world does begin with a happy you. Emotions are contagious; when you are happy, and care about the environment (in both your emotional and your carbon footprint) you spread that positivity to the people around you. Your example of living fully gives others permission to do the same. Happy people create happy communities who are dedicated to everyone thriving. These communities can then institute more caring policies that influence the well-being of a town, a state, a country. From one to many, conscious happiness can take hold, and it is a game changer for this generation and for those to come.

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Scranton, PA – In Memory Of Mr. David Harris Z l

Scranton, PA – Although my siblings and I grew up in Belle Harbor, Queens, and despite the fact that Monsey is where we raised our children over the past quarter-century, in many ways Scranton, Pennsylvania, is still home to me.

Scranton is where our paternal grandfather, Reb Yakov Moshe Horowitz, z”l, settled when he emigrated from Europe in the 1930’s. Our parents spent the first years of their married life in Scranton, three of our aunts and uncles raised their families there, and many Yomim Tovim during my formative years were spent in that ‘out-of-town’ community.

One of the distinct pleasures of visiting Scranton is spending a few moments with the members of “The Greatest Generation” who were the dearest friends of our parents a lifetime ago. Their family names alone evoke warm memories of a simpler time. Ganz. Fink. Harris. Stahler.

They were a diverse group, but all cut from the same rich cloth. Simple and elegant. Regal and humble. Proud Americans and even prouder Jews.

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There were no “chochmos” in their lives. They had only one sink and one oven in their kitchens – but far more importantly, they only had one set of books in their financial and spiritual lives. They were bewildered and even bemused at our generation’s fascination with things like “shlissel challah”— for to them, the best segulah for parnasah was to be honest and work hard. No “chumros” could be found in their religious practices, but their emunah pishuta (simple faith in Hashem) is something I draw inspiration from even after all these years.

When the smartphones, we have come to rely on malfunction, we are often advised to store the information we have accumulated in its memory elsewhere and perform an operation that returns it to its “factory settings.” Well, that is how I often feel when returning to Scranton and interacting with the friends of our parents – like my settings are getting a sorely needed recalibration.

Earlier this week, Mr. David Harris, one of the humble giants of that beautiful kehila, suddenly passed away at the age of 89. He was simply a princely human being who embodied every one of the virtues noted above – and then some. The sense of mesameach b’chelko (contentment) that he exuded was a living lesson in Pirkei Avos, and watching the love and respect with which he treated Norma ylc”t, his beloved wife of sixty-four years, was far more effective than any shalom bayis class could ever be in transmitting the values of family and derech eretz.

David loved life, and loved people even more. He didn’t “work the room” like so many of us do; multitasking our conversations with several people simultaneously. When you spoke to David, it was as if you were the only person in the room with him. Moreover replica watches, he had that unique ability to make everyone he spoke to feel valued and special. As Rabbi Jonathan Rosenblatt, Rav of The Riverdale Jewish Center replica watches, eloquently said at the funeral, those who had the privilege to see themselves through David’s eyes walked away elevated and inspired.

Or worded differently, … back to their factory settings.

May his memory be for a blessing. 

Rabbi Yakov Horowitz is the founder and dean of Yeshiva Darchei Noam of Monsey replica watches, and founder and Director of Project Y.E.S. (Youth Enrichment Services).

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Sanford, FL – George Zimmerman Released from Jail

George Zimmerman, left, walks out of the intake building at the John E. Polk Correctional Facility with an unidentified man on Sunday, April 22, 2012, in Sanford, Fla. Zimmerman posted bail on a 0,000 bond on a second degree murder charge in the February shooting death of 17 year-old Trayvon Martin In Sanford, Fla. (AP Photo/Brian Blanco)

Sanford, FL – George Zimmerman was released around midnight Sunday from a county jail on $150,000 bail as he awaits his second-degree murder trial for fatally shooting Trayvon Martin.

The neighborhood watch volunteer was wearing a brown jacket and blue jeans and carrying a paper bag. He met a man in a white vehicle and drove away. His ultimate destination is being kept secret for his safety and it could be outside Florida.

