Monday, September 25, 2006

Blogging for dollars

It's not just a hobby - some small sites are making big money. Here's how to turn your passion into an online empire.

By Paul Sloan and Paul Kaihla, Business 2.0 Magazine
September 8 2006: 12:37 PM EDT


Thursday, September 21, 2006

Ousted Thai PM Thaksin calls for swift elections

BANGKOK (Reuters) - Ousted Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra and the main opposition called on Thursday for swift general elections in Thailand as military coup leaders banned "political activities".

Thaksin, in a statement from London two days after he was removed in a bloodless coup, urged all parties to work for national reconciliation "for the sake of our King and country".

It said Thaksin "hopes the new regime will quickly arrange a new general election and continue to uphold the principles of democracy for the future of all Thai".

It gave no indication the billionaire telecoms tycoon, who won two landslide elections before facing an anti-corruption street campaign a year ago, was planning to return to Bangkok, despite an invitation to do so from coup leaders.

He would have to face charges already filed, including election fraud, and others may be looming.

The administration said it expected to complete a probe this month into whether Thaksin's family legitimately avoided tax on their $1.9 billion (1 billion pound) sale of the company he founded and into allegations of corruption in government spending under his rule.

Democrat Party leader Abhisit Vejjajiva called for elections in six months after army chief Sonthi Boonyaratglin promised a civilian prime minister in two weeks, followed by a military withdrawal, political reform in a year and then new elections.

"We are encouraged that they don't want to hold onto power and that their job is to put the country back on the democratic path," he told Reuters.

Wednesday, September 20, 2006

40 Things That Only Happen In Movies

1. It is always possible to find a parking spot directly outside or opposite the building you are visiting.

2. When paying for a taxi, don't look at your wallet as you take out a note. Just grab one out at random and hand it over. It will always be the exact fare.

3. Television news bulletins usually contain a story that affects you personally at the precise moment it's aired.

4. Creepy music (or satanic chanting) coming from a graveyard should always be closely investigated.

5. Any lock can be picked with a credit card or paperclip in seconds. UNLESS it's the door to a burning building with a child inside.

6. If you decide to start dancing in the street, everyone you bump into will know all the steps.

7. All bombs are fitted with electronic timing devices with large red digital displays so you know exactly when they are going to explode.

8. Should you wish to pass yourself off as a German officer, it will not be necessary to learn to speak German. Simply speaking English with a German accent will do. Similarly, when they are alone, all German soldiers prefer to speak English to each other.

9. Once applied, lipstick will never rub off. Even while scuba diving.

10. The Eiffel Tower can be seen from any window of any building in Paris.

11. Any police officer about to retire from the force will more often than not die on their last day (especially if their family have planned a party). (Caveat: Detectives can only solve a case after they have been suspended from duty).

12. Getaway cars never start first go. But all cop cars do. (They will also slide to a dramatic stop in the midst of a crime scene).

13. If staying in a haunted house, women should investigate any strange noises wearing their most revealing underwear.

14. On a police stake-out, the action will only ever take place when food is being consumed and scalding hot coffees are perched precariously on the dashboard . . .

15. All grocery shopping involves the purchase of French loaves which will be placed in open brown paper bags (Caveat: when said bags break, only fruit will spill out).

16. Cars never need fuel (unless they're involved in a pursuit).

17. If you are heavily outnumbered in a fight involving martial arts, your opponents will wait patiently to attack you one by one by dancing around you in a threatening manner until you have defeated their predecessor.

18. If a microphone is turned on it will immediately feedback.

19. Guns are like disposable razors. If you run out of bullets, just throw the gun away. you will always find another one.

20. All single women have a cat.

21. Cars will explode instantly when struck by a single bullet.

22. No matter how savagely a spaceship is attacked, its internal gravity system is never damaged.

23. If being chased through a city you can usually take cover in a passing St Patrick's Day parade - at any time of the year.

24. The ventilation system of any building is the perfect hiding place. Nobody will ever think of looking for you in there and you can travel to any other part of the building undetected.

25. You will survive any battle in any war UNLESS you show someone a picture of your sweetheart back home.

26. Prostitutes always look like Julia Roberts or Jamie Lee Curtis. They have expensive clothes and nice apartments but no pimps. They are friendly with the shopkeepers in their neighbourhood who don't mind at all what the girl does for a living.

27. A single match is usually sufficient to light up a room the size of a football stadium.

28. It is not necessary to say "Hello" or "Goodbye" when beginning a telephone conversation. A disconnected call can always be restored by frantically beating the cradle and saying "Hello? Hello?" repeatedly.

29. One man shooting at 20 men has a better chance of killing them all than 20 men firing at once (it's called Stallone's Law).

30. When you turn out the light to go to bed, everything in you room will still be visible, just slightly bluish.

31. Plain or even ugly girls can become movie star pretty simply by removing their glasses and rearranging their hair.

32. Rather than wasting bullets, megalomaniacs prefer to kill their enemies with complicated devices incorporating fuses, pulleys, deadly gases, lasers and man-eating sharks.

33. All beds have special L-shaped sheets that reach to armpit level on a woman but only up to the waist of the man lying beside her.

34. Anyone can land a 747 as long as there is someone in the control tower to talk you down.

35. During all police investigations it will be necessary to visit a strip club at least once.

36. You can always find a chainsaw when you need one.

37. Most musical instruments (especially wind instruments and accordions) can be played without moving your fingers.

38. In Middle America, all gas station attendants have red handkerchiefs hanging out of their back pockets.

39. All teen house parties have one of every stereotypical subculture present (even people who aren't liked and would never get invited to parties).

40. Trucks use their horns at random (no hang on, that happens in real life too!).

Thousands Remember the 'Crocodile Hunter'


Sept. 20, 2006 — Friends and fans, including Hollywood stars and Australia's prime minister, bid farewell to "Crocodile Hunter" Steve Irwin on Wednesday at a service that veered from poignant tributes to belly laughs.

Irwin's 8-year-old daughter, Bindi, hailed him as her hero; his father, Bob, asked people to end their grieving, and fans were invited to laugh at his television antics one more time.

