Friday, January 18, 2013

Oxford Lung Cancer and Mesothelioma Clinical Nurse Specialists

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This information leaflet explains the role of the Clinical Nurse. Specialists (CNS) in Lung Cancer and Mesothelioma. What is a Clinical Nurse. Specialist?

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Kids' Letters About Gun Control Read At White House [PHOTOS]

(Reuters) - "Dear President Obama," began a letter from 8-year-old Grant Fritz, with the shaky printing -- missed words, spelling errors -- of someone just learning how to put thoughts down on paper.

"I think there should be some changes in the law with guns," Fritz said in the December 17 letter he sent to the president days after the Newtown school shootings.

Invited to the White House on Wednesday, Fritz and three other children in their Sunday best sat on stage as Obama read out parts of their letters to illustrate why he wants to tighten gun laws.

The children's' presence at Obama's announcement aimed to keep kids at the heart of the often emotional battle over gun control, which reignited with the murder of 20 first-graders in Newtown, Connecticut, last month.

The president's own young daughters were dragged into the fray on Tuesday when the National Rifle Association put out an ad accusing Obama of hypocrisy by giving the girls armed Secret Service protection.

That broke a long-held taboo against using a president's children in political attacks and outraged the White House, which described the ad as "repugnant."

A-GRADE VS FIRST GRADE

With the letter-writing children looking on, Obama announced wide-ranging plans for gun control, including bringing an assault weapon ban to Congress. He challenged Americans to ask their lawmakers to support his plan despite objections from groups who believe the measures will infringe on gun ownership rights.

"Ask them what's more important: doing whatever it takes to get a 'A' grade from the gun lobby that funds their campaigns, or giving parents some peace of mind when they drop their child off for first grade?" Obama said to applause from a crowd of interest groups, Democratic lawmakers and law enforcement officials who agree with his plan.

Anger and pain over the December 14 Newtown shooting has been a common topic in the stacks of letters from Americans that flood into the White House. Obama says he reads 10 letters a day from the public.

Julia Stokes, 11, wrote that she "may not (be) that into politics but my opinion is that it should be very hard for people to buy guns."

"I know that laws have to be passed by congress but I beg you to try very hard to make guns not allowed," wrote Julia, who dotted her 'i' with a heart.

Hinna Zeejah, 8, whose patent-leather Mary Jane shoes didn't reach the floor as she sat on the White House stage, wrote, "I feel terrible for the parents who lost their children."

In the front row of the event sat Chris and Lynn McDonald, whose 7-year-old daughter, Grace, was killed at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown.

"I'm told she loved pink. She loved the beach. She dreamed of becoming a painter," Obama said. Her parents looked at each other and smiled as the president spoke of how one of Grace's paintings now hangs in his private study.

The horror of the Newtown school shooting made a significant difference in the debate over gun violence, said Annette Nance-Holt, who lost her only child, Blair, in a shooting on a city bus, when he was coming home from school in 2007.

"In Chicago, we've been waiting for a long time. I don't just represent Blair - that was my baby - but there are so many other babies in the city of Chicago that have been gunned down innocently," Nance-Holt told reporters, wearing a picture of her son on her lapel.

"Now we have a groundswell of movement. We have 20 babies, and people are looking at this totally different."

Obama was criticized by conservative pundits and bloggers as using children as political "props."

"I don't even know what to say about the White House publishing letters from children for political purposes. It's just so disgusting," tweeted Michelle Clouthier, a libertarian blogger.

In its ad, the NRA accused Obama of being "just another elitist hypocrite" for allowing armed Secret Service protection for his daughters but turning down the lobby group's proposal after the Newtown shooting to put armed guards in all schools.

That drew fire from White House spokesman Jay Carney.

"Most Americans agree that a president's children should not be used as pawns in a political fight. But to go so far as to make the safety of the president's children the subject of an attack ad is repugnant and cowardly," Carney said.

(Editing by Alistair Bell and Doina Chiacu)

Copyright 2012 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/01/17/children-gun-control_n_2496699.html

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Skin-Cancer Spotting Apps Miss Their Marks

60-Second Health

New smartphone apps that purport to assess patients' skin lesions as cancer or not are unreliable, according to a new study. Katherine Harmon reports.

More 60-Second Health

New smartphone apps now let you snap a picture and upload it for a skin cancer check. Sure sounds a lot easier than trekking into the dermatologist, right? But a new review of these apps finds that most of them are not very accurate.

Dermatologists uploaded 188 images of skin lesions to four different app-based services. The apps, which are unregulated, mostly use algorithms to judge?often in less than a minute?whether the spot is benign or something to get checked out. Three of the four apps failed to catch at least one-in-three known cases of melanoma. The apps also falsely identified plenty of benign growths as possibly cancerous. The findings are in the journal JAMA Dermatology. [Joel Wolf et al, Diagnostic Inaccuracy of Smartphone Applications for Melanoma Detection]

The fourth app, which did okay, actually used board-certified dermatologists to review images. It was the most expensive at five bucks per assessment and took 24 hours.

So next time you're worried about a mole, don?t use an app, get an ap?pointment?with a dermatologist.

?Katherine Harmon

[The above text is a transcript of this podcast]

?


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China Loses Its Edge as World's Factory

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Pre-caffeine tech: Internet surprises, solar blobs!

5 hrs.

Our?pre-caffeine roundup is a collection of the hottest, strangest, and most amusing stories of the morning.

So?this?is?weird:?Lennay Kekua, purported to be Manti Te'o's girlfriend, was a great?big?Internet?hoax. Whether Te'o was a victim or perpetrator of the hoax, though, remains up for debate.

The?U.S. Attorney prosecuting?Aaron Swartz defends?the?office's?conduct?in?the?case.?

The?White House raised the?online petition threshold to 100,000.

Meanwhile, the?FBI told?ACLU that it won't be sharing how, when or why it tracks you via technology.?

And here?are the 11 days of the year when people watch Internet?porn the least.?

Calling all iPhone-based Facebook users! The social network launched a feature within its Messenger app that gives iPhone owners the ability to call each other while connected either via Wi-Fi or their wireless provider?s data?network.

Meanwhile,?FaceTime on AT&T has been?extended to 3G users -- but still not to everyone.

A solar "blob"?is coming! But never fear ...?this show won't be scary.

Good news everybody!?Yelp is adding?hygiene scores to restaurant reviews in New York and San Francisco.

In closing:?The 32 Absolute Best Selfies Of All?Time.

Compiled?by?Helen A.S. Popkin,?who invites you to?join her on?Twitter?and/or?Facebook. Also,?Google+.?

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/pre-caffeine-tech-1B8014722

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Australia Eyeing up New Zealand Home-Based ECE Model | Attn ...

Australia could soon follow New Zealand?s popular model of in-home childcare as it undertakes major reforms in its Early Childcare Education (ECE) sector.

New Zealand Home Education Learning Organisation (HELO) president Jenny Yule is fielding strong interest from Australia along with other countries interested in the home-based childcare model.

?Australia is moving ahead of New Zealand with its new childcare reforms that will reduce child to teacher ratios in day care centres.

?We have caught the eye of Australia?s Liberal Member of Parliament Sussan Ley, the?Shadow Minister for Childcare and Early Childhood Learning, who visited PORSE last year.

Ms Ley was looking at what other countries have been doing as child care is of critical importance to the Australian Federal Opposition,? Ms Yule said.

Ms Ley said she was very impressed with the PORSE model and she is keen to further consider whether this could play a role in Australia, particularly in regard to the under two year olds.

?We have committed to having our Productivity Commission undertake an inquiry into childcare as a whole and home-based care will certainly be considered within this context.? However, this could not occur until we are elected to govern,? Ms Ley said.

Ms Yule said HELO?s founding members (PORSE, PAUA, Au Pair Link and Home Grown Kids) believe the return to care and learning in family homes is the wisest way forward for delivering state-funded early childhood care and education for babies and our young children.

?We need our babies to be raised by people who understand and are committed to the importance of working in close relationships with young children and supporting their families.

?When a baby is born, 70 per cent of their brain is yet to develop.? In the first three years of life, almost 90 per cent of the brain development left to be done is undertaken.

?Millions of connections between brain cells are formed, all directly in response to the environment around the child and the experiences that occur within relationship with those who care for them.

?Every adult relationship in a child?s life during the first three years plays a critical role in shaping up a blue-print for their lifetime success.

?Children cared for in the home can receive more consistent one-on-one responsive care, helping them to develop meaningful relationships in a family-focused community, supporting emotional growth and learning,? Ms Yule said.

But Ms Yule said New Zealand could also learn a lot from Australia?s new reforms.

?Here in New Zealand there is real concern about the ?factory style? approach to Early Childhood Education. ?For the past 27 years we have increased our numbers of children in day care to up to 150 for a single centre, however the ratio of care has remained the same at only one adult to five children aged under two years,? she said.

The ratio with home-based childcare is one adult to two children under the age of two years and the ideal group size of four children under five years supports social skills, co-operative play and learning.

?While home-based is the fastest growing ECE sector for children, we still only represent 9 per cent of the industry, with more children being enrolled from birth at out of home, day care services.

?HELO is committed to raising awareness about the benefits of quality home-based care and education, a sector of ECE that is often marginalised by group-based childcare advocates, at the expense of not having our babies and young children educated in home learning environments,? Ms Yule said.

It is a shocking fact that there are 25,000 children diagnosed in New Zealand with behavioural and emotional problems, with anxiety, the fastest growing condition, according to the Ministry of Health?s latest children?s health report.

Ms Yule backs up what the experts believe is the cause of the increasing rates of anxiety ? and supports the government review to examine the benefits of home-based ECE to which she says will reduce stress levels for young children and families, and help re-build neighbourhood communities of learning.

For more information please contact:
HELO President Jenny Yule 021 546 012

The Home Early Learning Organisation (HELO) comprises founding members PORSE, PAUA, Au Pair Link and Home Grown Kids; four of the largest home-based providers in the home-based ECE sector. HELO?s members cater to more than 50% of the children enrolled in home-based services nationwide.

Source: http://www.attn.co.nz/2013/01/17/australia-eyeing-up-new-zealand-home-based-ece-model/

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Thursday, January 17, 2013

Of Those We Know

Of Those We Know

In a world that has done its best to hide the existence of abnormality, soon the greatest secret of all times will become at risk. And a group of friends is right at its center.

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This topic is an Out Of Character part of the roleplay, ?Of Those We Know?. Anything posted here will also show up there.

