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Very Hot Topic (More than 100 Replies) Interesting News Article Thread (Read 880293 times)
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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #480 - Dec 5th, 2006 at 4:38pm
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www.cnn.com/2006/HEALTH/12/05/ny.trans.fat.ap/index.html

NEW YORK (AP) -- The Board of Health voted Tuesday to make New York the nation's first city to ban artery-clogging artificial trans fats at restaurants -- from the corner pizzeria to high-end bakeries.

The board, which passed the ban unanimously, did give restaurants a slight break by relaxing what had been considered a tight deadline for compliance. Restaurants will be barred from using most frying oils containing artificial trans fats by July and will have to eliminate the artificial trans fats from all of its foods by July 2008.

Health Commissioner Thomas Frieden said recently that officials seriously weighed complaints from the restaurant industry, which argued that it was unrealistic to give them six months to replace cooking oils and shortening and 18 months to phase out the ingredients altogether.

The ban contains some exceptions; for instance, it would allow restaurants to serve foods that come in the manufacturer's original packaging.

Trans fats are believed to be harmful because they contribute to heart disease by raising bad cholesterol and lowering good cholesterol at the same time. Some experts say that makes trans fats worse than saturated fat.

The panel also passed another measure that has made restaurants unhappy: Some that chose to inform customers about calorie content will have to list the information right on the menu. The rule would generally apply to fast-food restaurants and other major chains.

Trans fats are formed when liquid oils are made into solid fats by adding hydrogen in a process called hydrogenation. A common example of this is partially hydrogenated vegetable oil, which is used for frying and baking and turns up in processed foods like cookies, pizza dough and crackers. Trans fats, which are favored because of their long shelf life, are also found in pre-made blends like pancake and hot chocolate mix.

The FDA estimates the average American eats 4.7 pounds of trans fats each year.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who banned smoking in bars and restaurants during his first term, is somewhat health-obsessed, and even maintains a monthly weight-loss competition with one of his friends in order to stay slim.

He has dismissed cries that New York is crossing a line by trying to legislate diets.

"Nobody wants to take away your french fries and hamburgers -- I love those things, too," he said recently. "But if you can make them with something that is less damaging to your health, we should do that."

Many food makers have stopped using trans fats on their own, after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration began requiring companies to list trans fat content on labels.

Fast-food restaurants and other major chains were particularly interested in the board's decision on Tuesday, because for these companies, a trans-fat ban wouldn't just involve substituting one ingredient for another. In addition to overhauling recipes, they have to disrupt nationwide supply operations and try to convince customers that the new french fries and doughnuts will taste just as good as the originals.

Already, McDonald's Corp. has been quietly experimenting with more than a dozen healthier oil blends but has not committed to a full switch. At an investor conference last month, CEO Jim Skinner said the company is making "very good progress," at developing an alternative, and vowed to be ready for a New York City ban.

Wendy's International Inc. introduced a zero-trans fat oil in August and Yum Brands Inc.'s KFC and Taco Bell said they also will cut the trans fats from their kitchens.

Taco Bell worked for more than two years to find a substitute, conducting blind consumer taste tests and extensive research, the company said.

Chicago is also considering its own trans fat law, which wouldn't ban them outright but would severely restrict the amount that kitchens can use. The measure would apply only to large restaurants, defined as those that make more than $20 million in sales per year.

New York's move to ban trans fats has mostly been applauded by health and medical groups, although the American Heart Association warns that if restaurants aren't given ample time to make the switch, they could end up reverting to ingredients high in saturated fat, like palm oil.



What will they ban next?  Bacon? Unquilted toilet paper?  Finger nail biting?  After they banned smoking I joked that they will go after red meat next.  I wasn't that far off.


Quote:
Trans fats are believed to be harmful.


Well, it's certainly good to know they're just banning things based on their beliefs.  After all, those crazy scientists have never been wrong before!

Soon, New York will be better known as Tofuland.  It's sad to see Chicago going down the same path.  Considering the huge tourist population that shows up for "Taste of Chicago" and how important food is to Chicago's heritage, I can only hope they'll have an easier time shooting down this legislation.

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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #481 - Dec 5th, 2006 at 4:44pm
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You know, the more I think about that last article, the more it irritates me.

This kind of legislation ultimately stems from the "society pays" mentality of health care.  People would not be as upset about the fat problem in America if we weren't all paying for it with insurance premiums.  Because I pay for it, it actually does bother me that lardbuckets are taxing the system with lifestyle-related health problems.  The same goes for smoking.  One company here in town just banned all tobacco at work and their justification was how much it costs them in health insurance payments.  The root problem is socialism, once again.  Let the people with bad habits pay extra for all the extra costs they incur instead of just the copay.

