Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Former Creedence frontman Fogerty gets book deal

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Secession petitions filed in 20 states

In the week of last week's presidential election, thousands of Americans have signed petitions seeking permission for their states to peacefully secede from the United States. The petitions were filed on We the People, a government website.

States with citizens filing include Louisiana, Texas, Oregon, Alabama, Tennessee, Montana, North Dakota, Missouri, South Carolina, Arkansas, New Jersey, Colorado, Georgia, North Carolina, Mississippi, Michigan, New York, Florida, Indiana and Kentucky. Oddly, folks from Georgia have filed twice. Even stranger, several of the petitions come from states that went for Obama.

The petitions are short and to the point. For example, a petition from the Volunteer State reads: "Peacefully grant the State of Tennessee to withdraw from the United States of America and create its own NEW government." Of all the petitions, Texas has the most signatures so far, with more than 20,000.

Of course, this is mostly a symbolic gesture. The odds of the American government granting any state permission to go its own way are on par with winning the lotto while getting hit by a meteor while seeing Bigfoot while finding gluten-free pizza that tastes like the real thing.

An article WKRC quotes a University of Louisville political science professor who explained that these petitions aren't terribly uncommon. Similar petitions existed following the 2004 and 2008 elections. Still, should the petitions garner 25,000 signatures in a month, they will require an official response from the Obama administration.

From the We the People site:

"The right to petition your government is guaranteed by the First Amendment of the United States Constitution. We the People provides a new way to petition the Obama Administration to take action on a range of important issues facing our country. We created We the People because we want to hear from you. If a petition gets enough support, White House staff will review it, ensure it's sent to the appropriate policy experts, and issue an official response."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/secission-petitions-filed-20-states-190210006.html

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Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Syrian Expatriates Organization Announces the Starting of the ?Don?t Leave Syrians Cold? Project to Help Syrians Cope with Winter

SEO announces the starting of a new project ?Don?t Leave Syrians Cold? directed to benefit Syrians living under extremely harsh conditions, inside the country and in the refugee camps. SEO believes that the ?Don?t Leave the Syrians Cold? project is significantly important at this time, it highlights one of the major challenges facing Syrian people on a daily basis. SEO would like to ask people to relieve the suffering of Syrians by making a simple donation.

(PRWEB) November 12, 2012

SEO announces the starting of a new project ?Don?t Leave Syrians Cold? directed to benefit Syrians living under extremely harsh conditions, inside the country and in the refugee camps.

Describing the humanitarian situation in Syria as beyond the capacity of ICRC to cope with, Peter Maurer, president of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) said on Friday November 9th-2012 "The humanitarian situation is getting worse despite the scope of the operation increasing," On the same day, more than 11,000 refugees had fled Syria, in what is thought to be the highest daily exodus since the insurrection began 19 months ago, as reported by Freepnews.

http://www.freep.com/usatoday/article/1694315?odyssey=mod|newswell|text|FRONTPAGE|s

http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/middle-east/syria/121108/red-cross-cant-cope-syrian-crisis

Addressing the importance of the project, Dr Samah Bassas, SEO board member, said, ?Winter season has already started to pose an additional dimension to the existing catastrophic humanitarian situation in Syria and the refugee camps, where about 400,000 registered refugees in Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey and Iraq are under extremely harsh weather. Our project is directed, mainly, to alleviate the suffering of our people, by providing basic needs to cope with the environmental conditions. We will work with local city councils and humanitarian groups on the ground to respond to their demand accordingly. We hope to generate enough fund to help our people in Syria living in miserable conditions.?

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/nov/09/syria-refugee-high-11000-flee

SEO believes that the ?Don?t Leave Syrians Cold? project is significantly important at this time, it highlights one of the major challenges facing Syrian people on a daily basis. SEO would like to ask people to relieve the suffering of Syrians by making a simple donation.