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POWER TO THE ROLE PLAYERS: Most Recent Roleplay

I am 33% evil, 33% insane, 33% role player, and 1% other (Note: Insane and Brilliant are the same thing!)
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My Brothers Test: [CENTER]Image
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Mr. Baneling Squishy
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Hello again Squishy, mind if I join? I'd like to take the role of Maxine.

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Captain Obvious
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Captain!

Sorry about not posting in Bioshock, I tried to message you why.

I am actually still slightly sick, but not as bad. I actually typed this up last night/early morning whir I couldn't sleep. xD

And reserved

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Mr. Baneling Squishy
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India fish prices up 10-30% on higher demand

Fish prices?in India have shot up by 10% to 30% in the past year, reported India?s Economic Times.?

There is no sign of prices abating as domestic demand is growing at a faster rate than supply, said the new website.

Prices have been pushed up by a hike in diesel prices, higher costs of fishing and increasing demand, Pradeep Ghivalikar, owner of Mumbai-based Ghivalikar Fish Traders, told Economic Times.

Full story here

Source: http://www.undercurrentnews.com/2013/01/17/asd-2/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=asd-2

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FSU football program adds two coaches (with video)

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Ga. Gov. Nathan Deal pitches legislative agenda

ATLANTA (AP) -- Gov. Nathan Deal presented Georgia lawmakers with a wide-ranging but cautious agenda Thursday, asking the new General Assembly not to divert from the path set during the Republican governor's first two years in office.

"We have made communities safer, improved educational opportunities, provided for infrastructure improvements, driven workforce development, generated a better business environment and created jobs," Deal said during a 30-minute State of the State Address. "I challenge you to join me as we go forward with a focus on progress."

The governor's priority list, presented to a joint session of the House and Senate, includes public safety, education, health care and economic development, all pursued within tight financial constraints.

He presented a budget proposal that would trim most state agencies' budgets but cover higher costs from increased enrollment in K-12 schools. The latter detail is called for under the state's school financing formula. Deal also emphasized new money to return pre-kindergarten programs to a full 180-day calendar, after cutbacks in lean budget years.

The governor urged lawmakers to ratify his plan for an appointed state health policy board to assess fees on Georgia hospitals as a way to avert steep cuts to the Medicaid health insurance program for low-income residents, most of them children or disabled adults. That plan would replace a direct tax that expires at the end of the current fiscal year.

The Senate is expected to vote on the idea Thursday afternoon.

Deal said the threat of Medicaid payment cuts to hospitals and other health care providers is dire. Still, he stood by his decision not to accept federal dollars to expand the Medicaid program to cover thousands more individuals and families, as part of President Barack Obama's 2010 health insurance overhaul. Deal maintains that the state cannot afford its future share for expanding eligibility, though part of the current Medicaid expenditures involve paying hospitals to treat uninsured patients who would become insured under a larger Medicaid program.

The new fiscal year begins July 1. Legislators will debate the budget in the coming weeks of a session that is expected to last until early or mid-April.

The Deal administration is backing proposals from a juvenile justice commission to increase financial support for and emphasis on community programs intended to divert minor offenders from imprisonment in the adult system. Deal said the plan tracks previous sentencing changes and other policy shifts in the adult criminal law system.

Meanwhile, he said, lawmakers should reduce the blood-alcohol level that triggers a citation for boat operators from 0.1 percent to .08 percent. "If you're too drunk to drive an automobile, then you're too drunk to drive a boat," he said. That policy proposal follows an increase in boating accidents and fatalities on Georgia waterways.

The governor reserved perhaps his most spirited tone to discuss ethics, though he offered no specific policy proposal. House and Senate leaders are embroiled in a back-and-forth over how to tighten regulations on who must register as a lobbyist and how much those registered individuals can spend on interactions with elected officials.

"There will always be those in the media and elsewhere who thrive on sowing the seeds of doubt and distrust and who will never recant their sinister innuendos and malicious accusations even when they are vanquished by truth," Deal said. "And while you will never silence those voices of discord, nor should you try to do so, you can bolster the confidence of the public that might be tempted to listen to them by simply establishing clear rules under which you and those who deal with you in your capacity as elected officials must operate."

Deal praised Georgia voters for approving a 2012 constitutional amendment that will result in more independent public charter schools. "The message they sent was this this: They are not satisfied with the status quo. And neither am I," he said.

The governor's education agenda this year, however, is relatively thin. Besides the pre-kindergarten boost, his budget adds money to the HOPE scholarship program. But his agenda does not include any policy favorites of the school-choice movement that has pushed private-school tuition vouchers and charter school expansion. Deal said he wants Georgia to continue to monitor progress under curriculum tweaks and other policy changes ? many of them part of winning federal grants from the Obama administration.

Democrats were scheduled to deliver their official response at 12:45 p.m.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ga-gov-nathan-deal-pitches-182056731.html

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Planet Bollywood News ? Shahrukh: I like dusky people, Shilpa ...

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In Self DefenseIn Self Defense is inspired by the true-life story of a martial arts legend who died at the hand of his own son. After fighting in the jungles of the South Pacific in World War II, Willy Wetzel and his family migrated from Indonesia to America in 1956. Willy opened one of the first martial arts schools in the United States in Beaver County, Pennsylvania. He was a pioneer and became known worldwide for his mastery of many martial arts forms. The finest pupil Willy ever taught, was his second son, Roy Wetzel. The Wetzels all had their battle scars, some more visible than others. When Roy returned from Viet Nam with a Purple Heart, he hoped for a peaceful life at home. Instead Roy found himself in a fight with his father.One fateful night, their strained relationship finally came to a head. As Roy's young daughter lay asleep in the next room, a weapon-filled brutal fight between father and son ensued. The aftermath of Willy's last skirmish would leave Roy bloody and beaten and charged by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania with Murder. This led to a controversial trial and the original court transcripts contained in the second half of this non-fiction novel give a compelling account of the prolonged legal contest that stirred up many debates. Following the lives of the Wetzels in intricate detail, In Self Defense will keep you turning the page till the very end. Complete Krav Maga: The Ultimate Guide to Over 230 Self-Defense and Combative TechniquesComplete Krav Maga: The Ultimate Guide to Over 230 Self-Defense and Combative TechniquesDeveloped for the Israel military forces and battle tested in real-life combat, Krav Maga has gained an international reputation as an easy-to-learn yet highly effective art of self-defense. Clearly written and extensively illustrated, Complete Krav Maga details every aspect of the system including dozens of hand-to-hand combat moves, over 20 weapons defense techniques and a complete physical conditioning workout program.

All the moves are described in depth from beginning Yellow Belt to advanced Black Belt, yet they are easy to learn because one of Krav Maga's strengths is its simplicity. Based on the principle that it is best to move from defense to attack as quickly as possible, Complete Krav Maga offers fast-escape maneuvers from attacks and holds. It then follows them up with specific counterattacks, including punches, kicks and throws.

The authors show how anyone (big or small, man or woman) can practice self defense by using Krav Maga to protect weak spots, exploit an assailant's vulnerabilities and turn the attacker s force against him. Complete Krav Maga teaches the reader how to get in shape, gain confidence and feel safer and more secure every day.

Self-DefenseDr. Alex Delaware doesn?t see many private patients anymore, but the young woman called Lucy is an exception. So is her dream. Lucy Lowell is referred to Alex by Los Angeles police detective Milo Sturgis. A juror at the agonizing trial of a serial killer, Lucy survived the trauma only to be tormented by a recurring nightmare: a young child in the forest at night, watching a strange and furtive act.

Now Lucy?s dream is starting to disrupt her waking life, and Alex is concerned. The power of the dream, its grip on Lucy?s emotions, suggests to him that it may be more than a nightmare. It may be the repressed childhood memory of something very real. Something like murder.

From the Paperback edition.

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A-Rod has hip surgery; recovery time 6 months

FILE - In this May 23, 2012, file photo, New York Yankees third baseman Alex Rodriguez throws to first in the Yankees' baseball game against the Kansas City Royals at Yankee Stadium in New York. Rodriguez is scheduled for hip surgery on Jan. 16. The third baseman could be sidelined until the All-Star break because of the injury, which was disclosed by the team last month. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens, File)

FILE - In this May 23, 2012, file photo, New York Yankees third baseman Alex Rodriguez throws to first in the Yankees' baseball game against the Kansas City Royals at Yankee Stadium in New York. Rodriguez is scheduled for hip surgery on Jan. 16. The third baseman could be sidelined until the All-Star break because of the injury, which was disclosed by the team last month. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens, File)

(AP) ? Alex Rodriguez had surgery on his left hip Wednesday and is expected to be sidelined until after the All-Star break.

The New York Yankees said Dr. Bryan Kelly repaired a torn labrum and impingement and the operation at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York "went as planned and without complication."

The 37-year-old former All-Star third baseman is expected to be released from the hospital on Thursday and the anticipated time for a full recovery is six months. The Yankees signed free agent Kevin Youkilis this offseason to play third base while Rodriguez is out.

Kelly said last week that Rodriguez had a condition known as femoral acetabular impingement and it was caused by genes, not by steroids. Rodriguez admitted in 2009 that he used steroids while with the Texas Rangers from 2001-03.

Kelly said the injury was responsible for Rodriguez's poor performance in September and October, when A-Rod was benched in three of nine postseason games and pinch hit for in three others. He batted .120 (3 for 25) with no RBIs in the playoffs, including 0 for 18 with 12 strikeouts against right-handed pitchers.

Rodriguez is due $114 million over the next five years as part of his record $275 million, 10-year contract, so his health is a major concern for the Yankees.

Describing the bone meeting the socket, Kelly said "we're basically taking an egg-shaped femoral head and through the use of a camera, a motorized burr and Fluoroscopic imaging, we're reshaping the bone to a predetermined shape."

A 14-time All-Star, Rodriguez had right hip surgery on March 9, 2009, and returned that May 8. Kelly said the left hip requires more recovery time because Rodriguez is a right-handed hitter and rotates it when he swings.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2013-01-16-BBA-Yankees-Rodriguez-Surgery/id-4d1194a78f1f4cfcacde3a1c8a3c512e

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White House raises online petition threshold to 100,000

17 hrs.

"We the People," the White House's official online?petitioning platform, has raised the number of signatures required for a response from the administration from 25,000 to 100,000, citing huge increases in both users and petitions.

Macon Phillips, director of digital strategy for the White House, described the change in a blog post, saying the "good problem" of having more users than expected was "getting better."

