Monday, August 5, 2013

Disturbing Video: 13-Year-Old Florida Boy Brutally Beaten on School Bus, Driver Refuses to Intervene

Visit on your tablet, smartphone, or computer during the show for an exclusive feed LIVE from the ?Hannity? control room. The show?s producers will post videos, articles and slideshows related to what Sean and his guests are talking about in real time.?

This is the place to join-up with other fans nightly.?Test your knowledge in ?Hannity?s History Exam,? and take part in exclusive flash polls.?So, tune in at 9p?ET on Fox News Channel, and point your Internet browser to ?Hannity Live.??It?s fun, it's easy, and it?s free!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/FoxNewsInsider/~3/agPIOI7Isug/disturbing-video-13-year-old-florida-boy-brutally-beaten-school-bus-driver-refuses

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Joint-Venture Between GREE And Yahoo Japan Releases First Game

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Dr. Serkan Toto is a gaming expert and independent consultant based in Tokyo. You can follow him on Twitter and his blog. This article is republished with his permission.

GREE and Yahoo Japan launch Driland HTML5 game

The joint venture that GREE (TYO:3632) and Yahoo Japan established back in February this year ? called GxYz ? has released its first game.

Driland: Devil King Army vs Men Of Valor (a rough translation of the title) is a spin off of social card battler Driland (aka Doliland), GREE?s super-popular self-developed game (the English iOS version can be found here, but it will be closed on August 27, just like the Android version).

The spin-off was released exclusively for GREE on smartphones (as a browser-based game, and for Japan only) earlier this week.

In the new game, players take on the role of hunters (the hero characters in Driland proper) who have to defeat the Devil King army by teaming up with various monsters, gathering armor and weapons, and assembling parties.

Back in May, GREE introduced real-time battle elements to the original Driland. This new game puts these battles front and center by automatically assigning players to a guild right from the start and then letting them fight with members of the ?Devil King Army? in real-time.

Every day at 8am, noon, 6pm, and 10pm, players can engage in real-time 10 versus 10 battles (meaning a maximum of 20 characters can appear on the screen simultaneously). Outside these guild battles, players can ? much like in the original Driland ? strengthen their hunters by questing, winning items at gacha, and creating powerful weapons and armor.

Here are some more screenshots:

GREE and Yahoo Japan launch Driland HTML5 gameGREE and Yahoo Japan launch Driland HTML5 gameGREE and Yahoo Japan launch Driland HTML5 game

(Editing by Steven Millward)

Tags: $YHOO Doliland Driland Driland: Devil King Army vs Men Of Valor gaming GREE HTML5 gaming Japan Yahoo Yahoo Japan ????? ???vs??

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Source: http://www.techinasia.com/gxyz-gree-yahoo-japan-launch-driland-game/

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From soybeans to baseball, Sox owner has had success

John W. Henry took a backward ballclub in a dilapidated park and transformed it into a two-time World Series champion that is one of baseball's model franchises.

As the owner of The Boston Globe, he will try to turn around a newspaper that ? like many other major metro dailies ? is shedding staff, subscribers and advertisers as it makes the transition into the Internet age.

Henry agreed to buy the Globe along with the Worcester Telegram & Gazette and the Boston Metro for $70 million, a fraction of the $1.1 billion The New York Times Co. paid 20 years ago. Henry apparently made this deal without his Red Sox partners, though he said in a statement that more information will soon be available "concerning those joining me in this community commitment and effort."

The son of southern Illinois soybean farmers now worth an estimated $1.5 billion, Henry was a minority owner of the New York Yankees and the sole owner of the Florida Marlins when he led a group that bought the Red Sox for $660 million in 2002. (The original group included The New York Times, which sold the last of its 17.5 percent ownership last year.)

They soon set out to preserve Fenway Park while taking a wrecking ball to most everything else that had mired the franchise in failure for more than eight decades.

Henry, who made his money by taking a mathematical approach to the commodities markets, brought a similar method to the baseball diamond, hiring the statistically savvy Theo Epstein, then 28 years-old, as the youngest general manager in baseball history. They hired statistical pioneer Bill James as a consultant, putting the Red Sox at the forefront of the revolution that had just begun to take hold in front offices long dominated by old-time and hidebound scouting types.