When national socialized medicine becomes a reality you will see this on a grand scale.

Now we just need a BTFSG (Bureau of Trans-Fats, Sugar, and Grease) to conduct no-knock raids and confiscate contraband french fries.  Having a deep fryer will also get you charged with constructive intent to manufacture an unhealthy food, and if they find a used napkin you will also be charged with possession of fat paraphernalia.

-b0b
(...is only joking.  Kinda.)
  

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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #482 - Dec 5th, 2006 at 5:35pm
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It irks me too bob.

This is the government, once again, over stepping its bounds.  Are they going to ban us from eating poison too?  It makes no sense.  Are we suddenly not going to take poison just because our government tell us?  If they don't control it does that mean everyone's going to just be taking poison left and right?!

I can buy that trans fats are bad for you.  Even still, we have a govt institution which kills thousands of people each year...the FDA.  How many times have we heard of recalls and pulling things off the shelves.  Those are just what we hear about.  We don't hear about the 3,000 deaths per year for properly taking asprin and on top of that the other thousands who properly take other meds.

And then on top of that the FDA makes big pharma a monopoly by not even bothering to look at natural cures and remedies.

In this business it's not about making people healthy...it's about making them feeling better for a while.  You don't make money by curing people...you make money by getting them sick again.

I know I kinda went off topic there but it's all tied into the same crap.  The government needs to be put in check and the people need to realize that the govt is NOT our babysitter.

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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #483 - Dec 6th, 2006 at 11:36am
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Quote:
www.townhall.com/columnists/JohnStossel/2006/12/06/who_gives_to_charity


Who gives to charity?
By John Stossel
Wednesday, December 6, 2006

Americans are pretty generous. Three-quarters of American families give to charity -- and those who do, give an average of $1,800. Of course that means one-quarter of us don't give at all. What distinguishes those who give from those who don't? It turns out there are many myths about that.

To test them, ABC's "20/20" went to Sioux Falls, S.D., and San Francisco. We asked the Salvation Army to set up buckets at their busiest locations in both cities. Which bucket would get more money? I'll get to that in a minute.

San Francisco and Sioux Falls are different in some important ways. Sioux Falls is small and rural, and more than half the people go to church every week.

San Francisco is a much bigger and richer city, and relatively few people attend church. It is also known as a very liberal place, and since liberals are said to "care more" about the poor, you might assume people in San Francisco would give a lot.

But the idea that liberals give more is a myth. Of the top 25 states where people give an above-average percentage of their income, all but one (Maryland) were red -- conservative -- states in the last presidential election.

"When you look at the data," says Syracuse University professor Arthur Brooks, "it turns out the conservatives give about 30 percent more. And incidentally, conservative-headed families make slightly less money."

Researching his book, "Who Really Cares" (LINK: http://www.arthurbrooks.net/), Brooks found that the conservative/liberal difference goes beyond money:

"The people who give one thing tend to be the people who give everything in America. You find that people who believe it's the government's job to make incomes more equal, are far less likely to give their money away."

Conservatives are even 18 percent more likely to donate blood.

The second myth is that people with the most money are the most generous. But while the rich give more in total dollars, low-income people give almost 30 percent more as a share of their income.

Says Brooks: "The most charitable people in America today are the working poor."

We saw that in Sioux Falls, S.D. The workers at the meat packing plant make about $35,000, yet the Sioux Falls United Way says it gets more contributions of over $500 from employees there than anywhere else.

Note that Brooks said the "working" poor. The nonworking poor -- people on welfare -- are very different, even though they have the same income. The nonworking poor don't give much at all.

What about the middle class? Well, while middle-income Americans are generous compared to people in other countries, when compared to both the rich and working poor in America, Brooks says, "They give less."

When asked why, many say, "I don't have enough money to spare." But it's telling that the working poor manage to give.

Finally, Brooks says one thing stands out as the biggest predictor of whether someone will be charitable: "their religious participation." Religious people are more likely to give to charity, and when they give, they give more money -- four times as much.

But doesn't that giving just stay within the religion?

"No," says Brooks, "Religious Americans are more likely to give to every kind of cause and charity, including explicitly nonreligious charities. Religious people give more blood; religious people give more to homeless people on the street."

And what happened in our little test? Well, even though people in Sioux Falls make, on average, half as much money as people in San Francisco, and even though the San Francisco location was much busier -- three times as many people were within reach of the bucket -- by the end of the second day, the Sioux Falls bucket held twice as much money.

Another myth bites the dust.


I think San Francisco needs a 10.1 on the Richter Scale.

