Archive | March, 2010

Love, sex and the male brain

Posted on 24 March 2010 by admin

%Javedan Tv %Persian American online TV

Love, sex and the male brain

By Louann Brizendine, Special to CNN

Editor’s note: Dr. Louann Brizendine is a member of the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology and the National Board of Medical Examiners, and a clinical professor of psychiatry at the University of California, San Francisco. She is founder and director of the Women’s Mood and Hormone Clinic. She wrote “The Female Brain” and, just released, “The Male Brain.” Brizendine will appear on HLN’s “The Joy Behar Show” tonight at 9.

(CNN) – Although women the world over have been doing it for centuries, we can’t really blame a guy for being a guy. And this is especially true now that we know that the male and female brains have some profound differences.

Our brains are mostly alike. We are the same species, after all. But the differences can sometimes make it seem like we are worlds apart.

The “defend your turf” area — dorsal premammillary nucleus — is larger in the male brain and contains special circuits to detect territorial challenges by other males. And his amygdala, the alarm system for threats, fear and danger is also larger in men. These brain differences make men more alert than women to potential turf threats.

Meanwhile, the “I feel what you feel” part of the brain — mirror-neuron system — is larger and more active in the female brain. So women can naturally get in sync with others’ emotions by reading facial expressions, interpreting tone of voice and other nonverbal emotional cues.

Perhaps the biggest difference between the male and female brain is that men have a sexual pursuit area that is 2.5 times larger than the one in the female brain. Not only that, but beginning in their teens, they produce 200 to 250 percent more testosterone than they did during pre-adolescence.

If testosterone were beer, a 9-year-old boy would be getting the equivalent of a cup a day. But a 15-year-old would be getting the equivalent of nearly two gallons a day. This fuels their sexual engines and makes it impossible for them to stop thinking about female body parts and sex.

And so begins the ‘Man Trance’

All that testosterone drives the “Man Trance”– that glazed-eye look a man gets when he sees breasts. As a woman who was among the ranks of the early feminists, I wish I could say that men can stop themselves from entering this trance. But the truth is, they can’t. Their visual brain circuits are always on the lookout for fertile mates. Whether or not they intend to pursue a visual enticement, they have to check out the goods.

To a man, this is the most natural response in the world, so he’s dismayed by how betrayed his wife or girlfriend feels when she sees him eyeing another woman. Men look at attractive women the way we look at pretty butterflies. They catch the male brain’s attention for a second, but then they flit out of his mind. Five minutes later, while we’re still fuming, he’s deciding whether he wants ribs or chicken for dinner. He asks us, “What’s wrong?” We say, “Nothing.” He shrugs and turns on the TV. We smolder and fear that he’ll leave us for another woman.

Not surprisingly, the different objectives that men and women have in mating games put us on opposing teams — at least at first. The female brain is driven to seek security and reliability in a potential mate before she has sex. But a male brain is fueled to mate and mate again. Until, that is, he mates for life.

Despite stereotypes to the contrary, the male brain can fall in love just as hard and fast as the female brain, and maybe more so. When he meets and sets his sights on capturing “the one,” mating with her becomes his prime directive. And when he succeeds, his brain makes an indelible imprint of her. Lust and love collide and he’s hooked.

The ‘Doting Daddy Brain’

A man in hot pursuit of a mate doesn’t even remotely resemble a devoted, doting daddy. But that’s what his future holds. When his mate becomes pregnant, she’ll emit pheromones that will waft into his nostrils, stimulating his brain to make more of a hormone called prolactin. Her pheromones will also cause his testosterone production to drop by 30 percent.

These hormonal changes make him more likely to help with the baby. They also change his perceptual circuitry, increasing his ability to hear a baby cry, something many men can’t do very well before their wives are pregnant.

And a word to the wise for all the young mothers who are reluctant to let your husbands hold and care for your newborn. The more hands-on care a father gives his infant, the more his brain aligns with the role of fatherhood. So, hand over the baby.

His emotions run deep

Although men have earned the reputation for being more stoic than women, they actually have stronger emotional reactions than we do. They just don’t show it very often.

Studies of men’s faces show that the male brain’s initial emotional reaction can be stronger than the female brain’s. But within 2.5 seconds, he changes his face to hide the emotion, or even reverse it. The repeated practice of hiding his emotions gives men the classic poker face.

It’s his poker face and his analytical response to personal problems that can put him in the doghouse. She’s crying as she talks about what’s wrong with the relationship, and instead of hugging her, his mind is racing to find a way to resolve the problem as soon as possible. With practice and because of the way their brains are wired, men use their analytical brain structures, not their emotional ones, to find a solution.