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Circuit Judge Kenneth Lester said at a hearing Friday he cannot have any guns and must observe a 7 p.m.-to-6 a.m. curfew. Zimmerman also surrendered his passport.

Zimmerman had to put up 10 percent Tattoo Kits Supplies, or $15,000, to make bail. His father had indicated he might take out a second mortgage.

Zimmerman worked at a mortgage risk-management company at the time of the shooting and his wife is in nursing school. A website was set up to collect donations for Zimmerman’s defense fund. It is unclear how much has been raised.

Bail is not unheard of in second-degree murder cases, and legal experts had predicted it would be granted for Zimmerman because of his ties to the community, because he turned himself in after he was charged last week, and because he has never been convicted of a serious crime.

Prosecutors had asked for $1 million bail, citing two previous scrapes Zimmerman had with the law, neither of which resulted in charges. In 2005, he had to take anger management courses after he was accused of attacking an undercover officer who was trying to arrest Zimmerman’s friend. In another incident, a girlfriend accused him of attacking her.

Zimmerman, 28 Tattoo Stencil Machine, fatally shot Martin Rotary Machine Tattoo, 17, Feb. 26 inside the gated community where Zimmerman lived during an altercation. Martin was unarmed and was walking back to the home of his father’s fiancée when Zimmerman saw him, called 911 and began following him. A fight broke out – investigators say it is unknown who started it.

Zimmerman says Martin, who was visiting from Miami, attacked him and he shot in self-defense, citing Florida’s “stand your ground” law, which gives broad legal protection to anyone who says they used deadly force because they feared death or great bodily harm.

Zimmerman was not charged for over six weeks, sparking national protests led by Martin’s parents, civil rights groups and the Revs. Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton. Martin was black; Zimmerman’s father is white and his mother is from Peru.

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Blowing in the wind Maine’s energy past and futu

Photo courtesy of R.W. EstelaAn aerial photo, taken March 18, 2012, of First Wind’s 60 megawatt, 200 wind turbine Rollins Wind project, 8 miles east of Lincoln.

The nearly 400-foot-tall turbines atop Mars Hill Mountain had been spinning for several months when, on March 27, 2007, the facility quietly marked a historic moment in Maine’s energy history by selling electricity into the power grid.

The Mars Hill project formally opened the door in Maine to a renewable energy industry that had been discussed for decades but, prior to that day, had never amounted to more than talk.

Five years later, Maine is the largest source of wind energy in New England. The 205 commercial wind turbines spinning on Maine mountaintops, ridgelines and coastal islands are rated to produce enough juice to light more than 6 million 60-watt bulbs.

But like most growth spurts Custom Tattoo Machines, Maine’s rush into wind energy has not been pain-free.

Lawsuits, regulatory challenges and financial problems have slowed or snuffed out numerous projects. Alarmed by stories told by turbine neighbors elsewhere, voters in towns across Maine have banned commercial wind power near their homes.

Federal subsidies that fueled wind power’s dramatic national expansion are at risk of expiring amid the changing political environment in Washington, D.C. And in Augusta, the LePage administration wants lawmakers to revisit key policies written by their decidedly pro-wind predecessors — starting with dropping the state’s optimistic but symbolic goal of generating 2,000 megawatts from wind power by 2015. Turbines already installed in Maine can produce nearly 400 megawatts when operating at maximum capacity.

“Looking back five years, I think we all knew that [goal] was aggressive but we didn’t know if it was attainable,” said Ken Fletcher, director of the LePage administration’s Office of Energy Independence and Security. “We now have five years of experience so we think it is time to have the Legislature do a look-back at where we are, where we are going and what’s ahead.”

A $1 billion industry

Despite the rapid development of the industry during the past half-decade, wind energy represented just 6.6 percent of the total electricity generated in Maine in January 2012, according to figures from the U.S. Energy Information Administration. Hydropower, by comparison, accounted for 25 percent of Maine’s total electricity generation.

Nationally, Maine’s wind farms generated less than 1 percent of the nation’s total wind energy production in January 2012. Production of wind power in Maine increased by roughly 59 percent between January 2011 and January 2012, roughly equal to the national average.