Petitions originally required 5,000 signatures when "We the People" started in 2011, but after the site grew, 25,000 became the new threshold. Now that bar has been raised again ? although petitions already underway as of Wednesday, such as the one to remove the federal prosecutor in the Aaron Swarz case, will only require the original 25,000 for White House review.

The burst in activity has been of mixed character: Petitions range from the reasonable ("Finalize Standards for Gluten-Free Labeling") to the questionable ("Restrict pay for all Senators and Congress to $75,000 for a period of 3 years to repay the National deficit") to the absurd ("Secure resources and funding, and begin construction of a Death Star by 2016"). All three of those petitions have more than enough signatures to warrant a response, though so far only the Death Star one has actually received one.

At this moment, just under 40 petitions are past the 25,000-signature mark and await comment, and dozens more could garner that many before expiring. This high success rate is arguably as much attributable to the higher user count as it is to greater political involvement; it used to take three weeks to get that many signatures, and now most take less than five days.

Getting 100,000 signatures?will be more difficult, of course, but far from impossible. The top petition, "Legally recognize Westboro Baptist Church as a hate group,"?has?321,646?signatures?as?of?this?writing,?and?four?analogous?petitions?add?up?to?about?250,000?more,?putting?the?total?for?this?issue?well?above?half?a?million.

Some?more?engagement?statistics?and?news?(the?"We?the?People"?code?is?now?open?source,?for?instance)?can?be?found?at?the?White?House?blog?post.

Devin Coldewey is a contributing writer for NBCNews Digital. His personal website is?coldewey.cc.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/technolog/white-house-raises-online-petition-threshold-100-000-1B8003970

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Emergency landing grounds Boeing 787 jets in Japan

TOKYO (AP) ? Japan's two biggest airlines grounded all their Boeing 787 aircraft for safety checks Wednesday after one was forced to make an emergency landing in the latest blow for the new jet.

All Nippon Airways said a cockpit message showed battery problems and a burning smell was detected in the cockpit and the cabin, forcing the 787 on a domestic flight to land at Takamatsu airport in western Japan.

The 787, known as the Dreamliner, is Boeing's newest and most technologically advanced jet, and the company is counting heavily on its success. Since its launch, which came after delays of more than three years, the plane has been plagued by a series of problems including a battery fire and fuel leaks. Japan's ANA and Japan Airlines are major customers for the jet and among the first to fly it.

Japan's transport ministry said it got notices from ANA, which operates 17 of the jets, and Japan Airlines which has seven, that all their 787s would not be flying. The grounding was done voluntarily by the airlines.

The earliest manufactured jets of any new aircraft usually have problems and airlines run higher risks in flying them first, said Brendan Sobie, Singapore-based chief analyst at CAPA-Center for Aviation. Since about half the 787 fleet is in Japan, more problems are cropping up there.

"There are always teething problems with new aircraft and airlines often are reluctant to be the launch customer of any new airplanes," Sobie said. "We saw it with other airplane types, like the A380 but the issues with the A380 were different," he said.

Japan's transport ministry categorized Wednesday's problem as a "serious incident" that could have led to an accident, and sent officials for further checks to Takamatsu airport. The airport was closed.

It was unclear how long the Dreamliners would be grounded. ANA said 14 flights were changed to other aircraft, while 31 domestic and 7 international were cancelled. JAL said eight were cancelled, while two were changed to a 777.

ANA executives apologized, bowing deeply at a hastily called news conference in Tokyo.

"We are very sorry to have caused passengers and their family members so much concern," said ANA Senior Executive Vice President Osamu Shinobe.

One male in his 60s was taken to the hospital for minor hip injuries after going down the emergency slides at the airport, the fire department said. The other 128 passengers and eight crew members of the ANA domestic flight were uninjured, according to ANA.

The grounding in Japan was the first for the 787, whose problems had been brushed off by Boeing as teething pains for a new aircraft. The transport ministry had already started a separate inspection Monday on another 787 jet, operated by Japan Airlines, which had leaked fuel at Tokyo's Narita airport after flying back from Boston, where it had also leaked fuel.

A fire ignited Jan. 7 in the battery pack of an auxiliary power unit of a Japan Airlines 787 empty of passengers as the plane sat on the tarmac at Boston's Logan International Airport. It took firefighters 40 minutes to put out the blaze.

ANA cancelled a domestic flight to Tokyo on Jan. 9 after a computer wrongly indicated there was a problem with the Boeing 787's brakes. Two days later, the carrier reported two new cases of problems with the aircraft ? a minor fuel leak and a cracked windscreen in a 787 cockpit.

The 787 relies more than any other modern airliner on electrical signals to help power nearly everything the plane does. It's also the first Boeing plane to use rechargeable lithium ion batteries, which charge faster and can be molded to space-saving shapes compared to other airplane batteries. The plane is made with lightweight composite materials instead of aluminum.

The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration said in a statement that it is "monitoring a preliminary report of an incident in Japan earlier today involving a Boeing 787."

It said the incident will be included in the comprehensive review the FAA began last week of the 787 critical systems, including design, manufacture and assembly. U.S. government officials have been quick to say that the plane is safe. Nearly 50 of them are in the skies now.

GS Yuasa Corp., the Japanese company that supplies all the lithium ion batteries for the 787, had no comment as the investigation was still ongoing. Thales, which makes the battery charging system, had no immediate comment.

In Tokyo, the transport minister, Akihiro Ota, said authorities were taking the incidents seriously.

"These problems must be fully investigated," he said.

Boeing has said that various technical problems are to be expected in the early days of any aircraft model.

"Boeing is aware of the diversion of a 787 operated by ANA to Takamatsu in western Japan. We will be working with our customer and the appropriate regulatory agencies," Boeing spokesman Marc Birtel said.

The U.S. National Transportation Safety Board is aware of Wednesday's emergency landing in Japan and is gathering information on the incident, Kelly Nantel, a spokeswoman for the board, said.

In Wednesday's incident, a cockpit instrument showed a problem with the 787's battery and the pilot noticed an unusual smell, the airline said. The flight requested and was granted permission to make an emergency landing at Takamatsu airport.

Aviation safety expert John Goglia, a former National Transportation Safety Board member, said the ANA pilot made the right choice.

"They were being very prudent in making the emergency landing even though there's been no information released so far that indicates any of these issues are related," he said.

But much remains uncertain about the problems being experienced by the 787, said Masaharu Hirokane, analyst at Nomura Securities Co. in Tokyo.

"You need to ensure safety 100 percent, and then you also have to get people to feel that the jet is 100 percent safe," said Hirokane.

___

AP Business Writer Kelvin Chan in Hong Kong and AP Transportation Writer Joan Lowy in Washington, D.C., contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/emergency-landing-grounds-boeing-787-jets-japan-062741032--finance.html

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Album Review: California X ? California X

Swamp rock, sludge, fuzz, hooks, the next Dinosaur Jr.? Yeah, yeah, yeah, we get it. Oh, and they?re from Amherst to boot? Compare California X to J Mascis and Co. all you want, but, seriously: can we give them their own identity? They certainly deserve it.

For one, these are happy guys, or at least they sound like it. Frontman Lemmy Gurtowsky has neither the apathy nor the sad-bastard inflections of Mascis. Gurtowsky?s full-throated joy beams through even the gloomiest subject matter. Whereas Mascis might profess lamentation or resignation toward being stuck in the mire of ?Pond Rot?, Gurtowsky revels in it: ?Would you live down in the murky brown/ down in the fishy deep/ where it?s dark and cool?? Then, later on, ?everything is changing/ that?s not the body that I came in/ gills and fins growing in my skin/ I want a pond to rot in.? Next to Neil Young?s ?Will To Love?, it?s the best rock song about the joys of turning into a fish.

In more cynical hands, these succinctly-titled tunes (?Hot Hed?, ?Spider X?, etc.) would merely mope and lumber. In snarkier ones, the simple declaritives would turn into jokes. But the members of California X wear their graffitied denim with pride, and without a single stitch of irony. They begin and end their self-titled debut with their two strongest tracks, always a smart move when baiting first-time listeners. The opening dirge of ?Sucker? gives false impressions of metal before lurching into what seems like three infectious choruses jammed together for nearly seven minutes straight. The earworms burrow deeper and deeper until solo-anchored closer ?Mummy? ends the eight-song victory lap.

The electric camaraderie, chrome riffs, and crisp production make for a record that not only kicks, but shows how fun it can be to make music with your friends.

Essential Tracks: ?Sucker?, ?Pond Rot?, and ?Mummy?

Source: http://consequenceofsound.net/2013/01/album-review-california-x-california-x/

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The Great Social Customer Service Race | Business blog for small ...

[Today's guest post is from Ashley Verrill of Software Advice.]

In March, I will head to Florida to speak at an HP conference about an experiment I conducted recently called ?The Great Social Customer Service Race.? The four-week project tested how quickly and how often 14 top of the nation?s top brands respond on Twitter [infographic below or here].

The project started after I read a report saying as many as 73 percent of consumers use social media for customer service. I wanted know whether any of these mega companies have responded to this trend.

To make this assessment, myself and four of my coworkers used our personal Twitter accounts to send one tweet to each brand every day for four weeks. We asked questions that the companies should have prioritized according to social customer service best practices. This included questions that were either urgent, an FAQ, negative, positive or technical in nature.

Half the time we used the @ symbol with the brand?s Twitter handle (triggering a notification that someone mentioned them in a tweet), and the other half of the time we just mentioned the brand without an @ symbol.

HP invited me share what I learned from the race. Here?s a brief breakdown of a few of these key takeaways:

Listen for your brand, with or without the @.

Less than eight percent of responses came during the weeks when an @ was not used. The failure of brands to respond to negative, positive, or otherwise important tweets leaves a bad impression on the customer and anyone who follows them. Listening for these conversations also presents unique opportunities to surprise and delight the customer.

Choose Your Prioritization Rules Carefully.

It?s impossible to expect brands respond to every tweet, so they need prioritization rules programmed into their listening software so the most important tweets are sent to the front of the response queue. These prioritization rules can include combinations of your brand name and other words with high purchase intent, or risk of switching brands. Some examples include ?thank you,? ?mad,? ?upset,? ?buying,? ?switching,? or ?help.?

Track Social Customer Service Requests Like a Help Ticket.

