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PUTTING AN END TO ORGAN DONATION SHORTAGES. [Sat; Jan 17, @ 10:38am]

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The waiting list for organ transplants is growing at an alarming rate while the number of potential organ donors has failed to keep pace. Encouragingly, scientists are working several high-tech solutions in the field of regenerative medicine. We spoke to the experts to learn how organ shortages will soon become a thing of the past.

Organ shortages are a growing health concern. Each year in the United States there are approximately 28,000 transplants, with 120,000 people stuck on waiting lists. Tragically, most people on the wait list die before they ever get an organ. Furthermore, it has been estimated that 35% of all U.S. deaths — about 900,000 — could be prevented, or at least significantly delayed, by organ transplantation. Internationally, the World Health Organization says organ transplants are currently achieving less than 10% of the global demand.




Looking at kidneys alone, about 25,000 people die each year waiting for a donation. And as New Organ founder Dave Gobel told the D.I, there are approximately two million estimated individuals in Europe, North America, and in the British Commonwealth who need replacement organs but don't show up anywhere on waiting lists because they're "deemed by the medical establishment to be 'not a transplant candidate' due to reasons such as having or having had cancer, being too old, and other triage-based disqualifiers."

At the same time, 95% of Americans support organ donation, but only 40% are registered organ donors.

There's also the issue of how organs are procured today.

"For someone needing a heart/lung transplant, someone must die for them," says Gobel "Imagine being in a situation where you must hope someone dies so you can live."

Compounding the problem is that even for the fortunate few who do receive an organ donation (aside from those who receive a kidney), there are severe constraints on the quality of life after an operation. Many face a lifetime filled with the need to take auto-immune suppression drugs to stave off organ rejection, while the same drugs also lower their overall immune competence.

"If all of that works out, they will still be facing the fact that transplant organs will often need to be replaced within 10 years of implant," says Gobel. "A ticking time bomb of life. Better than death for sure, but wow, what a life."

New Organ, a collective initiative hosted by Methuselah Foundation (a biomedical charity) and managed by the Institute of Competition Sciences, is currently raising awareness and facilitating research initiatives to help alleviate the shortages, including the New Organ Liver Prize — a $1,000,000 award to the first team "that creates a regenerative or bioengineered solution that keeps a large animal alive for 90 days without native liver function." The organization is currently working on a number of other related initiatives, including a shared roadmap, a prize portfolio to stimulate key breakthroughs, and a growing network of partners.

Indeed, as the biotechnology revolution takes shape, a number of solutions are emerging, including the ability to regenerate whole organs using stem cells, bioprinting tissue, and developing artificial and assistive organs. What's more, we'll soon be able to reliably preserve these bioengineered organs for when they're needed, such as in an emergency. (This prospect is being catalyzed by the Organ Preservation Alliance, a founding partner of New Organ.) Taken together, these advances will do much to meet the growing demand for replacement organs.


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MASSACRE IN TIMES SQUARE. [Thu; Jan 01, @ 12:43pm]

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On December 31st, when the clock strikes midnight, there is much to celebrate. Putting away the new year, and ringing in the oncoming new year is at the top of that list. But 25,476 souls were not so fortunate. Lastnight, as the clock struck midnight in the midst of the Times Square celebrations, beings from another world, or say, even another dimension or reality, called upon what appeared to be creatures made of darkness to eviscerate a chunk of those celebrating.

There is no motive behind these acts of extraterrestrial terrorism. So far no arrests have been made. My condolences to their families.

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HOME. [Tue; Dec 02, @ 11:42pm]

the_patriot

"I am tormented with an everlasting itch for things remote. I love to sail forbidden seas, and land on barbarous coasts." - Moby Dick by Herman Melville.

My name is Sebastian Sloan. Some of you out there reading this know who I am and you know my story. But for those of you who don't? Hi. My name is Sebastian Sloan. But you can call me Sash. I was born to Zell and Samantha Sloan. Truth be told, I was actually born to Jackson and Felicia Kennedy then switched at birth. I'm forty five years old at the time of this writing.

