Archive for the ‘Great Ass News’ Category

2000 Year Old Mystery Circle Discovered In Downtown Miami

Wednesday, May 5th, 2010

In the middle of downtown Miami is one of the greatest mysteries of North America: A perfect circle, likely 2,000 years old, cut into the bedrock of the city, and stuffed with ancient teeth, weapons, and bones.

According to Atlas Obscura:

Property developer Michael Bauman was in for a real surprise when he purchased a plot of land in downtown Miami in 1998. Bauman’s plans for the land were seemingly simple: demolish a 1950-era apartment complex and build a luxury condominium in its place.

During a routine archaeological survey of the site, however, hundreds of mysterious holes were discovered in a layer of Oolitic limestone bedrock and Bauman’s development plans immediately came to a halt. Through further investigation, twenty-four of the largest holes comprised a perfect circle, 38 feet (12 m) in diameter, and excavation results found a variety of artifacts ranging from human teeth to ancient tools.

Included in the artifacts were pieces of burnt wood which, after being tested for radiocarbon dating, are believed to be 1800-2000 years old. To date, Miami Circle is the only known evidence in the United States of a prehistoric structure built into bedrock. Evidence from this mysterious prehistoric “footprint” predates other known settlements along the East Coast.

Among these tools were two axe-heads made from basalt, a hard stone that is not indigenous to Florida. The finding of these tools contradicts the theory that the site was occupied by the Tequesta, however, as the volcanic rock is believed to have been from a location in Macon, Georgia - some 600 miles (970 km) away from the site.

The site is now owned by the State of Florida, and has been protected (so far) from development. Nobody is sure what the origin or the function of the site might have been, but it has certainly given rise to some interesting conspiracy theories.

Source.

Soviet Moon Rover Lunokhod 1 Found

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

Fount Soviet Lander

A ROVER found on the moon last week has delivered joy to the Soviets who lost it 40 years ago and evidence to any that still needed it that man did indeed once land there.

The Soviet rover Lunokhod 1 was the first successful lunar rover, landing on the moon on November 17, 1970, a full 24 years before Sojourner was successfully rolled out on the surface of Mars.

Lunokhod 1 wheeled around for the better part of a year before its signal was lost.

Its main mission was to collect soil composition and topography data, but its discovery by NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter has given Lunokhod 1 a new lease on life.

A reflector onboard was added by the Russians so they could bounce a laser off the rover and take readings about the moon’s orbit to within a millimetre’s accuracy, according to National Geographic.

The Full Story Can Be Found Here.

Medical marijuana bill clears Delaware Senate committee

Sunday, June 14th, 2009

Delaware is making a step in the right direction ‘imho’

Legal Medical Pot
A bill that would make it legal for Delaware doctors to prescribe marijuana to patients with serious diseases was voted out of a Senate committee June 3 and is expected to reach the floor of that chamber in the coming weeks.
Before voting the Senate Health and Social Services Committee listened to 90 minutes of testimony in support of Senate Bill 94, authored by Sen. Margaret Rose Henry, D-Wilmington East, who also chairs the committee. No one spoke in opposition to the bill.
If passed, the legislation would allow individuals with diseases like cancer, multiple sclerosis and glaucoma to use marijuana as part of their treatment with the consent of a doctor.     Approved patients would be issued identification cards and could lawfully posses up to six ounces of the substance at a time and cultivate up to 12 plants for their own use.
The bill would also establish a network of dispensaries, known as “Compassionate Care Centers,” which would be authorized to grow a larger crop of marijuana and distribute it to authorized individuals.
The hearing drew a wide range of participants — from individuals who have used marijuana to treat epilepsy, bi-polar disorder, cancer and HIV, to representatives from the Hemp Education Awareness League and the Delaware Medical Society.
Newark resident Brian Larson told the committee that he suffers from severe pain as the result of a back injury, and that marijuana is the best way for him to deal with the pain and live a productive life.
Larson said prescription pain medications leave him feeling weak and lethargic, but marijuana relieves the pain and allows him to stay active.
“With Oxycontin, you just feel like a vegetable,” he said. “With marijuana you can still go out. I can run, I can hike or bike.”
If it becomes law, the bill would take a heavy load off those who are using marijuana to treat disease even though it is illegal, Larson added.
“It’s a matter of not making people feel like criminals,” he said. “If grown adults choose to medicate themselves in this way, then they should be able to freely.”
Bob Byrd, who spoke on behalf of the medical society, said the society’s member physicians engaged in a lengthy debate over the bill, but decided in the end to remain neutral and offer neither support nor opposition.
Byrd said many ophthalmologists argued that glaucoma should be taken out of the bill, since the condition, once a poster disease for medical marijuana, can be treated more effectively with new drugs that have been developed in recent years.
But other doctors said marijuana would be an effective treatment and far less costly than many prescription drugs, Byrd added.
“There were very articulate doctors on both sides of the bill,” he said.
Committee member Sen. Patricia M. Blevins, D-Elsmere, questioned the scope of the bill, since it lists several specific diseases as well as a myriad of individual symptoms for which marijuana can be used a treatment.
“I’m concerned about making it so broad that is won’t pass muster in the General Assembly,” she said. “We’re starting out so broadly that we might have a problem getting relief to those who need [marijuana] or are already using it illegally.”
Smyrna Clayton Sun Times Delaware