Several times during the race, a tweet was responded to twice, or several days later. Companies should have a standard method for processing and tracking tickets that?s comparable to phone, email or other channels. One way your company can streamline social customer service is by integrating listening software with help desk ticketing programs. This enables users to automatically convert a tweet into a ticket, then mark it as open, resolved or waiting a response.

Record Interactions by Customer.

One of my goals was to see if any of the brands would identify us as active socializers and improve their response time. None of the brands did. You should record interactions by customer so you can identify users who share often on Twitter. You can nurture those relationships and possibly turn a detractor into a promoter.

These brands responded to a mere 14 percent of the 280 tweets delivered during the race. Whether the issue is one of strategy or technology, brands are still far from meeting customers? expectations on Twitter.

Infographic: The Great Social Race by SoftwareAdvice

Infographic: The Great Social Race by SoftwareAdvice

About the Author:

Ashley Verrill is a market analyst with Software Advice. She has spent the last six years reporting and writing business news and strategy features. Her work has appeared in myriad publications including Inc., Upstart Business Journal, the Austin Business Journal and the North Bay Business Journal. Before joining Software Advice in 2012, she worked in sales management and advertising. She is a University of Texas graduate with a bachelor?s degree in journalism.

Source: http://www.clickandinc.com/blog/the-great-social-customer-service-race/

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Israeli soldiers kill Palestinian youth in West Bank

BUDRUS, West Bank (Reuters) - Israeli soldiers shot dead a 17-year-old Palestinian near the village of Budrus in the Israeli-occupied West Bank on Tuesday, Palestinian witnesses and medics said.

A second boy was shot and injured by soldiers in a nearby village, Palestinians said, but the Israeli military said it was not aware of any such incident.

Violence and deadly confrontations have become more frequent in the Palestinian territory since Israel announced plans late last year to expand settlements and the Palestinians won de-facto statehood recognition at the United Nations in November.

Sameer Awad was the second Palestinian killed in four days by Israeli troops in the West Bank, where few clashes in recent years have ended with fatalities.

Budrus, north of Ramallah, adjoins a barrier that Israel says is meant to keep out suicide bombers. The barrier - a network of fences interspersed with concrete walls that encroaches on occupied land in many places - is a focal point for protests by local residents against Israeli soldiers.

Awad's classmates said they were on the way to school on a bus when clashes broke out between demonstrators and Israeli soldiers patrolling the barrier.

It was unclear whether the teenager had been shot on the bus, or whether people from the bus had taken part in the demonstration.

An Israeli military spokeswoman said several Palestinians had approached the security fence near Budrus and damaged it as they attempted to cross into Israel.

"Soldiers at the scene responded immediately in order to secure the area and to prevent the infiltration," she said.

Clashes subsequently broke out at Awad's funeral as local youths threw stones at Israeli soldiers, who responded by firing tear gas and rubber bullets.

In the nearby village of Deir Nidham, Palestinian medics said Israeli soldiers had shot a Palestinian boy, who was taken to be treated in an Israeli hospital. A local source named the boy as Yazan, and said he was 12 or 13.

An Israeli military spokeswoman said there was no report or information of a boy being shot and taken to an Israeli hospital.

"During a violent and illegal riot that took place in Deir Nidham, several Palestinian rioters hurled rocks at security forces, who responded by using riot dispersal means," she said. "A Palestinian was lightly injured and received treatment on scene."

(Reporting by Mohamad Torokman in Budrus, Noah Browning in Ramallah and Ori Lewis in Jerusalem; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/israeli-soldiers-kill-palestinian-youth-west-bank-175302484.html

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Judge Backs Photographer In Twitter Case

Logo courtesy of Twitter


A judge has ruled that agencies cannot use photos posted on Twitter without the photographer's permission.

The ruling is a major test of where photographers stand when it comes to use of their images through social media sites.

The judge ruled that press agencies must have the photographer's permission before using their images that are posted on Twitter.

The case centres around Daniel Morel, who took a photo of? a shocked and devastated woman appearing out of rubble just after the Haiti earthquake of 2010. The photo was then taken by several papers, who then distributed it to others through agency networks without Daniel's permission.

The judge decided that Twitter's terms of service don't give news agencies permission to take photos without prior permission from the photographer. The AFP (Agence France-Presse), which distributed the photos, had argued that the photos were free to use as they were freely available online.

The trial for the case doesn't have a set date yet, but this case will have a major effect on photographer's rights in terms of whether photos that are published to social networks can be used in social contexts.

For more details, see the Reuters website.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ephotozine/news/~3/8aQi64gBIOk/judge-backs-photographer-in-twitter-case-21118

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Wednesday, January 16, 2013

FAA grounds all Boeing 787s

7 hrs.

The Federal Aviation Administration on Wednesday grounded all Boeing 787 planes operated by U.S. carriers?until the aircraft, also known as Dreamliners, are proven to be safe to fly.

United is the only U.S. carrier now operating ?787s and has six of the innovative jets.?The FAA's action follows a number of high-profile incidents?with the new aircraft over the past week, including fuel leaks, a battery fire, a?wiring problem and a?brake computer glitch.

"We've had two incidents involving batteries, involving charging circuits that are under question?that have resulted in one case in a?fire, in one case of?smoke," said?John Cox, NBC News?aviation analyst.

In a statement, the FAA said it?will issue an emergency airworthiness directive to address a potential battery fire risk in the 787s. Before further flight, the agency will require Boeing to demonstrate that the batteries in the planes?are safe.

United told NBC News in a statement that it will comply with the airworthiness directive. "We will work closely with the FAA and Boeing on the technical review as we work toward restoring 787 service." The airline said it would begin accommodating customers on other aircraft.

Boeing told NBC News that it is cooperating with the FAA.

"We are confident the 787 is safe and we stand behind its overall?integrity," said Boeing Chairman, President and CEO Jim McNerney?in?a?statement.?"We will be taking every necessary step in the coming days to?assure our customers and the traveling public of the 787's safety and?to return the airplanes to service."

Earlier Wednesday, Japan's two leading airlines grounded their Boeing 787?fleets after one of the passenger jets made an emergency landing.?The moves will make?Japan a test case for how Boeing?customers respond to safety concerns surrounding the Dreamliner 787, the pride of Boeing's passenger jet fleet, airline industry watchers said.

Japan Airlines (JAL) and All Nippon Airways (ANA) operate about half of the 50 new Dreamliners so far delivered by Boeing, and focus is firmly on Japan and what steps Boeing takes there to allay safety concerns.

"The most number of 787s in service are in Japan right now, therefore that is a big market for Boeing. A lot of the existing Boeing customers will be looking to see what action is taken in Japan in particular before they decide what action they are going to take with their orders," said Siva Govindasamy, Asia managing editor at Flightglobal, an industry news service.

"You can be pretty sure that 1-2 of those customers are already in talks with Boeing to see what is going on and to rectify any issues before they get their aircraft. That's going to be very crucial right now, so the onus is on Boeing to take action," he said.

India's aviation regulator said on Wednesday that it would decide whether or not to ground the Dreamliner jets only after Boeing submitted its safety report. State-owned Air India has six Dreamliners in its fleet. Australian carrier Qantas said its orders for 15 Boeing Dreamliner remain on track.

A senior Boeing engineer said last week that the plane maker had confidence in the Dreamliner despite recent mishaps that included a battery fire.

Still, industry watchers urged Boeing to take no risks with the Dreamliner and to take more steps straight away to assuage the safety concerns.

"This problem (with the Dreamliner) looks to be systemic, it looks to be recurring. In that respect, my view is ?.that they should consider grounding the entire Dreamliner fleet, not only limited to Japan but globally," Jonathan Galaviz, managing director & chief economist at Galaviz & Company told CNBC'S "Capital Connection."

CNBC's Dhara Ranasinghe ?contributed to this report.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/faa-grounds-all-boeing-787s-1B7991426

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EPA changed course after gas company protested

WEATHERFORD, Texas (AP) ? When a man in a Fort Worth suburb reported his family's drinking water had begun bubbling like champagne, the federal government sounded an alarm: A company may have tainted their wells while drilling for natural gas.

At first, the Environmental Protection Agency believed the situation was so serious that it issued a rare emergency order in late 2010 that said at least two homeowners were in immediate danger from a well saturated with flammable methane. More than a year later, the agency rescinded its mandate and refused to explain why.

Now a confidential report obtained by The Associated Press and interviews with company representatives show that the EPA had scientific evidence against the driller, Range Resources, but changed course after the company threatened not to cooperate with a national study into a common form of drilling called hydraulic fracturing. Regulators set aside an analysis that concluded the drilling could have been to blame for the contamination.

For Steve Lipsky, the EPA decision seemed to ignore the dangers to his family. His water supply contains so much methane that the gas in water flowing from a pipe connected to the well can be ignited.

"I just can't believe that an agency that knows the truth about something like that, or has evidence like this, wouldn't use it," said Lipsky, who fears he will have to abandon his dream home in an upscale neighborhood of Weatherford.

The case isn't the first in which the EPA initially linked a hydraulic fracturing operation to water contamination and then softened its position after the industry protested.

A similar dispute unfolded in west-central Wyoming in late 2011, when the EPA released an initial report that showed hydraulic fracturing could have contaminated groundwater. After industry and GOP leaders went on the attack, the agency said it had decided to do more testing. It has yet to announce a final conclusion.

Hydraulic fracturing ? often called "fracking" ? allows drillers to tap into oil and gas reserves that were once considered out of reach because they were locked in deep layers of rock.

The method has contributed to a surge in natural gas drilling nationwide, but environmental activists and some scientists believe it can contaminate groundwater. The industry insists the practice is safe.

Range Resources, a leading independent player in the natural gas boom, has hundreds of gas wells throughout Texas, Pennsylvania and other mineral-rich areas of the United States. Among them is a production site ? now owned by Legend Natural Gas ? in a wooded area about a mile from Lipsky's home in Weatherford, about a half-hour drive west of Fort Worth.

State agencies usually regulate water and air pollution, so the EPA's involvement in the Texas matter was unusual from the start. The EPA began investigating complaints about the methane in December 2010, because it said the Texas Railroad Commission, which oversees oil and gas drilling, had not responded quickly enough to the reports of bubbling water.

Government scientists believed two families, including the Lipskys, were in danger from methane and cancer-causing benzene and ordered Range Resources to take steps to clean their water wells and provide affected homeowners with safe water. The company stopped doing that after state regulators declared in March 2011 that Range Resources was not responsible. The dispute between the EPA and the company then moved into federal court.

