Saturday, December 31, 2011

Fantasy Baseball Hot Stove: Ryan Kalish

By Tim Heaney
Edited by Nicholas Minnix

Your fantasy baseball draft isn't far off. KFFL.com's Fantasy Baseball Hot Stove surveys free agency, trades, salary arbitration and injuries that will affect your rotisserie or head-to-head baseball league. You're cleared for your MLB offseason program: The Arizona Fall League, Baseball Winter Meetings, Rule 5 draft and more will shape your fantasy baseball rankings.

Boston Red Sox OF Ryan Kalish likely to miss start of 2012

Boston probably knew this when they grabbed Ryan Sweeney as a throw-in in their recent trade for Andrew Bailey, which cost them outfielder Josh Reddick.

A healthy Kalish would've been the favorite for the right-field job, but he's recovering from November surgery that fixed a torn labrum in his left (throwing) shoulder; this came after a September procedure to repair a bulging disc in his neck, a consequence of putting off the labrum patch-up in a lost 2011. He could be out until May or June, per a speculated timetable.

Kalish flashed a handy contact bat and a power-speed combo during two months of 2010 MLB work, filling in for a then-injured Jacoby Ellsbury and Mike Cameron, who was traded away at the non-waiver deadline. If you can get away with stashing the soon-to-be 24-year-old in ALs for a reasonable price, he could be a late-season boon. No bother considering him for mixed drafts, but he's worth a pre-emptive tuck-away - especially in deep leagues - if his rehab goes smoothly, say, around April.

In this roster picture, Kalish's delay boosts the playing-time potential of lefty-hitting, BA-friendly Sweeney, who can play all three outfield spots. Boston could also try internal names like Darnell McDonald, Mike Aviles, pop prospect Juan Carlos Linares (depending on recovery from ankle surgery) and stolen-base product Che-Hsuan Lin - if they don't explore external pieces, which is not a smart wager.

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Source: http://www.kffl.com/a.php/129457/189/fantasy-baseball/Fantasy%20Baseball%20Hot%20Stove%3A%20Ryan%20Kalish?source=campaign-rss

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2011?s Executive Compensation Highlights (and ... - Yahoo! Finance

Follow Yahoo!'s The Daily Ticker on Facebook here!

While it may not have been the best year for investors, 2011 was a pretty good year for America's top executives, many of whom took home rich pay packages and perks. Each month, Michelle Leder of Footnoted.com joins the Daily Ticker to discuss the salacious details her crew picks out of the pile of Securities and Exchange Commission filings. We asked her to put together the top five executive compensation items from 2011.

With no further ado, we present the top five executive compensation outrages of 2011.

5. What the MF? Jon Corzine, former Goldman Sachs top dog, former Senator, former New Jersey Governor, was already a very rich man before he joined financial services firm MF Global as CEO. But he aimed to increase his fortune further by having MF Global put on insanely leveraged trades on European sovereign debt. The trades, of course, blew up in his face, plunged MF Global into bankruptcy, and have launched a slew of investigations. As Leder point outs, it's possible that Corzine's attention in the spring of 2011 was somewhat diverted. As a filing detailed, Corzine was spending time. . . . renegotiating his compensation package. Months before the company blew up, MF Global agreed to pay Corzine a $1.5 million retention bonus on March 31, 2014 (or whenever he left the job), provided he didn't quit without a good reason or get fired for cause. And, Footnoted.com noted, a broadly written escape clause would have allowed him to receive at least partial payment if he quite without 'good reason.' If only Corzine had paid as much attention to the billions of dollars MF was handling as he was to the paltry million or so he was haggling over.

4. You Can Go Home Again. As CEO of Hewlett-Packard, Leo Apotheker was spectacularly unsuccessful. The former CEO of German software giant SAP joined H-P in November 2010, and crashed out ten months later. After presiding over three quarters of disappointing results, controversial decisions, and a falling stock, Apotheker was sent back to Europe. But in the type of deal that is as pathetic as it is typical, Apotheker was richly rewarded for his failure with a ton of money. The $25 million package included $7.2 million in severance, a $2.4 million bonus, and shares awarded for performance. Oh, and because CEOs should never be expected to pay for their own travel, he was given cash to pay for relocation to France, Belgium, or somewhere else in Europe.

3. Leading on a Jet Plane. Bob Pittman, the head of Clear Channel's media business, knows a lot about music. He was a founder of MTV and the former head of AOL. So presumably he'll get the clever reference to the Peter, Paul, and Mary song. But Pittman seems to know ? or care ? as much about aviation as he does about content. When Pittman hired on, Clear Channel said it would provide him with a fancy Dassault-Breguet Mystere Falcon 900 for personal and business use. Then, the company disclosed that it would pay $3 million to lease a jet for Pittman's use ? from a company owned by. . . . Pittman. The name of the leasing company: Yet Again.

2. Chesapeake's Mapquest.In May 2009, Chesapeake Energy spent $12.1 million of shareholders' cash to purchase an antique map collection owned by Aubrey McClendon, the company's chairman and chief executive officer. The company said the map collection added to the natural beauty of the firm's corporate campus and fit in with its history of exploration of oil and gas. But the move was really aimed at bailing out the CEO. McClendon had gotten into trouble by putting up his shares in the company as collateral for other debt, and in 2008 faced significant margin calls. Shareholders sued, and as part of the settlement, announced in November, McClendon agreed to buy back the maps for $12.1 million, plus interest. (Note: the interest charged is only 2.28 percent.) The company also agreed that it wouldn't reimburse McClendon for the deal, and that it would pay $3.75 million to cover plaintiffs' legal fees.