They enjoy this advantage, but women often take affront to it. When you’re telling your husband your problem and he tries to solve it instead of hearing you out, you may think he’s being insensitive. But that’s not what’s going on in his brain. He’s working to solve the problem so he can relieve your pain as quickly as possible. Not because he doesn’t care or doesn’t want to listen, but because he loves you.

‘Lovable Grandpas’ and ‘Grumpy Old Men’

As men age, the male brain hormones change and the male brain and body goes into the stage of life called andropause. The king of male hormones — testosterone — goes down and the queen of female hormones — estrogen — goes up. Whether Grandpa is your kids’ hero or the grouch they hate to visit depends a lot on how he handles these hormonal changes. For example, if his testosterone levels drop to an abnormally low level, he can feel tired, irritable and even depressed. Some men in this condition seek hormone replacement therapy and others find relief in exercise, more frequent sex, and spending more time with other people.

The grandpa that kids can’t wait to see is the one who’s feeling the effects of the hormone oxytocin, often called the “cuddle hormone.” He’s fun and playful and likes to hear what his grandchildren have to say. He’s much more patient with your children than he was with you, when you were growing up. The love circuits of the mature male brain can be hijacked by his grandkids, even more than they were by his own children.

The ‘Lonely Hearts Club’

Not only is the mature male brain more receptive to closer bonds, but it’s also more sensitive to loneliness. Nobody thrives when they’re lonely, but it seems to take a major toll on older men. Sixty percent of divorces in couples over the age of 50 are initiated by women, leaving their husbands shell-shocked and devastated.

Once his wife leaves, unless he makes a point of socializing more with other people, his brain stops getting the social workout it needs to make him feel good about himself. If he becomes a loner, his social-approval circuits don’t get activated. In brain scan studies of older males researchers have found that the brain’s pleasure and reward areas, the VTA and the NAc, remain more active in men who are social. So don’t begrudge the divorcee or the new widower some socializing and seeking female companionship.

The bottom line

The human brain is the best learning machine on the planet and human beings are capable of making major changes in our lives. But there are some things that the male brain and female brain are not likely to change anytime soon. And it makes more sense to deal with these brain realities, than to argue with them or ignoring them.

The best advice I have for women is make peace with the male brain. Let men be men.

The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Louann Brizendine.


Comments (16)

GM unveils electric concept car for mega-cities

Posted on 24 March 2010 by admin

Reuters

GM unveils electric concept car for mega-cities

%Javedan Tv %Persian American online TV

Reuters) – General Motors unveiled a new electric concept car in China on Wednesday , aiming to burnish its image as a supplier of non-polluting cars tailored to the crowded mega-cities of the future.

CHINA

GM showcased the EN-V, or “Electric Networked-Vehicle,” at a pavilion that it will share with its China joint venture partner, SAIC Motor Corp, during the World Expo to be held in Shanghai from May through October.

The two-seater EN-V, which would communicate with other cars to help avoid accidents and ease traffic in congested major cities like Shanghai, is only at the conceptual stage — it would not hit showrooms for another 10 to 20 years, and would require regulatory changes for it to be allowed on roads.

But the Detroit automaker is looking to the helmet-shaped EN-V to help establish itself as a significant player in cutting-edge, fuel-efficient vehicles while it seeks to reinvent itself after emerging from bankruptcy last July.

“In the EN-V we are really showing a new concept, for not just electrified vehicles but a reinvented vehicle experience for mega cities,” Alan Taub, GM’s vice president for global research and development, told reporters in Shanghai.

The three versions of the EN-V, powered by electric motors, can go about 40 km (25 miles) on a single charge.

Other major automakers, including Toyota Motor Corp and Nissan Motor, have similar zero-emission mobility concepts as they look to meet higher fuel economy standards and increased consumer demand for greener models.

The focus on a compact, low-emission vehicle contrasts with GM’s struggle to find a buyer for its iconic but tarnished Hummer brand, which had become synonymous with gas-guzzling excess.

GM had agreed to sell Hummer to Sichuan Tengzhong Heavy Industrial Machinery Co, a little-known company based in southwestern China’s Sichuan province, but the deal failed to win Chinese government approval.

The EN-V is, however, not GM’s first effort to reposition itself with more environmentally friendly models.

Its Chevrolet Volt plug-in hybrid, slated to reach showrooms in late 2010, is key to GM’s effort in the field.

SPOTLIGHT ON CHINA

GM’s choice of China to unveil the new concept model underscores the importance of China, the world’s biggest auto market, where car sales hit record highs in 2009 despite the global industry suffering a steep downturn.

China is GM’s second-largest market after the United States and a strategic battleground for all foreign automakers, with the likes of Volkswagen AG and Toyota fighting fiercely for bigger market share.

“China is crucial to GM for now and for the future. Without the China market, GM might not come out of bankruptcy so quickly,” said Zhang Xin, an analyst with Guotai Junan Securities in Beijing.