The ceremony was carried live on three national television networks and at least one radio station. Flags on the Sydney Harbor Bridge and throughout Irwin's home state of Queensland flew at half-staff, and giant television screens were set up for people to watch the service.

Prime Minister John Howard was among the 5,000 people who attended the ceremony at the "Crocoseum," the small stadium in Irwin's wildlife park where he regularly put on crocodile-feeding shows.

"Steve Irwin touched the hearts of Australians and touched the hearts of millions around the world in a very special way," Howard said.

In a recorded video message from New York, Oscar-winning actor Russell Crowe said: "It was way too soon for all of us. We have lost a friend, a champion."

Irwin, 44, died Sept. 4 when a stringray's barb pierced his chest while he filmed a TV show on the Great Barrier Reef. His family held a private funeral service for him on Sept. 9 at the family-owned park, Australia Zoo.

As expected, there was one empty seat at Steve Irwin's personal stadium — symbolically set aside for the late conservationist himself. On the stage sat Irwin's widow, Terri, and their two children, Bindi, and Bob, 2 — all dressed in Irwin's favorite khaki. It was their first public appearance since Irwin's death.

"Please do not grieve for Steve, he's at peace now," Bob Irwin said. "Grieve for the animals. They have lost the best friend they ever had, and so have I."

Bindi told the crowd at the ceremony that "my Daddy was my hero."

"He was always there for me when I needed him. He listened to me and taught me so many things. But most of all he was fun," she said.

There were lighter moments, including several video clips of Irwin's in-your-face antics that drew laughs and applause from the crowd.

Most popular were out-takes and bloopers from his TV program, showing Irwin falling out of boats, getting bitten by lizards and forgetting his lines.

At the end of the ceremony, Irwin's utility vehicle, packed with camping gear and his favorite surfboard, was driven from the stadium — through an honor guard of Australia Zoo employees.

After the truck left the stadium, a group of employees spelled out Irwin's catchword "Crikey" in yellow flowers on the ground.

As part of the public memorial entitled "He Changed Our World," actress Cameron Diaz said in a video presentation that Irwin was incredibly popular in the United States.

"America just flipped for him," said Diaz. "Every kid was in love with the idea of being him."

Actor Kevin Costner said in the video that Irwin was "fearless ... He let us see who he was. That is being brave in today's society."

Separately from the service, marine explorer Jean-Michel Cousteau said that, while he mourned Irwin's death, he disagreed with the Australian's hands-on approach to nature television.

He said he respected Irwin's environmental message, but noted that Irwin would "interfere with nature, jump on animals, grab them, hold them, and have this very, very spectacular, dramatic way of presenting things."

"It sells, it appeals to a lot people, but I think it's very misleading," Cousteau said in Los Angeles. "You don't touch nature, you just look at it."

Buddha

Holding onto anger is like grasping a hot coal with the intent of throwing it at someone else; you are the one who gets burned. - Buddha

Joke: Le Parfumerie y le Blonde

One day two blondes walk into a perfume shop. The one blonde picks up a bottle of perfume that is titled "Viens Chez Moi."

The blonde asks the manager what it means, and the manager says it means, "Come to Me."

So the blonde smells the perfume and asks her friend, "Does this smell like come to you? Because it doesn't smell like come to me."

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

Good Pictures from Bansky

Intervención sobre el Muro de Palestina


Intervención sobre el Muro de Palestina


Intervención sobre el Muro de Palestina


Intervención sobre el Muro de Palestina







Para ver más hacer click aquí

Hungarian Premier Appeals for Calm After Riots in Budapest

Sept. 19 (Bloomberg) -- Hungarian Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsany called for an end to violence as Budapest braces for a possible second night of rioting following his admission that he misled voters about spending before April elections.

Gyurcsany appealed to citizens to shun riots and not join protesters who are gathering for a third day in front of parliament. About 10,000 demonstrators yesterday hurled stones and bottles at a police cordon, set fire to cars and beat back an attempt to clear the area, injuring about 200.

``A majority of people could feel nothing else but repulsion, rejection and astonishment by what happened last night,'' Gyurcsany said. ``I ask all Hungarians to not support any illegal acts. To participate in the events as responsible citizens, not as vandals.''

Gyurcsany's Socialist Party won April elections with promises to boost social spending after the opposition Fidesz party moved ahead in pre-election polls. At the same time, the government was under growing pressure by the European Union to slash its burgeoning budget deficit, the EU's largest compared with the size of its economy, so it can adopt the euro.

The protests were sparked by an expletive-laden recording that was leaked to several media outlets on Sept. 17 in which Gyurcsany said the government lied about the economy. He later published the full text in his Internet diary. He was calling for the start of a cleansing process in Hungarian politics, he said.

`Screwed Up'

``We screwed it up, big time,'' Gyurcsany said on the leaked tape of the meeting. ``No country in Europe has been so blatant. We obviously lied throughout the past 1 1/2 to 2 years. And meanwhile, we didn't do a thing for four years. Nothing.''

Protestors said they would remain at parliament, which was cordoned off today by a ring of police officers, until the government steps down.

``We know that all politicians are liars,'' said Balint Pethes, 27, standing outside the legislature holding a Hungarian flag. ``They insulted us. That is why we are here. We are going to stay here until he resigns.''

The forint fell to 273.45 by 1:46 p.m. in Budapest from 270.71 late yesterday. Hungary's benchmark BUX stock index fell 1.34 percent. The yield on the nation's five-year bond rose 14 basis points.

The number of demonstrators increased through yesterday and the crowd moved to the nearby television building at about 10 p.m. last night, demanding airtime to broadcast their grievances. They were led by a group of soccer hooligans and political extremists, Gyurcsany said today.

Injured Police

A total of 114 policemen had been injured by the time they cleared the building of protesters at 4:30 a.m., said police spokesman Pal Nemeth. The area around TV headquarters was cordoned off this morning and is peaceful now. State television was back on the air at 5:23 a.m. this morning, four hours after breaking off.

Police have arrested eight people and ordered investigators to find people caught on taped broadcasts, said police spokeswoman Eva Tafferner. They also closed down the square in front of the television building, home to the U.S. Embassy, the central bank and the headquarters of several commercial banks.