1. Howdy, Nabors! Nabors Industries is a mid-sized energy exploration and production company. But when it comes to executive compensation, it's a titan. Long-serving CEO, Eugene Isenberg has long been a compensation champ. Use by company executives of private jets was covered by Mark Maremont in the Wall Street Journal in June and has led to an SEC investigation. On a Friday night in late October, Nabors disclosed that Isenberg, who had been CEO since 1987, was stepping down and would be replaced. The punch line Nabors announced it "intends to record a $100 million contingent liability, to be reflected in its fourth-quarter results and year-end financial statements, in light of provisions in Mr. Isenberg's employment agreement." Most employees are pleased if they can their long-time employer with an intact pension and a gold watch. Isenberg left with $100 million. That nice round sum, combined with the company's long history of excessive compensation and the weasel-like decision to push the release out on a Friday night lands Nabors in the top spot for 2011.

Join us next year -- and check out Footnoted.com daily -- for more disclosures.

Daniel Gross is economics editor at Yahoo! Finance

follow him on twitter @grossdm; email him at grossdaniel11@yahoo.com

Source: http://finance.yahoo.com/blogs/daily-ticker/2011-executive-compensation-highlights-lowlights-080951787.html

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The morning after: PlayStation Vita sales go cold during first full week in Japan

It's hard to set much store by early sales performance, particularly after the evergreen 3DS faced such a rocky road. Nevertheless, the Vita's latest stats do look disappointing for such a highly anticipated -- not to mention high-quality -- console: after shifting a remarkable 321,000 units during its first two days on sale in Japan, it could only muster 72,500 in the whole week between December 19th and Christmas Day. In comparison, the PS3 sold 76,000 units during the same period, while the 3DS rang up half a million. This doesn't necessarily reflect a lack of interest, however: there have been stock shortages, and it's also possible that buyers are waiting to make sure that all the launch bugs get cleaned up. As for us, our alarms remain firmly set for February 22nd.

The morning after: PlayStation Vita sales go cold during first full week in Japan originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 29 Dec 2011 11:32:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/29/the-morning-after-playstation-vita-sales-go-cold-during-first-f/

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Friday, December 30, 2011

bcuban: RT @DwainPrice: The Mavericks need more energy guys like center Sean Williams who will give up their lunch while making sure they put on ...

Loader The Mavericks need more energy guys like center Sean Williams who will give up their lunch while making sure they put on a good performance.

Source: http://twitter.com/bcuban/statuses/152130152388763649

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Microbial communities on skin affect humans' attractiveness to mosquitoes

Thursday, December 29, 2011

The microbes on your skin determine how attractive you are to mosquitoes, which may have important implications for malaria transmission and prevention, according to a study published Dec. 28 in the online journal PLoS ONE.

Without bacteria, human sweat is odorless to the human nose, so the microbial communities on the skin play a key role in producing each individual's specific body odor. The researchers, led by Niels Verhulst of Wageningen University in the Netherlands, conducted their experiments with the Anopheles gambiae sensu stricto mosquito, which plays an important role in malaria transmission. They found that individuals with a higher abundance but lower diversity of bacteria on their skin were more attractive to this particular mosquito. They speculate individuals with more diverse skin microbiota may host a selective group of bacteria that emits compounds to interfere with the normal attraction of mosquitoes to their human hosts, making these individuals less attractive, and therefore lower risk to contracting malaria. This finding may lead to the development of personalized methods for malaria prevention.

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Verhulst NO, Qiu YT, Beijleveld H, Maliepaard C, Knights D, et al. (2011) Composition of Human Skin Microbiota Affects Attractiveness to Malaria Mosquitoes. PLoS ONE 6(12): e28991. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0028991

Public Library of Science: http://www.plos.org

Thanks to Public Library of Science for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

This press release has been viewed 81 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/116342/Microbial_communities_on_skin_affect_humans__attractiveness_to_mosquitoes

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'Rare' brain disorder may be more common than thought

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

A global team of neuroscientists, led by researchers at Mayo Clinic in Florida, have found the gene responsible for a brain disorder that may be much more common than once believed. In the Dec. 25 online issue of Nature Genetics, the researchers say they identified 14 different mutations in the gene CSF1R that lead to development of hereditary diffuse leukoencephalopathy with spheroids (HDLS). This is a devastating disorder of the brain?s white matter that leads to death between ages 40 and 60. People who inherit the abnormal gene always develop HDLS. Until now, a definite diagnosis of HDLS required examination of brain tissue at biopsy or autopsy.

The finding is important because the researchers suspect that HDLS is more common than once thought and a genetic diagnosis will now be possible without need for a brain biopsy or autopsy. According to the study?s senior investigator, neurologist Zbigniew K. Wszolek, M.D., a significant number of people who tested positive for the abnormal gene in this study had been diagnosed with a wide range of other conditions. These individuals were related to a patient known to have HDLS, and so their genes were also examined.

?Because the symptoms of HDLS vary so widely ? everything from behavior and personality changes to seizures and movement problems ? these patients were misdiagnosed as having either schizophrenia, epilepsy, frontotemporal dementia, Parkinson?s disease, multiple sclerosis, stroke, or other disorders,? says Dr. Wszolek. ?Many of these patients were therefore treated with drugs that offered only toxic side effects.

?Given this finding, we may soon have a blood test that can help doctors diagnose HDLS, and I predict we will find it is much more common than anyone could have imagined,? he says.

Dr. Wszolek is internationally known for his long-term efforts to bring together researchers from around the world to help find cases of inherited brain disorders and discover their genetic roots.