In 2009, GM sold 1.83 million vehicles in the country, up 67 percent, and broke sales records every single month of the year.

It will sell more than 2 million vehicles this year, Kevin Wale, president and managing director for its China operations, told Reuters in January.

(Editing by Edmund Klamann and Lincoln Feast)

Comments (6)

هشدار اتحادیه اروپا به ایران درباره ارسال پارازیت

Posted on 22 March 2010 by admin

وزیران امور خارجه اتحادیه اروپا که در بروکسل تشکیل جلسه داده بودند، با صدور بیانیه شدیداللحنی از ایران خواسته اند به پارازیت اندازی بر برنامه های شبکه های بین المللی ماهواره ای پایان دهد.

در این بیانیه که توسط 27 کشور عضو اتحادیه اروپا صادر شده، ضمن درخواست توقف فوری سانسور اینترنتی و پارازیت اندازی بر روی برنامه های ماهواره ای توسط ایران درخواست شده و هشدار داده شده در صورتی که ایران به این اقدامات پایان ندهد، برای مقابله با این رویه تدابیری اتخاذ خواهد شد.

از جمله این تدابیر، ممانعت ایران از استفاده از ماهواره هایی است که این کشور برای پخش برنامه های بین المللی خود از آنها استفاده می کند

کانال تلویزیونی پرس تی وی، که به زبان انگلیسی برنامه پخش می کند از جمله این شبکه هاست.

همچنین در باره متقاعد کردن شرکت های تلفن همراه، از جمله نوکیا و زیمنس به عدم فروش تجهیزات به ایران، گفتگوهایی در جریان است.

خبرنگار بی بی سی در مسائل اروپا می گوید از ماه فوریه گذشته حدود 70 رادیو و شبکه تلویزیونی خارجی از جمله تلویزیون فارسی بی بی سی، صدای آمریکا و دویچه وله آلمان هدف پارازیت اندازی ایران قرار گرفته اند.

دیوید میلیبند وزیر خارجه بریتانیا گفته است که صحبت در باره اعمال سانسور توسط ایران لازم است زیرا مردم ایران باید از مزایای دسترسی آزاد به اخبار برخوردار باشند.

چهار شنبه گذشته 17 مارس، بریتانیا، فرانسه و آلمان در نامه ای به اتحادیه اروپا خواستار اتخاذ تدابیری برای مهار توانایی ایران در سانسور مخالفان و ایجاد اختلال در امواج ماهواره های خارجی شدند.

همزمان شرکت “یوتل ست” که برنامه های بسیاری از کانال های عمده خارجی توسط ماهواره های آن در ایران پخش می شود گفت که در 9 ماه گذشته دو شکایت علیه ایران تنظیم کرده است که به ایجاد اختلال در برنامه های بی بی سی فارسی و صدای آمریکا مربوط می شود.

وزرای خارجه بریتانیا، فرانسه و آلمان در نامه ای به کاترین اشتون رئیس امور خارجی اتحادیه اروپا خاطر نشان کرده بودند که ایجاد محدودیت های شدیدتری بر فروش فناوری هایی که ایران می تواند از آنها برای سرکوب و سانسور استفاده کند را لازم می دانند.

دیوید میلیبند، برنارد کوشنر و گایدو وسترول از وزرای خارجه اتحادیه اروپا درخواست کرده بودند تا در نشست امروز خود (22 مارس) ایران را محکوم کرده و خواستار “پایان فوری پارازیت اندازی” بر امواج خارجی شوند.

ایران که هرگز به طور رسمی پارازیت اندازی بر شبکه های خارجی را تایید یا تکذیب نکرده است، بی بی سی و صدای آمریکا را به دخالت در امور داخلی خود و دامن زدن به ناآرامی های پس از انتخابات ریاست جمهوری متهم می کند، اتهامی که این رسانه ها رد کرده اند.

Comments (8)

لايحۀ تاريخی اصلاح بيمه درمانی به تصويب کنگره آمريکا رسيد

Posted on 22 March 2010 by admin

لايحۀ تاريخی اصلاح بيمه درمانی به تصويب کنگره آمريکا رسيد

%Javedan Tv %Persian American online TV

مجلس نمايندگان آمريکا شامگاه يکشنبه لايحه ای را که نقطه عطفی برای اصلاح سيستم بيمه درمانی در ايالات متحده به شمار می آيد با پافشاری نمايندگان حزب دموکرات، به تصويب رساند. اصلاح نظام بيمه درمانی همگانی در آمريکا، يکی از مهمترين اولويت های داخلی پرزيدنت اوباما ست.

در رأی گيری های روز يکشنبۀ مجلس نمايندگان آمريکا، نمايندگان جمهوريخواه مجلس جملگی از تأييد لايحه اصلاح بيمه های درمانی، خودداری کردند.