Believing the case was headed for a lengthy legal battle, the EPA asked an independent scientist named Geoffrey Thyne to analyze water samples taken from 32 water wells. In the report obtained by the AP, Thyne concluded from chemical testing that the gas in the drinking water could have originated from Range Resources' nearby drilling operation.

Meanwhile, the EPA was seeking industry leaders to participate in a national study into hydraulic fracturing. Range Resources told EPA officials in Washington that so long as the agency continued to pursue a "scientifically baseless" action against the company in Weatherford, it would not take part in the study and would not allow government scientists onto its drilling sites, said company attorney David Poole.

In March 2012, the EPA retracted its emergency order, halted the court battle and set aside Thyne's report showing that the gas in Lipsky's water was nearly identical to the gases the Plano, Texas-based company was producing.

"They said that they would look into it, which I believe is exactly what they did," Poole said. "I'm proud of them. As an American, I think that's exactly what they should have done."

The EPA offered no public explanation for its change in thinking, and Lipsky said he and his family learned about it from a reporter. The agency refused to answer questions about the decision, instead issuing a statement by email that said resolving the Range Resources matter allowed the EPA to shift its "focus in this case away from litigation and toward a joint effort on the science and safety of energy extraction."

After the agency dropped its action, the company offered scientists access to a site in southwestern Pennsylvania. The EPA has not yet accepted the offer.

Rob Jackson, chairman of global environmental change at Duke University's Nicholas School of the Environment, reviewed Thyne's report and the raw data upon which it was based. He agreed the gas in Lipsky's well could have originated in a rock formation known as the Barnett shale, the same area where Range Resources was extracting gas.

Jackson said it was "premature" to withdraw the order and said the EPA "dropped the ball in dropping their investigation."

Lipsky, who is still tied up in a legal battle with Range Resources, now pays about $1,000 a month to haul water to his home. He, his wife and three children become unnerved when their methane detectors go off. Sometime soon, he said, the family will have to decide whether to stay in the large stone house or move.

"This has been total hell," Lipsky said. "It's been taking a huge toll on my family and on our life."

The confidential report relied on a type of testing known as isotopic analysis, which produces a unique chemical fingerprint that sometimes allows researchers to trace the origin of gas or oil.

Jackson, who studies hydraulic fracturing and specializes in isotopic analysis, acknowledged that more data is needed to determine for certain where the gas came from. But even if the gas came from elsewhere, Range Resources' drilling could have contributed to the problem in Lipsky's water because gas migrates, he added.

The company insists the gas in Lipsky's water is from natural migration and not drilling. Range Resources' testing indicates that its gas well was working properly and that the gas came from a different rock formation called Strawn shale and not the deeper Barnett shale, Poole said.

In addition, he said, isotopic analysis cannot be used in this case because the chemical makeup of the gases in the two formations is indistinguishable. A Range Resources spokesman also dismissed Thyne and Jackson as anti-industry.

Range Resources has not shared its data with the EPA or the Railroad Commission. Poole said the data is proprietary and could only be seen by Houston-based Weatherford Laboratories, where it originated. It was analyzed for Range Resources by a Weatherford scientist, Mark McCaffrey, who did not respond to requests for an interview.

Gas has always been in the water in that area, Poole said. And years before Range Resources began drilling, at least one water well in the neighborhood contained so much methane, it went up in flames.

At another home with dangerously high methane levels in the water, the company insisted the gas had been there since the well was first dug many years ago. The homeowner was not aware of anything wrong until Range Resources began drilling in 2009.

Jackson said it was "unrealistic" to suggest that people could have tainted water and not notice.

"It bubbles like champagne or mineral waters," he said. "The notion that people would have wells and have this in their water and not see this is wrong."

___

Associated Press writers Nomaan Merchant in Dallas, Allen Breed in Raleigh, N.C., and Michael Rubinkam in Allentown, Pa., contributed to this report.

___

Plushnick-Masti can be followed on Twitter at https://twitter.com/RamitMastiAP

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/epa-changed-course-gas-company-protested-184626701--finance.html

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Yang Baibing, veteran Chinese revolutionary and later proponent of economic reforms, dies

BEIJING, China - Yang Baibing, a veteran Chinese revolutionary and strong proponent of economic liberalization, has died. He was 92.

Along with his more famous half-brother, former Chinese president Yang Shangkun, Yang had been among the most powerful leaders in China. However, he was forced into retirement in 1992 and his supporters were purged from the officer corps by former paramount leader Deng Xiaoping, who feared the Yang brothers were accumulating too much power.

Yang joined the Chinese Communist Party in 1938 and battled both Japanese invaders and Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalists before the communist seizure of power in 1949.

A powerful backer of the bloody military crackdown on 1989 pro-democracy protests centred on Beijing's Tiananmen Square, Yang later stood by Deng in his struggle against conservatives opposed to further economic reforms.

? Copyright (c)

Source: http://www.timescolonist.com/news/obituaries/yang-baibing-veteran-chinese-revolutionary-and-later-proponent-of-economic-reforms-dies-1.48509

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The Republicans? Plan for the New President

On the night of Barack Obama?s inauguration, a group of top GOP luminaries quietly gathered in a Washington steakhouse to?lick their wounds and ultimately create the outline of a plan for how to deal with the incoming administration.

?The room was filled. It was a who?s who of ranking members who had at one point been committee chairmen, or in the majority, who now wondered out loud whether they were in the permanent minority,? Frank Luntz, who organized the event, told FRONTLINE.

Among them were Senate power brokers Jim DeMint, Jon Kyl and Tom Coburn, and conservative congressmen Eric Cantor, Kevin McCarthy and Paul Ryan.

After three hours of strategizing, they decided they needed to fight Obama on everything. The new president had no idea what the Republicans were planning.

Tonight?s film, Inside Obama?s Presidency, explores?the behind-the-scenes story of his first four years.?With inside accounts from his battles with his Republican opponents over health care and the economy to his dramatic expansion of targeted killings of enemies, FRONTLINE examines the president?s key decisions and the experiences that will inform his second term.

Check your local listings?to find out when the film will be broadcast on your local station. Util then, read our discussion with six leading journalists who weigh in on President Obama?s first term. Has he been the transformative president he wanted to be?

Source: http://feeds.pbs.org/~r/pbs/wgbh/frontline/fromourfiles-feed/~3/LquLrPLzckI/

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AP PHOTOS: A look back at Lance Armstrong's career

DEAR ABBY: Recently my husband, "Byron," and I had an argument, and he took off in his truck. He didn't return until after work the following day. He had he spent the night at our friend "Arlene's" house. She is divorced and lives alone. Byron assures me "nothing happened" between them. I want to believe him, but ever since this incident, Arlene will not look me in the eye or speak to me.I love Byron and trusted him until now. It hurts to think that our marriage may be ruined over a stupid argument. ...

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ap-photos-look-back-lance-armstrongs-career-073037692--spt.html

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Oak Hills Golf Course Inches Closer To A Driving Range

NORWALK, Conn. ? An ad hoc committee of the Oak Hills Authority on Tuesday began putting together a request for proposal for a new driving range at the public golf course, but not before at least one angry resident claimed the committee was out of bounds.

Committee Chairman Ernest Desrochers, a member of the authority, said the committee is simply putting together a document to gauge interest among developers and operators of the potential driving range, and that the public will have ample opportunities to comment on the plan.

?No one here will be bullied,? Desrochers said during a heated exchange with West Norwalk resident Paul Cantor. ?We?re looking to make the course economically viable, and we want to open a dialogue with the neighbors.?

Cantor, who opposes the driving range, interrupted Desrochers on several occasions to read a lengthy statement that putting out an RFP is a mistake, in part because he believes more public comment is needed.

?You have a responsibility to see that the park becomes more accessible to people who do not play golf,? said Cantor, adding that the secluded section where the driving range may one day rest could be used for ?passive recreational use.?

Committee members said they are willing to consider all options for the driving range, the idea for which has been kicked around city government for more than 20 years. A driving range at Oak Hills on Fillow Street was even included in the city?s 1999 Master Plan.

?This is the first step in many to getting this done,? said Desrochers. ?Your input is very important.?

The committee plans to place the draft of the RFP on the city?s website and hold a public hearing on it on Feb. 12.

Source: http://norwalk.dailyvoice.com/neighbors/oak-hills-golf-course-inches-closer-driving-range

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Economics and Its Ethical Assumptions - Center for a Stateless Society

The following article was written by?Roderick T. Long?and published with the Mises University,?May 20, 2006.

When I was given the title ?Ethical Assumptions of Economics,? my first thought was to say, ?economics has no ethical assumptions.? But then I thought this might not be the best way to earn my keep here. So I?m going to talk about some senses in which economics might have implications for ethics.

There are these two terms that we often hear as characterizing Austrian economics. One is ?value-freedom,? or?Wertfreiheit.?Wertfreiheit?does not mean free in a valuable way; it just means a description that doesn?t involve evaluation. To be value-free is simply to describe things, to tell how things are, without advocating any particular point of view.

And closely related is this notion of ?value-subjectivism,? the notion that Austrian economics in some sense recognizes only subjective values, only the values to the participants whose actions are being described or explained, and doesn?t evaluate their actions.

Well, if Austrian economics is value-free and value-subjectivist, then it might seem as though it couldn?t have much in the way of implications for ethics. But there are several respects in which ethics and economics nevertheless interestingly interact.

First, it?s worth pointing out that economics is often?presented?in ways that are perhaps not completely value-free. For example, words like ?welfare? and ?property? and so forth tend to have value connotations. Now you can try to interpret them value-neutrally, but ordinarily when we say that such-and-such promotes social welfare, it sounds like we?re in favor of it ? since we are part of society, and we do care about our own welfare. And when we say that something is someone?s property, that often implies that it?s their?legitimate?property, and so calling something someone?s property might imply that they?ought?to have it, not just that they happen to possess it.

You might think this can be used to bias the discussion, but medicine?s a value-free science too; strictly speaking, in purely descriptive terms, medicine is indifferent between health and sickness ? it just wants to describe what causes what ? but since as a matter of fact practitioners of medicine are practicing it in order to promote health, naturally they?re going to describe it in such a way, where it?s understood that all the participants in the discussion agree that they?re trying to promote health rather than promoting sickness.

Objective Value

There?s perhaps a deeper worry that?s raised by the Greek philosopher Socrates in a couple of Socratic dialogues that are attributed to Plato (but it?s not clear whether they?re really by Plato or not), the?Hipparchus?and the?Eryxias, where he explores the meanings of certain economic concepts like ?wealth? and ?profit,? and gives something like an argument that these can?t really be value-neutral terms.