Dr. Wszolek?s interest in HDLS began when a severely disabled young woman came to see him in 2003 and mentioned that other members of her family were affected. The diagnosis of HDLS was made by his Mayo Clinic colleague, Dennis W. Dickson, M.D., who reviewed the autopsy findings of the patient?s uncle, who had previously been misdiagnosed as multiple sclerosis, and subsequently, Dr. Wszolek?s patient and her father. All members of the family had HDLS.

Dr. Dickson had identified other cases of HDLS from Florida, New York, Oregon and Kansas in the Mayo Clinic Florida brain bank and knew of a large kindred in Virginia with similar pathology, based upon a presentation at the annual meeting of the American Association of Neuropathologists. With concerted efforts, Dr. Wszolek and collaborators at University of Virginia were able to obtain DNA samples from the Virginia kindred. Dr. Wszolek also sought other cases, particularly those that had been reported in the neuropathology literature, and he was able to obtain samples from Norway, the United Kingdom, Germany and Canada, and other sites in the U.S. He and his team of investigators and collaborators have since published studies describing the clinical, pathologic and imaging characteristics of the disorder, and they have held five international meetings on HDLS.

In this study, which included 38 researchers from 12 institutions in five countries, the study?s first author, Rosa Rademakers, Ph.D., led the effort to find the gene responsible for HDLS. Her laboratory studied DNA samples from 14 families in which at least one member was diagnosed with HDLS and compared these with samples from more than 2,000 disease-free participants. The gene was ultimately found using a combination of traditional genetic linkage studies and recently developed state-of-the art sequencing methods. Most family members studied ? who were found to have HDLS gene mutations ? were not diagnosed with the disease, but with something else, thus emphasizing the notion that HDLS is an underdiagnosed disorder.

The CSF1R protein is an important receptor in the brain that is primarily present in microglia, the immune cells of the brain. ?We identified a different CSF1R mutation in every HDLS family that we studied,? says Dr. Rademakers. ?All mutations are located in the kinase domain of CSF1R, which is critical for its activity, suggesting that these mutations may lead to deficient microglia activity. How this leads to white matter pathology in HDLS patients is not yet understood, but we now have an important lead to study.?

?With no other disease have we found so many affected families so quickly,? says Dr. Wszolek. ?That tells me this disease is not rare, but quite common.? He adds, ?It is fantastic that you can start an investigation with a single case and end up, with the help of many hands, in what we believe to be a world-class gene discovery.?

###

Mayo Clinic: http://www.mayoclinic.org/news

Thanks to Mayo Clinic for this article.

This press release was posted to serve as a topic for discussion. Please comment below. We try our best to only post press releases that are associated with peer reviewed scientific literature. Critical discussions of the research are appreciated. If you need help finding a link to the original article, please contact us on twitter or via e-mail.

This press release has been viewed 108 time(s).

Source: http://www.labspaces.net/116318/__Rare__brain_disorder_may_be_more_common_than_thought

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Washington Man, Suspect In Missoula Beating Death Surrenders

By The Associated Press

POSTED: 10:16 pm MST December 28, 2011UPDATED: 10:17 pm MST December 28, 2011A Washington state man sought on a nationwide warrant in a June beating death in Missoula, Mont., has turned himself in at the Pierce County Jail in Tacoma, Wash. The sheriff's office says 39-year-old David Sekou Hylton of Tacoma surrendered Tuesday night. He's been sought for investigation of deliberate homicide in the death of 41-year-old Angelo Lorenzo Fuentes of Spokane, Wash. A coroner's report said Fuentes died of blunt force trauma to the head. He was found outside the Elks Lodge in Missoula during a hip-hop show there.For more information on the incident surrounding Fuentes' death, click here.blog comments powered by

Source: http://www.nbcmontana.com/news/30092991/detail.html

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nightafternight: RT @RP_Newsletter: It's the domination of the country by Washington that is driving the militia & other heroic movements around the country.

Twitter / Ron Paul Newsletter: It's the domination of the ... Loader It's the domination of the country by Washington that is driving the militia & other heroic movements around the country.

Source: http://twitter.com/nightafternight/statuses/151787626259689475

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Why Windows Phone 7 is losing

Windows Phone 7
Photo: handy2day / Flickr

Charlie Kindel, a former Windows Phone GM, wrote a post explaining the reasons he believed were behind Windows Phone 7?s continued struggles in sales even though ? according to him ? it was a superior platform to Google?s mobile OS. He says it all comes down to control ? and that is what has limited WP7?s sales potential to date.

Kindel?s reasoning

Kindel explains that there are four primary sides of the mobile market ? the users, the OS providers, the device manufacturers and the mobile carriers. He explains that they all own and control different parts of the market, while in conflict in other parts. He explains that where Google gives the device manufacturer and the carrier control ? leading to more Android devices being made and carrier retail sales people punting Android phones ? Microsoft restricts this control, meaning manufacturers and carriers support it less. In turn users do not have the devices marketed to them by the carriers, hence Microsoft?s week sales position.

What this means

Charlie Kindel explains that this means that Windows Phone 7 is able to provide a superior end user experience, though it comes with a price. ?This is why, despite being a superior PRODUCT to Android, Windows Phone has not sold as well.? Spending marketing dollars on advertising Android devices is and easy decision for the carriers. Pushing RSPs to push Android is easy,? he writes.

In the long run, he believes this model ? putting users first ? could trump over Google?s ?do what you will approach?, which he says has resulted in the platform becoming extremely fragmented.

A comeback unlikely?

Tech writer turned venture capitalist MG Siegler says that, even if WP7 is marginally better than Android or iOS, it?s not enough, especially given how late to market it is. ?Two to three years in the hole, the only way Windows Phone can win the market now is to make a product that is leaps and bounds better than what?s out there. They need something that?s an iPhone-in-2007 type product. The product they have, while good, isn?t that,? Siegler writes.