For more information, please visit our website at:


http://www.syrain-expatriates.org

sawsan Jabri
Syrian Expatriates Organization
734-769-4017
Email Information

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/syrian-expatriates-organization-announces-starting-don-t-leave-023330041.html

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6 Signs Your Marriage Will End In Divorce | World of Psychology

6 Signs Your Marriage Could Be Heading to Divorce This guest article from YourTango was written by Leslie Petruck.

Maintaining a marriage requires intentionality. Just like other relationships, if your marriage doesn?t receive the necessary time and attention, it will deteriorate.

Couples tend to enter marriages with great expectations, bringing both their own histories of hurt and unmet needs. The unspoken expectation that your partner will finally love you the way you desire to be loved is often a setup for failure.

Apathy and contempt in a marriage are warning signs that your marriage needs your attention, and the number one predictor of divorce is conflict avoidance. So, if you and your partner avoid conflict and lack the skills of conflict resolution, your marriage may be in jeopardy.

Dr. John Gottman, marriage and family therapist and leading researcher on marriage, has conducted studies over the span of 40 years to determine the predictors of divorce.

His studies showed that these 6 characteristics of communication predict the likelihood of divorce with 91% accuracy.

If the dynamics in your marriage fit these patterns, your chance of divorce may be greater:

1. Harsh start-ups. Approaching a conversation or conflict with sarcasm, accusations, criticism or derogatory comments is dangerous for a marriage. Initiating a conversation harshly, will likely result in an acrimonious ending without resolution.

2. The four horsemen. Gottman identifies these as contempt, criticism, defensiveness and stonewalling.? His research shows a correlation between these characteristics of communication with your spouse drastically increase likelihood to divorce.

3. Flooding. You and/or your spouse overwhelm each other with negativity that causes an emotional shut-down and detachment from your relationship. When you or your partner suddenly barrages the other with criticism or contempt, leaving the other feeling shell shocked, this results in disengagement and often, over time, leads to contempt.

4. Body language. When one or both partners become overwhelmed and flooded, it results in physiological changes in the body. Increased heart rate, a secretion of adrenaline and an increase in blood pressure occur and these physiological responses preclude the ability to effectively resolve conflict. Flooding triggers a fight or flight response, resulting in disengagement and/or stonewalling by your partner.

5. Failed attempts to repair. If conflict is not resolved or stonewalled by one partner, the likelihood of divorce increases. Conflict resolution is imperative in maintaining a healthy relationship. Stonewalling is the lack of willingness to engage in conversation and resolution around a conflict.

6. Bad memories. Couples who get stuck viewing their relationship through a negative lens end up rewriting history that is often distorted. This extreme negative outlook impacts the historical, present and future perception of the relationship and contributes to the demise of a marriage.

Dick Schwartz, another leading Marriage and Family Therapist, and Founder of the Center For Self Leadership and Internal Family Systems, writes in his book You Are The One You?ve Been Waiting For that marriage is often a set-up for failure from the start because of the expectation that your mate will be your ?redeemer? and fulfill all your unmet needs. This expectation will inevitably result in disappointment and discord.

No partner can fulfill and redeem another. One must first learn how to lead from the self so he/she is able to connect with his/her own natural ability for caring, compassion and courage. By identifying and working with your own hurting parts, learning their story and the emotions and beliefs they hold, you are able to connect with your self and become more ?self-lead.?

The ability to be in ?self leadership? will allow you to avoid the expectation of your partner to fulfill your unmet needs and therefore remove the constant let down you experience when your partner doesn?t. In turn, this will set the stage for resolving conflict in such a way that each partner feels heard and understood.

More divorce advice from YourTango Experts:

Contributed by YourTango.com, an online magazine dedicated to love, life and relationships. From dating to marriage, parenting to empty-nest, relationship challenges to relationship success, YourTango is at the center of the conversations that are closest to our over 3 million readers' hearts. With daily contributions from our Experts, we have a little something for everyone looking to create healthier lives. We're excited to offer our contributions to the PsychCentral community, and invite you to visit us on YourTango.com.

Like this author?
Catch up on other posts by YourTango Experts (or subscribe to their feed).



????Last reviewed: By John M. Grohol, Psy.D. on 12 Nov 2012
????Published on PsychCentral.com. All rights reserved.

APA Reference
Experts, Y. (2012). 6 Signs Your Marriage Could Be Heading to Divorce. Psych Central. Retrieved on November 13, 2012, from http://psychcentral.com/blog/archives/2012/11/12/6-signs-your-marriage-could-be-heading-to-divorce/

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Source: http://psychcentral.com/blog/archives/2012/11/12/6-signs-your-marriage-could-be-heading-to-divorce/

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Monday, November 12, 2012

'Homeland' star uses Muslim joke on Obama gift

Kent Smith / Showtime

Damian Lewis, right, as Nicholas Brody and Claire Danes as Carrie Mathison on the Showtime series "Homeland."

By Courtney Hazlett, TODAY

Many Americans are big fans of "Homeland," and specifically, Damian Lewis' Emmy-winning portrayal?of double agent Sgt. Nicholas Brody. President Barack Obama is no exception, and?has expressed?that the show is a must-see for him.?Lewis was even a dinner guest at the White House in March.

The actor, appearing on the British talk show "The Jonathan Ross Show," explained that he was recently given the opportunity to sign a "Homeland" box set for Obama, and needed to think of a message to pen to the president.

"Claire Danes (who plays CIA agent Carrie Mathison) had written something really lovely and sweet, saying, 'I was a fan of yours long before you were a fan of ours.' And I thought, got to think of something great and funny ... something classy. And I went, 'From one Muslim to another' in an indelible Sharpie. And I couldn't take it back."

The birther reference was meant to be a joke, playing off of the religion of Lewis' "Homeland" character, but Lewis appeared to have some regrets about doing it.

"I was then writing emails for the whole of the next week, going: ''I do hope he understands irony.'"

Related content:

?

Also in The Clicker:

Source: http://theclicker.today.com/_news/2012/11/12/15114442-homeland-star-signs-obama-gift-from-one-muslim-to-another?lite

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Early stress may sensitize girls' brains for later anxiety | Science Codex

MADISON ? High levels of family stress in infancy are linked to differences in everyday brain function and anxiety in teenage girls, according to new results of a long-running population study by University of Wisconsin-Madison scientists.

The study highlights evidence for a developmental pathway through which early life stress may drive these changes. Here, babies who lived in homes with stressed mothers were more likely to grow into preschoolers with higher levels of cortisol, a stress hormone. In addition, these girls with higher cortisol also showed less communication between brain areas associated with emotion regulation 14 years later. Last, both high cortisol and differences in brain activity predicted higher levels of adolescent anxiety at age 18.

The young men in the study did not show any of these patterns.

"We wanted to understand how stress early in life impacts patterns of brain development which might lead to anxiety and depression," says first author Dr. Cory Burghy of the Waisman Laboratory for Brain Imaging and Behavior. "Young girls who, as preschoolers, had heightened cortisol levels, go on to show lower brain connectivity in important neural pathways for emotion regulation - and that predicts symptoms of anxiety during adolescence."

To test this, scans designed by Dr. Rasmus Birn, assistant professor of psychiatry in the UW School of Medicine and Public Health, showed that teenage girls whose mothers reported high levels of family stress when the girls were babies show reduced connections between the amygdala or threat center of the brain and the ventromedial prefrontal cortex, a part of the brain responsible for emotional regulation. Birn used a method called resting-state functional connectivity (fcMRI), which looks at the brain connections while the brain is at a resting state.

The study is being published today in Nature Neuroscience.

"Merging field research and home observation with the latest laboratory measures really makes this study novel," says Dr. Richard Davidson, professor of psychology and psychiatry, and director of the lab where Burghy is a post-doctoral researcher. "This will pave the way to better understanding of how the brain develops, and could give us insight into ways to intervene when children are young."

The current paper has its roots back in 1990 and 1991, when 570 children and their families enrolled in the Wisconsin Study of Families and Work (WSFW). All of the children were born in either Madison or Milwaukee. Dr. Marilyn Essex, a UW professor of psychiatry and co-director of the WSFW, said the initial goal was to study the effects of maternity leave, day care and other factors on family stress. Over the years, the study has resulted in important findings on the social, psychological, and biological risk factors for child and adolescent mental health problems. Subjects are now 21 and 22 years old, and many continue to participate.

For the current study, Burghy and Birn used fcMRI to scan the brains of 57 subjects ? 28 female and 29 male ? to map the strength of connections between the amygdala, an area of the brain known for its sensitivity to negative emotion and threat, and the prefrontal cortex, often associated with helping to process and regulate negative emotion. Then, they looked back at earlier results and found that girls with weaker connections had, as infants, lived in homes where their mothers had reported higher general levels of stress ? which could include symptoms of depression, parenting frustration, marital conflict, feeling overwhelmed in their role as a parent, and/or financial stress. As four-year-olds, these girls also showed higher levels of cortisol late in the day, measured in saliva, which is thought to demonstrate the stress the children experienced over the course of that day.

Near the time of the scan, researchers queried the teenagers about their anxiety symptoms, and about the stress in their current lives. They found a connection with childhood stress, rather than current stress levels. This suggested that higher cortisol levels in childhood could have modified the girl's developing brain, leaving weaker connections between the prefrontal cortex and amygdala ? an association that explained about 65 percent of the variance in teenage anxiety levels.

"Our findings raise questions on how boys and girls differ in the life impact of early stress,'' says Davidson, who calls the disparity unsurprising. "We do know that women report higher levels of mood and anxiety disorders, and these sex-based differences are very pronounced, especially in adolescence."

Davidson says the study "raises important questions to help guide clinicians in preventive strategies that could benefit all children by teaching them to propagate well-being and resilience."

Essex notes that some of the recent results also answer questions raised when the newborns were enrolled a generation ago.

"Now that we are showing that early life stress and cortisol affect brain development," she says, "it raises important questions about what we can do to better support young parents and families."

Source: http://www.sciencecodex.com/early_stress_may_sensitize_girls_brains_for_later_anxiety-101824

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Samsung Nexus 10 review

Nexus 10

The screen is to die for, but how does the rest of the Nexus 10 match up? Is it the tablet to buy, or does the Nexus 7 still hold that honor?

We get giddy around here when new Nexus devices get released. Some of you guys and gals do, too. This go ‘round, we get a twofer with both the LG Nexus 4 (check out Phil's great review), and the Samsung Nexus 10 hitting Google Play at the same time.

'Tis a good time to be an Android fan.

The screen is beyond beautiful, and the next-generation hardware under the glass should be able to push Android in ways we would have never thought possible a scant 12 months ago -- and maybe it pushes it a little too far. But make no mistake -- the Nexus 10 is at the pinnacle of tablet technology. We've never seen specifications of this caliber before, and everything about the Nexus 10 just screams bad-ass.

The Nexus 10 is in an odd spot though, as one of its biggest competitors is for sale right beside it at Google Play, and checks in a good bit cheaper. I’m talking about the Nexus 7, of course. The new hardware in the Nexus 10 has to justify the extra $200 price, and that leads to the million dollar question. Is being the best spec’ed and best value 10-inch tablet enough to pick the Nexus 10 over it’s 7-inch brother? Let’s have a look and find out.

Win a Nexus 10 of your own in the Mobile Nations Passport contest!

read more



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/androidcentral/~3/LEitKOjgFQ4/story01.htm

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