Socrates asks the person he?s talking with, ?how would you define profit?? And the person answers, ?getting more in exchange for less.? You put in a smaller amount, and you get back a greater return than you put in. That?s profit. (Now this doesn?t really distinguish between profit and interest, risk premium, and all that, but never mind.)

Socrates says ? translating his example into our money ? ?if I gave you one $10 bill, and you gave me three $1 bills back, I wouldn?t think I?d made a profit, even though I?d gotten more in exchange for less ? I?d given only one bill and I got three back.? So what matters is the?value?of the bills, and the fact that a $10 bill is more valuable than a $1 bill. You can?t just describe the exchange in terms of empirical mass quantities; you have to describe it in terms of value. You don?t really?profit?unless you?re getting something of greater value.

And of course Socrates wants to spin this into, ultimately, a?moral?argument that you don?t really benefit from what you get unless what you get really is of greater?real?value. So if I get a lot of money by cheating you, then since cheating you is a great harm to my soul and is not outweighed by the benefit of the money I get, I haven?t really profited.

It?s clear enough what someone like Mises would say to this. He?d say: well, it?s certainly true that you can?t define profit in terms of just getting more physical things in exchange for fewer physical things; but you don?t have to interpret it in terms of?objective?value ? you can interpret it in terms of?subjective?value. You get a profit, not if you get things that are genuinely objectively better in return, but if you get things you value?more?instead of what you value?less.

Part of the reason Socrates and Mises disagree here is that Socrates thinks that?valuing something more?involves?judging that it?s better, and these judgments can be true or false. And what you really want is not to get what you?think?is better; what you really want is to get whatever?is?better. And that whole way of thinking is something that Mises opposes, so they?re not really going to see eye to eye here.

Value Subjectivism

Is Austrian economics committed to rejecting any kind of objective morality?

We can distinguish between two kinds of value-subjectivism. You can have?explanatory?value-subjectivism, which simply means that in explaining someone?s actions, you appeal to their evaluations, not yours ? just as in explaining someone?s actions you appeal to their?beliefs?and not yours. If you see someone walking out on a bridge, and you know the bridge is unsafe and is likely to collapse, but they don?t know that, then in interpreting why they?re doing what they?re doing you shouldn?t attribute to them your belief that the bridge is unsafe if they don?t have that belief. If you try to explain their action by appealing to your belief that the bridge is unsafe, your explanation isn?t going to be any good.

So likewise, if you?re explaining their actions you also have to appeal to their?values. Suppose that you hate vanilla ice cream, and you see someone trying to get some. What they?re doing would make no sense if you assumed that they share your value. Instead, your evaluation of their taste in ice cream doesn?t make any difference to explaining ? whether they?re right or wrong to like vanilla ice cream, nevertheless the fact that they like it is what explains their going after it.

So explanatory value-subjectivism doesn?t say anything one way or the other about whether there is such a thing as objective value; it just says that if you?re going to explain people?s actions, you explain them in terms of their desires, not yours.

Normative?value-subjectivism, on the other hand, means that there are no objective values, that there is nothing?to?value over and above just whatever any person happens to want. There?s no right or wrong way to want things; you can?t be right or wrong about your ultimate desires.

So these are two different things, and you can see that at least it?s not obvious that explanatory value-subjectivism entails normative value-subjectivism.

Now Mises seems to have thought it did, and I think his reason for thinking this is?not?just that he somehow confused two kinds of subjectivism; I think there?s a deeper reason he thought this. The fact that Mises thinks that these two go together, and that both explanatory value-subjectivism and normative value-subjectivism are true, helps to explain why a lot of people interpret Austrian economics as being against any kind of objective value.

Rothbard, on the other hand, accepted?explanatory?value-subjectivism. He thought that in explaining people?s actions, or in trying to understand and describe economic behavior, you appeal to their beliefs and desires, not yours ? but he thought?normative?value-subjectivism was false. He thought that there was, on the basis of philosophical arguments ? the kinds of arguments he gives for example in his book?The Ethics of Liberty, where he tries to develop a libertarian theory of rights ? he thought you could give arguments to establish that certain values were objectively valid. But he thought those arguments didn?t make any difference to how you interpreted people?s economic behavior.

If economics is value-free in the sense that it doesn?t presuppose any particular values, as Mises and Rothbard both seem to agree about economics, you might wonder how economics can serve as a basis for advice. Economists are often called upon to give advice; how can they do that? Well, there are several different possibilities.

Mises?s view is that it?s impossible to give advice about ultimate goals ? except in terms of just saying, ?well, I like this goal, you should pursue that,? but you can?t really give any?reasons, Mises thinks, for ultimate goals. But?given?a certain ultimate goal, you can give reasons for adopting certain means to it. And economics is useful for that. Economics can tell us what sorts of actions tend to have what sorts of consequences. So if you happen to want to have, or want to avoid, certain consequences, then the economist can tell you what things to do that are likely to get you the consequences you want and to avoid the consequences you don?t want.

Although you might be in the field of medicine working on germ warfare, in which case you?re interested in causing sickness, most doctors, most of the time, are interested in curing disease, we hope, and so if you go to a doctor for advice, the doctor can just assume that what you want is what will promote health.

But of course it?s not part of the medical expertise to tell you whether health is a good thing. Nowhere in medical school can you learn any reason for thinking health is a good thing. That?s not a medical question. Mises would say it?s not an answerable question at all; others might say, well yes, maybe it is an answerable question, but at any rate it?s not a medical question ? maybe it?s a philosophical question or a theological question or something like that.

Socrates used to say that the doctor can tell you what?s likely to make you live or die, but the doctor can?t tell you whether you?d be better off alive or dead. That goes outside of the doctor?s area of expertise. The?philosopher?tells you whether your life is worth living or not: ?the unexamined life is not worth living,? so if you?re not examining your life, you?re better off dead. That?s what Dr. Socrates would say.

Mises thinks economics can tell us how to pursue the ends we happen to have, and given that most people prefer prosperity to poverty and cooperation to chaos, Mises thought that there?s some general, all-purpose advice that economists can give.

Rothbard went further. In the last chapter of?Power and Market, Rothbard says that although economics?per se?can?t give us?positive?ethical advice ? it can?t tell us what goals to aim at ? it can?criticize?certain goals as being incoherent. And although I say that Rothbard here is going beyond Mises, in a sense Rothbard would think of himself as continuing what Mises was doing, even if Mises didn?t call it this. So for example Mises argues that socialist calculation is impossible: you cannot rationally allocate resources in a socialist economy. Well, suppose that was your goal ? to rationally allocate resources in a socialist economy. It certainly seems relevant to find out that the goal is impossible. If the goal is impossible, then it seems like you don?t have any good reason to pursue it.

This is a way of criticizing ends: not criticizing ends on the grounds that they?re?bad, that it would be a bad thing to achieve this goal, but rather to argue that the goal can?t be achieved at all. So in the last chapter of?Power and Market, Rothbard runs through what he calls various positions of ?anti-market ethics,? and tries to refute various positions on the grounds that they posit goals that are somehow economically impossible, or logically incoherent, or in one way or another can be shown not to be possible. But he doesn?t think that economics can?per se?give us positive goals to aim at, or show us what is really worthwhile; he thinks you have to do philosophy for that. That?s why he only does this?criticism?of ethical theories in?Power and Market, and you have to go to?The Ethics of Liberty?to get his?positive?ethical arguments.

Positive Ethics

The question is: can economics or praxeology give us anything more than that? Can it give us any implications for positive ethical theorising? What more can it tell us about ethics? I?m going to explore some various possibilities. If you?re hoping that I?m going to derive an ethical system from the axioms of praxeology for you today, well ? we don?t have time for that! So I?m just going to give various suggestions about various issues.

First of all there?s this big dispute between Mises on the one hand and Carl Menger, the founder of the Austrian School, on the other. Menger had a category of what he called ?imaginary goods.? He said that in order for something to be a good, it has to meet a certain number of criteria, one of which is that it has to be suitable for achieving certain goals or satisfying certain human needs. But, he says, there are some things that don?t really satisfy any human need, while you?think?they do ? like fake cures, things that are supposed to cure you but they don?t really work; he seems for some reason to have included?cosmetics?in this category; you might wonder about that. But anyway, he thinks various things that don?t really meet any human need are not real goods, they?re imaginary goods, because although they may be suitable means to certain goals, those goals are not in fact genuine human needs.

Mises thought this was a horrible mistake. Mises said the economist has no business pontificating about whether these are genuine needs or not; if you want to explain human behavior, what we think of the person?s desires is irrelevant. If you want to understand the market for horoscopes, or if you want to understand the market for something genuinely valid, it doesn?t make any difference. As long as people think horoscopes are valuable, then they?ll be willing to pay for them, and if they don?t think they?re valuable, then they won?t, regardless of whether they really are valuable or not. Mises thought this category was irrelevant for economics.

But he didn?t just think it was irrelevant for?economics, he thought it was irrelevant,?period. It wasn?t just that classifying something as an imaginary good was a job for the philosopher rather than for the economist; Mises thought that it wasn?t a job for anybody ? because he thought the only way we can make mistakes is about means. We can?t evaluate ends as right or wrong. Our ends are just whatever we want. If you want to justify what you?re doing, you have to appeal to some further end you have. Why am I walking over here? In order to get to the chair. Why do I want to get to the chair? In order to sit down. Why do I want to sit down? Well, at some point you just have to end with ?because I want to, and that?s that,? Mises thought.

Mises thought the ultimate goal is not capable of being rationally assessed. The only things you can criticize are people?s means. The only mistakes you can make are about the means to your ends, not about the ends themselves.

However, there?s a distinction which Mises doesn?t consider which might complicate this. It?s the distinction between?instrumental?means and?constitutive?means. And here?s a way of thinking about this. Suppose that I want to play the Moonlight Sonata; and so I save money to buy a piano, and to buy sheet music, and to take piano lessons and so forth, so that I?ll be able to play the Moonlight Sonata. These are all means to the end of playing the Moonlight Sonata; if you ask me why am I saving this money, why am I buying a piano,?etc., I would say these are all means to my ultimate goal, which is to play the Moonlight Sonata.