But, perhaps more importantly, the new owners turned what had long been a stagnant family business into a revenue spigot.

They took NESN, which had been almost exclusively an outlet for Red Sox and Boston Bruins games, into a full-fledged sports network. (Not every effort ? like the sports-themed dating show "Sox Appeal" ? was a success.) And they spent more than $285 million turning the once-doomed Fenway Park into a modern ? well, as modern as a 100-year-old ballpark can be, anyway ? sporting venue.

With seats above the Green Monster and a roof deck in right field, a high-tech scoreboard and new concourses and concessions, Fenway sold out 820 consecutive games ? by official count, anyway ? the longest such streak in professional sports history. Thousands more file through the turnstiles 12 months a year, paying up to $16 just to see the park when it is empty.

Source: http://www.wcvb.com/news/money/from-soybeans-to-baseball-john-henry-has-had-success/-/9848680/21321686/-/bm10jm/-/index.html?absolute=true

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Mitch McConnell's Team Prepares to Defend His Role in the Coming Fiscal Showdown

Mitch McConnell will be at the center of negotiations during this fall's fiscal showdown. It's inevitable, his allies say, and while his campaign team might not love it, they're now preparing to defend his dealings with Democrats, both from anti-compromise tea partiers and negotiating partners looking to score a few political points along the way.

McConnell's stay-in-the-game strategy is an acknowledgment of the obvious -- his campaign can't run from a 30-years record in Washington so they might as well embrace it.

"From a political perspective it makes no sense having him sitting in the middle of a very contentious situation, but it doesn't change the fact that the problem's going to happen," said a source close to McConnell.

Indeed, people close to him say, McConnell largely compartmentalizes his roles as Senate Republican leader and candidate, often forcing his campaign team to sell his leadership moves back home.

And the Kentucky senator has made some major moves, emerging as a key dealmaker between congressional Republicans and the White House. In 2011, he helped craft a deal with Democrats to cut spending and raise the government's debt limit. Earlier this year, he cut a deal with Vice President Joe Biden to avoid the so-called fiscal cliff of automatic spending cuts and tax increases that threatened to send the fledgling economy into a tailspin.

With Congress facing fall deadlines to fund the government and raise the debt limit to pay the bills the country's already racked up, Washington is wondering if he'll reprise his role as The Closer. It's a question that has taken on renewed interest since millionaire tea party favorite Matt Bevin challenged the 71-year-old McConnell in the GOP primary by attacking his record out of the gate.

McConnell's allies argue that he's no stranger to tough votes. In 2008, he voted for the unpopular TARP program, which bailed out big banks. And in the 1990s he opposed a constitutional amendment to ban flag burning because he thought it violated freedom of speech, not a popular position in Kentucky.

"He's the Republican leader of the United States Senate because he's there to lead. He's not going to back down. He's not going to shy away from that," said his campaign manager Jesse Benton. "He's ready for all the attacks."

And they're already coming. In his first ad, Bevin hit McConnell for supporting TARP and the fiscal cliff deal. Bevin's spokeswoman told the Washington Post that McConnell should have been able to cut a better deal with the White House but "he caved to President Obama and cut a deal that threw Kentucky taxpayers under the bus because he didn't want to get his hands dirty and do the work the people of Kentucky elected him to do." (McConnell's aides fire back that the deal avoided an across-the-board tax increase, saving 99.7 percent of Kentuckians from higher taxes.)

And Democrats are almost daring McConnell to cut another deal. "We'll see if he has the guts," a Senate Democratic leadership aide said. "We would not use it again him. The tea party would."

It's a reality that's not lost on Republican insiders either, some who question whether McConnell, caught between the left and the right, now has the same leeway to maneuver.

"Does Uncle Mitch come in and save House Republicans from themselves again? Probably not. He can't take the heat at home," said one senior Republican operative.

McConnell did make himself some more space after the fiscal cliff deal saying he wouldn't negotiate another last-minute pact with the White House.