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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #484 - Dec 6th, 2006 at 6:05pm
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www.tbnweekly.com/content_articles/112206_pco-04.txt


Deputy indicted for tasering suspect who fired on police
PINELLAS COUNTY – A Pinellas County sheriff’s deputy who chose to taser a suspect that shot at him and another deputy instead of using deadly force was indicted by a federal grand jury for allegedly using excessive force. Deputy Richard Farnham was on special volunteer assignment in the Florida Panhandle after Hurricane Ivan in September 2004 when the incident occurred.

Despite the fact that one of the suspects allegedly fired a handgun at Farnham and a Santa Rosa County deputy while on patrol in Navarre Beach, the jury sitting in the Northern District of Florida’s Pensacola Division agreed that Farnham used excessive force by using a Taser gun on one of two armed suspects who had allegedly fired their guns at the deputies.

Farnham, authorities said, actually had the right to shoot back, but chose instead not to use a life-threatening means to subdue the gunman. Farnham, who was to surrender in Santa Rosa County this week, is on administrative paid leave. The indictment has caused an uproar in the law enforcement community.

“We are concerned and disappointed about these allegations, but will continue to cooperate in this process,” Pinellas County Sheriff Jim Coats said.



Who the heck was on that jury?

-b0b
(...thinks they need to be shot.)
  

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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #485 - Dec 6th, 2006 at 6:19pm
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I doubt all the facts were supplied in the article.  It sounds like the officer may have tasered the guy for a long period of time.  Either way the sentence for the officer should be light.
  
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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #486 - Dec 7th, 2006 at 12:20pm
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U-M, Wayne State to continue affirmative action programs despite ban

December 7, 2006 - 10:03AM
DETROIT (AP) - Two of Michigan's largest public universities are moving ahead with programs to encourage diversity despite a voter-enacted ban on affirmative action policies.

The University of Michigan says it will continue to set hiring goals for women and minorities, saying not doing so would jeopardize federal funding.

Wayne State's law school also has a new admissions policy it hopes will maintain diversity. It states that students who meet certain grades and test scores will automatically be accepted, but it allows more than two dozen exceptions for those who don't meet that level.

Proposal 2 passed last month with 58 percent of the vote and banned the use of race and gender preferences. It has already been challenged in federal court.


Sometimes no just doesn't mean no, huh?

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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #487 - Dec 7th, 2006 at 2:43pm
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Hmm doing it for federal funding?  Ya know I think the Founding Fathers would see this as a tyrannical control by the federal government on the ability of individual states to rule themselves as free as possible.  Someone should sue.  Like some white kid with a black girlfriend...not me find you cause I'm so done with school.

I think if these colleges were just doing it for the money they would keep their mouths shut.  However since they are bragging about it they are trying to booster minority and women applications.  No doubt about it.  This is about right vs. wrong...this is about the green.

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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #488 - Dec 7th, 2006 at 3:02pm
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http://biz.yahoo.com/special/allbiz120606_article1.html

Quote:
At most companies, going AWOL during daylight hours would be grounds for a pink slip. Not at Best Buy. The nation's leading electronics retailer has embarked on a radical--if risky--experiment to transform a culture once known for killer hours and herd-riding bosses. The endeavor, called ROWE, for "results-only work environment," seeks to demolish decades-old business dogma that equates physical presence with productivity. The goal at Best Buy is to judge performance on output instead of hours.


Quote:
Hence workers pulling into the company's amenity-packed headquarters at 2 p.m. aren't considered late. Nor are those pulling out at 2 p.m. seen as leaving early. There are no schedules. No mandatory meetings. No impression-management hustles. Work is no longer a place where you go, but something you do. It's O.K. to take conference calls while you hunt, collaborate from your lakeside cabin, or log on after dinner so you can spend the afternoon with your kid.


interesting.
  

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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #489 - Dec 8th, 2006 at 12:36pm
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Now this is one MMO, besides a better Star Wars Galaxy, that I would play!

Quote:
'Firefly' to become MMORPG
Author: Ryan Garside
Published: 8th December 2006


Firefly was a brilliant television series. Will the MMO live up to that?
Firefly was a brilliant television series. Will the MMO live up to that?

Multiverse, a company made up of former Netscape employees, was founded in 2004 with the aim of creating a network of Massively Multiplayer Online Games. Two years later and the company has announced a major coups, the rights to make the MMO for the cult hit television series Firefly. They will now be in charge of a project that will bring the Firefly universe to the internet.

The irony is that the company who canned the television series (to the anger of many) is now commissioning the MMO. Adam Kline, FOX spokesperson told Wired News:

"We see virtual worlds as an extraordinarily promising new entertainment medium. We believe Multiverse can deliver an experience that will remain true to the original series, while enabling a whole new level of personal involvement for fans."