Gyurcsany, speaking to reporters today in Budapest, said he will give police all available resources to conserve peace.

``We are past one of the longest and darkest nights of the third Hungarian republic,'' he said. ``The institution of the republic itself was under attack.''

He reiterated yesterday's pledge not to step down. He said yesterday that he can't be forced out of power unless his parliamentary majority turns against him. The Socialist Party and coalition partner, the Free Democrats' Alliance, pledged their support yesterday.

President Laszlo Solyom denounced Gyurcsany's comments on the leaked tape. He said that he had no constitutional rights to act, even after several people urged him to dissolve parliament and call new elections.

`Moral Crisis'

There's a ``moral crisis in Hungary,'' Solyom said yesterday. ``The premier's reactions only deepened that. If it becomes the norm that a good goal justifies all means, then the credibility of democracy is at stake.''

He also condemned last night's violence at a press conference today.

``These are criminal acts,'' Solyom said. ``We must stand up against them in the strictest way, and from which the state must use its whole power to protect its citizens and institutions. We have to make a clear distinction between freedom of expression, freedom of assembly and criminal acts.''

The parliamentary opposition called for Gyurcsany's resignation.

`Flood of Lies'

``Gyurcsany is part of the problem, not the solution,'' said Tibor Navracsics, the head of the Fidesz parliamentary group, on the party's Web site yesterday. ``Gyurcsany has become persona non grata in Hungarian politics. The flood of lies they told in the election campaign has been uncovered.''

Justice Minister Jozsef Petretei offered his resignation following the riots, which Gyurcsany didn't accept, government spokeswoman Emese Danks said in a phone interview.

To contact the reporter on this story: Balazs Penz in Budapest at bpenz@bloomberg.net .

Friday, September 15, 2006

Kisses

The plaza collects the fleeting happiness of the couple's ephemeral love. In spite of this knowledge, they kiss. And the world disappears. All that remains are the entwined hearts in that long kiss. People pass and look but they don't notice. They are too preoccupied with each other.

A dog tries to eat its tail, as absorbed with itself as they are with themselves.

The kiss ends, the dog finishes.

The couple no longer exists, not the plaza, not even the dog. Or you. Or this story.

Life doesn't exist beyond kisses.

Monday, September 11, 2006

Blair takes peace mission to a hostile Beirut


TONY BLAIR inspected the ground zero of his Middle East policy yesterday with a trip to bomb-ravaged Beirut.

The embattled British Prime Minister flew on to Lebanon after a two-day peace mission to neighbouring Israel and the West Bank.

Tight security was deployed around the state building in central Beirut to protect Mr Blair from about 1500 protesting Lebanese angered by his support for the recent Israeli onslaught, which killed more than 800 civilians and caused billions of dollars in damage and losses.

Mr Blair is believed to be hoping for a diplomatic triumph to boost his crumbling domestic and international prestige. He has just endured a disastrous week in which he was forced to set a one-year deadline for his retirement or face a leadership challenge from within the Labour Party.

The main catalyst for the discontent was Mr Blair's staunch support for Israel and the US during the 34-day war sparked by the July 12 raid in which Hezbollah guerillas captured two Israeli soldiers and killed eight others.

Mr Blair will thus face a difficult task in winning over Lebanese opinion. While he went straight into a meeting with the Prime Minister, Fouad Siniora, yesterday, two Hezbollah members of the elected government declined to attend a planned meeting and the Speaker of the parliament, Nabih Berri, who is close to Hezbollah, went abroad on Saturday.

On the eve of his arrival, Mohammed Hussein Fadlallah, Lebanon's most senior Shiite cleric and a spiritual guide to Hezbollah, said Mr Blair had been "a real partner in the Israeli-American war on Lebanon" and should not be allowed to visit.

Before his departure for Beirut, Mr Blair achieved a symbolic breakthrough when the Israeli Prime Minister, Ehud Olmert, and Palestinian President, Mahmoud Abbas, stated separately that they would meet each other without preconditions.

Israel has refused to allow any formal contacts with senior Palestinian Authority officials, including the moderate Mr Abbas, since parliamentary elections in January brought a surprise victory for the Islamic militant group Hamas, which Israel shuns as a terrorist organisation. In practice, however, both sides say that no preparations for talks are under way.

Mr Blair also stated that Britain would welcome the formation of a new Palestinian unity government including Hamas and Mr Abbas's Fatah party - perhaps setting the scene for an end to the diplomatic and financial boycott imposed on the Palestinian Authority by Israel and the West after Hamas came to power.

The boycott has led to surging poverty and desperation in the West Bank and in particular Gaza, where Israeli raids and bombardments have killed hundreds of Palestinians this year, many of them civilians.

Such a breakthrough would depend on Hamas - as part of the new government - accepting United Nations, Western and Israeli demands that it end armed resistance, recognise Israel's right to exist and accept previous agreements recognising Israeli occupation of Palestinian territories pending a final settlement.

A Hamas spokesman, Sami Abu Zuhri, said the group was prepared for a coalition with Fatah, but "not according to standards that are dictated". Instead, Hamas has sought to blur the issue by accepting the so-called "prisoners' document", a Palestinian peace initiative that calls for independence in Arab lands seized by Israel in 1967.

By doing so, some say, Hamas is accepting a de facto recognition of Israel's existence in the other 80 per cent of the former British mandate of Palestine, lands that Israeli forces occupied in 1948.

Thursday, September 07, 2006

Future Be Warned: Keep Out!


A half-mile below the surface of the New Mexico desert, the federal government is interring thousands of tons of monstrously dangerous leftovers from its nuclear weapons program --plutonium-infested clothing, tools and chemical sludge that will remain potentially lethal for thousands of years to come.

It may be safely secured now, but how to keep our descendants centuries in the future from accidentally unearthing it?

That's the question posed by the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant, the nation̢۪s only underground repository for military-generated radioactive waste.

To address it, the Department of Energy convened a conclave of scientists, linguists, anthropologists and sci-fi thinkers to develop an elaborate system intended to shout "Danger!" to any human being for the next 10,000 years -- regardless of what language they speak or technology they use.