But now suppose you come upon me in the middle of playing the Moonlight Sonata, and I?m hitting a particular note. And you ask me: ?Why are you hitting that particular note? Is it just that you find that note valuable in and of itself?? And I would answer: ?No, I?m playing that note because I want to play the Moonlight Sonata, and I can?t play the Moonlight Sonata without playing that note at that point.? Well, in a sense, then, playing that note is a means to playing the Moonlight Sonata; but it?s not a means in the other way. It?s not a means that?s?external?to the end; it?s a means that?s?part?of the end.

When a means is external to or merely instrumental to an end, then it would make sense to say, ?I wish I could have the end without having to go through all these means.? I wish I could be at the top of the mountain without having to climb all this way up, or I wish I could play the Moonlight Sonata without having to save all this money to buy a piano. But it doesn?t make any sense to say, ?I wish I could play the Moonlight Sonata without having to play all these notes? ? because the Moonlight Sonata just is those notes in that order.

So there are cases where a means can be a constitutive part of the end rather than being an external means to it. And a lot of things that Mises considers ultimate ends you might think are really means, but they?re constitutive means rather than instrumental means. So then the question is: well, can we deliberate about constitutive means? How do we determine whether something is a constitutive means to an end? It seems it?s not a matter of cause and effect any more; it?s more a matter of logical or conceptual analysis.

Why does Mises think that if you?re an explanatory value-subjectivist, you have to be a normative value-subjectivist? I think that his reason comes in his two-step argument for why he thinks explanatory value-subjectivism implies?utilitarianism. (Both these steps, I think, are denied by Rothbard.) So first he thinks that explanatory value-subjectivism implies normative value-subjectivism: if you can only explain things in terms of people?s subjective values, then you have to give up the idea of there being any objective standard of value. I?ll say in a minute why I think he thinks that. Second, he thinks that that position in turn implies utilitarianism.

And you might think that?s very odd; because you might think that if someone says economics implies utilitarianism, it sounds like they think that economics implies a positive ethical theory ? because we usually think of utilitarianism as a particular ethical theory, a theory that says that certain things are objectively good. The standard versions of utilitarianism, like John Stuart Mill?s version, assert that a certain goal ? human welfare, happiness, pleasure, satisfaction ? is intrinsically valuable and worth pursuing, objectively so. And then our job is to pursue it.

Clearly Mises can?t mean?that. Since Mises thinks that there are no objective values, when Mises embraces utilitarianism he can?t be embracing the view that human welfare is an objective value. What Mises means by ?utilitarianism? is a little bit different from the kind of utilitarianism that people like John Stuart Mill advocate. By ?utilitarianism? Mises means something like simply giving people advice about how to achieve the goals they already have. So you?re not necessarily endorsing their goals, but utilitarianism says that really the only real role for any kind of evaluation is simply to talk about means to ends, because you can?t evaluate the ends.

And I think we can see?both?why he thinks explanatory value-subjectivism implies normative value-subjectivism, and why he thinks that in turn implies utilitarianism of his sort, in this quote from?Theory and History:

All nonutilitarian systems of ethics look upon the moral law as something outside the nexus of means and ends. The moral code has no reference to human well-being and happiness, to expediency, and to the mundane striving after ends. It is heteronomous, i.e., enjoined upon man by an agency that does not depend on human ideas and does not bother about human concerns.

So that?s the position that Mises thinks he?s attacking. He?s attacking the view that the proper moral code is completely independent of what actually makes people happy or what they actually happen to want.

And in a sort of slap at Kant, he calls this sort of thing ?heteronomous.? Now the term ?heteronomous,? which is supposed to be the opposite of ?autonomous? ? ?autonomous? means somehow governed by a law you give to yourself, and ?heteronomous? means governed by a law imposed on you from something else ? Kant had used the term ?heteronomous? to mean following your inclinations, which are external to and distinct from your rational will, and therefore you?re acting heteronomously when you obey your inclinations. Now Mises is sort of turning Kant?s terminology upside-down here.

But Mises thinks it?s presumptuous to tell people that they ought to be pursuing something completely unrelated to anything they actually happen to want, desire, or have any motivation or personal reason to pursue. Now I think the reason he thinks?that?is that if you think that all action, as praxeology teaches, is a matter of pursuing ends, and the ends you pursue are your own ? you can?t pursue someone else?s end unless it also happens to be your own end ? then it just doesn?t even make sense to demand of people that they pursue some end that they have no motivation for, no interest in, no personal reason to pursue.

So you might say that he?s relying on something like the ?ought implies can? principle ? that it doesn?t make sense to demand that you morally?ought?to do something unless you?can?do it. If I said, ?you are morally obligated all to fly up to the ceiling right now,? that wouldn?t make any sense, to say that you?ought?to do it or that you should feel?guilty?for not doing it, because you don?t have the choice, you don?t have any control over whether you do that or not. I think that Mises thinks that because our actions can only be actions aiming at ends that we?have?? we can?t perform an action without aiming at some end, and the end has to be an end we?ve?got?? it just doesn?t make any sense to demand of us that we act in accordance with some objective code of ethics.

However, I think that what he?s really arguing for here is better understood as a kind of ethical?internalism?rather than genuine normative value-subjectivism. Ethical internalism is the view that you can?t have any moral duties that you don?t have any motivation to pursue. Now that?s a broad family of theories, because according to some theories the moral duty just?gives?you a motivation, whereas for other theories, no, you?ve already got your motivations, and the moral duty can?t get its foot in the door unless you?ve already got one. Those are very different kinds of internalism. But still the internalists all agree that there are no moral duties without some corresponding motivation on your part. And I think that Mises is really arguing forthat. But it?s important to see that that?s not the same thing as normative value-subjectivism, because it might be that, given your motive, and given some appropriate story, the moral duty really is an?objective?one.

And likewise, the reason he thinks that this has to be purely utilitarian, that there can?t be any actions that are right or wrong in themselves, but only as part of promoting some further goal, is that he thinks all action has to have a means-end structure. But again, you can have a means that is constitutive rather than instrumental. If I?m playing this particular note because I want to play the Moonlight Sonata, then that note is a means to playing the entire sonata, but it?s not an external one. Likewise, people who say a certain action is morally right in and of itself might mean that it isn?t an external or instrumental means to some further goal, but is just?part?of, say, the good life.

The Goal of Happiness

Now something like Mises?s view was recently defended by Leland Yeager in a book called?Ethics As Social Science, where he accepts Mises?s view that ultimate goals cannot be rationally assessed. He says: therefore, ultimate goals are rationally arbitrary, but the means to those goals aren?t, and therefore the advantage of utilitarianism of Mises?s sort, which simply says, ?promote whatever satisfies human desires,? is that it?s the best theory because it minimises the amount of ethical arbitrariness. All that?s arbitrary is just this ultimate goal, happiness; but although it?s arbitrary, it?s not terribly controversial: most people are pro-happiness. Whereas if you add more intrinsic values in addition to happiness, things like moral duties and so forth, then you?re increasing the number of ultimate ends. And since ultimate ends are rationally arbitrary, your theory is getting?more arbitrary?the more of those you add.

I?m not so sure about that; if you really think the whole thing rests on an ultimate thing that?s arbitrary, I?m not sure that whether it?s one or many makes that much difference. But at any rate, the assumption that you can?t rationally assess ends is something that I?m not convinced of. There?s something called?reflective equilibration, which is the idea that you weigh various beliefs and values and judgments against each other and see whether they conflict with each other. If they conflict with each other then you revise them to make them not conflict. And so if you?ve got some ultimate end, you can?t assess it as a means to some further end, perhaps, but you can assess it by whether it fits in consistently with everything else. Now that?s a kind of assessment. You might think it?s a kind of wimpy assessment, but it?s an assessment.

We started off with Socrates, and Socrates has to come in again. There?s this tradition I call the eudaimonic tradition, from the Greek word for happiness or well-being,?eudaimonia. And this is a tradition that runs through Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, the Stoics, and it runs on through the medieval philosophers and the Scholastics, Aquinas and so forth; in fact it?s the dominant ethical tradition of the first 2,000 years of Western philosophy. It?s not until after the end of the Middle Ages that it begins to be whittled away by new theories. And this is the view according to which there is an ultimate good, which usually gets called ?happiness? ? but that can be somewhat misleading, because it?s not a pleasant feeling of satisfaction, although it may involve that ? but it?s a state of your life objectively going well, your life being an objective success, something like your being successful at living a good human life: that?s what?eudaimonia?is. That?s the ultimate good.

And morality is not just an instrumental means to that good; it?s actually part of it. Morality stands to the ultimate human good as playing one note stands to playing the whole sonata ? or actually, probably as playing two-thirds of the sonata stands to the whole sonata (or if you?re a Stoic, as playing the entire sonata stands to playing the entire sonata).

And there are some interesting connections between this tradition and Austrian economics, simply because Austrian economics in a way indirectly grows out of this tradition. The earliest forerunners of Austrian economics are the late Scholastics, who developed a subjective theory of value in the explanatory sense of ?subjective,? and they developed many of the early theories and early parts of what would later go on, running through the French School, finally to become the Austrian School. And if you look at Rothbard?s?History of Economic Thought, there?s a long section on how cool the Scholastics were. So from the fact that the Scholastics are forerunners of Austrian economics, and the Scholastics are coming at the tail end of this tradition that runs back to Socrates and Aristotle and so forth, I think it?s not that surprising that there are some commonalities.

For this tradition means-end analysis is central: we evaluate things in terms of their being means to ends. But each person has an ultimate end. And this ultimate end isn?t just feeling satisfied or something like that; it?s an objective state of human flourishing. And we can talk about wrong ends as well as wrong means, because those wrong ends are really misidentified constitutive means. So in other words, if you wrongly value something as an end, what?s really going on is that you are taking it to be a constitutive part of your ultimate good when it isn?t.

Now according to this tradition, why do they say that we have just?one?ultimate end? Why not say that we have lots, that there are lots of things we want: ice cream, fame, not being killed? We?ve got all these different things, but why suppose that they?re all constituents of some big super-end? Well, I think part of the reason they think this is: what happens when you make trade-offs? Suppose there are two ultimate ends you have: ice cream and fame. Those are two ultimate ends you have, and they come in degrees. (That?s why I didn?t use not being killed, because that?s less a matter of degree.) So you want more ice cream, and you want more fame. And sometimes those go together, like winning an ice-cream-eating contest. But still there are lots of cases where these goals might conflict, and so you have to do trade-offs, and decide between them.