Still, Democrats are working to position McConnell for criticism no matter what he does. If he hangs in the background, they'll argue he's a weak leader. If he cuts a deal, they'll stand back and let the tea party attack. And if he uses his clout to block a deal, they'll label him an obstructionist.

The strategy was on display last week. After the Senate voted to confirm a new director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and explosives, who McConnell opposed, Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee spokesman Matt Canter argued the vote illustrated McConnell's waning influence. When a reporter pointed out that McConnell had just successfully blocked a spending bill on the Senate floor, Canter responded, "Senator Gridlock."

McConnell's uncowed, telling National Journal in an e-mail that he plans to go into the fall swinging, "We'll fight hard against Democrats' efforts to increase spending and we'll hold them accountable for the bipartisan promise made to the American people on reducing spending just two years ago."

Democrats and their candidate, Kentucky Secretary of State Alison Lundergan Grimes, are arguing that McConnell's an ineffective leader and a partisan obstuctionist who's no longer getting it done for Kentuckians.

McConnell's camp embraces the obstruction label, "absolutely Mitch is up there blocking stuff. He's blocking a lot of real horrible stuff," Benton said. And aides say, in the last week or so, his leadership stymied a Democratic backed spending bill and forced Democrats to tie student loans to market rates. McConnell's style, aides say, is to empower his members to cut deals while keeping him in the loop.

But his high profile does not seem to be translating into high poll numbers at home. In a poll out Thursday by a Democratic firm, McConnell's approval rating was 40 percent and he was trailing Grimes by one point in the poll, within the margin of error. A recent Republican poll had McConnell up eight points over Grimes and 39 points over Bevin with a 53 percent favorability rating.

McConnell's been in tough spots before. Former chief of staff Billy Piper remembers the financial crisis of 2008 when Congress, faced with a collapsing Wall Street, passed TARP to bailout the banks -- a move unpopular in Kentucky.

"As the market would go down by hundreds of points a day, our overnight tracking polls would go down with them," Piper remembered. "It was awful."

But with the market cratering, McConnell voted for TARP and Democrats slammed him for it. DSCC chair Chuck Schumer ran ads in Kentucky showing armored trucks hauling down the street with money flying out the back, Piper said.

"I have no doubt that he wondered if being involved in the middle of it he might be presiding over his own demise," he said. "We went into election day not sure if he'd win."

So to those wondering if McConnell will play in the debt dealings this fall, Piper points to 2008, "He was right there in the thick of it then and there was considerable political risk."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mitch-mcconnells-team-prepares-defend-role-coming-fiscal-060022643.html

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Sunday, August 4, 2013

Kerry visit casts Pakistan more as partner than pariah (+video)

The tumultuous relationship between the US and Pakistan is moving in a more positive direction after worsening for years.

By Jeremy Ravinsky,?Correspondent / August 1, 2013

US Secretary of State John Kerry, right, meets with Pakistan's Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif in Islamabad, Pakistan Thursday, Aug. 1, 2013. Kerry was meeting Thursday with top Pakistani leaders, hoping the U.S. can open a new chapter in Washington's often testy relationship with Islamabad.

Jason Reed/AP

Enlarge

On an unannounced visit to Islamabad late Wednesday, United States Secretary of State John Kerry has moved one step closer to rekindling talks of a strategic partnership with Pakistan. The visit is the first by a high-ranking US official since the election of Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif in May.

Skip to next paragraph Jeremy Ravinsky

Correspondent

Jeremy Ravinsky is an intern at the Christian Science Monitor's international desk. Born and raised in Montreal, Canada, Jeremy has lived in Boston for a number of years, attending Tufts University where he is a political science major. Before coming to the Monitor, Jeremy interned at GlobalPost in Boston and Bturn.com in Belgrade, Serbia.

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The negotiations come after years of strained relations between the two countries over the 2011 raid which killed Osama bin Laden, the US?s use of drone strikes, and Pakistani support for Taliban forces fighting in Afghanistan.