پرزيذنت اوباما در سخنان خود از کاخ سفيد تصويب لايحه را ستود و اعلام کرد که اين اقدام پاسخ مثبتی به دعاهای کسانی است که فاقد بيمه درمانی بوده اند. حاميان لايحه می گويند اصلاح قانون بيمه درمانی مراقبت های بهداشتی را در دسترس بيش از ۳۰ ميليون آمريکايی که در حال حاضر از بيمه درمانی محروم هستند، قرار می دهد.

منتقدان می گويند اين تغييرات موجب افزايش هزينه ها و نيز افزايش مداخله دولت در تصميمات مربوط به مراقبت های بهداشتی شهروندان، خواهد شد.

پرزيدنت اوباما گفت که لايحه مجلس نمايندگان همه معضلات سيستم درمانی را حل نميکند اما آمريکا را در جهت صحيحی، به پيش خواهد راند.

مجلس نمايندگان آمريکا يک لايحه ديگر را نيز برای تلفيقِ لوايح مجلس نمايندگان و مجلس سنا در مورد اصلاح قانون بيمه درمانی، تصويب کرد. مجلس سنا نيز بايد لايحه تلفيقی را تصويب کند. بموجب برخی از مصّوبات پارلمانی، تنها رأی نيمی از نمايندگان باضافه يک، لايحه تلفيقی را تصويب شده تلقی خواهد کرد. دموکرات ها ۵۹ کرسی از ۱۰۰ کرسی مجلس سنا را در اختيار خود دارند.

Comments (2)

Obama Plans to Sign Health Overhaul Bill on Tuesday

Posted on 22 March 2010 by admin

Obama Plans to Sign Health Overhaul Bill on Tuesday

%Javedan Tv %Persian American online TV

By ROBERT PEAR and DAVID M. HERSZENHORN

WASHINGTON — House Democrats approved a far-reaching overhaul of the nation’s health system on Sunday, voting over unanimous Republican opposition to provide medical coverage to tens of millions of uninsured Americans after an epic political battle that could define the differences between the parties for years.

With the 219-to-212 vote, the House gave final approval to legislation passed by the Senate on Christmas Eve. Thirty-four Democrats joined Republicans in voting against the bill. The vote sent the measure to President Obama, whose yearlong push for the legislation has been the centerpiece of his agenda and a test of his political power.

The president intends to sign the measure on Tuesday.

After approving the bill, the House adopted a package of changes to it by a vote of 220 to 211. That package — agreed to in negotiations among House and Senate Democrats and the White House — now goes to the Senate for action as soon as this week. It would be the final step in a bitter legislative fight that has highlighted the nation’s deep partisan and ideological divisions.

On a sun-splashed day outside the Capitol, protesters, urged on by House Republicans, chanted “Kill the bill” and waved yellow flags declaring “Don’t Tread on Me.” They carried signs saying “Doctors, Not Dictators.”

Inside, Democrats hailed the votes as a historic advance in social justice, comparable to the establishment of Medicareand Social Security. They said the bill would also put pressure on rising health care costs and rein in federal budget deficits.

“This is the Civil Rights Act of the 21st century,” said Representative James E. Clyburn of South Carolina, the No. 3 Democrat in the House.

Mr. Obama celebrated the House action in remarks at the White House.

“We pushed back on the undue influence of special interests,” Mr. Obama said. “We didn’t give in to mistrust or to cynicism or to fear. Instead, we proved that we are still a people capable of doing big things.”

“This isn’t radical reform,” he added, “but it is major reform.”

After a year of combat and weeks of legislative brinksmanship, House Democrats and the White House clinched their victory only hours before the voting started on Sunday. They agreed to a deal with opponents ofabortion rights within their party to reiterate in an executive order that federal money provided by the bill could not be used for abortions, securing for Democrats the final handful of votes they needed to assure passage.

Winding up the debate, Speaker Nancy Pelosi said: “After a year of debate and hearing the calls of millions of Americans, we have come to this historic moment. Today we have the opportunity to complete the great unfinished business of our society and pass health insurance reform for all Americans that is a right and not a privilege.”

The House Republican leader, Representative John A. Boehner of Ohio, said lawmakers were defying the wishes of their constituents. “The American people are angry,” Mr. Boehner said. “This body moves forward against their will. Shame on us.”

Republicans said the plan would saddle the nation with unaffordable levels of debt, leave states with expensive new obligations, weaken Medicare and give the government a huge new role in the health care system.

The debate on the legislation set up a bitter midterm campaign season, with Republicans promising an effort to repeal the legislation, challenge its constitutionality or block its provisions in the states.

Representative Paul D. Ryan, Republican of Wisconsin, denounced the bill as “a fiscal Frankenstein.” Representative Lincoln Diaz-Balart, Republican of Florida, called it “a decisive step in the weakening of the United States.” Representative Virginia Foxx, Republican of North Carolina, said it was “one of the most offensive pieces of social engineering legislation in the history of the United States.”