If you?re deciding between them, that?s an action. Actions have to have a means-end structure, right? So if you?re trying to decide how to trade off between ice cream and fame, then doing that must be a means to some end. Well, what?is?the end? It can?t be the end of maximizing the ice cream, because you haven?t decided whether that?s what you?re going to do. It can?t be the end of maximizing fame, because you haven?t decided that. It can?t be the end of getting the maximization of both, because it?s a trade-off ? that?s impossible. Instead, you?re trying to maximize something of which these two are parts, some general, overall satisfaction ? that?s what you?re trying to maximize. You might wonder whether ?maximize? is even the right word, but anyway you?re trying to promote some good that includes both of these intrinsic good; these are intrinsic parts of your overall good. And it?s that sort of thing that leads the eudaimonists to think that whenever you?re acting, you?re always promoting some?ultimate?good of yours, some ultimate end or aim.

Why not just say that the ultimate aim you?re pursuing is some?psychological?state, like pleasure? We know how John Stuart Mill would have analyses this; he?d say, well, you like ice cream because ice cream isn?t really your final end, ice cream promotes?pleasure. And you like fame because it also gives you pleasure. And so it?s really pleasure that?s the ultimate goal, and ice cream and fame are simply means to that. And then your trade-off is just to determine which one will give you the most pleasure.

Or as Mises puts it, Mises talks about getting rid of?uneasiness. And sometimes he seems to mean this in a purely formal sense: simply getting something that satisfies you more instead of something that satisfies you less, getting something you prefer over something you ?dis-prefer,? to use a Stoic term. (Actually to misuse it, in this context.) But sometimes Mises talks as though there?s this?feeling?you get of uneasiness: which of the various things I can choose will make this feeling go away? Getting rid of that horrible feeling of uneasiness is the goal. Sometimes Mises sounds like that, sometimes he doesn?t.

At any rate, you might say: why not take that view? Why not say that our ultimate goal is some psychological feeling like pleasure, or decreasing felt uneasiness, or something like that, and that everything else we do is a means to that?

Well, here?s the problem with that view. Suppose I buy life insurance. And you ask me, why am I doing that? And I say: so that my loved ones will do well after my death. So it looks like I?m treating?buying life insurance?as a means to?my loved ones? doing well after my death. Now this is either an ultimate goal of mine, or it?s a means to some further goal. Well, whichever one it is, this is not a feeling. And it?s also not the cause of a feeling. Unless you?re assuming that you?re looking down from heaven after you?re dead ? or up, if things go worse ? but anyway you?re hanging around after death and seeing your loved ones doing well, and you?re getting a charge out of that. But it seems like you don?t have to assume that you?re actually going to experience your loved ones? doing well in order to buy life insurance. People who don?t believe in an afterlife, or people who believe in an afterlife where they?re off somewhere not being involved with human concerns, still buy life insurance. So it seems that this is something we do that is not a means to pleasure.

Now obviously someone could say: well, wait a second, you get pleasure out of the?thought?that your loved ones will do well after your death, right? Yeah, that?s true. So here?s something,?the belief that my loved ones will do well. And that causes pleasure. And maybe that?s?part?of my reason for buying life insurance. But is it really plausible to say it?s really that belief?rather than?their actually doing well? Because one isn?t a means to the other. Your loved ones? doing well in the future can?t be a cause of your belief that they?ll do well now, unless you believe in backward causation. So even if you believe that the belief is part of your goal, there?s still the goal of their actually doing well?too?? unless you think you don?t really have that goal at all, you really just have the belief as your goal.

Suppose I offer you a magic pill that costs half the cost of the life insurance. And this magic pill will make you believe that your loved ones will do well after you?re dead. And so you can either have the life insurance for $100, or this pill for $50. If all you care about is the belief that your loved ones will do well, then you?d take the pill over the life insurance. Well, from the fact that presumably at least a lot of people would buy the life insurance rather than the pill, that suggests that they care about their loved ones??actually?doing well.

And likewise Aristotle thinks that this is naturally the way we think. He raises the question: can people?s welfare be affected after they?re dead? And he didn?t believe in an afterlife, at least not a personal afterlife ? he thought there was some aspect of you that lived on, but it wasn?t your personal identity ? so he wasn?t talking about an afterlife. He thought that if there?s something you cared about, a loved one or some project, and right after you die the project either succeeded or failed, he thought that would make some difference to how we evaluate the success of your whole life.

So our ultimate good, according to this tradition, is not pleasure ? although pleasure?s part of it, pleasure?s one of the things we care about, relief from felt uneasiness is great, but it?s not the only thing that we actually pursue.

Aristotle would say that your life?s being an objective success?includes?the well-being of your friends. It?s not that the well-being of your friends?causes?you some jollies ? it does, sure, but that?s not all there is to it. In fact, he would say that the welfare of your friends causes you pleasure because it?s part of your good, not?vice versa?? that pleasure is a byproduct of getting what you think is good rather than the opposite.

Rights and Utility

Okay, let me finish up with a largely unrelated question ? though it?s not completely unrelated, because these all interconnect. The question is about the relation between rights and utility.

The question is whether rights derive from utility ? in other words, is the reason that we have rights the fact that rights are a strategy that?s most likely to promote either our personal self-interest or social welfare (you can take either an egoistic or a universalistic version of utilitarianism) ? is that the ultimate foundation of rights? Or are our rights completely?independent?of utility? There are those who think that our rights are completely based on utility, that the only grounding for rights is that they somehow are strategies for promoting human welfare, either one?s own or everybody?s. And in some sense Mises seems to think something like that. On the other hand, you might think rights are completely independent of utility, that rights just are what they are, regardless of their results. Maybe Walter Block thinks that, I?m not sure. Rothbard is often?said?to have thought that, but if you read?The Ethics of Liberty?it?s not so clear; there is some sort of eudaimonic thing going on in the background there, with the Aristotelian stuff in the early chapters.

I want to end by giving some quick reasons why I think that it?s a mistake to think either that rights depend wholly on utility or that rights are wholly independent of utility.

Here?s why I think rights can?t depend wholly on utility: because whatever we choose, we choose either as an ultimate end or as a means ? in economic terms, either as a producer?s good or a consumer?s good. Either you choose it as some ultimate thing you want for its own sake, or you choose it as a means to producing some further thing. So if any sort of utilitarianism is true, then morality is a producer?s good, not a consumer?s good. And it?s?solely?a producer?s good; I mean, everyone agrees that it?s?partly?a producer?s good. Everyone agrees that?one?of the things about morality that?s good is that it has good results. But if you?re a utilitarian, you have to think that morality is not a constitutive means to the good, it?s simply a purely instrumental means.

Why is that problematic? Well, nearly all sophisticated utilitarians ? and this definitely includes Mises ? think that it?s not a good strategy to promote human welfare to constantly be deciding everything on a case-by-case basis. Most sophisticated utilitarians are some kind of?rule-utilitarians, or?indirect?utilitarians. They think that you have to commit yourself to some general set of principles or values. You can?t just decide everything that comes up on a case-by-case basis. The best way to achieve long-term results of the kind you want is to commit yourself to acting in a principled fashion.

Here?s an example that John Hospers, a former Libertarian Party candidate for President, gives in one of his books. He says: suppose you?re an umpire in a game, or a referee, and you?re making decisions, making calls ? ?he?s safe,? ?he?s out,? ? and you suddenly begin to reflect philosophically while you?re standing out there, and you think, ?What?s the purpose? What?s my purpose here as a referee? Well, my purpose is to facilitate the game going well. What?s the purpose of the game?? And suppose that you conclude that the purpose of the game is to give pleasure to the spectators. I don?t know whether that?s the right story about the purpose of the game, but suppose that?s what you conclude. Then you might conclude: ?Well, then, when I give my calls and decide who?s safe and who?s out, I should make whatever call will be most pleasing to the spectators. And so I won?t pay any attention to the actual rules of the game; I?ll just consider: is it a home game or an away game? How happy are the people in the stands going to be with my ruling??

Now this might maximize spectator pleasure in the short run, but soon it?ll become obvious that winning or losing in this game no longer depends at all on the skill and abilities of the players. The players can just do any darn thing, and you?ll automatically rule in favor of team A if there are more people in the stands favoring team A. Once it turns out that you?re ruling in this manner, all the fun?s going to go out of the game for the spectators. If you?re constantly ruling with an attempt to please the spectators, that?s going to end up in the long run making the spectators very unhappy. You?re much more likely to please the spectators in the long run if you just stick to the rules of the game.

Likewise, most utilitarians think that you?re more likely to promote human welfare in the long run if you stick to definite rules. And?libertarian?utilitarians think these definite rules include rules of property rights and non-aggression and so forth, that sticking to those in the long run causes more happiness, because people can count on having their rights respected, they?re not constantly worried that suddenly their rights are going to be overridden for social utility, and so forth. So they?re going to be better off.

So what most utilitarians say is that you should behave?as if?you valued these rules for their own sake, even though you really value them just for the sake of utility. But my worry is: what does it mean to say that you should value something?as if?it were valuable for its own sake? I mean, either you value it for its own sake or you don?t. If you value it for its own sake, then you?ll choose it if it competes with some other value; if you don?t value it for its own sake, then you?ll give it up if you find some other way of promoting the same goal. If your only reason for respecting rights is to promote social utility, then you?d be irrational not to give up rights in any particular case when you could promote social utility otherwise. So my worry is that this rule-utilitarianism or indirect consequentialism or whatever you want to call it is praxeologically unstable.

However, I also think there are good praxeological reasons not to think that rights are completely independent of utility. And that?s because given precisely the view I discussed earlier, according to which whenever you?re doing trade-offs between different things, where you?ve got different ends, you have to regard them as different parts of an overarching end. Well, unless rights are the only thing you care about, the only value you have ? and I?ve sometimes told Walter that that?s his view (although it isn?t really, but it?s fun to say that) ? unless rights are the only values you have, then you have to say: here are a bunch of values, there?s the content of justice or rights, but there are also these other values, and they all have to fit together. And if all your values have to fit together, then it doesn?t really make sense to think that you can sort of separate one off and completely decide it without paying attention to any of the rest of them. I think each part of your value system has to have its content at least?responsive?to the other parts.

And this is what the Greeks called ?unity of virtue.? Now people often say that the unity of virtue just means that if you have one virtue, you have to have them all; but I think the real core of the view is that the content of any one virtue is partly determined by, or responsive to, the content of the other virtues. Your account of what justice requires can?t be completely independent of your account of what courage requires, or your account of what generosity requires, or your account of any other virtue.

Listen to the?archived media version?of this speech in?Mises Media.

Source: http://c4ss.org/content/16325

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