The Windows Phone 7 sales problem has been on my mind for some time now. The mobile OS platform is, in my view, at least on par with Google?s Android, if not superior. What?s for certain is Android OS isn?t manifold better warranting the major sales gap between the two platforms. So what then is Microsoft to do to mitigate their current sales problem?

Kindel does a good job outlining how, in simple terms, the mobile devices market is structured. His argument for Windows Phone 7 sales issues is well articulated, but the proactive steps the WP7 team need to take to kick start sales outside of throwing money at the problem and waiting is not explained at all.

Source: http://www.mobile-computing-news.co.uk/industry-news/14971/why-windows-phone-7-is-losing.html

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Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Event Network selects Microsoft Dynamics NAV, LS Retail solutions

RBR Staff Writer Published 26 December 2011

Event Network, a US-based cultural attraction retail operator, has selected Microsoft Dynamics NAV and LS Retail as its enterprise resource planning (ERP) and retail operations software systems.

Radiant Techonolgies will support the retail operator through the process of implementing Microsoft Dynamics NAV and LS Retail for all national operations.

The latest technology solutions will help struggling Event Network in managing multiple disparate systems, including financial management, store replenishment planning, POS, and inventory management.

Event Network will also focus on its aggressive growth strategy, which includes providing guest experience and achieving the maximum retail potential for their partners' cultural attractions.

Source: http://retailtechnology.retail-business-review.com/news/event-network-selects-microsoft-dynamics-nav-ls-retail-solutions-261211

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Tuesday, December 27, 2011

East Bay roots sprout a Texas Longhorn by way of Hollywood, selfless service and combat

By Jeff Faraudo
Bay Area News Group

Nate Boyer has made a lifetime's worth of surprising choices in the decade since he left Valley Christian High in Dublin: aspiring actor, working with autistic children in Los Angeles and refugees in Darfur, joining the Green Berets.

But none, perhaps, is more stunning than this one.

When Cal plays Texas in the Holiday Bowl on Wednesday, Boyer will be on the sidelines for the Longhorns -- a 30-year-old walk-on defensive back who never had played football before making the team.

Boyer probably won't play, but his mere presence -- and his personal story -- have inspired his teammates all season.

"Everybody knows Mr. Boyer," said Joe Bergeron, a 19-year-old freshman running back.

"He's got unique life experiences," said defensive backs coach Duane Akina. "When he can convey what it's like to be deployed and we're in (training camp) two-a-days, it shows there's no reason for us to be feeling sorry for ourselves."

Boyer, who grew up in Pleasanton picked Texas after he left the Green Berets. He went there largely because his GI Bill benefits covered his school costs.

Upon arriving in Austin, Boyer decided to try out for the football team even though, at 5-foot-11 and 190 pounds, "I was not a physical specimen."

Boyer never told the Texas coaching staff that he hadn't played football before. But he didn't fool Akina, the Longhorns' assistant head coach in addition to coaching the defensive backs. Akina

spotted Boyer as a newbie "the first time I saw him running around" he said, chuckling.

It didn't matter. Boyer outworked other candidates at a tryout last year, and made the cut.

"They threw me into the fire with a bunch of guys," Boyer said. "It's like trying out for the Special Forces. So much of it is mental toughness."

Although Boyer mostly stands on the sidelines during games -- his only appearance was on special teams -- Texas coach Mack Brown calls the reserve safety a valued member of the squad.

"He's a great young man," Brown said. "His character and determination are things we can all look up to. As he told (our players), you can't have a bad day when you're in the military."

Boyer didn't intend to become a role model. After graduating from Valley Christian, he flirted briefly with junior college, then followed his acting aspirations to Hollywood.

To make ends meet, he took a baby-sitting job that involved caring for an autistic child, and that led to doing therapy with autistic children in L.A.

"He's always had this thing about the injustice of the world, the unfairness," said his mother, Laura McDowell-Boyer.

After reading a magazine article about genocide in the Darfur region of Sudan, Boyer told his parents in 2004 he wanted to fly to Africa to work in the refugee camps. They gulped and gave him their blessing.

"I'd never been to a place like that," said Boyer, who worked in camps on the Chad side of the border. "It was mostly children and women. All their husbands were off fighting or had been killed."

The experience in Africa, coupled with the memory of the 9/11 attacks on New York, convinced Boyer to enlist in the Army. This was a tougher endeavor for his parents to embrace. Boyer's father, Steve, is a racehorse veterinarian and his mom is an environmental engineer. Both have Ph.D.s and expected their son would attend college.

Instead, he told them he planned to try out for the Special Forces unit after basic training.

Africa prepared Boyer for some of what greeted him in Iraq, but not all. In his first week, a bomb killed a fellow soldier.

"You're thinking, 'OK, this is real,'" he said.

He spent part of his time in Iraq training local military forces in the An Najaf province, earning him the Bronze Star.

By 2009, Boyer's active enlistment was up and he transitioned to the National Guard reserves. He also began looking at colleges.

Boyer is studying kinesiology at Texas and hopes to pursue an MBA. But spending time with his teammates is the best part of his day, he said.

Blake Gideon, a four-year starter for the Longhorns and Boyer's roommate, has worked with him from the start, helping him with football techniques that he knew nothing about.

"His military experience has shown in his willingness to learn and get better every day," Gideon said. "It didn't matter that he didn't play before. He's making up for that."

Boyer has three more years of football eligibility and is working to become a long-snapper for field goals and punts; it's another way to get on the field.

