Daily Archives: May 10, 2010

Starving yogi has not eaten in 70 years

An 83-year-old Indian holy man who says he has spent seven decades without food or water has astounded a team of military doctors who studied him during a two-week observation period.

Prahlad Jani spent a fortnight in a hospital in the western India state of Gujarat under constant surveillance from a team of 30 medics equipped with cameras and closed circuit television.

During the period, he neither ate nor drank and did not go to the toilet.

“We still do not know how he survives,” neurologist Sudhir Shah told reporters after the end of the experiment. “It is still a mystery what kind of phenomenon this is.”

The long-haired and bearded yogi was sealed in a hospital in the city of Ahmedabad in a study initiated by India’s Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO), the state defence and military research institute.

The DRDO hopes that the findings, set to be released in greater detail in several months, could help soldiers survive without food and drink, assist astronauts or even save the lives of people trapped in natural disasters.

“(Jani’s) only contact with any kind of fluid was during gargling and bathing periodically during the period,” G. Ilavazahagan, director of India’s Defence Institute of Physiology and Allied Sciences (DIPAS), said in a statement.

Jani has since returned to his village near Ambaji in northern Gujarat where he will resume his routine of yoga and meditation. He says that he was blessed by a goddess at a young age, which gave him special powers.

During the 15-day observation, which ended on Thursday, the doctors took scans of Jani’s organs, brain, and blood vessels, as well as doing tests on his heart, lungs and memory capacity.

“The reports were all in the pre-determined safety range through the observation period,” Shah told reporters at a press conference last week.

Other results from DNA analysis, molecular biological studies and tests on his hormones, enzymes, energy metabolism and genes will take months to come through.

“If Jani does not derive energy from food and water, he must be doing that from energy sources around him, sunlight being one,” said Shah.

“As medical practitioners we cannot shut our eyes to possibilities, to a source of energy other than calories.”

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Brown to step down as British prime minister

I have been watching this story unfold for a week now. For those of you who do not follow British politics, the Labour Party is the American equivalent of the democrat party here in the states. They have reigned supreme in England for many years now, and they have run the United Kingdom into the ground with their socialist spending sprees.

Their reckless spending has now led to a split of power in England. The working stiffs that have been footing the bill for the lazy and inept have finally stood up and been counted. These are both liberals and conservatives that are tired of being taxed out of existence by their elected official.

Its sort of like being able to look into the future of America. JD

Prime Minister Gordon Brown said Monday he will resign to take the blame for his Labour Party’s heavy defeat in a general election last week.

In the election last Thursday, the opposition Conservatives finished as the largest party while Brown’s ruling Labour Party came a distant second. The Liberal Democrats were in third. But the election left no party with an absolute majority in parliament.

“As leader of my party I must accept that that is a judgment on me,” Brown said from outside his Downing Street residence.

The prime minister said the center-left Labour Party will begin preparations for a new leadership contest but he will not run in the race.

Of the 650 seats in the House of Commons, the center-right Conservative Party led by David Cameron secured 306 seats, a net gain of 98, on about 36 percent of the popular vote, while Labour had 258 seats, a net loss of 91, with around 29 percent support.

Given the closest election in decades, Britain is facing its first hung parliament since 1974 and the question of who will be prime minister is up in the air.

The Liberal Democrats are holding talks with the Conservatives in a bid to form a coalition or looser working arrangement.

But it is believed the Liberal Democrats are pushing for radical reforms to Britain’s voting system in order to make it fairer.

Conservatives are resisting changes to the preset system because it has favored them in the past and they see no great demand from the public to reform.

This has opened the way for Brown’s party to retain power by forming an alliance with the Liberal Democrats, who secured 57 seats in the election.

Brown admitted his party is entering into coalition talks with the Liberal Democrats, the party which holds the balance of power following the election, in response to a request by their leader Nick Clegg.

Speaking outside his formal London residence, Brown said, “I believe it is sensible and in the national interest to respond positively” to the request.

“The first priority should be an agreed deficit reduction plan to support growth. There is also a progressive majority in Britain and I believe it could be in the interests of the whole country to form a progressive coalition government. Only such a government could meet the demand for political and electoral change which the British people made,” Brown said.

Brown said he will stay on as prime minister and Labour leader only long enough to try and form a coalition. A leadership election has been set in motion and the frontrunner to take over as Labour leader is Foreign Secretary David Miliband.

Brown’s Labour party has already made pledges to work on reforming the voting system for the House of Commons. The plan would aim to ensure that the number of votes cast better matches the number of seats won.

Reform of the voting system has long been a Liberal Democrats’ goal. But the fact that the Conservatives got 48 more seats than Labour and received 10.7 million votes means the Liberal Democrats may be reluctant to side with the governing party.

During the campaign, the Liberal Democrats’ leader Nick Clegg said that his party would not enter into a coalition with Labour if Gordon Brown remained in post.

Labour and the Liberal Democrats could form a working majority if they also enlisted the support of around eight parliamentarians from minority parties in Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales.

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Jewish World Review wastes no time attacking Obama nominee Elena Kagan

From Jewish World Review

United States Solicitor General Elena Kagan, who President Barack Obama interviewed April 30 to replace Justice John Paul Stevens on the Supreme Court, is widely considered a blank slate.

But is she?

True, Kagan, a former Harvard Law School dean, would be the first person without judicial experience appointed to the Supreme Court since William Rehnquist in 1972, doesn’t have much of a paper trail.

Her views on most of the hot button issues she would likely decide on the Supreme Court–race relations, abortion and federalism, are mostly impossible to discern.

But Kagan does have an identifiable, though overlooked, track record on one matter and it’s a telling one. As Dean of Harvard Law School in 2004 and 2005 she treated two liberal law professors with kid gloves when they were busted for plagiarism. Her chicanery was so blatant that even a leftist academic said she should be fired for her “whitewash.”

Kagan’s essential absolution of both professors has been virtually unnoticed in the flood of stories about her possible Supreme Court nomination this year and in 2009 when she was considered a top candidate to replace liberal Justice David Souter.

But the way she handled professors Larry Tribe and Charles Ogletree, when they both were caught swiping the words of others, seems to violate basic principles of fairness.

She let the professors off easy for the kind of offense that for which any Harvard undergraduate or law school would have been suspended if not expelled.

As the Harvard Crimson wrote after Kagan and Harvard president Larry Summers declined to punish Tribe, “the glaring double standard set by Harvard stands as an inadequate precedent for future disappointments.”

It also could say a lot about Kagan would behave on the bench. Through inaction and disingenuous statements that disregarded Harvard’s own disciplinary policy Kagan exonerated Tribe and Ogletree of any malfeasance.

In other words, like a good liberal activist judge, she ignored precedent and the plain meaning of relevant texts to create an outcome that struck her fancy.

The copycat cases came to light in the Fall of 2004. Ogletree was busted first for his book, part history part personal memoir, All Deliberate Speed.

Following a Harvard investigation ordered by Kagan when she received an unsigned letter claiming that Ogletree’s book had ripped off a collection of essays about Brown Ogletree issued a September 3 statement on the school website.

The professor, who taught both Michelle Obama and Barack Obama at Harvard Law School, said that his book contained six paragraphs, almost word for word, from the essay collection, What Brown v. Board of Education Should Have Said. The 2001 book was edited by Yale Law School professor Jack Balkin.

Ogletree, who gained prominence when he served as Anita Hill’s lawyer during the Clarence Thomas confirmation battle, said he took “complete responsibility” for the errors. Then he blamed it on his research assistants.

He said one assistant put quotation marks around Balkin’s words so the other assistant could summarize it with “proper attribution to Balkin.” But the second assistant mistakenly removed the quotes and and sent a book draft to the publisher.

So much for contrition what about the punishment?

Ogletree told the Boston Globe that he would face disciplinary action but neither he nor Kagan’s spokeswoman would specify it.

Kagan said in a statement that Olgetree was guilty of “a serious scholarly transgression.”

But Ogletree was not suspended, which is the minimum that undergraduates and graduates face when they are busted for plagiarism. How seriously then did Kagan really treat this transgression?

Certainly, the statement Ogletree issued, which was “approved” by Harvard according to the Boston Globe, relied on an excuse, unintentional copying, that Harvard Law School’s student handbook explicitly says is not exculpatory. “Students who submit work that is not their own, without clear attribution of all sources, even if the omission is inadvertent will be subject to disciplinary action.”

As the controversy festered, Harvard Law School professor Larry Tribe, a party line liberal, came to Ogletree’s defense. Tribe told the Boston Globe that Ogletree is someone who “because he often says yes to them many people all over the country who ask for help on all kinds of things, he has extended himself even farther than someone with all the energy can safely do.”

Tribe vouching for Ogletree’s character quickly sounded like Eliot Spitzer vouching for your monogamy.

A law professor who read about Tribe’s defense tipped off The Weekly Standard that Tribe’s 1985 book, G0d Save This Honourable Court, had purloined quite a bit from University of Virgina emeritus professor Henry Abraham’s acclaimed 1974 book, Justice and Presidents.

In a humongous article posted on the magazine’s website September 24 Joseph Bottum documented multiple passages from Tribe’s book, the bible for liberals who Borked Robert Bork in 1987 when he was nominated for the Supreme Court in 1987, that were clearly lifted from Abraham’s.

One phrase was taken verbatim. “Taft publicly pronounced Pitney to be a � weak member’ of the court.”

Many others were virtually identical. Consider Bottum’s many examples. Abraham: “Caleb Cushing was unquestionably highly qualified and possessed of a superb mind.”‘ Tribe: “Cushing was possessed of a fine mind and undoubtedly highly qualified.”

And that was the least of it, Bottum, now editor of First Things, noted that “The historical sections of the book typically consist of a long passage from Abraham crunched down by rephrasing and the elimination of detail — as one might expect when Abraham’s 298 pages of material are made to provide the facts around which Tribe builds his own thesis in [only] 143 pages of text.”

Tribe quickly issued a non-apology apology. Just like Ogletree he accepted full responsibility for the plagiarism–and then proceeded to say it was all a harmless error.

Tribe contended that his “well meaning effort to write a Book accessible to a lay audience through the omission of any footnotes or endnotes in contrast to the practices I have always followed in my scholarly writing came at an unacceptable cost: my failure to attribute some of the material the Weekly Standard attributed.”

Why just some? He didn’t identify what the Standard supposedly got wrong.

And what was Kagan’s reaction to Tribe’s mea not so culpable? She refused any comment to the Boston Globe and appointed a three person panel to investigate the matter.

In other words, she stonewalled. Why did she need to investigate what Tribe had already admitted? Tribe didn’t challenge any facts in the Weekly Standard opus.

A mere seven months later the panel presented its report to Kagan and then Harvard president Larry Summers.

What did they find? Nobody knows. The report was not released and former Harvard president Derek Bok, one the authors, refused to discuss it when reached by JewishWorldReview.com at home last week.

The only “punishment” Tribe got was a statement by Kagan and Summers that cleared him of any malfeasance.

“The unattributed materials relates more to matters of phrasing than to fundamental ideas,” they said, offering a distinction that would have been irrelevant to Harvard if a student had done the same thing. “We are also firmly convinced that the error was the product of inadvertence rather than intentionality.”

“Nevertheless, we regard the error in question as a significant lapse in proper academic practice.”

A lapse? That’s like saying someone who bounces check didn’t swindle anyone the bum checks were just a lapse in accounting procedures. Or the shoplifter had a lapse in memory when he left the store without paying.

And again, just like Kagan’s statement on Ogletree, if the lapse was so ” significant” why wasn’t Tribe sanctioned?

In a lengthy article for his blog, Massachusetts School of Law Dean Lawrence Velvel said Kagan and Summers should have been axed for their “whitewash.”

He cited example after example of how Kagan and Tribe essentially offered excuses for the very actions they purported to condemn.

For example, Summers and Kagan said that they had “taken note that the relevant conduct took place two decades ago.”

Why take note? Velvel asked. “Do we forgive criminals because their crimes were committed 20 years ago, but they managed to hide them for two decades?)

Well, maybe Velvel is just a conservative ideologue determined to bludgeon liberals with any rhetorical weapon available?

Uh, not exactly. In September 2008, Velvel held a conference to plan the prosecution of Bush Administration officials for “war crimes.”

In his analysis of the Kagan-Summers statement Velvel, who could not be reached for comment, was also subtle. “What can one say of this travesty?” he asked. “Only, I suppose, that it is a travesty. Its language is misleading, its logic miserable, and its spirit corrupt.”

Corrupt, indeed. Law school students, however, caught with purloined words just like Tribe and Ogletree don’t have it so easy.

The current Harvard Law School handbook describes three cases of plagiarism by students in “recent years.” One student was suspended. The other was suspended and not allowed back to complete his studies.

The third student had already graduated when his plagiarism was discovered. His degree was rescinded.

Maybe they can get jobs as research assistants for Ogletree or Tribe.

As for Kagan and her possible new job, given how little integrity she displayed at Harvard is there any reason to think she’ll have any at the Supreme Court?

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Detroit landscapers choose unemployment over paycheck

Gee . . . Ya think? The reporter that wrote the article below seems stunned and amazed and stunned that people would take advantage of the unemployment extensions from the federal government. There are jobs out there but there are also people that do not want to work. Duh . . .

In a state with the nation’s highest jobless rate, landscaping companies are finding some job applicants are rejecting work offers so they can continue collecting unemployment benefits.

It is unclear whether this trend is affecting other seasonal industries. But the fact that some seasonal landscaping workers choose to stay home and collect a check from the state, rather than work outside for a full week and spend money for gas, taxes and other expenses, raises questions about whether extended unemployment benefits give the jobless an incentive to avoid work.

Members of the Michigan Nursery and Landscape Association “have told me that they have a lot of people applying but that when they actually talk to them, it turns out that they’re on unemployment and not looking for work,” said Amy Frankmann, the group’s executive director. “It is starting to make things difficult.”

Chris Pompeo, vice president of operations for Landscape America in Warren, said he has had about a dozen offers declined. One applicant, who had eight weeks to go until his state unemployment benefits ran out, asked for a deferred start date.

“It’s like, you’ve got to be kidding me,” Pompeo said. “It’s frustrating. It’s honestly something I’ve never seen before. They say, ‘Oh, OK,’ like I surprised them by offering them a job.”

Some job applicants are asking to be paid in cash so they can collect unemployment illegally, said Gayle Younglove, vice president at Outdoor Experts Inc. in Romulus.

“Unfortunately, we feel the economy is promoting more and more people and companies to play the system and get paid or collect cash money so they don’t have to pay taxes,” Younglove said.

A person becomes ineligible for benefits if he or she fails to accept suitable work, said Stephen Geskey, director of Michigan’s Unemployment Insurance Agency.

The average landscape worker earns about $12 per hour, according to the Michigan Department of Labor and Economic Growth. A full-time landscaping employee would make $225 more a week working than from an unemployment check of $255.

But after federal and state taxes are deducted, a full-time landscaper would earn $350 a week, or $95 more than a jobless check. The gap could narrow further for those who worked at other higher-paying seasonal jobs, such as construction or roofing, which would result in a larger benefits check.

The maximum weekly benefit an unemployed Michigan worker can receive is $387.

The jobless in Michigan are collecting for a longer time — an average of 19.4 weeks last year, up from 15 weeks in 2008. State benefits last for up to 26 weeks.

The unemployed can then apply for extended federal benefits that increase the total time on the public dole up to a maximum of 99 weeks.

The federal jobless benefits extension “is the most generous safety net we’ve ever offered nationally,” said David Littmann, senior economist of the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, a free-market-oriented research group in Midland. The extra protection reduces the incentive to find work, he said.

It’s impossible to know exactly how many workers are illegally declining employment, but 15 percent of Michigan’s economy is underground, where people trade services, barter or exchange cash without reporting it to the government, Littmann said.

One former landscaper, who has been on unemployment for a year, said he will search for work when the benefits expire, but he estimates he earns about $50 to $60 less a week than he would if he were working.

“It’s crazy,” he said. “They keep doing all of these extensions.”

But another analyst said working pays off for most seasonal laborers.

“That’s a tough call for a family that’s trying to pay its bills,” said Sharon Parks, president and CEO of the Michigan League for Human Services, a Lansing-based nonprofit that helps low and moderate-income families toward economic self-sufficiency.

“But I think that by and large, people want to work because they need a paycheck,” she said.

That is what other Metro Detroit landscaping companies are finding. They say business is up this season, and they have a steady stream of applicants eager to fill the orders.

“They can earn more money working for us than they can from getting unemployment,” said Tony Konja, president of Artistic Outdoor Services in Farmington Hills.

“Finding talented people is, and always will be, a challenge,” said Sam LaGrasso, president of United Lawnscape Inc. in Washington Township. “But if a company is focused on being good to its people and providing advancement opportunities, the talent will find you.”

But B&L Landscaping in Oak Park finds the labor pool is noticeably weaker and less motivated, director Richard Angell said, even though the company still gets 80 to 100 applicants per week.

“We’re just getting people coming in, filling out paperwork, hoping they won’t get hired,” Angell said. “… We’re having a hard time finding quality applicants.”

Gaming the system is “not surprising, but the question is how prevalent it is,” the Unemployment Insurance Agency’s Geskey said. “My gut tells me it may happen, but under the law, that person’s benefits need to end.”

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Man killed by fake census worker

HOUSTON—A man was killed and his family members beaten after three suspects barged into a north Houston home Saturday afternoon, police said.

Investigators said one of the suspects pretended to be a census worker to gain entry into the house, located in the 400 block of Truman.

Family members said the victim’s son opened the door for the suspects, believing they were with the census.

Larry Johnson Jr., the nephew of the victim, said the suspects tied up and beat his cousin and aunt after barging into to the home.

Johnson said his uncle, Reginald “Pete” Haynes, walked in on the crime and was ambushed.

“They tied him up and stabbed him and tried to submerge him in water,” Johnson said.

Haynes later died at the hospital.

Family members said the men ransacked the house for two hours.

“They were looking for money and my aunt gave them everything that they had and it wasn’t enough for them,” Johnson said.

Neighbor Randell Harmon said he even watched the suspects leave after the crime and had no idea what had happened.

“I saw three gentlemen walk out and I didn’t think anything of it,” Harmon said. “They didn’t look at me. They got in the truck and they left.”

The incident left people in the community fearful about who might come knocking at their door.

“They’ve taken something precious from us,” Johnson said. “They really have.”

Neighbors said census-takers started working their street weeks ago.

According to HPD, the suspect who claimed to be a census worker showed no ID badge. Investigators said they don’t have a good description of any of the suspects.

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