Yet Maine’s wind power sector has grown from almost nothing a decade ago into one that has funneled more than $1 billion and created thousands of jobs, according to an industry group, much of that during an economic downturn. And industry representatives insist Maine is poised not only to remain as New England’s top source for sought-after wind energy but potentially to become an international leader in the arena of offshore wind production. A 2010 survey found that 88 percent of Mainers support wind power in the state.

“That is an enormous investment that these companies are making in Maine and, quite frankly, in Maine people,” said Jeremy Payne, executive director of the Maine Renewable Energy Association, an industry trade group. “And it is important to recognize that a lot of these jobs are happening in rural parts of the state where there often aren’t a lot of job opportunities.”

Rural and economically challenged aptly describes Mars Hill The Best Tattoo Machine, an Aroostook County town located about 15 miles south of Presque Isle on the Maine-Canada border. The 28 turbines operated by First Wind — New England’s largest wind power company — sit atop a 1,700-foot-tall mountain that dominates the horizon and, in winter, is a popular ski destination for locals.

The Mars Hill project may have paved the way for future wind farms but it also left a legacy that continues to haunt the industry in Maine.

Noise problems persist

Although the project has enjoyed strong support from Mars Hill officials and many town residents, some neighbors of the 28-turbine project were expressing concerns about the turbines as soon as they began spinning.

Upset residents accused First Wind of downplaying the potential noise created as the nearly 200-foot-long blades sliced through the air, especially at night and when atmospheric conditions were right for carrying the sound. Affected neighbors have complained about sleep deprivation, headaches and decreased financial and aesthetic values of their homes.

The noise problems at Mars Hill have come up at almost every regulatory proceeding on wind power since. And five years after Mars Hill became operational, First Wind only recently reached settlement agreements with more than a dozen homeowners who had pursued court action against the company.

Those settlements reportedly included payments from First Wind to the complainants in exchange for their agreement to drop all claims against the company. Peter Kelley, a Caribou attorney who represented the complainants, declined to discuss the settlements because the parties are bound by a confidentiality agreement.

‘Too close to houses’

Michael Gosselin is the sole complainant who has yet to settle with First Wind. A disabled Vietnam veteran who moved to Mars Hill 21 years ago from Rhode Island to escape noise, Gosselin claims the turbines affect his sensitive hearing and disturb his sleep even though his house is located nearly two miles away.

“I am for alternative energy but they made a major mistake when they put the turbines up here in Mars Hill,” said Gosselin, who is constructing a soundproof bedroom in his garage. “It is too close to houses.”

First Wind officials point out that the town of Mars Hill receives $500,000 a year in tax payments for 20 years from the project and that the facility employs nine people full time plus additional temporary workers throughout the year. But they also acknowledge that, as the first wind energy project in Maine, Mars Hill was a learning experience for all.

“I think one of the things that First Wind is doing better now than we did back then is when we are going into towns to propose [a project] we ask the towns to make trips to come and see Mars Hill,” said Bruce Chapman, who manages the company’s operations east of the Mississippi River from the Mars Hill facility. “We don’t want to catch anybody by surprise.”

While the Mars Hill controversy has undoubtedly influenced debate over wind power in Maine, it has not had a major impact on the success or failure of subsequent permit applications for new wind farms.

Only three major projects — in Redington/Wyman Townships, Highland Plantation and Carroll Plantation-Kossuth Township — have been turned down by regulators, withdrawn or have requested withdrawal in the face of likely rejection since March 2007. And the latter two may be refiled with modifications.

By comparison, state or local officials have approved 13 separate commercial wind power projects since 2007, representing 274 additional turbines and 627 megawatts of electricity. Eighty-six of those yet-to-be-built turbines have been approved under Republican Gov. Paul LePage’s watch despite perceptions that the current administration is l ess supportive of the wind industry than Democratic Gov. John Baldacci.

“At the end of the day, projects continue to be proposed, continue to be permitted and continue to be built, so that says there hasn’t been a lot of change,” Payne said.

Time for another look at regulations

There have, of course, been notable changes to Maine’s regulations during the past five years, some intended to facilitate the development of wind power and others attempting to address concerns raised at Mars Hill and other sites.