But Representative Marcy Kaptur, Democrat of Ohio, said the bill heralded “a new day in America.” Representative Doris Matsui, Democrat of California, said it would “improve the quality of life for millions of American families.”

The health care bill would require most Americans to have health insurance, would add 16 million people to theMedicaid rolls and would subsidize private coverage for low- and middle-income people, at a cost to the government of $938 billion over 10 years, the Congressional Budget Office said.

The bill would require many employers to offer coverage to employees or pay a penalty. Each state would set up a marketplace, or exchange, where consumers without such coverage could shop for insurance meeting federal standards.

The budget office estimates that the bill would provide coverage to 32 million uninsured people, but still leave 23 million uninsured in 2019. One-third of those remaining uninsured would be illegal immigrants.

The new costs, according to the budget office, would be more than offset by savings in Medicare and by new taxes and fees, including a tax on high-cost employer-sponsored health plans and a tax on the investment income of the most affluent Americans.

Carl Hulse and Jeff Zeleny contributed reporting.

Comments (1)

Health care latest: House hears Republican objections

Posted on 21 March 2010 by admin

CNN;

%Javedan Tv %Persian American online TV

Follow the very latest on the health care vote and find out what it means for you, tonight on CNN. Watch the debate online, on TVand your iPhone.

Washington (CNN) — The House is set to vote Sunday on the health care bill passed by the Senate in December.

Here’s the latest on what’s happening on Capitol Hill:

6:52 p.m.: Debate will be followed by three votes: a vote on the Senate bill, a vote on the motion to recommit on the reconciliation package (a Republican motion), and a vote on the reconciliation package.

Republicans are expected to throw up parliamentary roadblocks throughout the debate.

6:43 p.m.: House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer opens debate.

Republicans and Democrats have one hour each to make their case.

6:28 p.m.: The House votes to move into general debate over the health care legislation. The vote is 224-206.

Debate is slated for two hours.

The fact that the motion to debate passed is an indication that Democrats have enough votes to pass the legislation itself.

6:04 p.m.: House Republicans blast the executive order in a news conference.

Republican Rep. Jean Schmidt said an executive order “is not worth the paper it is printed on.”

“It is not the law of the land and it can be rescinded in the blink of an eye,” she said.

5:04 p.m.: President Obama will make a statement following the House vote.

4:50 p.m.: Asked whether Democrats have the 216 votes needed to pass health care legislation, House Majority Whip James Clyburn said, “We’re feeling good, with room to spare,” CNN’s Dana Bash reports.

4:39 p.m.: Asked her reaction to the deal over abortion funding, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said, “We’re very pleased that we have more votes for the bill,” CNN’s Kevin Bohn reports.

4:07 p.m.: Rep. Bart Stupak, D-Michigan, announces that he, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and the White House have reached an agreement that protects “the sanctity of life in health care reform.”

Stupak and other anti-abortion Democrats had said they would oppose the Senate bill because of concerns it would expand federal funding of abortion.

House vote on health reform expected to be extremely close

4:07 p.m.: One hour of debate has begun on the rules for debate and vote on the health care legislation.

3:59 p.m.: President Obama will issue an executive order after a health care bill is passed “that will reaffirm its consistency with longstanding restrictions on the use of federal funds for abortion,” White House Communications Director Dan Pfeiffer said.

The order does not change the law, but it will provide “additional safeguards to ensure that the status quo is upheld and enforced, and that the health care legislation’s restrictions against the public funding of abortions cannot be circumvented.”

3:35 p.m.: Republican Rep. David Dreier of California said lawmakers know with “absolute certainty” that the only thing they are guaranteed is what’s in the Senate bill, which all House Republicans and a number of Democrats oppose.

Democratic Rep. Louise Slaughter interrupted, saying, “No you don’t!”

“The best way that they can achieve their ends of removing the things that are objectionable from the Senate bill is to support reconciliation,” she said as lawmakers cheered and jeered.

3:28 p.m.: Stupak, D-Michigan, will hold a news conference at 4 p.m., CNN’s Deirdre Walsh reports.

Stupak is part of a coalition of Democrats who oppose the Senate bill because they say it would expand federal funding of abortion.

3:02 p.m.: The House defeats a Republican point of order from Rep. Paul Ryan, R-Wisconsin.

Another Republican point of order from Darrell Issa of California is now being debated.

2:40 p.m.: Ryan called the health care bill a “fiscal Frankenstein.”

“It is not too late to get it right. Let’s start over. Let’s defeat this bill,” he said.

2:30 p.m.: Rep. Patrick Kennedy, D-Rhode Island, son of the late Sen. Ted Kennedy, said there are significant parallels between the struggle for civil rights and the fight to make quality, affordable health care accessible to all Americans.