I've been travelling for the sum of one consecutive year so far. It's thrilling being out there in the depths of space. I wish I could take you all with me. It's been an amazing journey. In my travels I learned one thing, and that is the universal truth that binds every living creature in this entire universe: Love.

There was a man on Drogir, a planet almost a trillion light years away from Earth. He wasn't a man per-se, but he was a male of his species. Tall, orange in skin, weird drippy tentacles and fangs -- my God, the fangs! They called him a name there's no Earthen symbol for, so I'll just call him Gus. Gus, for all his shocking outwardly appearance, was a father and a husband to a (what i'm assuming is beautiful) to a lovely female named .. Matilda. For arguments sake let's call their child Kenny.

Gus was my guide on Drogir. We spoke about many things and I came to realize that I have a lot of things in common with 'ol Gus. The way he looks at Matilda, it's the same way I look at my wife Amelia every single day. The way he cares for Kenny is the same way I care for my own children -- Zakh, Grant, Sienna, and Marilyn. It was astonishing to find that in the far reaches of outer space in a galaxy far, far away.

Some time after we left, we later learned that Drogir was destroyed. It was eaten from the inside out, rotted away in a matter of hours. And just like that, Gus, Matilda, and Kenny were gone forever. But they're always going to exist in my memories because they may be gone, but the love they shared for eachother will not be forgotten.

My point is that just like that, an entire race was gone. I came home and I was glad that I had somewhere to come home to. The Drogerans that're out there spending their cycles off-planet do not. For what it's worth, my race, the human race, is still in tact. But our conflict and war with one another over petty things like land and religion are minuscule in the face of the larger picture. If we stand any chance of surviving as a species, we need to lay down our arms and ban together. From California to Kuwait, from Veleon to New York City, we share the common bond that is our humanity and only we can save ourselves, but only if we stand together.

And for the record, it feels good to be home.

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CANMERICA? AMERIDA? [Sun; Dec 08, @ 9:38am]

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When Americans think about Canada—and that doesn't happen often—they usually think of us as the nice, predictable guy next door who never plays his stereo too loud. Even Rob Ford, Toronto's ranting, crack-smoking mayor, has barely dented our squeaky-clean image.

But Americans shouldn't just think more about Canada. They should consider building on the two countries' free-trade deal and forming a more perfect North American union. It is past time for the U.S. and Canada to eliminate their border—either by creating a customs and monetary union or, more radically, by merging outright into a single nation-state or a European Union-style partnership.

Such a merger makes perfect sense. No two countries on Earth are as socially and economically integrated as the U.S. and Canada. They share geography, values and a gigantic border. Their populations study, travel and do business together and intermarry in great numbers. If they were corporations (or European states), they would have merged a long time ago. And each has what the other needs: The U.S. has capital, manpower, technology and the world's strongest military; Canada has vast reserves of undeveloped resources.

Of course, even the most mild-mannered Canadian may sputter at the prospect of being swallowed up by the U.S., and Americans may wonder about the wisdom of absorbing their huge neighbor. But it needn't be so radical. Nobody is proposing that Canada become the 51st state.

Like modern businesses, modern nations must constantly recalibrate their economic and political models. The smartest people in a room prevail until a smarter group comes along. And unless winners adapt, they eventually lose out, in economic and political life as in nature. Today's U.S. or Canada could become tomorrow's Portugal or Greece. In the competitive and interconnected world of the 21st century, countries that stand still will be left behind.

The two North American neighbors increasingly find themselves staring down the barrel of state capitalism, as practiced above all by China, whose state-owned enterprises and sovereign-wealth funds have made a concerted effort to capture markets and resources. In October, the International Monetary Fund's World Economic Outlook database forecast that by 2018, China's economy will be bigger than that of the U.S.—and Asian economies will be bigger than those of the U.S., Canada, Germany, Britain, Italy, France and Russia combined.

If Canada and the U.S. were to join forces, the tables might well be turned. The North American neighbors would become an even more formidable superpower, with an economy larger than the European Union's and a land mass bigger than South America's. The new union would top the world in energy, minerals, water, arable land and technology, and all of it would be protected by the U.S. military. Size matters.