From the pro-development side, the most significant was a Baldacci administration policy that streamlined the permitting process and reduced the importance of scenic impacts for any projects proposed throughout much of rural Maine. The LePage administration said this week that they hope to revisit aspects of the so-called “expedited permitting” process, including scenic impacts.

“It’s not that we are going to change it Tattoo Machines For Cheap,” said Fletcher of the state’s energy office. “But after five years of experience, it is time to take another look at that.”

The Legislature also recently endorsed a Board of Environmental Protection decision to lower the maximum nighttime noise level as measured from nearby houses from 45 decibels to 42 decibels. The change came after neighbors of two smaller wind energy facilities — in Freedom and Vinalhaven — also complained about noise disturbances.

Although less aggressive than some had desired, the three-decibel reduction was interpreted as a small victory for the small but increasingly vocal and well-organized critics of commercial wind power in Maine.

“I feel a little bit better,” said Lynne Williams, a Bar Harbor attorney who has represented wind power project opponents in regulatory hearings and in court. “I think the people who have raised issues with projects are being listened to more seriously now than they were in the beginning.”

In addition to noise, opponents of commercial wind projects claim the facilities produce far less electricity than their megawatt ratings suggest, requiring fossil fuel power plants to remain online as backup. They also are heavily subsidized, change the landscape, can be deadly to birds and bats and require mountaintop areas to be cleared for roads and turbine pads.

Williams later added this caveat, however: “Our views being heard doesn’t necessarily mean that we win.”

An uncertain future

So where is Maine’s wind power industry headed? Will hundreds more 400-foot-tall turbines dot the landscape of rural Maine in 2017?

Two projects — an eight-turbine proposal for Canton in Oxford County and a 14-turbine proposal for Grand Falls Township in Penobscot County — are pending with state regulators. Four more in Dixfield, rural Washington County, Bingham and an area west of Bridgewater in Aroostook County are under development.

How many of those projects, if any, become reality likely depends on a host of factors, including: whether Congress reauthorizes federal tax incentives for wind power, the political climate in Maine toward renewable energy and the price of the fossil fuels that largely dictate electricity costs.

On the federal front, action appears stalled on the so-called “production tax credits” that help wind power compete with cheaper fossil fuel-derived electricity generation. And observers suggest that Washington may punt the issue until after the November election.

“It will change the pace of development if it goes away,” said Matt Kearns, First Wind’s vice president for development in the Northeast.

The LePage administration has made clear that their top energy priority is lowering costs, regardless of the source of that electricity. As part of that campaign, LePage and Fletcher have been urging lawmakers to loosen requirements that power suppliers increase the amount of electricity derived from renewable sources, a policy regarded as a key incentive to the wind industry.

The administration also has signaled that state utility regulators should not enter into long-term contracts with wind-power producers — as happened with First Wind’s Rollins Mountain facility — unless those contracts promote lowering the costs of electricity.

Other New England states still can enter into long-term contracts with wind-power producers in order to meet their renewable energy goals, Fletcher said.

“But this administration would not be in favor of asking ratepayers to pay more than they should have to pay just to support an industry,” Fletcher said.

Fletcher added, however, that this should not be interpreted as the administration looking askance at wind power. Offshore wind energy, although likely a decade or more from commercial reality, stands to be a major potential source of renewable energy and University of Maine researchers could help produce the “breakthrough technology” that might make Maine’s heavy manufacturing industry a global leader.

Wind power’s critics, meanwhile, are hoping the combination of the modest victories on noise regulations, uncertainty over federal tax credits and the LePage administration’s less-friendly relationship with the industry could signal a shift away from large-scale projects.

“I don’t think we are going to have a lot more wind farms,” Williams said. “We may have more windmills, but the people I talk to around the state are more inclined to [support] regional projects where the local town or county gets the power” rather than feeding into the New England grid.

Not surprisingly, Jeremy Payne, executive director of the Maine Renewable Energy Association, disagrees about the immediate prospects for an industry he describes as one of the only “bright spots” in Maine during the recession.