The resulting solution: an unprecedented and epic scale monument that's expected to take the next three decades and as much as $1 billion to complete. "Basically, we just want to make sure society doesn̢۪t forget we're here," says Roger Nelson, WIPP's chief scientist.

It's going to be pretty obvious that something is there under the scrublands near Carlsbad. The waste site will be surrounded by a four-mile outer fence of dozens of 25-foot, 20-ton granite markers engraved with multi-lingual and pictographic warnings.

Inside that perimeter will be a massive earthen berm 33 feet high, forming a rectangle matching the footprint of the underground site.

The berm will be implanted with magnets and radar reflectors to make it obvious that it̢۪s not a natural formation. A structure in the center of the space and two subterranean rooms will hold detailed information on the facility, and hundreds of super-hard disks printed with pictographic danger signs will be scattered throughout its 120 acres.

Construction of the full Stonehenge-like structure won̢۪t start until WIPP is filled up, sometime in the mid-2030s. At that point, the underground site will be sealed and guarded for the next 100 years.

Prep work, however, is already underway.

"We looked at what messages had come from deep in time to the present, like the pyramids," explains David B. Givens, an anthropologist specializing in non-verbal communication who helped conceive the warning system. "It boils down to stones," he says -- the only medium so far to have established a track record of retaining messages for as long as 5,000 years.

That̢۪s a good start, but still not enough. Scientists at WIPP are currently conducting tests to figure out whether they can develop materials that might last even longer.

Then there's the question of how to make the message itself comprehensible. Centuries from now, any modern language is likely to be as hard to understand as pre-medieval Pictish.

"Egyptian hieroglyphics lasted thousands of years, but it took us years of research to decipher them," says Givens. "We want ours to be self-explanatory."

That means pictures, as well as words.

The next step will be testing various pictograms on people from far-flung cultures to find some that are as universally legible as the "man" sign on an airport restroom.

Still, given the infinite unknowns of what society might look like millennia from now, there's every chance none of this will work -- and might even backfire.

"The pyramids were designed to keep people out, but wound up attracting them instead," points out Don Hancock, a spokesperson for the Southwest Research and Information Center, a New Mexico environmental group.

That's a particular concern, considering that there are probably large reserves of oil and natural gas underneath the waste site. "People are going to want to get to that, and markers are not going to keep them away," says Hancock.

Of course, there's one consolation. If the warning system doesn̢۪t work, none of us will be around to find out.

Friday, September 01, 2006

New Skype Phone Is PC Free

Skype has announced the first cordless phone that doesn’t need a PC to run the popular VoIP service. The Philips VOIP841’s base station can be plugged into a landline or ethernet connection, letting you make Skype calls as well as calls from your home phone number. It’s not travel friendly like other Skype phones — because it uses DECT rather than WiFi, you can’t use it with wireless hot spots, but that’s a small quibble given that this is the first standalone Skype handset. The phone will be released around Christmas this year.

2 insurgents reported killed; Dutch F-16 crashes

ABUL -- Taliban militants attacked a southern town Thursday in the latest violence in Afghanistan, sparking intense fighting that left two insurgents dead, the Defense Ministry said.

A NATO air strike pushed back the militants, who used mortars, rocket-propelled grenades and heavy machine guns in the attack on Naw Zad, in volatile Helmand province, said Defense Ministry spokesman Gen. Zahir Azimi. He said the fighting was "intense."


A Dutch F-16 fighter jet crashed in Ghazni province in central Afghanistan, killing the pilot, military officials said. Hostile fire was ruled out because it was flying too high to have been shot down. The 29-year old pilot, the only person on board, was found dead.

The Netherlands is a key contributor to a multinational force in charge of security operations in southern Afghanistan.

In Zabul province, a suicide attacker plowed his explosives-filled car into a police convoy traveling on the main road, wounding three officers, said Jailan Khan, provincial police chief.

Saturday, August 05, 2006

Blogger in Jail for not give a video to the Police


Josh Wolf, independient blogger and journalist has been putted in jail this Thursday for not giving to the justice the video of a protest against G8.

In his blog: http://joshwolf.net/blog/ his mather ask for fund to support the trial.
A clear case of personal Fund Raising.

More info in Reporteros Sin Fronteras

Friday, June 16, 2006

Argentina 6-0 Serbia & Montenegro

Argentina put one foot into the last 16 by demolishing Serbia and Montenegro.

Maxi Rodriguez fired Argentina ahead from Javier Saviola's pass before Esteban Cambiasso rounded off a flowing 24-pass move, finishing from 12 yards.

Javier Saviola set up Rodriguez for the second and after Mateja Kezman saw red for a late lunge, Hernan Crespo made it 4-0 from Lionel Messi's cross.

Carlos Tevez rolled home the fifth and then teed up Messi who completed the rout with a low finish for the sixth.

Argentina took an early lead with a beautifully constructed goal that typified their flowing style.

Juan Pablo Sorin's cute backheel opened Serbia up down the left, allowing Saviola to cut inside where he eased a perfect pass into the path of Rodriguez who stabbed a first-time shot past Dragoslav Jevric.

Argentina gave a masterclass of passing skills to double their lead with the sweetest of goals.

They patiently strung together 21 passes before Juan Pablo Riquelme fed Saviola who slipped a pass inside for Cambiasso. Cambiasso knocked the ball into Crespo who backheeled a return pass into the Inter midfielder who thumped the ball home from 12 yards.

Predrag Djordjevic vainly attempted to prompt Serbia & Montenegro from midfield but there was already an air of resignation from his strikers and they were the architects of their own downfall as Argentina scored a third just before half-time.

Argentina legend Diego Maradona in Gelsenkirchen
Argentine legend Diego Maradona led the celebrations

Mladen Krstajic's attempts to shepherd the ball out for a corner ended in embarrassment as Saviola took the ball off him and cut inside where his shot was parried by keeper Jevric into the path of Rodriguez who scored from a tight angle via the post.

Savo Milosevic provided Roberto Abbondanzieri with his first test in the opening minute of the second half and the former Aston Villa striker was inches away as he lunged at Kezman's knock-back.