While an appearance in the Holiday Bowl is a long shot, Boyer had a day to remember Nov. 5 during a game against Texas Tech.

With is parents in the stands and the Longhorns were well on their way to a 55-20 victory, Boyer was sent in to help on kickoff coverage -- his first play in a college-football game.

Earlier in the game, Boyer was watching from the sidelines as Bergeron scored one of his three touchdowns.

"Everybody's cheering for him," Boyer recalled, "and he came right up to me, all pumped up. He looked me right in the eye and said, 'That one's for you.'"

Said Bergeron: "It was basically saying, 'Thank you,' and that I'm playing for him."

Source: http://c.moreover.com/click/here.pl?r5665654126

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A Christian on Hitchens' Atheism and Lowe's Muslim Problem (Time.com)

David Caton owes me one. I interviewed the head of the Florida Family Association last week during his bigoted but successful crusade to get companies like Lowe's to pull ads from All-American Muslim, the Learning Channel reality show about a community of Muslim Americans. Before Caton hung up on me -- he gets angry when you question his complaint that the show presents Muslims in too positive a light and not as crazed radicals plotting to impose Islamic shari'a law from Maine to Monterey -- I corrected his pronunciation of imam, a Muslim cleric, from Eye-mam to the proper Ee-mawm. Later that day, I heard him say it properly on CNN.

But that's all he got right. I concern myself with Caton -- who also likes to hire small planes to haul banners over Orlando warning people that homosexuals visit Disney World -- only for two reasons. One is that a major corporation like Lowe's actually caved to the Evangelical's ugly Islamophobia. The other is that he got his 15 minutes of fame at about the same time that Christopher Hitchens died, on Dec. 15. Hitchens was best known as one of the "angry atheists" for his 2007 best seller God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything, and narrow-minded fundamentalists like Caton made his work a lot easier. So of course did extremist Muslims, as well as extremist Roman Catholics, Jews, Hindus and all the fanatics who ruin religion the way drunks ruin driving. Which is why Hitchens' attacks on faith, while brilliantly written, could also feel gratuitous. (See "Christopher Hitchens, RIP.")

So it's fitting, at least for the silent majority of Christians who aren't hatemongering zealots but who derive hope and humane inspiration from our beliefs, that Caton and Hitchens should both be in the news during the Christmas season. The holiday's anticommercialization critics are right to argue that Christians spend too much time on outdoor lights at the expense of the inner light kindled by the story of God's incarnation in a manger. I'm as guilty as anyone in that regard. But Caton and Hitchens at least give us Christians a convenient place to start. They prod us on the one hand to assess what isn't Christian -- like demonizing gays and Muslims -- and on the other hand to reaffirm why Christianity and religion itself are a positive and not always poisonous influence in the world.

The crux of the Florida Family Association's campaign is Caton's preposterous claim, as he told me, that "every Eye-mam in this country wants to put the U.S. under shari'a law." Every imam I know here in Miami rejects the idea. "Muslims are only 6 million out of 300 million in this country," one reminds me. "We rely on U.S. law to protect our rights as a minority." They're also a minority who wish Christians well at Christmas: the Koran reverently mentions Jesus and the Virgin Mary almost 60 times. (See "Do Shari'a Courts Have a Role in British Life?")

One way, then, that Christians can practice Jesus' teachings of love, tolerance and charity this yuletide is by resolving to reassure folks like Muslims that we're not like the Florida Family Association. That we're committed to the code of Christmas -- "Peace on earth to people of goodwill" -- trumpeted by the same angels we place atop the trees in our living rooms.

That's also one of the best ways to answer Hitchens as well as other angry atheists like Richard Dawkins and quite a few members of my own hypersecular profession. It's a fairly widely accepted maxim that atheist fundamentalists, as I call them, can be just as intolerant as religious fundamentalists. And the problem they share is that both take religion way too literally. Just as Christian fundamentalists insist on a literal reading of the Bible, angry atheists tend to insist that belief in God qualifies you as a raving creationist. (See "Why Christopher Hitchens Is Wrong About Billy Graham.")

Here's what they refuse to get: Yes, Christians believe that Jesus' nativity was a virgin birth and that he rose from the dead on Easter. But if you were to show most Christians incontrovertible scientific proof that those miracles didn't occur, they would shrug -- because their faith means more to them than that. Because in the end, what they have faith in is the redemptive power of the story. In Evelyn Waugh's novel Brideshead Revisited, an agnostic says to his Catholic friend, "You can't seriously believe it all ... I mean about Christmas and the star and the three kings and the ox and the ass."

"Oh yes, I believe that. It's a lovely idea."

"But you can't believe things simply because they're a lovely idea."

"But I do. That's how I believe."

I'm willing to bet it's how most believers believe. Before Hitchens died at 62 from esophageal cancer, he made a point of declaring he was certain no heaven awaited him. But that swipe at the faithful always misses the point. Most of us don't believe in God because we think it's a ticket to heaven. Rather, our belief in God -- our belief in the living ideal of ourselves, which is something even atheists ponder -- instills in us a faith that in the end, light always defeats darkness (which is how people get through the wars and natural disasters I cover). That does make us open to the possibility of the hereafter -- but more important, it gives us purposeful inspiration to make the here and now better.

With all due respect to the memory of Christopher Hitchens, making the here and now better would be difficult without religion. But it's also hard enough without the un-Christian antics of people like David Caton. As Christmas ought to remind us.

See TIME's 2011 Person of the Year.