“There is still substantial interest in wind in Maine and, quite frankly, I don’t see that slowing down,” Payne said.

Five years after successfully launching Maine’s first commercial wind farm, officials at First Wind are watching the federal subsidies debate closely. Meanwhile, the company is moving forward — albeit perhaps at a slightly slower pace — with construction plans for a 50-turbine wind farm in the Aroostook County town of Oakfield and a 19-turbine facility near Eastbrook in Hancock County.

Additionally, First Wind is developing plans for a wind energy facility in Bingham that could have more than 50 turbines and plans to continue exploring opportunities in Aroostook and Washington counties, both of which have been receptive to past projects.

“We are positioned to do more,” said Don Theriault, senior asset manager in the Northeast for First Wind. “Maine has learned how to do wind power and Mars Hill really started it.”

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The Note’s Must-Reads for Monday, April 23, 2012

The Note’s Must-Reads are a round-up of today’s political headlines and stories from ABC News and the top U.S. newspapers. Posted Monday through Friday right here at www.abcnews.com

Compiled by ABC News’ Jayce Henderson, Amanda VanAllen, and Carrie Halperin

PRESIDENT OBAMA:
The New York Times’ Charlie Savage: “Shift on Executive Power Lets Obama Bypass Rivals” One Saturday last fall, President Obama interrupted a White House strategy meeting to raise an issue not on the agenda. He declared Buy Herve Leger v neck, aides recalled, that the administration needed to more aggressively use executive power to govern in the face of Congressional obstructionism. LINK

The Boston Globe’s Jonathan D. Salant: “Obama takes passive stance on stronger election laws” Barack Obama pledged as a presidential candidate to strengthen the Federal Election Commission and nominate members “committed to enforcing our nation’s election laws.” Since taking office, he hasn’t pushed for achievement of either goal. The president has taken no action to reshape the FEC, even as five of the six commissioners are serving on expired terms. LINK

MITT ROMNEY:
ABC News’ George Stephanopoulos: “George Will Writes Off Jeb Bush as VP Possibility” As speculation over who Mitt Romney will choose as his running mate reaches a fever pitch, ABC’s George Will struck one big name off the list of possibilities today: former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush. “If Jeb Bush is to be Romney’s running mate, it would mean that in seven of nine presidential elections there would be a Bush on the Republican ticket,” Will said today on “This Week.”  LINK

USA Today’s David Jackson: “Axelrod: Voters don’t know Romney yet” A top political aide to President Obama said today that Republican Mitt Romney is moving up in the polls because people don’t really know his economic policies — yet. When voters do learn more about Romney, senior adviser David Axelrod said, “they’re going to think this is very familiar — we tried this — this was a big failure.” LINK

The Wall Street Journal’s Patrick O’ Connor: “Pushback for Romney Fund” A new effort by Mitt Romney’s presidential campaign to substantially increase the amount of money wealthy backers can give has hit a hurdle: new Securities and Exchange Commission rules that are making some Wall Street donors skittish about writing checks. The effort, the Romney Victory fund, was announced earlier this month. LINK

Politico’s Reid Epstein: “Mitt Romney plays the victim card” Meet Mitt Romney the victim. And that may be a good thing for his campaign.  Following the still-rippling kerfuffle over Hilary Rosen’s comments that Ann Romney “hasn’t worked a day in her life,” Romney is portraying himself as the victim of the liberal media and secular culture, and some social conservatives who opposed him in the GOP primary are rallying around him as a result. LINK

The New York Daily News’ Alison Gendar: “Mitt Romney aide with history of snarky comments about women in politics removes hundreds of tweets from online profile” A Romney aide is rewriting history — his own. Richard Grenell, a former Bush official, removed hundreds of Tweets and comments from his online profile this weekend after reporters zeroed in on his penchant for snarky comments about women in politics. LINK

The Los Angeles Times’ Noam Levy: “Romney’s healthcare plan may be more revolutionary than Obama’s” As he pushes to “repeal and replace” President Obama’s healthcare law, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney has turned to proposals that could alter the way hundreds of millions of Americans get their medical insurance. In public, Romney has only sketched the outlines of a plan, and aides have declined to answer questions about the details. LINK