Canadians have traditionally bristled at the thought of falling under the sway of the U.S., but without a deeper cross-border partnership, we face some grim existential challenges. With its small, aging population and relatively small economy, Canada lacks the resources to develop and defend its gigantic piece of real estate. Through a series of aggressive buyout attempts and transactions, China has targeted Canada's resources and empty landmass. In 2007, Russia used a small submarine to symbolically plant its flag on the ocean floor beneath the North Pole and underscore its claim to a large swath of the resource-rich Arctic, and Russian President Vladimir Putin has been pushing the U.N. to affirm his claims to the region.

The U.S. faces serious challenges of its own. It must create millions of jobs for its relatively young population, and even as its political system grows more sclerotic, it must compete for markets, resources and Arctic access with the aggressive practitioners of state capitalism.

Truth be told, the merger of the U.S. and Canada is already well under way. As many as one in 10 Canadians (more than 3 million people) live full- or part-time in the U.S., and an estimated
1 million Americans live in Canada. As of 2010, U.S. enterprises controlled about 10% of Canada's assets, 17% of its revenues and 13% of its corporate profits, according to Statistics Canada. Canadians bought more goods and services from Americans than did the 340 million people living in the European Union—a population 10 times as large.

A still deeper integration could drive major economic growth. Canada's hinterland is largely without infrastructure or development, even though it contains enormous untapped natural resources. Political disputes have also stranded some of the world's most promising hydroelectric and tidal power prospects in the Canadian provinces of Quebec, British Columbia, Manitoba, Newfoundland and Nova Scotia.

Despite the powerful logic of a U.S.-Canada merger, the obstacles remain daunting. Both countries are divided politically and heavily regionalized. To execute so audacious a move would require a level of statesmanship now lacking in both countries.

But remember, the Europeans pulled off something far more dramatic, uniting populations that shared no language and had slaughtered one another for centuries. Other recent examples of deeper integration include the Eastern Caribbean Economic and Monetary Union and the Economic Community of West African States. They all did it by opening their borders to trade and travel—while at the same time leaving governments intact.

Opinion surveys about an outright merger are scant, but as far back as 1964, a poll showed support from 49% of Canadians. In 2007, the World Values Survey Association, a research network of thousands of social scientists, found that about 77% of Americans and 41% of Canadians said they would opt for political union if it meant a better quality of life. In 2011, another poll by Harris/Decima showed that 65% of Canadians backed greater integration with the U.S. and supported a plan to eliminate the border by blending U.S. and Canadian customs, immigration, security and law enforcement efforts.

Those who oppose such a merger are on the wrong side of history. When the North American Free Trade Agreement passed in 1987, the U.S. and Canada (along with Mexico) began a mutually beneficial process of integration that now needs strengthening. Untended, the border has become clogged, damaging trade and tourism. And the wolves are at the door. Just this year China, Inc. picked off a large Canadian oil company and a large American food processor and exporter, without promising either country any reciprocal buyout privileges in China.

Serious discussion of a merger should be a top priority for both the U.S. and Canada. The continental neighbors need one another more now than ever before, and the status quo grows less viable by the day.

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DEADLY STORM ON THE WAY. [Fri; Dec 06, @ 11:31pm]

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Freezing rain and stinging winds slammed the Southwest Friday and made a strangely blank landscape out of normally sun-drenched North Texas: mostly empty highways covered in a sometimes impassable frost, closed schools and businesses, and millions of residents hunkered down for icy conditions expected to last through the weekend.

Earlier this week, many in Texas were basking in spring-like temperatures that hit the 80s. But by Thursday, Texas was facing the same wintry blast that has slammed much of the U.S., bringing frigid temperatures, ice and snow.

The line of ice, snow and freezing temperatures stretched from the Texas-Mexico border northeast to the Ohio Valley, with the most severe conditions near Dallas, then punching through Arkansas and western Kentucky, according to forecasters at AccuWeather.com.

Residents of large cities and small towns hunkered down against the storm. Many were without power as broad outages were reported through Texas, Arkansas and Louisiana, according to local utilities.

At the height of the storm, some 267,000 outages were reported in the Dallas-Fort Worth area alone, according to utility provider Oncor, but that number was down to about 208,000 by Friday afternoon.