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Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/religion/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/time/20111225/us_time/08599210292700

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Monday, December 26, 2011

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Source: http://androidcommunity.com/forums/f24/free-new-york-giants-vs-new-york-jets-live-stream-nfl-week-16-online-video-24-a-83070-new/

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Paul Loeb: If You Care About Keystone and Climate Change, Occupy Exxon

It seemed like the afterthought in the payroll tax cut extension fight, a small consolation prize to the Republicans on what should have been the easiest of bi-partisan votes. But the two-month clock is now ticking on whether Obama will approve the Keystone XL pipeline from Canada's environmentally disastrous tar sands. If we want him to make the right decision and deny the permit, maybe it's time to Occupy Exxon, with creative protests at local Exxon/Mobil stations. Of course we need to keep pressuring Obama. The bill's deadline precludes anything close to the kind of comprehensive environmental review that he called for after rallies and civil disobedience at the White House led him to delay approval for a year. But why not also go after the oil companies whose influence led the Republicans to hold the rest of the unemployment and payroll tax bill hostage to the fast-track requirement. Exxon/Mobil has long been the dirtiest of the dirty among these companies. This makes them a logical target.

In a week heralding news of melting Arctic methane beds, and a year of record global temperatures and billion-dollar weather-related disasters, demanding Keystone's approval is a stunning exercise in denial. But that's the deal that passed. So our challenge is not only to get Obama to reject the pipeline. We also want to make this raw power grab backfire on those who insisted on it by turning at least part of the national conversation back onto oil company greed. The more we do this, the more political room we create for Obama both to block the pipeline and to act more forcefully on climate change in general. So just as Occupy Wall Street has got us talking about predatory banks, Occupying Exxon would get Americans thinking about destructive fossil fuel interests--whether they're fighting for the pipeline, convincing the Republicans to block proposed cut-backs to their massive tax subsidies, or paying nothing in federal income taxes, as Exxon did as recently as 2009. Targeting Exxon links an issue most Americans may have barely heard of with a company known as an embodiment of greed. It also links Exxon's lobbying for the pipeline with their long-time backing of climate change denial. Using strategies, scientists, and PR firms borrowed from the tobacco industry, Exxon contributed $16 million between 1998 and 2005 to groups denying human-caused climate change and spent over $55 million to lobbying, at a time when even BP and Shell were beginning to acknowledge the reality. Exxon's claimed they've now cut this funding, but continue to back institutes and support politicians who promote denial.

The pipeline matters, because building it invites the acceleration of tar sands extraction. And the process leaves the resulting fuel contributing as much as three times the greenhouse emissions per energy unit as conventional oil. Given the massive size of these deposits, their full exploitation, say NASA's leading climate scientist, James Hansen, would create "game over for the planet." For this reason, twenty of Hansen's most respected climate scientist peers sent a letter to Obama opposing the pipeline, as did Desmond Tutu, eight other Nobel Peace Prize winners, and every major American environmental group, including the most conservative ones.

Given Obama's two month decision window, we need to keep pressure on the White House, from calling and writing, to public rallies, perhaps even at Obama campaign offices. The chances of Obama's again rising to the occasion are far greater if there's continued public outcry about the pipeline. But one powerful way to create this is to tie the proposal and the politicians who've backed it to the greed-driven agenda of the oil companies. I'd suggest we invite the Occupy Movement, environmental groups, and anyone appalled at our pay-to-play politics to show up at local Exxon/Mobil stations in whatever nonviolent and creative ways they can, whether through picketing, vigils, guerrilla theater, or civil disobedience. Other oil companies are also involved in the tar sands, like BP, Chevron, Shell and Conoco. Brand-name gas stations sometimes sell fuel from ostensible competitors. But Exxon remains the most powerful symbol, because of all they've done and are continuing to do in promoting blanket denial.

As always, the Republicans claim this is a jobs issue. Yet a credible Cornell study points out that the pipeline could actually cost American jobs, and even if the pipeline backers are right, we're talking only 5,000-6,000 temporary positions for two years. That doesn't count the climate change risks or the potential for the pipeline to break and pollute the massive Ogallala aquifer that sustains America's agricultural heartland. The latter possibility impelled Nebraska's Republican governor to speak out against the pipeline, in the wake of major citizen outcry and a 42,000-gallon leak this past July that spilled into the Yellowstone River from Exxon's Silvertip Pipeline. So any economic benefit would go largely to the project's promoters.

For most Americans, I suspect Keystone feels like an obscure minor issue worth the tangible gain of extending unemployment benefits and the payroll tax cut. I doubt they're highly invested on either side. But we know that the groups that lobbied for the Pipeline will go all out this round, so staying silent or confining ourselves to virtual lobbying is a bad option. But if we make Exxon and the oil companies the sleazy face of the fight, we can change the political context. Occupy Exxon protests would invite people to undertake flexible and creative approaches to the issue in their own backyards. They'd highlight the oil companies as the heart of the issue, so if Obama allows the pipeline he'll be seen as supporting them, and if he blocks it he can justly frame it as challenging corporate greed. Exxon's long undermined the habitability of the planet, from their day-to-day operations to their long-term political role. Targeting them just might make their latest destructive power grab finally backfire.


Paul Loeb is author of Soul of a Citizen, with 130,000 copies in print including a newly updated second edition now being used in hundreds of schools to promote civic engagement. He's also the author of The Impossible Will Take a Little While: A Citizen's Guide to Hope in a Time of Fear, named the #3 political book of 2004 by the History Channel and the American Book Association. See www.paulloeb.org To receive Paul's articles directly www.paulloeb.org/subscribe.html You can sign up here for his Huffington Post pieces.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/paul-loeb/if-you-care-about-keyston_b_1170119.html

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Rick Perry Won't Be On Virginia GOP Primary Ballot After Failing To Gather 10,000 Signatures

RICHMOND, Va. -- Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and Texas Rep. Ron Paul will be on Virginia's March 6 Republican presidential primary ballot, but Texas Gov. Rick Perry has failed to qualify.