AP INVESTIGATION: Alaska funded Palin kids’ travel

Tuesday, October 21st, 2008

this doesnt surprise me one little bit..

it also scares the shit out of me at the same time..    If they do get into the White House..  is this

how they will continue to run our coutry into the ground..

At first..  I wasnt really rooting for Obama..  but the more I think about it..  I kind of want him to get

in just to see if he can really change (for the better hopefully) what our government has become…

______________

Article courtesy of Yahoo News

ANCHORAGE, Alaska – Gov. Sarah Palin charged the state for her children to travel with her, including to events where they were not invited, and later amended expense reports to specify that they were on official business.

The charges included costs for hotel and commercial flights for three daughters to join Palin to watch their father in a snowmobile race, and a trip to New York, where the governor attended a five-hour conference and stayed with 17-year-old Bristol for five days and four nights in a luxury hotel.

In all, Palin has charged the state $21,012 for her three daughters’ 64 one-way and 12 round-trip commercial flights since she took office in December 2006. In some other cases, she has charged the state for hotel rooms for the girls.

Alaska law does not specifically address expenses for a governor’s children. The law allows for payment of expenses for anyone conducting official state business.

As governor, Palin justified having the state pay for the travel of her daughters — Bristol, 17; Willow, 14; and Piper, 7 — by noting on travel forms that the girls had been invited to attend or participate in events on the governor’s schedule.

But some organizers of these events said they were surprised when the Palin children showed up uninvited, or said they agreed to a request by the governor to allow the children to attend.

Several other organizers said the children merely accompanied their mother and did not participate. The trips enabled Palin, whose main state office is in the capital of Juneau, to spend more time with her children.

“She said any event she can take her kids to is an event she tries to attend,” said Jennifer McCarthy, who helped organize the June 2007 Family Day Celebration picnic in Ketchikan that Piper attended with her parents.

State Finance Director Kim Garnero told The Associated Press she has not reviewed the Palins’ travel expense forms, so she could not say whether the daughters’ travel with their mother would meet the definition of official business.

On Aug. 6, three weeks before Republican presidential nominee Sen. John McCain chose Palin his running mate, and after Alaska reporters asked for the records, Palin ordered changes to previously filed expense reports for her daughters’ travel.

In the amended reports, Palin added phrases such as “First Family attending” and “First Family invited” to explain the girls’ attendance.

“The governor said, ‘I want the purpose and the reason for this travel to be clear,’” said Linda Perez, state director of administrative services.

When Palin released her family’s tax records as part of her vice presidential campaign, some tax experts questioned why she did not report the children’s state travel reimbursements as income.

The Palins released a review by a Washington attorney who said state law allows the children’s travel expenses to be reimbursed and not taxed when they conduct official state business.

Taylor Griffin, a McCain-Palin campaign spokesman, said Palin followed state policy allowing governors to charge for their children’s travel. He said the governor’s office has invitations requesting the family to attend some events, but he said he did not have them to provide.