Quoting the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., Kennedy said, “Of all forms of inequality, injustice in health care is the most shocking and humane.”

1 p.m.: The House convenes.

Lawmakers spend about an hour giving one-minute speeches and taking votes on issues unrelated to health care.

Do Democrats have the votes?: Democratic leaders continue to try to round up the 216 necessary votes to pass the bill in the House.

Rep. John Larson, chairman of the House Democratic Caucus, said told CNN’s “State of the Union” that “We’ve got the votes.”

“This is a historic day and we are happy warriors,” Larson said.

But the chief deputy whip in the House was cautious.

“We don’t have a hard 216 right now,” Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, D-Florida, told “Fox News Sunday” just as Larson was speaking to CNN. But, she added, “I firmly believe we will have 216.”

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer said Sunday morning, “We are going to get the votes this afternoon.”

Latest vote count: According to CNN’s latest count, 33 Democrats plan to vote against the legislation. Thirty-eight Democratic “no” votes are needed to kill the bill.

Six House Democrats have told CNN they haven’t yet decided how they will vote, and two have not responded to CNN’s repeated inquiries.

See how Democrats plan to vote

Can Republicans block the vote?: Democrats control Congress, so they should be able to bring the Senate bill, and a package of changes to it, to a vote. But Republicans plan to impede the process as much as they can.

Without spelling out specifics, House Republican Conference Chairman Mike Pence of Indiana promised to do just that.

“We are going to use every means at our disposal to oppose this government takeover of health care,” Pence told “State of the Union.” “Because quite frankly, as thousands gather at rallies all across this country and here in the nation’s capital yesterday, you know, the American people are sick and tired of runaway federal spending by both parties, of borrowing and bailouts and takeovers. And I believe this is going to be a historic weekend.”

Asked what measures Republicans might take, Pence replied, “Stay tuned, it’s going to be an interesting day.”

Working the phones: Former President Clinton made several phone calls Saturday to lobby wavering Democrats to sign on to the health care reform bill, Democratic sources told CNN.

11th hour appeal: President Obama on Saturday made his last appeal for the reform bill, telling House Democrats on the eve of the historic vote: “Let’s get this done.”

“If you agree that the system is not working for ordinary families, if you’ve heard the same stories that I’ve heard everywhere, all across the country, then help us fix the system,” Obama said.

‘Deeming’ ditched: Democratic leaders on Saturday decided to abandon a controversial legislative mechanism that could have avoided a direct vote on the legislation. They will hold an up-or-down vote on the reform plan that the Senate has already passed.

If the Senate bill passes the House, Obama will sign it into law. If the package of changes is passed, it will be taken up by the Senate.

Protests get ugly: Three black Democratic lawmakers — including civil rights leader Rep. John Lewis of Georgia — said demonstrators against the health care bill yelled racist epithets at them Saturday as they walked past. Rep. Emanuel Cleaver of Missouri said a protester spit at him. Capitol police said a demonstrator was arrested in that incident.

In addition, protesters yelled anti-gay comments at Rep. Barney Frank of Massachusetts, an openly gay Democrat.

Leaders of both parties condemned the protesters’ actions.

iReport: Make your case on health care reform

Obama targets insurers in final health care push

Obama’s Sunday plans: A White House official said the president is “in the West Wing, getting updates, dropping in on staff, and like the rest of America, examining the rubble of his [NCAA basketball] bracket.”

The official added that Obama “made a surprise appearance at an 11 a.m. meeting of senior staff,” and is “preparing to make and take member phone calls as we move toward the vote.”

Legislation revealed: Democratic leaders unveiled the text of the reconciliation act for health care on Thursday. Health Care and Education Affordability Reconciliation Act of 2010 (pdf)

Section-by-section analysis (pdf)

The price tag: The compromise health care bill drafted by top Democrats will cost $940 billion over the next 10 years, according to a preliminary analysis released Thursday by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office.

Read the CBO preliminary estimate (pdf)

The bill cuts the deficit by $138 billion during that period, the CBO report said. It would further reduce the deficit by another $1.2 trillion in the following decade, two House Democratic sources said.

GOP leaders said the new CBO estimates had not changed their opinion of the bill, which they vehemently oppose.

What happens next?: Democrats hope to pass the Senate bill Sunday and the package of changes designed in part to make the overall legislation more acceptable to House Democrats. President Obama can sign the bill into law if it passes.

The Senate would vote to approve the changes to its bill this week by a simple majority vote.

CNN’s Dana Bash, Kevin Bohn, Candy Crowley, Evan Glass, John Helton, Ed Henry, Kristi Keck, Brianna Keilar, Dan Lothian, Deirdre Walsh and Robert Yoon contributed to this report.