Serbia & Montenegro became increasingly frustrated as Argentina strutted their stuff and Kezman boiled over with a wild lunge on Javier Mascherano which earned him a straight red card.

There was even time for Messi to make a contribution as the substitute latched on to Riquelme's quickly taken free-kick and crossed for Crespo to tap in at the far post.

Another substitute, Tevez, scored a fine individual fifth as he beat two defenders in drifting in from the left before rolling the ball in.

Tevez then provided the pass for Messi to run on and beat Jevric at his near post to complete the rout with Argentina's sixth.


Argentina: Abbondanzieri, Burdisso, Ayala, Heinze, Sorin, Maxi (Messi 74), Mascherano, Gonzalez (Cambiasso 16), Riquelme, Saviola (Tevez 58), Crespo.
Subs Not Used: Coloccini, Aimar, Cruz, Cufre, Franco, Milito, Palacio, Scaloni, Ustari.

Booked: Crespo.

Goals: Maxi 6, Cambiasso 31, Maxi 41, Crespo 78, Tevez 84, Messi 88.

Serbia & Montenegro: Jevric, Duljaj, Gavrancic, Krstajic, Dudic, Koroman (Ljuboja 49), Stankovic, Nadj (Ergic 45), Predrag Djordjevic, Kezman, Milosevic (Vukic 69).
Subs Not Used: Basta, Nenad Djordjevic, Dragutinovic, Ilic, Kovacevic, Stojkovic, Vidic, Zigic.

Sent Off: Kezman (65).

Booked: Koroman, Nadj, Krstajic.

Att: 52,000

Referee: Roberto Rosetti (Italy).

Fifa man of the match: Juan Roman Riquelme.

TRIVIA

This 6-0 hammering of Serbia and Montenegro is the joint 10th biggest win ever at the World Cup. Substitute Lionel Messi became Argentina's youngest player at the World Cup (18 years and 357 days). Messi also became the sixth youngest goalscorer ever in the finals. Pele is the youngest at 17 years and 239 days.

Roberto Ayala has equalled Javier Zanetti's career record of 102 caps for Argentina. Diego Simeone is the Argentine record holder with 106. Captain Savo Milosevic won his 100th cap. He's the first Serbia and Montenegro player to reach this milestone. So far Milosevic has won 72 caps for Yugoslavia and 28 for Serbia and Montenegro.

Serbia & Montenegro have now lost their last three World Cup matches (against Argentina and twice against Holland in 1998 and 2006). This equals their worst ever run set in 1974 as Yugoslavia.


Tuesday, May 16, 2006

Transforming Garbage - into Decent Jobs

Marcela Valente

BUENOS AIRES, May 16 (IPS) - The Argentine capital opened its first municipal plant for classifying solid waste - plastic, glass, paper, metal, cardboard and other materials - for recycling, as part of a project aimed at providing decent jobs for informal garbage collectors and reducing the amount of trash dumped into landfills.

The people sorting, classifying and processing rubbish in the City Plant for the Classification and Conditioning of Recyclable Material were until recently "cartoneros", the name given in Buenos Aires to those who make a meagre living picking through garbage.

The number of cartoneros skyrocketed during the severe economic crisis of late-2001 and 2002, but has shrunk somewhat as the economy recovered, to perhaps 10,000 today.

The cartoneros compete at a disadvantage with the garbage companies hired by the Buenos Aires city government, which collect 4,500 to 5,000 tons of rubbish every day and transport it to dumps on the outskirts of the city.

The cartoneros, meanwhile, with their hand- or horse-drawn carts, collect between 450 and 900 tons of garbage a day, depending on the weather. They sell the glass, paper, cardboard and other products to warehouses that pay them per kilo and the intermediaries sell the material to the recycling companies.

A new law on "Integral Management of Solid Urban Waste", which the international environmental group Greenpeace helped draft, went into effect in late 2005.

The law, better known as the "Zero Garbage Law", foments "rational consumption" and recycling and is designed to gradually bring about decent working conditions for the cartoneros.

"The idea is to reduce as much as possible the garbage that goes to the landfills or is incinerated, to curb pollution of the soil, air and water," Greenpeace activist Juan Carlos Villalonga told IPS.

The law stipulates that the amount of garbage in landfills is to be reduced by 50 percent by 2012 and 75 percent by 2017, from 2003 levels.

To reach that goal, the Buenos Aires city government has sponsored the organisation of cooperatives of garbage scavengers and provided space for the first warehouse, located on the west side of the city and inaugurated on May 1, International Labour Day.

It has also launched a pilot garbage separation programme in buildings more than 20 stories high, public offices, five-star hotels, and housing, businesses and offices in the exclusive Buenos Aires district of Puerto Madero, on the Río de la Plata coast.

In these areas, people and businesses separate their dry waste products from the organic waste, and the former is taken by garbage collection companies to the new plant. The law also states that the companies must build five new recycling centres, to be run by cooperatives of cartoneros.

"For now, we are practicing with small quantities to learn how to classify, but we will later have to learn to handle larger volumes and how to register purchases, sales and payments," Francisco Monzón, president of the Bajo Flores Ecological Cooperative of Recyclers, which is running the city's new plant, told IPS.

Monzón, who worked in the construction industry, has been unemployed for a decade, and turned to scavenging to scrape by. He used to gather cardboard which he stored in his backyard and sold on his own. In 2002, he set up a cooperative with 30 other cartoneros, in order to obtain better prices for the recyclable material.

Monzón's cooperative was the first to benefit from the "Zero Garbage" project. The Buenos Aires city government built the plant, bought the machinery, and loaned the installations for five years to the members of the cooperative, who hope to boost their incomes and who are working in a safer, dignified environment.

For now, 30 cartoneros are working in the plant, processing 10 tons of waste a day. But the goal is to eventually expand to 90 workers, who would handle 120 tons a day.

The workers wear gloves, masks and uniforms, to protect them from the health risks, and they are also safe from the dangers they used to face in the streets, hauling their carts along busy roads.