It’s a bitter-sweet pill for Firefly fans, who will no doubt relish the prospect of jumping into a universe full of Reavers, traders, mercenaries, futuristic geishas and a whole range of bizarre and imaginative locations they know and love from the series. On the other hand they may feel slightly angered by the fact that this all but ends any hope of there ever being a second Firefly series, with Wheadon (Firefly director) stating he would never work with FOX again. If the MMO is a success then FOX will not let go of the franchise lightly.

The game won't be based around the characters that you know from the movie/series. Instead you will build your own characters, probably in a similar vein to how Star Wars Empires worked, and plop them into the universe. The initial aim is to try and create something distinct from World of Warcraft. However, whether this MMO will be any different to the: choose character, take on quest, level up, then repeat ad infinitum, remains to be seen.

Firefly has a dedicated internet following with sites like FireflyFans.net producing fan fiction and Firefly News. There is even a site dedicated to getting a second Firefly 2 series commissioned. No doubt a fruitless quest.


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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #490 - Dec 8th, 2006 at 12:47pm
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This MMO will suck.  It's going to be a combination of the Star Wars and Matrix MMO's, and - like each - will die a silent death.

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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #491 - Dec 8th, 2006 at 1:24pm
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HOLIDAY MALL ATTACK THWARTED: A 22-year-old Chicago man has been charged with plotting a terrorist attack on a Rockford, Ill. mall. The suspect is accused of planning to use guns and explosives during the holiday shopping season. The suspect is described as an unaffiliated 'lone wolf-style terrorist', though MSNBC is reporting that he is 'ideologically motivated'. A press conference is forthcoming...


"lone wolf-style terrorism"?  Whatever happen to "this guy is just nuts?!"  Patriot Act says that terrorism includes all crime...so I guess this and jaywalking are both terrorist activities!

Also, Chi-town is suddenly becoming the capital of thwarted "terrorist plots".  If you'll recall the Chicago 8 or how ever many there were.  They were supposedly Islamic extremists.  However their "leader" said that they follow the Bible.  Not to mention the FBI set these guys up with a few thousand dollars and a video camera and told them to tape themselves.  Also, not to mention the fact that most of them were mentally retarded.  Also, whatever happened to these guys?  It's like the Una-bomber...where are they now?!

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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #492 - Dec 10th, 2006 at 2:29am
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I file this under this thread and not random stupidity because...well I'll explain after you read the article.

Quote:
14-year-old boy commits suicide, hoping for better luck next life

KAWAGOE, Saitama -- A 14-year-old boy who leaped to his death from a condominium complex left a suicide note saying he will come back in his next life, police said.

"I'm sure I'll be reborn. I'll come back to you as a more capable person. Don't forget me. I'm sorry. Goodbye," his suicide note to his family left on his desk partly read.

Investigators said the boy, a second-year junior high school student, appeared shocked to lose his regular position in the school's basketball club. Police are investigating the motives for his suicide.

At about 2:45 a.m. on Saturday, a passer-by found the boy lying on the premises of the condominium complex where he lived, and alerted police. The boy subsequently died from blood loss.

The boy apparently jumped from the landing on the 10th floor of the structure, local police said.


I file this under interesting because this is what a true believer in that religion should do.  Just as if you don't believe there is anything after this life...you should do anything and everything you want to do.  I guess that explains the actions of our "politicians".

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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #493 - Dec 10th, 2006 at 2:32am
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Ok I would put this under random stupidity but I think it illustrates my point above.  If you don't teach consequences...then don't expect your kids to NOT turn into thugs!

Quote:
Boy holds up convenience store for $1 candy

11:15 PM CST on Friday, December 8, 2006

By JASON TRAHAN / The Dallas Morning News

A boy believed to be about 12 held up a Pleasant Grove convenience store at gunpoint before school Wednesday after a girl he was with got mad at the clerk for charging her tax for candy.

At 7:40 a.m., six youths entered the Heba Mini-Mart in the 9500 block of Scyene Road near St. Augustine Drive.

A girl, whose age was not reported, tried to buy $1 worth of candy but did not "want to pay the tax on the item," according to a police report.

The clerk insisted that she would be charged the tax. "What is your problem?" asked the boy, pulling a chrome, semiautomatic pistol on the clerk.

As the boy and girl left the store, one of them took the dollar's worth of candy. The other four kids followed them out.


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Re: Interesting News Article Thread
Reply #494 - Dec 19th, 2006 at 1:57am
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http://www.foreignpolicy.com/story/cms.php?story_id=3652&page=00

Top Ten stories missed in 2006.  Of course most of them involve the US and then f-in up the world!

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