But there are hopes for a stronger US-Pakistan relationship under the guidance of Mr. Kerry, who has strong ties to Pakistan, and Mr. Sharif, who many believe can solve some of Pakistan?s political and economic troubles.

The announcement that talks would resume was made after Kerry met with Sharif and other high-level Pakistani officials over issues ranging from Pakistan?s economic and energy woes to the security situation in Afghanistan as US-led NATO forces prepare to withdraw in 2014, reports the BBC. Kerry said the talks were ?constructive,? leading analysts to see this as a turning point for tenuous bilateral relations.

The relationship between the two countries hit a low point in 2011, when US Navy SEALs?killed Osama bin Laden after raiding his secret hideout, reports the Washington Post. Talks shortly afterwards between then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Pakistani officials produced little and were ultimately suspended.

Anti-US sentiment in Pakistan has also been stoked by US drone strikes on Pakistani territory, which killed an estimated 2,800 people in Pakistan between 2002 and 2013, including 366 civilians. In 2011, a US military strike killed 24 Pakistani soldiers, leading Islamabad to close down vital supply routes into Afghanistan. The supply routes have since reopened, and drone strikes have decreased ??though they are still a point of contention.

And Pakistan?s tacit support for Islamist insurgent groups, such as the Afghan Taliban and the Haqqani network, operating in Afghanistan has irked many in the US.

However, both the US and Pakistan see normalizing relations as within their best interests right now, reports Reuters.

Both sides are now keen to overcome the grievances and start afresh, a shift in priorities they hope is possible with a new government in Pakistan and a new secretary of State in the United States.

With Pakistan's economy badly in need of support and the United States keen on smoothly withdrawing most of its troops from neighboring Afghanistan next year, both sides will see positives in repairing the relationship.

The security situation is of vital concern to both sides, particularly as US military forces are preparing to wind down operations in Afghanistan next year. According to Voice of America, Pakistan has promised to act as a mediator between the Afghan government and the Taliban and to help facilitate peace in the conflict-ridden country. Meanwhile, Kerry has stated his confidence that an agreement will be reached that will see the extension of US troop presence in Afghanistan, reports the BBC.

Both Kerry and Sharif are well positioned to improve relations between their countries. Kerry has a long history with Pakistan, and officials there know and trust him. Kerry was instrumental in passing the Kerry-Lugar-Berman aid package in 2009, which pledged $1.5 billion a year to Pakistan through 2013. According to The Christian Science Monitor, prior to his appointment as secretary of State, Pakistani officials were optimistic about the prospect of Kerry replacing Ms. Clinton.

And Sharif?s return to government after two stints as prime minister in the 1990s has many hoping that Pakistan is on the road to recovery.This year's election was Pakistan?s first to see a civilian government hand power to another civilian government, marking a democratic milestone for the country.

And he has already made attempts to improve the country?s economy by accepting a $5.3 billion aid package from the IMF, despite some domestic opposition to it and Sharif?s ideological opposition to external interference, writes the New York Times. The move both encourages American investment and demonstrates that Sharif can negotiate pragmatism and ideology.

And more importantly, Sharif has shown increased commitment to cooperate with the US on cracking down on militants, reports Reuters.

Pakistan itself has seen a spate of attacks against its military and civilians by the Pakistani wing of the Taliban since Sharif was sworn in on the back of promises to talk to the insurgents rather than fight them.

Speaking alongside Kerry, Sartaj Aziz, Sharif's adviser on foreign affairs, appeared to harden that position, saying his government might resort to the use of military force after all against the Taliban.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/9Mo4fCuNE6E/Kerry-visit-casts-Pakistan-more-as-partner-than-pariah-video

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Online Business ? Budgeting the Scottish Way |

online business

?

I am a Scotsman with an Online business.

Now?.There is a myth that all Scotsmen are mean and stingy when it comes to money. Not True!!

However we can be quite careful when it comes to spending and like to budget and that is why I have put this post together.

What I am going to recommend here is a methodology for those who plan to establish their online business with a limited budget??Been there, done that!!

One of the most important factors for being successful in online business, or any business for that matter, is budget control regardless of how big or small your budget is.