The warehouses that purchase recyclable waste from the cartoneros charge 15 percent more when they sell it to the recycling companies, which in turn add a similar percentage to the cost when they sell it, transformed into material that can be used by industry.

The law states that the overall amount of garbage in the dumps must be reduced, and that the proportion that goes to the garbage separation and classification warehouses must steadily increase. (END/2006)

The Next Green Revolution

How technology is leading environmentalism out of the anti-business, anti-consumer wilderness.
By Alex Nikolai Steffen
For decades, environmentalists have warned of a coming climate crisis. Their alarms went unheeded, and last year we reaped an early harvest: a singularly ferocious hurricane season, record snowfall in New England, the worst-ever wildfires in Alaska, arctic glaciers at their lowest ebb in millennia, catastrophic drought in Brazil, devastating floods in India - portents of global warming's destructive potential.

Green-minded activists failed to move the broader public not because they were wrong about the problems, but because the solutions they offered were unappealing to most people. They called for tightening belts and curbing appetites, turning down the thermostat and living lower on the food chain. They rejected technology, business, and prosperity in favor of returning to a simpler way of life. No wonder the movement got so little traction. Asking people in the world's wealthiest, most advanced societies to turn their backs on the very forces that drove such abundance is naive at best.

With climate change hard upon us, a new green movement is taking shape, one that embraces environmentalism's concerns but rejects its worn-out answers. Technology can be a font of endlessly creative solutions. Business can be a vehicle for change. Prosperity can help us build the kind of world we want. Scientific exploration, innovative design, and cultural evolution are the most powerful tools we have. Entrepreneurial zeal and market forces, guided by sustainable policies, can propel the world into a bright green future.

Americans trash the planet not because we're evil, but because the industrial systems we've devised leave no other choice. Our ranch houses and high-rises, factories and farms, freeways and power plants were conceived before we had a clue how the planet works. They're primitive inventions designed by people who didn't fully grasp the consequences of their actions.

Consider the unmitigated ecological disaster that is the automobile. Every time you turn on the ignition, you're enmeshed in a system whose known outcomes include a polluted atmosphere, oil-slicked seas, and desert wars. As comprehension of the stakes has grown, though, a market has emerged for a more sensible alternative. Today you can drive a Toyota Prius that burns far less gasoline than a conventional car. Tomorrow we might see vehicles that consume no fossil fuels and emit no greenhouse gases. Combine cars like that with smarter urban growth and we're well on our way to sustainable transportation.

You don't change the world by hiding in the woods, wearing a hair shirt, or buying indulgences in the form of save the earth bumper stickers. You do it by articulating a vision for the future and pursuing it with all the ingenuity humanity can muster. Indeed, being green at the start of the 21st century requires a wholehearted commitment to upgrading civilization. Four key principles can guide the way:

Renewable energy is plentiful energy. Burning fossil fuels is a filthy habit, and the supply won't last forever. Fortunately, a growing number of renewable alternatives promise clean, inexhaustible power: wind turbines, solar arrays, wave-power flotillas, small hydroelectric generators, geothermal systems, even bioengineered algae that turn waste into hydrogen. The challenge is to scale up these technologies to deliver power in industrial quantities - exactly the kind of challenge brilliant businesspeople love.

Efficiency creates value. The number one US industrial product is waste. Waste is worse than stupid; it's costly, which is why we're seeing businesspeople in every sector getting a jump on the competition by consuming less water, power, and materials. What's true for industry is true at home, too: Think well-insulated houses full of natural light, cars that sip instead of guzzle, appliances that pay for themselves in energy savings.

Cities beat suburbs. Manhattanites use less energy than most people in North America. Sprawl eats land and snarls traffic. Building homes close together is a more efficient use of space and infrastructure. It also encourages walking, promotes public transit, and fosters community.

Quality is wealth. More is not better. Better is better. You don't need a bigger house; you need a different floor plan. You don't need more stuff; you need stuff you'll actually use. Ecofriendly designs and nontoxic materials already exist, and there's plenty of room for innovation. You may pay more for things like long-lasting, energy-efficient LED lightbulbs, but they'll save real money over the long term.

Redesigning civilization along these lines would bring a quality of life few of us can imagine. That's because a fully functioning ecology is tantamount to tangible wealth. Clean air and water, a diversity of animal and plant species, soil and mineral resources, and predictable weather are annuities that will pay dividends for as long as the human race survives - and may even extend our stay on Earth.

It may seem impossibly far away, but on days when the smog blows off, you can already see it: a society built on radically green design, sustainable energy, and closed-loop cities; a civilization afloat on a cloud of efficient, nontoxic, recyclable technology. That's a future we can live with.

Alex Nikolai Steffen (alex@worldchanging.com) runs Worldchanging.com and edited the book Worldchanging: A User's Guide for the 21st Century

Monday, May 15, 2006

Greenpeace in all Newspaper´s covers

Argentina





Uruguay

Brasil

Greenpeace´s action was in hundreds of newspapers.

Picture: Evangelina Carrozo, Queen of Gualeguaychú´s Carnival

Sunday, May 07, 2006

Best Desing Sites

A site where you can find the best of the web desing:

http://www.thebestdesigns.com/

Monday, April 24, 2006

Paying for Tesco's Profits

Tesco is expected to announce record profits of over £2.2 billion tomorrow (Tuesday 25 April). But Friends of the Earth warned that Tesco's continuing success is partly based on trading practices that have serious consequences for suppliers, farmers, overseas workers, local shops and the environment [1].

Friends of the Earth Supermarkets Campaigner Sandra Bell said:

"Tesco's booming profits come at a cost with consumers, farmers and our environment paying the price. It is time to put the breaks on the Tesco juggernaut. The Government and competition authorities must recognise the value of small shops to local communities and create an environment that allows retail choice to flourish.

Tesco has grown unchecked by the competition authorities and aided by a planning system which has not been robust enough to stop it building new stores and extensions even where there is strong local opposition. In the last few years Tesco has:

*

Taken over convenience stores with no intervention from the competition authorities.
*

More than tripled the proportion of floorspace in its huge Tesco Extra hypermarkets (over the last five years).
*

Significantly extended existing stores without planning permission by inserting mezzanine floors [1].
*

Created `Tesco towns' where it has over 45 per cent of the market share.