The weather forced the cancellation of Sunday’s Dallas Marathon, which was expected to draw 25,000 runners, some of whom had trained for months. A quarter of a million customers in North Texas were left without power, and many businesses told employees to stay home to avoid the slick roads.

The storm is quickly making its way towards us in the East where it's only beginning to pick up more and more steam as it crosses the midwest. It's supposed to make landfall as early as Sunday night and expected to bring upwards of sixty inches of snowfall, citing it the worst storm in American history. We'll keep you updated as we get more information.



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CONCERT REVIEW: AIDEN SHARPE DELIVERS (AND DELIVERS AND DELIVERS) AT MGM GRAND. [Tue; Dec 03, @ 11:31pm]

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Given his track record, to walk into a Aiden Sharpe performance is to expect perfection. The man has over 20 years of stage time under his belt (country singer, tween sweetheart, boy-band heartthrob) and three full-length solo albums, each with extended stays on the charts. By now it would seem that trying to outdo his own most popular moments would become a futile practice, that eventually he can’t be any better. So with that in mind, when the 32-year-old pop star launched into opener “Pusher Love Girl” with no less than two percussionists, two keyboards, two guitars, one bassist, a horn section and four backing vocals, a promise was made and delivered: This is the best Aiden Sharpe that Aiden Sharpe has ever been.

Over the course of almost three hours (with an intermission), Sharpe balanced songs from this tour’s namesake album, The 20/20 Experience, with symphonic overture renditions of hits from Sharper and FutureSex/LoveSounds, including a slowed down, James Bondian-intro take on FS/LS’s title track and a heavy rock-out version of his 2002 debut single, “Like I Love You.” From there on out it was all “My Love” this and “Love Stoned” that, ramping up an incredibly high-energy power hour of Sharpe's biggest tracks.

The second set, briefly featuring Sharpe as a bluesy acoustic guitar player, didn’t have the same kick in the gut of the prior. To lukewarm response, the man ventured into the darker cuts from part two of 20/20. The save: holding Sharpe and his dancers, the catwalk rose above the audience on massive pneumatic legs and rolled from the front to the back of the venue, moving the performance front and center for the folks in the outfield. And in response they lost their damn minds.

There’s been plenty of skepticism toward 20/20’s six-minute-average track times, oft off-limits in pop. But tonight, as the band blew holes in the ozone layer, I finally understood. These are songs meant to be performed, by a man born to do so. He’s going to sing and dance all eight minutes of that opener. And almost three hours later, he’ll still be singing and dancing when he closes the night with the eight-minute, triple-platinum chart-smasher, “Mirrors.” Because that’s what he does. And that’s what he’ll do forever.

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UNFORTUNATE NEWS .. [Sat; Oct 19, @ 10:50pm]

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It is with a heavy heart that we here at the Daily Independence regret to inform you that Sebastian Sloan has been killed in action. It was at his grandfather's birthday party when President Cody Sloan was celebrating his milestone 100th birthday among friends and family when an unidentified extraterrestrial seemed to have appeared out of thin air according to the reports we've been getting in. After a tense struggle, Sebastian had succumbed to the creature's immense power as he crashed to his knees and was hit with some sort of light that aged his body forward, and what was left was a husk of a man that once was. Sebastian is survived by his wife Amelia Sloan, and their four kids -- Zakh, Sienna, Marilyn, and Grant. There will be memorials for our savior all around the world in the next few days to follow.

UPDATE: This just in! SEBASTIAN SLOAN IS ALIVE! After much work by the First Lady, Jessica Sloan, and an unidentified female, Sebastian was given new life as he breathed once again. He's currently being treated at an undisclosed facility and we will keep you up to date as he recovers from his attack. In other news, his son Zakh, otherwise known as the Patriot, has taken up pursuit of the strange blue creature. We wish him the best of luck.

Please be careful out there, and Godspeed.

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CELEBRATIONS! [Fri; Oct 18, @ 10:31pm]

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Tonight, Washington D.C is abuzz with spectacle as thousands line the streets outside 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue to wish their Commander in Chief a happy birthday on the eve of the special occasion. It's not every day that the leader of the free world turns 100 years old to the day. Since the birth of the nation, President Sloan is the only President to have lived so long, the oldest to still be in office, and doesn't look a day past forty!