In October 2007, Palin brought daughter Bristol along on a trip to New York for a women’s leadership conference. Plane tickets from Anchorage to La Guardia Airport for $1,385.11 were billed to the state, records show, and mother and daughter shared a room for four nights at the $707.29-per-night Essex House hotel, which overlooks Central Park.

The event’s organizers said Palin asked if she could bring her daughter.

Alexis Gelber, who organized Newsweek’s Third Annual Women & Leadership Conference, said she does not know how Bristol ended up attending. Gelber said invitees usually attend alone, but some ask if they can bring a relative or friend.

Griffin, the campaign spokesman, said he believes someone with the event personally sent an e-mail to Bristol inviting her, but he did not have it to provide. Records show Palin also met with Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Goldman Sachs representatives and visited the New York Stock Exchange.

In January, the governor, Willow and Piper showed up at the Alaska Symphony of Seafood Buffet, an Anchorage gala to announce winners of an earlier seafood competition.

“She was just there,” said James Browning, executive director of Alaska Fisheries Development Foundation, which runs the event. Griffin said the governor’s office received an invitation that was not specifically addressed to anyone.

When Palin amended her children’s expense reports, she listed a role for the two girls at the function — “to draw two separate raffle tickets.”

In the original travel form, Palin listed a number of events that her children attended and said they were there “in official capacity helping.” She did not identify any specific roles for the girls.

In July, the governor charged the state $2,741.26 to take Bristol and Piper to Philadelphia for a meeting of the National Governors Association. The girls had their own room for five nights at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel for $215.46 a night, expense records show.

Expense forms describe the girls’ official purpose as “NGA Governor’s Youth Programs and family activities.” But those programs were activities designed to keep children busy, a service provided by the NGA to accommodate governors and their families, NGA spokeswoman Jodi Omear said.

In addition to the commercial flights, the children have traveled dozens of times with Palin on a state plane. For these flights, the total cost of operating the plane, at $971 an hour, was about $55,000, according to state flight logs. The cost of operating the state plane does not increase when the children join their mother.

The organizer of an American Heart Association luncheon on Feb. 15 in Fairbanks said Palin asked to bring daughter Piper to the event, and the organizer said she was surprised when Palin showed up with daughters Willow and Bristol as well.

The three Palin daughters shared a room separate from their mother at the Princess Lodge in Fairbanks for two nights, at a cost to the state of $129 per night.

The luncheon took place before Palin’s husband, Todd, finished fourth in the 2,000-mile Iron Dog snowmobile race, also in Fairbanks. The family greeted him at the finish line.

When Palin showed up at the luncheon with not just Piper but also Willow and Bristol, organizers had to scramble to make room at the main table, said Janet Bartels, who set up the event.

“When it’s the governor, you just make it happen,” she said.

The state is already reviewing nearly $17,000 in per diem payments to Palin for more than 300 nights she slept at her own home, 40 miles from her satellite office in Anchorage.

Tony Knowles, a Democratic former governor of Alaska who lost to Palin in a 2006 bid to reclaim the job, said he never charged the state for his three children’s commercial flights or claimed their travel as official state business.

Knowles, who was governor from 1994 to 2002, is the only other recent Alaska governor who had school-age children while in office.

“There was no valid reason for the children to be along on state business,” said Knowles, a supporter of Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama. “I cannot recall any instance during my eight years as governor where it would have been appropriate to claim they performed state business.”

Knowles said he brought his children to one NGA event while in office but didn’t charge the state for their trip.

In February 2007, the three girls flew from Juneau to Anchorage on Alaska Airlines. Palin charged the state for the $519.30 round-trip ticket for each girl, and noted on the expense form that the daughters accompanied her to “open the start of the Iron Dog race.”

The children and their mother then watched as Todd Palin and other racers started the competition, which Todd won that year. Palin later had the relevant expense forms changed to describe the girls’ business as “First Family official starter for the start of the Iron Dog race.”

The Palins began charging the state for commercial flights after the governor kept a 2006 campaign promise to sell a jet bought by her predecessor.

Palin put the jet up for sale on eBay, a move she later trumpeted in her star-making speech at the Republican National Convention, and it was ultimately sold by the state at a loss.