The Republican Party of Virginia said Friday that Perry's campaign fell short of the 10,000 signatures of registered voters required for a candidate's name to be on the primary ballot.

The state party said Romney and Paul obtained the needed signatures. Party officials were still verifying the signatures of former House Speaker Newt Gingrich late Friday.

State GOP spokesman Garren Shipley says the party is validating petitions the candidates submitted by the Thursday 5 p.m. deadline to the State Board of Elections. The process of validating the signatures began Friday morning.

The 10,000 registered voters must also include 400 signatures from each of Virginia's 11 congressional districts.

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/12/23/rick-perry-wont-be-on-virginia-ballot_n_1168431.html

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Sunday, December 25, 2011

Mayor: House fire kills 5 in Stamford, Connecticut

STAMFORD, Conn. (AP) - Fire tore through a house in a tony neighborhood along the Connecticut shoreline early Sunday, killing five people, making it among the worst Christmases in the city's history, the mayor said.

Officials said the fire, which was reported shortly before 5 a.m., killed two adults and three children. Two others escaped. Their names have not been released.

"It is a terrible, terrible day for the city of Stamford," Stamford Mayor Michael Pavia told reporters at a news briefing at the scene of the fire. "There probably has not been a worse Christmas day in the city of Stamford."

Acting Fire Chief Antonio Conte said attempts by firefighters to rescue the house's occupants were pushed back by intense flames and heat.

He said fire officials do not yet know the cause of the blaze and will not likely get clues for a few days until fire marshals can enter the house "and figure out what happened."

Conte said he did not know the conditions of the two survivors.

"We had our hands full from the moment we arrived on the scene," he said.

A neighbor, Sam Cingari Jr., said he was awakened by the sound of screaming and that the house was entirely engulfed by flames.

"We heard this screaming at 5 in the morning," he said. "The whole house was ablaze and I mean ablaze."

Cingari says he does not know his neighbors, who he said bought the house last year and were renovating it. Power also was out in the neighborhood, he said.

Charles Mangano, who lives near the scene, told The Advocate of Stamford he saw a barefoot man wearing boxers and a woman being led out of the house.

The woman said, "`My whole life is in there,"' he said. "They were both obviously in a state of shock."

The 3,349-square foot, five-bedroom home sold for $1.7 million in December 2010, according to the Stamford assessment office's website. It's located in Shippan Point, a neighborhood that juts into Long Island Sound.

Tony Low-Beer, another neighbor, said he was awakened by a neighbor after 4 a.m. who told him about a "raging fire" next door.

"Cinders were flying all over the place," he told The Associated Press.

He said he secured his three dogs and put his iguana in a carrying case because he was concerned he might have to evacuate. As of Sunday afternoon, he was still at his home.

Stamford, a city of 117,000 residents, is about 25 miles northeast of New York City.

Source: http://www.kval.com/news/national/Mayor-House-fire-kills-5-in-Stamford-Connecticut-136203383.html

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VeloBusDriver: Microsoft was a ghost town this AM. I'm driving the last 242 through campus to Northgate - any bets on how many passengers I pick up?

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Microsoft was a ghost town this AM. I'm driving the last 242 through campus to Northgate - any bets on how many passengers I pick up? VeloBusDriver

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

Suu Kyi's party to run in Myanmar elections

Opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi formally registered her party Friday for any upcoming elections, returning the Nobel laureate to the political arena.

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Suu Kyi decided last month to formally rejoin politics in the military-dominated country after recent reforms by the nominally civilian administration that took power this year. Suu Kyi, National League for Democracy leader Tin Oo and other party members registered the party at the Union Election Commission in the capital, Naypyitaw.

The party boycotted last year's general elections because of restrictive rules that among other things prevented Suu Kyi from being a candidate. The government has since lifted many of those restrictions.

The government had disqualified the NLD for boycotting the election.

NLD spokesman Nyan Win said the party will contest all vacant seats in an upcoming by-election and Suu Kyi will soon announce in which constituency she will run.

No date has been set for that election, but last week Election Commission Chairman Tin Aye said the government will announce it three months before the by-election, giving candidates time to campaign.

Allowing Suu Kyi's party back into the political fold will likely give the government greater legitimacy at home and abroad. It has already won cautious praise from international observers and critics including the United States, for introducing reforms.

During her visit to Myanmar early this month U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said she wants to ensure that future elections are "free, fair and credible in the eyes of the people."

The polls in November 2010 were Myanmar's first since the NLD overwhelmingly won a general election in 1990. The military junta at that time refused to honor the results.

The regime kept Suu Kyi under house arrest during different periods for a total of 15 years. She was released just after last year's elections and is now free to move about and meet people.

The government continues to hold hundreds of other political prisoners and Suu Kyi has said the NLD will continue to work for their release.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45773721/ns/world_news-asia_pacific/

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Editor ousted over racial slur against Rihanna

AMSTERDAM (AP) ? The editor of a Dutch fashion magazine has been fired after the publication used a racial slur to refer to Barbados-born Rihanna, setting off a social media furor and prompting an outraged response from the singer.

Eva Hoeke, editor of "Jackie," and the magazine's publisher said in a joint statement on Facebook that the misuse of a racial slur ? "although without malicious intentions" ? was cause for Hoeke's departure after eight years on the job.

The slur was used in an article about how to dress your daughter like a pop star. Responding to criticism that flashed across the ocean, Hoeke said at first that her use of the term was meant as a joke.