OTHER:
The Washington Times’ Seth McLaughlin: “Campaign 2012′s silly season in full swing” Dogs on roofs, dogs on the menu, wars on women, bureaucrats behaving badly — with the drama largely drained from the Republican nominating race and not much on the schedule until August, the campaign’s silly season has begun in earnest. LINK

The Hill’s Josh Lederman: “The 2012 GOP presidential dropouts: Where are they now?” The six major GOP candidates who dropped out of the presidential race may be gone Buy Hale Bob Dresses, but they aren’t altogether forgotten.  Rick Perry is wading into a Senate primary in Texas. Herman Cain is crisscrossing the country supporting candidates who have embraced his 9-9-9 tax plan. LINK

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TechArt GT Street RS, because the Porsche GT2 isn’

Click above for a hi-res gallery of the GT Street RS

The Porsche 911 GT2 has 530 horsepower, 505 lb-ft of torque and is capable of going 204 mph. And it’s not enough. Not for TechArt, at least. You know TechArt. They take Porsches that already push the limits of performance and go all Chuck Yeager on them, probing for new and more crazy limits. Generally they find them, then they package them up and offer them to the moneyed public. Case in point: the new GT Street RS. What begins as a “normal” GT2 turns into a 700-horsepower Tattoo Supplies, 634 lb-ft (860 Nm) warp-enabled street predator when the TechArt people are through messing with it.

The myriad changes include new bodywork that improves the car’s aerodynamics, updated chassis components, a customized and caged interior, and a laundry list of underhood modifications. The turbos, intercoolers, headers, electronics, pressure sensor, air filter and exhaust system all get updated by TechArt Tattoo Supplies, facilitating the transformation from factory supercar to ballistic missile with wheels. Now, where’d we leave those launch codes…

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[Source: TechArt]

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Escape From the Echo Chamber

Maybe democracy will survive the Internet after all. Many hands have been wrung over the supposed tendency for consumers of online news to seek out sites that validate their own political opinions. Like minds, the theory goes, surf alike. But, as David Brooks noted, this may not be the case. A recent paper by two researchers from the University of Chicago suggests that, when it comes to online news, we aren’t nearly as isolated as we think.

The paper’s authors, Matthew Gentzkow and Jesse Shapiro Discount DKNY Clothes, studied the readership of 112 high-traffic news and politics Web sites. Using data collected by the Web analytics firm comScore, Gentzkow and Shapiro analyzed the surfing habits of about 12,000 people who had identified their political affiliation. (Conservatives and liberals were the only types counted in the study; self-described moderates and independents were not included.) They then gave each Web site a score based on the political leanings of its readers.

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Their conclusion: Many people go to sites whose readers don’t share their politics. To use their terminology, they found a low degree of “media isolation” among Web surfers compared with the political isolation most Americans experience in their daily lives. Stacked against the networks in which we work, live, and socialize, the network we increasingly use to get our news—which is to say, the one you are using right now—is relatively integrated.

Part of the reason may be that the more partisan Web sites attract a pretty small audience. The visualization at the bottom of the page illustrates this point. Each square represents a Web site. A square’s size is relative to its audience White Herve leger sale, while a square’s color is relative to its audience’s politics. A major news portal like Yahoo News has a relatively balanced readership—about 55 percent of its readers say they are conservative Discount Karen Millen Dresses, and 45 percent say they are liberal—so it’s shaded a neutral gray. An international site like BBC News, with only 22 percent of readers identifying themselves as conservative, is deep blue. (Apparently, more liberals than conservatives want their news from across the Atlantic.) Dragging the bars at the top of the map allows you to see how an audience’s size and its politics play off each other.

The visualization shows that few sites have a balanced audience. While behemoths like Yahoo News and CNN have a fairly even readership, even ostensibly balanced, mainstream media brands like the New York Times, USA Today, and ABC News have an audience that tips to one side of the spectrum. (Because more Americans self-identify as conservatives than as liberals, sites are more likely to tilt to the right.) But that doesn’t necessarily mean their news is slanted. The study assesses a site’s readers, not its content.

Slatewants to help you discover your own isolation index. So we’ve created a little program that allows you to see for yourself how open-minded you are—at least according to your browsing history.

Here’s how it works: When you click on the “Profile Me” button, we will check which news sites you’ve visited recently. Then Herve leger strapless sale, using the same Web site rankings Gentzkow and Shapiro used in their research, we’ll tell you how “isolated” you are. Before you click, you should know that you will remain completely anonymous—we have no clue who you are—and we do not download your browsing history. We simply check whether you’ve visited the home page of each of the sites listed in the study. (It works much like sites that guess your gender.) A full list of the publications and Web site addresses we check for is here. We do not save the information, just your overall score, which will be used solely to compare you to other Slate readers, shown in the graph below the button.

Remember: This isn’t about your own political views—it’s about those of your fellow readers. So if your online diet only consists of the Drudge Report Replica Christian Audigier Clothing, the New York Post, and HotAir.com, you’re going to come across as pretty isolated. If you make occasional forays to the New York Times and Huffington Post, you’ll seem catholic. Our calculations don’t include how long you spent on each page—only that you’ve been.

The main drawback to this methodology, of course—which Cheap Chloe Dresses, Gentzkow and Shapiro acknowledge—is that they (and we) have no idea what you think of what you read. When you read a columnist that you vehemently disagree with—Paul Krugman, say, or Karl Rove—you get credit for exposing yourself to the other side. Maybe you come away with a renewed respect for the opposing argument. Or maybe the experience only reinforces the opinions you already hold. That’s a question to be answered by another study—or in the comments.

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eBay Find of the Day2012 Lexus LFA says look, copp

If you have an issue with the fact that Lexus is going to make you lease an LFA instead of letting you outright buy the vehicle, we’ve got good news for you. Sort of. Herb Chambers Lexus in Sharon, MA is selling one of the carbon-fiber supercars for some very wealthy Buy Emilio Pucci Dresses, very lucky individual to have and to hold as their own.

What’s the hitch? Unsurprisingly, there are a couple of them. We spoke with the dealer, and according to them, before the title changes hands Buy Chanel Dresses, the new owner will need to sign a first right of refusal contract with Lexus. If the buyer takes the car home and decides to sell it in the first two years, the automaker gets dibs on buying the car back. (Before you cry foul, note that Ferrari has made similar stipulations in hopes of keeping flipping and price gouging on its hot new models for some time now).

The supercar is dipped in sexy copper (Pearl Brown?) paint with a matching saddle interior Cheap Missoni Dresses, and there are a mere six miles on the clock. According to the dealer Discount Herve Leger v neck, the original orderer of the car came in to inspect it, got a walk-around with Lexus’ LFA-specific expert who was on-hand to assist, briefly drove it and then decided he would let someone else purchase it.

So… how much will the sales team at Herb Chambers ask for the pleasure of ownership? How does $389 Cheap Marc Jacobs Dresses,900 grab you? At that price Cheap Herve Leger v neck, by our calculations, the would-be buyer is basically paying Lexus 24 months of lease payments up front, plus the balloon payment at the end to buy the car outright. Still interested? Head over to eBay Motors to have a look at the auction.

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VIDEOLamborghini Reventon

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There are some photogenic cars that take your breath away just from the pictures. And there are others that you have to see in the flesh to appreciate. Then there are a few – like the Lamborghini Reventon – that fit both: each picture speaks a thousand words Cheap Herve Leger v neck, but seeing it up close yields an even deeper appreciation of its styling. The most extreme of Lamborghinis was created for just that purpose: shock and awe.

Although rumors are circulating that Lamborghini may give the green light for a total production run of 100 Discount Herve Leger v neck, currently the company plans to build only twenty examples Chanel Dresses sale, which means that most may never have a chance to see one up close and in person. Fortunately Sant’Agata has released this video walk-around to allow the world to take in its latest creation in all of its oblique glory. Follow the jump to see for yourself.

[Source: World Car Fans]

Related Gallery2008 Lamborghini Reventon

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Too Big To Fail

Defense Secretary Robert Gates

The Pentagon released its budget for fiscal year 2011 this afternoon, and it is enormous—much larger, even adjusting for inflation, than any budget since World War II. What’s more, some numbers buried within the budget suggest that it’s set to grow larger still in the coming years—to a greater extent than the White House or the Defense Department acknowledges.

One bit of good news: Defense Secretary Robert Gates is more honest than his recent predecessors about how much money he’s really requesting. The figure for FY 2011 is $708.2 billion—consisting of $548.9 billion for the “baseline” budget plus $159.3 billion to pay for “overseas contingency operations Fake Zenith Watches,” mainly the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. And, by the way, he says, tack on another $33 billion to the current year’s budget, to pay for the 30,000 extra troops (and all their supplies, weapons, and so forth) that President Obama is sending to Afghanistan.

All told, that’s $741.2 billion in new money—and Gates is upfront about it.

In the past, defense secretaries, in presenting their budgets to Congress, have pretended that the costs of war are completely separate from the rest of the military budget. And they’ve itemized  those war costs very sketchily, if at all. By contrast, Gates breaks down that $159.3 billion in some detail ($89.4 billion for operations, $21.3 billion to repair broken equipment, $13.6 billion to train the Afghan and Iraqi security forces, etc.).

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Still, $708.2 billion, the sum requested just for fiscal year 2011, is an extraordinary chunk of change. The Center for a New American Security (hardly a dovish think tank) calculates that, adjusting for inflation, this sum is 13 percent higher than the defense budget at the peak of the Korean War, 33 percent higher than at the peak of the Vietnam War, 23 percent higher than at the peak of the Cold War Rolex Replica Watches, and 64 percent higher than the Cold War’s average.

Granted, the comparisons aren’t quite commensurate. For one thing, payroll costs are much higher for an all-volunteer military, and over the past 10 years, Congress has passed pay increases totaling 64 percent. (Military personnel costs are now nearly 20 percent of the defense budget; health care eats up another 5 percent and is climbing.) But on the other side of the equation Fake Emporio Armani Watches for sale, the U.S. military consists of far fewer servicemen and -women than before. The United States no longer needs massive garrisons to stave off a Soviet invasion of Western Europe, nor does it face any prospective enemy that approaches its global reach in air or naval power.

Let’s assume that all the money Gates is requesting for war-related costs—some $192 billion in this and next year’s budgets—really is related to the war. (Donald Rumsfeld, Gates’ predecessor, treated those accounts as a slush fund.) What about the half-trillion-plus “baseline”?

Last year, in the FY 2010 budget, Gates cut or killed a slew of weapons programs that he (and many others) considered unnecessary or ineffective: the Air Force’s F-22 fighter Fake Versace Watches for sale, the Navy’s DDG-1000 destroyer, the more high-tech components of the Army’s Future Combat Systems. Today, he’s calling for an end to the C-17 cargo-transport plane (we have enough of them) and a second engine for the F-35 fighter (the one it has already is fine). But, except for a handful of teeny programs (including some I’d never heard of) Buy Cheap Replica Jaquet Droz Watches, that’s it.

For the most part, the big-ticket weapons programs are on the rise: $25 billion for 10 new ships, including two Virginia-class submarines and two DDG-51 destroyers (to make up for his killing the more “advanced” DDG-1000 last year, perhaps). Gates is requesting another $10 billion on missile defense (a billion more than last year). And he is requesting $11 billion for 43 more F-35 fighter planes.

One thing about the F-35, the joint Air Force-Navy fighter that Gates wants to accelerate after halting production of the more costly, somewhat more capable F-22: It’s having problems. The problems are so severe, Gates announced today, that he’s withholding $614 million in fees from its contractor How to buy Replica Versace Watches, Lockheed-Martin (which also made the F-22), and he’s fired the plane’s program manager.

This is a potentially big story that raises several questions. For instance, is the F-35 going to turn out so riddled with problems that Gates will regret killing the F-22?And more immediately, why is he penalizing the contractor, canning the program manager—yet, at the same time, vastly increasing the buy?

I have a theory: He can’t cut it too deeply, especially after cutting the F-22, without raising holy hell inside the Pentagon.

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