That left only one high-performance aircraft deemed safe enough for her to use — a 1980 twin-engine King Air assigned to the public safety agency but, according to flight logs, out of service for maintenance and repairs about a third of the time Palin has been governor.

Wall Street banks in $70bn staff payout.. Pay and bonus deals equivalent to 10% of US government bail-out package

Saturday, October 18th, 2008

Well..  who is suprised..  NOT ME..  we all knew this has been going on for years..

why would a government bailout check make them act like giddy little school girls with daddys credit card..

article and picture courtesy of The Guardian.co.uk

Financial workers at Wall Street’s top banks
are to receive pay deals worth more than $70bn (£40bn), a substantial
proportion of which is expected to be paid in discretionary bonuses,
for their work so far this year - despite plunging the global financial
system into its worst crisis since the 1929 stock market crash, the Guardian has learned.

Staff at six banks including Goldman Sachs
and Citigroup are in line to pick up the payouts despite being the
beneficiaries of a $700bn bail-out from the US government that has
already prompted criticism. The government’s cash has been poured in on
the condition that excessive executive pay would be curbed.

Pay
plans for bankers have been disclosed in recent corporate statements.
Pressure on the US firms to review preparations for annual bonuses
increased yesterday when Germany’s Deutsche Bank said many of its
leading traders would join Josef Ackermann, its chief executive, in
waiving millions of euros in annual payouts.

The sums that
continue to be spent by Wall Street firms on payroll, payoffs and, most
controversially, bonuses appear to bear no relation to the losses
incurred by investors in the banks. Shares in Citigroup and Goldman
Sachs have declined by more than 45% since the start of the year.
Merrill Lynch and Morgan Stanley have fallen by more than 60%. JP MorganChase fell 6.4% and Lehman Brothers has collapsed.

At
one point last week the Morgan Stanley $10.7bn pay pot for the year to
date was greater than the entire stock market value of the business. In
effect, staff, on receiving their remuneration, could club together and
buy the bank.

In the first nine months of the year Citigroup,
which employs thousands of staff in the UK, accrued $25.9bn for
salaries and bonuses, an increase on the previous year of 4%. Earlier
this week the bank accepted a $25bn investment by the US government as
part of its bail-out plan.

At Goldman Sachs the figure was
$11.4bn, Morgan Stanley $10.73bn, JP Morgan $6.53bn and Merrill Lynch
$11.7bn. At Merrill, which was on the point of going bust last month
before being taken over by Bank of America, the total accrued in the
last quarter grew 76% to $3.49bn. At Morgan Stanley, the amount put
aside for staff compensation also grew in the last quarter to the end
of August by 3% to $3.7bn.

Days before it collapsed into
bankruptcy protection a month ago Lehman Brothers revealed $6.12bn of
staff pay plans in its corporate filings. These payouts, the bank
insisted, were justified despite net revenue collapsing from $14.9bn to
a net outgoing of $64m.

None of the banks the Guardian contacted
wished to comment on the record about their pay plans. But behind the
scenes, one source said: “For a normal person the salaries are very
high and the bonuses seem even higher. But in this world you get a top
bonus for top performance, a medium bonus for mediocre performance and
a much smaller bonus if you don’t do so well.”

Many critics of
investment banks have questioned why firms continue to siphon off
billions of dollars of bank earnings into bonus pools rather than using
the funds to shore up the capital position of the crisis-stricken
institutions. One source said: “That’s a fair question - and it may
well be that by the end of the year the banks start review the
situation.”

Much of the anger about investment banking bonuses
has focused on boardroom executives such as former Lehman boss Dick
Fuld, who was paid $485m in salary, bonuses and options between 2000
and 2007.

Last year Merrill Lynch’s chairman Stan O’Neal retired
after announcing losses of $8bn, taking a final pay deal worth $161m.
Citigroup boss Chuck Prince left last year with a $38m in bonuses,
shares and options after multibillion-dollar write-downs. In Britain,
Bob Diamond, Barclays president, is one of the few investment bankers
whose pay is public. Last year he received a salary of £250,000, but
his total pay, including bonuses, reached £36m.