First we need to define what the meaning of limited budget is. First, you need to believe in your heart that it is impossible to start and run an online business for free. Do not believe anybody who tells you otherwise.

The second rule is you need to budget at least $200 for marketing and administrative costs. To give you an idea of what these costs might be here are few examples:

1-??????????? Administrative Cost Items:

a.??????????? Internet Connection

b.??????????? Hosting Service for your website (If you have one)

c.???????????? Phone Bill.

d.??????????? Electricity

e.??????????? Credit Card Charges

f.???????????? Post and Courier (If applicable)

?

2-??????????? Marketing Costs (Depending on your general Strategy)

a.??????????? Software Programs

b.??????????? Traffic Generation Services

c.???????????? Offline Advertising

d.??????????? Pay Per Click

e.??????????? Leads

f.???????????? Autoresponder Service

g.??????????? Any other Paid advertising Tactic

?

Now you can add on top of the above mentioned $200 any direct costs related to your online business. Mainly this includes one or both of the following:

?

1-??????????? What you have to pay to stay in business including a monthly subscription if applicable.

2-??????????? Inventory of Products that you have to buy.

?

To be able to spend your budget wisely we recommend following these steps:

1-??????????? Do not start your online marketing activity by choosing paid options. In a previous article we detailed what are your free online marketing strategy tools. We will just list them here:

a.??????????? Submit your link(s) to directories and search engines.

b.??????????? Write and Submit articles to article directories

c.???????????? Reciprocal linking

d.??????????? Posting in active forums

e.??????????? Make your website content rich and dynamic

f.???????????? Blog and Ping.

g.??????????? Traffic Exchange Services

2-??????????? Buy software programs that will help you automate the processes of the above free online marketing options. Try not to opt for subscription based services. Make sure to have software programs that have a one time payment option.

3-??????????? After few months you will realize that you have a free amount in your budget that now you can use for paid online or offline marketing options.

My final and sincere recommendation to you is not to get involved in any online business if you cannot afford to spend a reasonable monthly amount.

One way to make sure that you get as much as possible out of your monthly amount is to subscribe to the Internet Marketing Review and Try a 2 Month Test Drive. Your Online Business will benefit greatly so Click Here to get going.

?

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Source: http://gleneskbusinessbuilder.com/internet-marketing/online-business-budgeting-the-scottish-way/

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David King: the world needs a 'moon landing' for solar energy

Britain's former chief scientist has challenged governments around the world to find a way of creating a ready flow of cheap solar power over the next 10 years to fight global warming.

Writing in the Financial Times today, Sir David King and co-author Richard Layard, the former founder-director of the London School of Economics' Centre for Economic Performance, warn a collective scientific effort of similar proportions to putting a man on the moon is needed to tackle climate change.

"To defeat the axis of powers the allies developed the atom bomb. When threatened in the cold war, the US sent a man to the moon," the authors write. "When threatened by global warming we surely need a similar effort to save the planet."

King and Layard suggest that by 2025 bulk solar electricity should be supplied commercially at an unsubsidised price on a 24-hour basis, with at least 1GW powering cities in the Americas, Europe and Asia.

The joint project would be open to all G20 countries, and funded either by a carbon tax or governments' research and development budgets. King and Layard say the cost for each country would be 0.05 per cent of annual GDP for 10 years.

"We need a concentrated effort on one source [of energy] that offers the clearest prospect of success," they say. "The collection of solar energy by photovoltaic cells becomes cheaper every day and is already nearly economic in sun-rich environments."

But King and Layard also highlight the need for investment in electricity storage in order to achieve the goal of providing constant solar power.

"This is a far more important issue than putting a man on the moon. It should attract as much attention - and, this time, the attention of every nation. Failure to solve this problem will affect every nation upon earth."

Source: http://feeds.businessgreen.com/c/554/f/7118/s/2f793218/sc/29/l/0L0Sbusinessgreen0N0Cbg0Cnews0C22865630Cdavid0Eking0Ethe0Eworld0Eneeds0Ea0Emoon0Elanding0Efor0Esolar0Eenergy/story01.htm

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