Comments (14)

هیلاری کلینتون عید نوروز را تبریک گفت

Posted on 20 March 2010 by admin

هیلاری کلینتون عید نوروز را تبریک گفت

%Javedan Tv %Persian American online TV

هیلاری کلینتون، وزیر امور خارجه آمریکا، با صدور بیانیه ای نوروز را به ایرانیان و مردم دیگر کشورهایی که این عید را جشن می گیرند، تبریک گفته است.

او روز شنبه (۲۰ مارس) اعلام کرد: “به نمایندگی از طرف مردم آمریکا بهترین آروزها را به تمام کسانی که در سراسر دنیا نوروز را جشن می گیرند، تقدیم می کنم”.

کلینتون گفت: “نوروز برای ایرانی ها، افغان ها، کردها، آذری ها و مردم آسیای میانه آغاز سال جدید و مملو از وعده ها و فرصت های تازه است”.

خانم کلینتون همچنین نوروز را فرصتی برای یادآوری این موضوع دانست که آینده ای صلح آمیز و پر رونق، آرمان مشترک همه انسان هاست و حقوق بشر و آزادی های اساسی حق مسلم انسان هاست.

برآورد می شود بیش از ۳۰۰ میلیون نفر در ایران، افغانستان، تاجیکستان، جمهوری آذربایجان، کردستان عراق، ازبکستان، قزاقستان، پاکستان و ترکیه نوروز را جشن می گیرند.

باراک اوباما، رئیس جمهوری آمریکا، نیز در پیامی ویدئویی به مناسبت فرارسیدن نوروز این عید را به مردم ایران تبریک گفته است.

آقای اوباما در دومین پیام نوروزی خود گفت که پیشنهاد آمریکا برای گفتگوی مستقیم با حکومت ایران همچنان پابرجاست و این دولت ایران بود که طی سال گذشته، منزوی ساختن خود را برگزید.

مجلس نمایندگان آمریکا دوشنبه گذشته قطعنامه ای را تصویب کرد که ضمن به رسمیت شناختن اهمیت تاریخی و فرهنگی نوروز به عنوان قدیمی ترین عید ایرانی ها، این روز را همه افرادی که آن را جشن می گیرند، تبریک گفت.

اقدام مشابهی در مجلس سنای آمریکا در حال انجام است.

سناتور جان کری، رئیس کمیته روابط خارجی مجلس سنا، روز جمعه با انتشار بیانیه ای، فرارسیدن نوروز را به ایرانی تبارهای آمریکا تبریک گفت و آن را فرصتی برای نو شدن و ایجاد امید نام برد.

Comments (6)

پرزیدنت اوباما: آمریکا به آینده ای بهتر برای مردم ایران متعهد است

Posted on 20 March 2010 by admin

VOAPPN

%Javedan Tv %Persian American online TV

پرزیدنت باراک اوباما به مردم ایران گفته است ایالات متحده، علیرغم اختلاف هایی که با دولت ایران دارد، به آینده ای بهتر و امید بخش تر برای آنها متعهد است. 

آقای اوباما در یک پیام ویدئویی که در شبکه اینترنت منتشر شده و شامگاه جمعه به مناسبت نوروز برای مردم ایران فرستاد گفت آمریکا مایل است بر فرصت های مبادلات آموزشی بیافزاید و به تضمین دسترسی آزاد و سانسور نشده ایرانیان به اینترنت کمک کند. 

رئیس جمهوری آمریکا گفت در پیام نورزوی خود در یک سال پیش از فصل جدیدی از تعامل سخن گفت. اما اظهار داشت از آن هنگام، دولت ایران با خودداری از قبول پیشنهادی های جامعه بین المللی راه منزوی ساختن خود را برگزیده است. 
%Javedan Tv %Persian American online TV
آقای اوباما گفت جامعه بین المللی سعی دارد دولت ایران را مسئول و پاسخگو بداند اما پیشنهاد حل اختلافات از طریق دیپلماسی و گفت و شنود هنوز بقوت خود باقی است. 

تلویزیون ایران روز شنبه به پیام آقای اوباما پاسخ داد و گفت رئیس جمهوری آمریکا گفت و شنود را پیشنهاد کرد اما امتیازاتی را که واشنگتن آماده است بدهد مشخص نساخت.

Comments (0)

Thais, Hollywood stars go crazy for ‘super-human’ tattoos

Posted on 18 March 2010 by admin

Jolie was back again in 2004 to get another. Called "Phaya Sua Krong" or the King of Tiger, it is believed the wearer will have commanding and attractive speech.Ajarn Noo

Bangkok, Thailand (CNN) — For many, tattoos can be a sign of rebellion, individuality or fashion; but in Thailand, tattoos have a whole different meaning.