Some consumers/communities are beginning to say enough is enough. More and more communities all over the country are fighting Tesco plans to open new stores [2].

Recent surveys suggest that customer loyalty is being shaken as people learn the truth about the companies bully tactics. Tesco's corporate image slipped on YouGov's brand-index, which measures consumer attitudes to brands on a day-by-day basis, after media coverage of anti-Tesco campaigners. And a study of consumer attitudes to the top supermarkets, by brand market research consultancy Millward Brown, found that while Tesco was still the most popular brand its brand loyalty rating had fallen sharply since 2003.


There is speculation that Tesco will announce funding for new environmental measures alongside its profits tomorrow. But Friends of the Earth said that Tesco would have to fundamentally change the way it does business to reduce its negative environmental impacts. This would include sourcing a lot more of its food from the UK instead of flying it across the world.

The environmental campaign group pointed out that local shops tend to be more energy efficient than huge supermarkets - per square foot supermarkets emit three times more carbon dioxide than greengrocers and it would take more than sixty greengrocers to match the carbon dioxide emissions from a single average superstore [3].

Friends of the Earth wants a rapid and thorough review of the grocery market by the Competition Commission, who have the power to break up the supermarket monopolies and a swift rewriting of the supermarket Code of Practice to protect their suppliers.



[1] Friends of the Earth survey 2006

[2] See www.tescopoly.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=213&Itemid=103

[3] Sheffield Hallam University (2002) Energy use in the United Kingdom non-domestic building stock

Monday, April 10, 2006

Maradona keen to lead Argentina

Diego Maradona believes he has a chance of coaching Argentina - if current boss Jose Pekerman does not lead them to World Cup success this summer.

Argentine legend Maradona, 45, said: "There is a willingness of Argentina Football Association boss Julio Grondona to have me work as a coach.

"If Pekerman wins the World Cup, I could work with the youth squads."

Asked about Argentina's 2006 chances, he added: "We must be cautious. We came back early from the last World Cup."

He stated: "The boys know that in Korea-Japan we made history. So that error will serve as an example for us to do things in a different way."

The former Argentina player made 91 apperances and scored 34 goals for the national side and helped them to World Cup glory in 1986.

Wednesday, March 29, 2006

IRAQ: Breaking the Silence

A prominent former insider is criticizing the administration’s handling of Iraq’s reconstruction. And there’s more to come.

by Michael Hirsh, Newsweek
March 22nd, 2006


Andrew Natsios has taken a lot of flak over his role in Iraq. The longtime director of America's foreign-aid program has been pilloried for his April 2003 remark, in an ABC News interview, that the U.S. government would spend no more than $1.7 billion to rebuild Iraq. In the ensuing three years, Natsios, a lifelong Republican, has played the loyal soldier for the administration. He regularly defended the U.S. reconstruction effort in Iraq even as he was lumped with other errant prognosticators like Paul Wolfowitz (That's “wildly off the mark") and Dick Cheney ("We will be greeted as liberators"). After Natsios resigned in January to take a teaching post at Georgetown University, he maintained his silence about Iraq.

But this week, for the first time, Natsios publicly gave vent to his long-suppressed frustrations over the Bush administration's handling of the Iraq occupation. In an interview with NEWSWEEK on Tuesday, he harshly criticized the Coalition Provisional Authority led by L. Paul Bremer III for botching the reconstruction effort and allowing ill-qualified or corrupt contractors to dominate it. "They didn't have [monitoring] systems set up. They were very dismissive of these processes," he said. His U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) was marginalized despite its expertise, and the CPA "didn't hire the best people," he said. "We were just watching it unfold. They [the CPA] were constantly hitting at our people, screaming at them. They were abusive."

Natsios's low-cost estimate from April 2003, he made clear, was not based on the kind of chaotic, top-heavy occupation that he says Bremer eventually installed in Iraq but on the more traditional, streamlined U.S. aid effort that Natsios had urged.

NATSIOSDan Senor, former spokesman for Bremer’s CPA, dismissed Natsios’s criticisms, saying the insurgency in Iraq made ordinary contracting procedures impossible. "I'm not familiar with the traditional USAID program that was recommended,” Senor told NEWSWEEK. “If it was traditional and conventional, it may have made sense for the reconstruction of Switzerland. But it sounds like it was completely irrelevant to the facts and conditions on the ground that we found in Iraq.” Senor added that the CPA had "recruited some of the top career Foreign Service officers from the State Department to serve in the CPA's management roles. We would have welcomed suggestions—from Andrew or anyone else—of who would have been better experienced.”

Natsios, who served as USAID director for nearly five years and was considered one of the top development and aid experts in Washington, says that his advice was largely ignored. Other administration officials, usually speaking anonymously, have backed Natsios's dim view of the CPA's competence level. The conventional wisdom today is that while most CPA officials were enthusiastic and brave, too many were inexperienced and second-rate.

Natsios’s criticisms mark another significant milestone in the great Republican crackup over Iraq—especially since they came on the same day that President Bush reiterated, at a news conference, that he would not ask any senior staff to resign in connection with the mess in Mesopotamia. The president’s refusal to consider replacing senior officials, especially Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, has angered many Republicans, as well as Democrats, who say the administration needs to show a sense of accountability for its many mistakes in Iraq. At the very least, Natsios’s criticisms represent the latest effort by a Bush supporter to distance himself from America's new quagmire. Bremer himself, in his new book, "My Year in Iraq" (Simon and Schuster), blames Rumsfeld for many of his problems as viceroy, while other notable GOP stalwarts such as William F. Buckley have emerged as critics of the war.

And there is much more to come, especially on the little-noticed issue of contracting in Iraq, which the watchdog group Transparency International last year warned could become “the biggest corruption scandal in history." The Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction is expected to issue a harshly critical report in May concluding that the CPA did not have disciplined contracting procedures in place, according to several people involved in drafting the report. If the Democrats manage to get control of the House later this year, it's all going to come in an avalanche of subpoenas and new investigations. Not that the Republicans have been entirely sitting on their hands. When Rep. Christopher Shays, a Connecticut Republican, agreed to subpoena records of funds transmitted to Iraq, his House Government Reform Subcommittee learned that nearly $12 billion in U.S. currency was shipped to Iraq from the Federal Reserve Bank in New York, much of it with little accountability.

Shays is also conducting hearings on the administration's efforts to silence whistle-blowers who ferret out corruption and other problems. "The administration seems to have a deaf ear to this issue," Shays told NEWSWEEK. "I would like to hear a little outrage on the part of the administration. I don't hear that outrage. Because you don't hear that outrage you then feel the administration doesn't care about these issues … It needs to come from the secretary [of Defense]. When you have men and women dying on the battlefield and you have corruption, then you've got a problem."

But the Defense Department has avoided conceding this point, just as Rumsfeld himself has testily rejected responsibility for such critical errors as misreading the number of troops needed for the occupation and downplaying the insurgency.

The Pentagon has consistently declined to send a permanent auditing team to Iraq despite prodding from Congress. “We do not have auditors on the ground in Iraq,” acting Pentagon Inspector General Thomas Gimble admitted in testimony late last year before Shays’s subcommittee. (“I don't understand why,” retorted Shays.) The Defense Department argued that its IG team was not needed because Congress had set up its own auditing arm for Iraq called the Special Inspector General for Iraqi Reconstruction. But that congressionally authorized IG was only supposed to be looking at reconstruction contracts, not security, fuel or other Pentagon contracts. In his testimony last fall, Gimble said his office was acting in a support role from Washington to help the special inspector general, Stuart Bowen. But Special Inspector General spokesman Jim Mitchell told NEWSWEEK. “That wasn’t the case.”

In response to the criticism from such Republicans as Shays, Sen. Charles Grassley and others, the Pentagon IG finally opened an office in Qatar—earlier this month. IG spokesman Gary Comerford says Gimble made the move after he went to the region and talked with CENTCOM commander Gen. John Abizaid, among others. “They said primarily what we need down there are auditors, not only for Iraq, but Afghanistan and for DoD assets in Kuwait,” Comerford said. For many critics, the move came far too late. “Their answer to the criticism is to open an office within a thousand miles of Baghdad,” cracked one U.S. official involved in the auditing process who spoke on condition of anonymity.

At the same time critics of the contracting morass in Iraq—which former CPA advisor Franklin Willis once called a “free-fraud zone”—have raised serious issues about conflicts of interest in Iraq. These questions also have gone largely unanswered. Late last year, the Defense Department’s IG, Joseph Schmitz, resigned and took a senior position with Blackwater USA, one of the private companies contracted to handle security in Iraq. Because the CPA in Iraq fell under the Pentagon’s authority, a company like Blackwater would nominally be under the IG’s purview. In a series of articles last year, the Los Angeles Times suggested that Schmitz, a conservative Republican, had gone out of his way to protect John A. (Jack) Shaw, a deputy undersecretary of Defense involved in Iraq contracting who was later fired by the Pentagon. Another government department is conducting a separate investigation of Schmitz’s tenure as IG as well.

Asked to respond, IG spokesman Comerford noted that Schmitz had signed a letter recusing himself from Blackwater-related business while still at the Pentagon. Comerford also said the IG had done 33 audits during Schmitz’s tenure, and he noted that each of the military services has its own Inspector General’s office. Comerford told NEWSWEEK there were presently audits under way of two Iraq contractors connected with public relations in the global war on terror, the Lincoln Group and the Rendon Group.

Both were also requested by Congress, the former by Sen. Ted Kennedy and the latter by yet another skeptical Republican, Rep. Walter Jones of North Carolina. Despite those ongoing audits, the Pentagon has determined that the Lincoln Group did not violate policy in planting propaganda in Iraqi newspapers, The New York Times reported Wednesday. A Rendon Group official told NEWSWEEK: "As we understand it, the IG investigation was requested by Congress in response to media reports that wrongly characterized the Rendon Group as having a role in public-relations work in the leadup to the war in Iraq. We expect the IG report will clear up the confusion." Lincoln Group president Paige Craig initially told NEWSWEEK that he believed there was no audit, only a “special review.” Craig later called back to confirm that his firm was being audited.

On yet another front, the Justice Department continues to decline to join a whistle-blower case against a security contractor called Custer Battles, despite a March 9 jury verdict that found the company had defrauded the U.S. government out of millions of dollars in Iraq. In a statement issued after the verdict, Senator Grassley noted that “war profiteering is what led President Lincoln to support the original False Claims Act,” under which the Custer Battles case was pursued. Typically, the U.S. government will back the efforts of whistle-blowers—in this case two former executives of Custer Battles who were appalled by the fraud—but the Bush administration has maintained its silence. “I remain concerned as to why the Justice Department chose not to join this case,” Grassley said. Justice Department spokeswoman Cynthia Magnuson, asked to respond, said, “I don’t have anything immediately for you.”

It will take a long time for the contracting mess in Iraq to be sorted out, if it ever is. Natsios says he warned about what might happen if standard procedures, known as Federal Acquisition Regulations, were ignored. "I told Bremer and the CPA that we were following federal law and we were going to implement according to federal statutes so there weren't any scandals. And there weren't any with USAID. But we were criticized for following federal law." Regarding firms like Custer Battles, Natsios added: "The contractors they chose weren't the best people. I heard lots of stories. The staff would come in and say a group of retired officers has set up a business and they got this contract, and they didn't have any qualifications for it."

Jim Mitchell, the spokesman for the special Iraqi inspector general, says his office is currently looking at 57 possible cases of corruption and fraud, and he expects more arrests in coming days. But only four contractors and officials have been arrested so far. That's not a lot, considering the potential size of the Iraq corruption problem. Maybe it really is a free-fraud zone.

Thursday, March 23, 2006

Here they are again... (More Blood for us)

US sending agents to Triple Frontier

An undetermined number of agents from Homeland Security’s Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency, or ICE, are due to arrive in Brazil within 60 days, and in neighbouring Argentina and Paraguay a few weeks later. (AP)