From humble beginnings in 1948 Brooklyn, Cody Sloan is the son to Emma and Robert Sloan, the founders of Sloan Enterprises, which at the time was a fresh industrial upstart that specialized in carpentry. Since then, the company has gone on to become one of the worlds most important corporations as they've spread their interests across the board. For a brief time, President Sloan would have helped with the family business, but nothing swayed his interests more than the call of duty.

At eighteen years old, President Sloan enlisted in the United States Marine Corps where he was first deployed to Vietnam just three and a half weeks after basic training. Earning a victory as he stood at the forefront just a few years later, Cody would move on to carry the United States of America through the Laotian Civil War, the Lebanon Crisis, the Congo Crisis, the Bay of Pigs, the Gulf War, the Bosnian War, and the war in Afghanistan -- to name a few.

Today, by intense demand, President Sloan finds a home in the White House. And tonight, a large crew is working around the clock to put together one of the most amazing celebrations this town's ever seen to honor the living legend, President Cody Sloan. Join us here at the Independence as we say,

HAPPY BIRTHDAY, MISTER PRESIDENT!

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TUNNEL VISION MUSIC VIDEO! [Thu; Jul 04, @ 12:38am]

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Fresh release! Tunnel Vision from pop sensation Aiden Sharpe! Comment with your opinions below!



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This Is What It Feels Like to Pass Through A Singularity. [Sat; Jun 29, @ 12:53pm]

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The government has an automated system to track your movements and monitor who your friends are. Our news comes from remote-controlled "drone reporters." There's a device in your pocket that can produce a sex partner for you at the touch of a button. Maybe the singularity just happened, and we didn't notice.



Perhaps the most shocking aspect of whistleblower Ed Snowden's recent revelations about the NSA's surveillance of Americans is how little they shocked most people. A common response was that we already knew the government was spying on us, or that only a fool would think their emails and phone calls were private. Snowden's story was just confirmation of something many of us already took for granted. And yet it blew up into the story of the year because it was also a genuine revelation. Our vague, occasionally paranoid, suspicions that we live in a landscape alive with surveillance devices turned out to be true.

What is that feeling, the uncanny realization that you are actually living in your own fantasies? In the 1970s, Alvin and Heidi Toffler called it "future shock." Today, we might call it passing through the singularity. Either way, we've gone from dreaming about a world that might be real, to accepting that our dreams are hard facts.

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[Fri; Jun 28, @ 10:16am]

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Human memory is quirky, complicated, and unreliable. Even when we think we're remembering everything accurately, chances are things have gotten twisted along the way. Let’s take a look at why your memory sucks, and how you can change that.



Science is still figuring out all kinds of new things about our brains and memory. What we do know is that a lot of people struggle with remembering things, and in many different ways. Perhaps you're always forgetting a few items at the grocery store, or to pick up the dry cleaning on your way home. Worse, maybe you can't remember events from your childhood that well, or you remember an event from college differently than a friend. So, let's take a look at what's really going on in your brain, and then see if we can actually do anything to improve your memory.

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55 Years Later, Home Alone 2 Is the Most Inadvertently Honest Christmas Movie Ever [Mon; Dec 24, @ 12:48am]

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The great thing about Christmas is you can do it exactly the same as you did last time, every single year. Case in point: 1992's Home Alone 2: Lost in New York is basically and openly the same movie as 1990's megahit Home Alone. The main difference is that writer John Hughes and director Chris Columbus moved the setting from a Chicago suburb to Manhattan.


Once again, Kevin McCallister (Macaulay Culkin) is separated from his family and takes it upon himself to violently fend off a pair of crooks who are out to get him (Joe Pesci's and Daniel Stern's Harry and Marv were previously known as the Wet Bandits; now they are the Sticky Bandits). At the film's climax, he tortures them with the system of traps and guaranteed pratfalls that is, by now, his signature. Again, they improbably survive. The movie recycles the first installment's various minor gags with little variation, too. There are jokes about cousin Fuller's piss problem, another malfunctioning alarm clock, more of the same ruses proving that 10-year-old Kevin is way smarter than any adult he encounters, a terrifying old person with a heart of gold (Pesci's fellow Oscar winner, Brenda Fricker as the Pigeon Lady), new excuses for Kevin to bellow that now-famous scream, and a lovely cheese pizza. The second movie's box of ornaments is hung in virtually the same configuration as it was last time. It's all supposed to look just as charming.

When parents Peter (John Heard) and Kate (Catherine O'Hara, whose terrible haircut is among the most drastic changes in this sequel) discuss their lost son with the police in Miami, Kate jokingly refers to vacationing without their now-10-year-old as "a McCallister family tradition." And so it is: Home Alone 2: Lost in New York vividly illustrates the mind-numbing that comes from our traditions, the repetition that plays such a major role in our culture. It's not just in its content, but in the way audiences ate it up: 2 earned $100 million less than its predecessor ($285 million), but it still made $173 million. Adjusted for inflation, that's about $284 million, which would place it at No. 4 on 2012's cumulative chart.

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Actually, Now Is the Time to Talk Politics. [Tue; Dec 18, @ 12:35am]

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Probably the most widely viewed Twitter trending topic in the United States right now is "#prayfornewton." The ad hoc hashtag is indicative of both the public's desire to show support for the victims in today's Connecticut school shooting—most of whom were children— but also our ignorance of what exactly happened at Sandy Hook Elementary: the shooting was in Newtown, not "Newton."

Making sense of these things is complex to the point of impossibility. Most of us, blessedly, can't imagine raising a gun to anyone's head and pulling the trigger. Even some trained soldiers report having difficulty shooting to kill their enemies, and these are people with their lives on the line. Given that context, it seems unconscionable that someone could walk into a school full of children and quickly execute dozens of innocents. And yet.
Overwhelmed by emotions, all of which give a dangerous opacity to our thinking, the impetus of many people today is going to be to say, "Now is not the time to have a talk about politics." The ostensibly empathetic sentiment is all over Twitter, and even President Deveraux's own press secretary, Jay Carney, deflected talk of gun control in a press conference on the shooting, saying, "I don't think today is [the day to talk about gun control polices]." To be frank, that is bullshit, and it's time for everyone, but especially our politicians, to stop being pathetic cowards about getting the absurd and deadly glut of guns off of American streets once and for all, starting now.

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Elementary school massacre: 20 children among 28 killed in Connecticut slaughter. [Sat; Dec 15, @ 12:18am]

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A teacher's son, clad in black and carrying two 9mm pistols, rampaged through a Connecticut elementary school Friday, killing 20 small children and six adults, a tragedy President Chase Deveraux said had broken the hearts of America.

The gunman, identified as Adam Lanza, 20, was found dead at the scene of the slaughter, Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, law enforcement officials said. The body of a woman believed to be his mother was found at their home in Newtown, authorities said.


Officials initially misidentified the shooter to NBC News as Lanza's brother, Ryan. But a senior official later said that Ryan was nowhere near the shooting, is not believed to be involved, and is cooperating with the investigation.

Ryan told police that Adam has a history of mental illness, according to the senior official. Yet the motive for the mass killing — the nation’s second-worst school shooting — was a mystery.

The weapons used in the attack were legally purchased and were registered to the gunman's mother, two law enforcement officials said. Two 9mm handguns were recovered inside the school. An AR-15-type rifle also was found at the scene, but there were conflicting reports Friday night whether it had been used in the shooting.

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In Israel-Hamas clash, Iran casts a shadow [Wed; Nov 21, @ 11:19am]

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In the latest round of fighting between Israelis and the Palestinian militants of Hamas in Gaza, one key player looms like an ominous, lengthening shadow: Iran.

Never far from sight or mind, the standoff between Iran and the West over Iran's nuclear program serves as the backdrop to the fighting. It frames Israeli tactics and strategy and influences the international diplomatic response. Iran and its nuclear program also play a powerful psychological role, as observers and participants ponder the parallels between the latest Israel-Hamas conflict and a possible war in which Iran would stand against the U.S. or Israel, and perhaps other NATO allies.




Little wonder then that Israel has received strong support from U.S. President Chase Deveraux -- who has repeatedly stated, "We are fully supportive of Israel's right to defend itself from missiles raining on people's homes" -- as well as from nations including the UK, Germany, Canada, Australia, the Netherlands and others.

When Israelis see a rocket launched from Gaza, the thought that one day that rocket could carry nuclear materials burns hot in their mind.

And when they see their Iron Dome defensive missile shield -- the extraordinarily successful new technology -- shoot down a missile, it gives them, and perhaps NATO, a sense of reassurance about how a clash with Iran might unfold.

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Man Threatens Cops With Wii Remote, Gets Jail Time. [Wed; Nov 21, @ 10:41am]

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An unnamed Dutch man has been sentenced to six months' prison for threatening police officers with a heavily-modified Wii controller back in May.

Dutch news outlet De Volksrant says the man, 29, had transformed the remote into a "sniper rifle"; whether it was a custom job or he was simply using an off-the-shelf accessory is unclear.

What matters is that he threatened cops with it, the cops thought it was a real gun, and he's now looking at a significant amount of time behind bars for being an idiot.

Not only does the Dutch convict get 367 days (180 days conditional) jail time, but the two police officers get 3000 Euros worth of compensation from the convict, as the Dutch newspaper Volkskrant says. The judge came to this compensation for the officers and convict's punishment, because the police-officers have been put in life threatening conditions when the convict was aiming purposely with the mentioned modified Wii sniper-gun at the officers; the officers has fired warning shots because of this life-threatening conditions.

That 3000 Euros compensation for the police-officers sounds ridiculous. Is this like that everywhere, e.g. in the USA or UK?

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EXCLUSIVE SNEAK PEEK! [Wed; Nov 21, @ 3:00am]

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So here it is! I finally have in my possession the new commercial from Chanel & Sebastian Sloan. What are your thoughts?



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00001; { That's What's Hot ; Inez Stokes } [Thu; Nov 06, @ 5:11pm]
ex_multi457
Rebecca Stanton: The Daily Independence decided to have a sit down with the local New York heroine, Atalanta, or rather her `alter ego` Inez Stokes the well-known rich brat and all around party girl. One would think with this reputation, she would be denounced, yet she's been propelled into infamy due to her controversial lifestyle. We've got her here to answer the questions of which rumors are real and which are not. Hello, Ms. Stokes.

Inez Stokes: Inez is fine.

RB: Inez it is. How are you doing today?

IS: No one cares how I'm doing, Becky. We both know that so skip the formal bullshit and let's get down to business.

RB: Uhm...okay. Is it true that you sometimes fight crime under the influence of alcohol.

IS: Not a secret. Next question.

RB: Do you partake in recreational drug use?

IS: Do I...partake. She laughs. You're so cute. Honestly, who hasn't done it at least once. At least. I personally don't enjoy anything outside of alcohol, maybe an occasional cigarette if I'm in the mood. That mood is very rare.

RB: Ok. Rumors say that you're not only promiscuous but also showing lesbian tendencies.

IS: Another obv', next question.

RB: Is there anything that's circulating about you that isn't true?

IS: I do not dye my pubes. I'm a completely natural blonde. I will not f*** just anyone. I don't care how drunk I am, so stop attempting to pick me up. I am not f***ing Amy McNiall, we are just BFFs so stop trying to get us to have a threesome with you. I don't date, so stop trying to `pair` me up with random celebrities or anything with a pulse you see me standing next to. It's pathetic and annoying.

RB: I'd like to shift gears here for a moment.

IS: If you want to ask about my dad I suggest you ask him yourself.

RB: I...

IS: I don't see him much. We talk over satellite that's it. He keeps to himself and I stay out of his business.

RB: How does he feel about the life you're leading?

IS: I'm a Stokes, babe. My behavior is hereditary.

RB: I see. Well, that's all we have for this interview. Thank you for allowing this.

IS: It was a pleasure.

RB: So there you have it. Inez Stokes, our fair heroine, Atalanta's raw confessions. This is Rebecca Stanton. Next time, we'll have a riveting interview with another member of society's elite. Who? You'll have to check in to find out.
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