Devotees of Yan tattoos have been gathering outside Bangkok for an annual festival, where believers demonstrate the supposed super-human powers radiated from the designs.

Men covered in ornate ink depictions of tigers, Buddhas and ancient scripts rant and rave, scream, laugh and charge around as if they are possessed. They claim the chanting of the monks brings out the power of their tattoos.

Wat Bang Phra resembles a lunatic asylum, as hundreds of apparently insane tattooed men demonstrate their special powers.

But It’s not just Thais who are going crazy for Yan tattoos. Hollywood actress Angelina Jolie came to Bangkik for a huge Yan tattoo of a tiger in 2004. Her photo adorns the walls  of Ajarn Noo’s tattoo pariouhe’s keen for potential customers to see that he’s inked one of the most famous and desirable women in the world.

He claims his tattoos can attract the opposite sex, as well as money. They also help to ward off enemies and bad luck.

Comments (11)

Dubai kiss court case highlights culture clash

Posted on 18 March 2010 by admin

An Emirati man riding a camel passes by foreigners sunbathing on a beach in Dubai last spring

By Daniela Deane for CNN

CNN.com/2010/world

London, England (CNN) – The locals wear long, all-covering robes. They pray five times a day in one of the city’s many mosques. Each year, they celebrate Ramadan, fasting from dawn to dusk.

Many expatriates, instead, love to hang out at the beach, often in skimpy bathing suits making the most of the year-round sunshine. They go to beach-side cafes to drink and eat with friends, enjoying the tax-free lifestyle of the sunny sheikdom-by-the-sea.

Only rub is expatriates overwhelmingly outnumber locals — by more than eight to one.

Welcome to Dubai, the tiny, sun-drenched, desert sheikdom where a whopping 85 percent of the population hail from somewhere else, demographics unheard of anywhere else in the world.

And although the unusual co-existence is largely peaceful, friction can bubble up, like in the recent case of a British couple facing up to a month in jail for kissing in public.

The couple, a British man living and working in Dubai, and a British female tourist visiting the Persian Gulf city-state, were arrested in November accused of kissing and touching each other intimately in public — violations of law against public indecency — and consuming alcohol. The couple have been granted bail pending appeal. A hearing is scheduled for April 4.

Dubai’s foreign population has soared in recent years as expatriates, courted by the country, flocked to the booming emirate to work.

“It’s one of the countries in the world which has had the most rapid structural transformation we’ve ever seen for an economy,” said Nasser Saidi, chief economist of the Dubai International Financial Centre Authority. “If you look at it like that, you start to understand the dynamics of the economy, why you need to attract a vast population from across the world.”

The population changes have challenged the now vastly outnumbered Emiratis, though, raising concerns among the local population that the breakneck modernization of the sheikdom threatens their deeply conservative social and religious identity.

The case is the third of its kind involving Britons in under two years. Expats who live in the emirate say authorities seem to be increasingly sensitive to such culture clashes.

“Expats need to know that no matter how modern and open-minded this country is, it’s an Islamic country,” said Heike Moeckel, a cultural consultant at Embrace Arabia, an Abu Dhabi-based, Emirati-owned company providing cultural training to expats and Emiratis alike.

Moeckel said “the amount of ignorance” by expats to Islamic traditions was the “biggest obstacle” in her work. She said there were beaches in Dubai where a local Emirati woman would not dare bring her children because of the dress code and behavior there, considered “completely inappropriate” by local people.

The British couple at the center of the current case were dining with friends at Bob’s Easy Diner, one of a stretch of cafes on a popular strip behind the city’s Jumeirah Beach, when an Emirati woman with her family reported their behavior to police.

“It’s very easy to make an economy out of different kinds of people with different religious backgrounds and nationalities,” Shahidul Haque, regional representative for the Middle East for the International Organization for Migration, told CNN. “But it’s often very difficult to develop a social fabric with the same populations.”

“That’s a huge challenge for any country,” Haque said, adding that incidents like the couple kissing “happen for social and economic reasons,” rather because of religious differences.

The economy of Dubai, a once tiny pearling village with limited natural resources, was built by expatriate labor. And the high number of expats needs to be maintained to ensure growth, experts say.

Oil sales account for less than five percent of Dubai’s economy now. The majority of its income comes from service industries, retail, trade and tourism.

Asked if the Dubai economy could continue to grow without its large expat population, chief economist Saidi replied no.

“It’s clear they need them,” he said. Saidi said that although the population of the emirate is very young and growing fast, it will take “a couple of generations to build up the skills needed.”

Until such point, Dubai continues to need — and court — its foreign workers, despite culture clashes like the one with the British couple.

“The local labor market cannot provide” what is needed, Haque said. “You either have to depend on foreign labor, or reduce the economy.”

“And no country wants to shrink their economy.”

Comments (19)

Advertise Here
Advertise Here
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement