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Archive for February 27th, 2008

From Wired/Danger Room

By Noah Shachtman

February 26, 2008 | 3:08:00 AM

Our tipsters have sent us a copy of the military’s logo for last week’s satellite-shooting operation.  Behold!

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Sure, the military may be calling the effort “Operation Burnt Frost,” in public.  But, as this logo reveals, there’s a different monicker, behind closed doors.  Amazingly, the armed forces appeared to have crowdsourced the name of the operation to… all of you.

Last week, we had a little contest, to name the sat-blasting project.  Over 500 possible titles were submitted.  Two of the four leading vote-getters made it to this august emblem.  So congrats, KnuckleDragger and Albert Sunseri, for your noble contribution to this historic effort.

“The top-rated names are so funny, I had to combine” a few, the satirical logo-maker tells DANGER ROOM.  Here’s “the NRO patch that was my original inspiration.”

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If and when it hits $4/gallon I, personally, am in trouble. I am a long distance commuter so I consume a lot of gasoline per month. I think I’ll freak…

From PRNewswire

$4 a Gallon Gasoline Will be Tipping Point for Most Consumers

gaspump.jpgKeeping the Car Running Better and Driving it Less is the Trend

BETHESDA, Md., Feb. 27 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — If gasoline prices
hit $4 per gallon as many economists predict, an estimated 65 percent of
American car owners say they will dramatically change their driving
behavior, according to a study commissioned by the Automotive Aftermarket
Industry Association (AAIA).

“While a third of consumers claim they already changed their driving
behavior by curtailing driving or maintaining their vehicle better when gas
prices reached $3 a gallon, the real tipping point is $4 a gallon,” said
Kathleen Schmatz, AAIA president and CEO.

According to a survey conducted by Opinion Research Corporation for
AAIA, 91 percent of drivers are driving less and 75 percent are maintaining
their vehicle better because of rising gas prices. Other specific
behavioral changes were carpooling (31 percent), purchasing more fuel
efficient vehicles (30 percent) and making greater use of public transportation (24 percent).

For more information on the survey, e-mail Rich White at
rich.white@aftermarket.org or call 301-654-6664.

For more information on tips and advice for simple vehicle maintenance
and care to improve gas mileage, contact the Car Care Council at
http://www.carcare.org.

About AAIA

AAIA is a Bethesda, Md.-based association whose more than 23,000 member
and affiliates manufacture, distribute and sell motor vehicle parts,
accessories, service, tool, equipment, materials and supplies. Through its
membership, AAIA represents more than 100,000 repair shops, parts stores
and distribution outlets.

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What the heck is the world coming to…?

From Reuters

Keep quiet about atrocities, Ethiopia warns aid workers
27 Feb 2008 16:44:00 GMT
Written by: Joanne Tomkinson
Aid workers in Ethiopia’s remote Ogaden region are currently facing an impossible dilemma. In order to carry on helping people in the east of the country, the government has warned them that they better keep quiet about allegations of army atrocities in the area.
International humanitarian staff have spoken anonymously to the Boston-based Christian Science Monitor about public executions, rapes, torture, arbitrary detentions and beatings of civilians by government forces in Ogaden, where most people are ethnic Somalis.
Aid workers also accuse separatist rebels in the Ogaden National Liberations Front (ONLF) of terrible crimes against civilians who refuse to help them.
Relief agencies were expelled from Ogaden during Ethiopian government crackdowns on the ONLF in late 2007. They are now gradually being allowed to return with food and medicines – but only if they stay silent about what they see.
“We have two options: either we come out with a nasty press release tomorrow on protection of human rights, and we will have to leave behind a substantial population still facing atrocities, or we just do our work,” an aid worker said to the Monitor.
Ogaden’s residents have greeted aid workers enthusiastically, eager to share their stories with humanitarians. “They have begged us to stay,” an aid worker tells the paper.
Conflicting reports from locals, and a ban on journalists entering the area, mean that allegations are hard to verify. The government denies its troops have committed any atrocities.
“I can assure you that the government is not in the business of killing people and putting them in mass graves,” government spokesman Bereket Simon told the Monitor.
The need for aid workers in Ogaden is great. Food and water are in short supply and medical supplies in the Somali area ran out long ago. The U.N. Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights still has no access to investigate allegations, and the World Food Programme’s food aid distributions have been hampered by conflict in the area.
“You always come down on the same side,” the director of one organisation operating in the region said to the Monitor. “It’s better to keep yourself operational and to do something.”

Some frustrated aid workers are beginning to speak out discreetly, but it’s dangerous. International staff run the risk of being expelled or seeing their operations closed down, but the stakes are even higher for local staff. Many said they didn’t want to say anything to the Monitor for fear they might be imprisoned or killed.

One local aid worker who talked to the paper said: “It’s a relief to speak with you. You hear these things and they weigh on your heart.”

But for now, most aid workers are just getting on with the job of delivering humanitarian relief.

When does the moral duty to bear witness outweigh the need to try to save lives? Or where is it more important to stick by people who are suffering, even if it means not speaking out about what’s going on?

Does it depend how many aid agencies are on the scene? Is it possible to tell the truth and keep running a relief programme?

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On Tuesday, 2/26/08, approximately 7100 Starbucks stores shut down for an expresso tutorial/pep rally. Starbucks “baristas” learned to properly pour expresso into a coffee drink from a shot glass. Starbucks management felt that the mini-training session was well worth some loss in profts in order to ensure that “perfect coffee drink.”

Am I excited over this? No. I’m still waiting for the cost of a regular cup of coffee to drop from $1.69 to $1.00. I liked when Starbucks talked about this idea but I guess the idea died.

The regular cup of coffee doesn’t even require much expertise in pouring it from the pot to the cup and then presenting it to my hand. Hey, I can even pour it myself – I don’t need special training.

Another thought, Starbucks could even sell me the cup for a dollar and allow me to dispense the coffee for myself freeing up the “baristas” for really important drinks requiring special expresso attention. The company should be looking at protecting their investment (barista training on expresso) and unloading the less labor intensive aspects. Right?

Sounds like a good trade-off to me…

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Convicted murderer cries injustice from prison! Officials are hindering continuance of sex change procedures.

Tax dollars not only have to feed and harbor criminals but it has to take care of their sex change needs? Ahem, really…  Where does the line get drawn?

From AP/Yahoo News

Sex-change inmate says treatment stopped

By DENISE LAVOIE, Associated Press Writer

Wed Feb 27, 1:33 AM ET

A killer who sued to have a sex change claims her body is becoming more masculine again because she’s being denied treatment in prison as she awaits a ruling in her bid for the surgery. Michelle Kosilek, formerly known as Robert, said that for months she has not been allowed to have court-approved hair-removal treatment or access to a specialist to discuss her testosterone levels.

“My breasts have shrunk, genitals have regained previous size and function, facial hair is thicker and scalp hair is thinner, all related to an elevated testosterone level,” Kosilek said in a handwritten letter submitted to the court recently.

Robert Kosilek was sentenced to life in prison in the 1990 murder of his wife. Kosilek said the slaying was self-defense after she poured boiling tea on his genitals.

Kosilek, 58, who legally changed her name to Michelle in 1993 and has been living as a woman, first sued the Department of Correction in 2000, saying its refusal to allow her to have sex-change surgery violates the Eighth Amendment protection against cruel and unusual punishment.

In 2002, U.S. District Judge Mark Wolf ruled that Kosilek was entitled to treatment for gender identity disorder — including hormone treatments, laser hair removal and psychotherapy — but stopped short of ordering sex-reassignment surgery.

Kosilek sued again in 2005, saying the treatments were not enough to relieve her anxiety and depression.

“I would not want to continue existing like this,” Kosilek testified in June 2006.

The trial lasted on and off from May 2006 until March 2007, with expert testimony from 10 doctors, psychiatrists and psychotherapists. An Associated Press review last year found that the corrections department and its outside health care provider had spent more than $52,000 on experts to testify about the surgery, which would cost about $20,000.

Though testimony ended almost a year ago, Wolf has given no indication when he will rule in the case, which is being closely watched nationwide by advocates for other inmates who want to undergo a sex change. Transgender inmates in other states have sued prison officials, but none has persuaded a judge to order a sex-change operation.

The Department of Correction claims Kosilek’s surgery would create a security quagmire and make her a target for sexual assault. Department spokeswoman Diane Wiffin would not comment on Kosilek’s recent claims that her treatment is being neglected, citing the ongoing litigation.

In court papers filed last month, Kosilek claimed that prison officials have stopped following the treatment plan outlined by Wolf in 2002, causing a “serious revision” in her attempts to complete her transformation into a woman.

Kosilek said she has not received any laser hair removal or electrolysis since May 2006, and that prison officials have refused to let her see an endocrinologist since October 2007. She said she has repeatedly told prison authorities that the testosterone blocker Lupron has stopped functioning effectively.

In a written response, lawyers for prison officials said Kosilek has continued to receive adequate treatment for gender-identity disorder. The Correction Department also said Kosilek met three times in December with a nurse practitioner to discuss her concerns about her suppression treatment.

Kosilek, however, said prison officials have denied her repeated requests for a follow-up visit with the endocrinologist.

Prison officials said Kosilek received extensive laser hair removal treatments, then asked in January 2007 for electrolysis to remove hair that was too light for laser treatments. They said the department’s mental health provider is currently reviewing the request for electrolysis to determine whether it is “appropriate or necessary treatment.”

Kosilek’s lawyer, Frances Cohen, said the surgery is a medical necessity for Kosilek, who has twice attempted suicide.

“We hope that the Department of Correction wouldn’t use the amount of time that it necessarily takes the judiciary to resolve this to allow her treatment to move backwards,” Cohen said.

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