She then put out a Twitter item with a more explicit apology, saying she learned, "1. Don't publish bad jokes in the magazine 2. Don't pretend bad jokes to be funny. Sorry guys. My bad."

On Tuesday, Rihanna responded herself via Twitter: "Your magazine is a poor representation of the evolution of human rights! I find you disrespectful, and rather desperate!!"

Rather than a positive article useful to Dutch girls, Rihanna said Jackie chose to print an item "degrading to an entire race. That's your contribution to this world!" She also ended her tweet with an indelicate phrase.

Hoeke said she was unaware the word she used was so loaded because "you hear it all the time on radio and TV."

By Wednesday, the Facebook apology had attracted hundreds of comments, many condemning Hoeke but some saying the reaction was overblown.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2011-12-21-EU-Netherlands-Rihanna/id-078174ad8e544edb8fe9ecddb716ec23

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Gov. Scott Wants Insurance Issues Fixed ? CBS Miami

TALLAHASSEE (CBSMiami/AP) ? As 2011 draws to a close, Gov. Rick Scott wants lawmakers to address a pair of issues that are costing Floridians hundreds of millions of dollars each year.

The issue facing the largest number of Floridians is the rising cost of personal injury protection or PIP coverage that licensed drivers must buy. In some neighborhoods in the Tampa Bay area and South Florida the coverage can add several hundred dollars annually to auto insurance premiums, a cost that?s almost entirely the result of rampant fraud.

Scott, a conservative Republican, also expects lawmakers during their annual session that begins Jan. 10 to somehow reverse the runaway growth of the state-backed Citizens Property Insurance Corp., which was created a decade ago as the insurer of last resort for home and business owners. However, Citizens has mushroomed into the biggest property insurer in Florida with 1.5 million policyholders and doesn?t collect enough in premiums to guarantee that is could pay off if a catastrophic storm hit the state.

While Scott?s predecessors, as well as legislators, have tried to resolve these issues in recent years, the problems remain.

?We were just in an echo chamber here making ourselves feel good by passing bills,? said Sen. Don Gaetz, a Niceville Republican slated to become that body?s next president.

And the prospect of making gains on either insurance measure, much less both, is uncertain again as lawmakers concentrate on approving new political boundaries during the session before cranking up their re-election campaigns.

?I hope we can make progress on both, but it?s too soon to tell,? House Speaker Dean Cannon said in a pre-session interview. He points out that fixing the Citizens problem would likely result in higher premiums, at least in the short term, something legislators don?t want to do as the state suffers from a down economy and 10 percent unemployment rate.

Both PIP and Citizens began with the best intentions ? to make sure anyone injured in an auto accident would quickly get money to treat their injuries and to make sure that property owners in areas especially susceptible to hurricanes could get coverage. But both have turned into annual headaches for the Legislature, where competing interests have made resolution difficult.

Under PIP, which was adopted in 1972, a driver?s own insurance company pays up to $10,000 to cover medical bills and lost wages after an accident, no matter who is at fault. But it has been fraught with fraud, with schemers turning Florida into the No. 1 state for staged accidents.

The Insurance Information Institute predicts that fraud could approach $1 billion in the state this year ? costs that are passed on to customers. Lawmakers have even heard testimony that organized crime is involved in some areas of the state in the high-stakes swindles. Florida is one of only a dozen states that require PIP insurance.

?These excessive costs are levied on those who can afford them the least,? said state Rep. Jim Boyd, a Bradenton Republican and insurance agent who sits on the House Banking and Insurance subcommittee. ?It?s costing our taxpayers and our citizens and our friends and neighbors a lot of money every year.?

U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson tried to clamp down on PIP fraud as long ago as 15 years ago during the time he served as Florida treasurer and insurance commissioner.

?It?s been so hard to fix the problem in Florida because of the influence of special interests,? Nelson told The Associated Press. ?You?ve always had trial lawyers versus the insurance companies, plus health-care providers trying to get at least some of their costs covered in car injuries.?

State Sen. Ellyn Bogdanoff, R-Fort Lauderdale, apologized at a legislative committee meeting earlier this year for not solving the problem in 2007 when a bill she shepherded while in the House inadvertently led to increased fraudulent activity as questionable claims involving staged accidents increased 58 percent between 2008 and 2009. The Insurance Research Group also found that one-third of all no-fault claims closed in 2007 involved overbilling or excessive use of medical services.

?We messed up,? Bogdanoff said. ?We need to fix it.?

She believes that keeping PIP in its existing form amounts to a legislative endorsement of fraud and some lawmakers would just like to kill it ? Rep. Mike Horner, R-Kissimmee, filed a bill to repeal the law effective July 1, 2014. Many people already have health and disability insurance that would cover their losses, although the first $10,000 would not be covered in a basic health policy in Florida since PIP would pay it.

Sen. Joe Negron, R-Stuart, agrees with his colleague on many concerns about PIP, but believes changes are needed to ensure that insurance companies pay legitimate claims in a timely manner.

?Let?s not go to the other extreme and act like every person involved in an auto accident is a potential crook,? Negron said.

Lawmakers thought they might have had a solution in 2006, but former Gov. Jeb Bush vetoed it. Bush believed any changes should include limits on the number of doctor visits permitted and on charges by doctors, hospitals and lawyers.

Lawmakers did allow for more than 11.3 million licensed drivers in Florida to have an option on buying PIP in the 2007 session, but after just three months it was required again.

The Citizens property insurance problem is just as complex. The state-backed insurer is supposed to be getting smaller, but instead has been adding customers at the rate of 30,000 a month.

Scott wants Citizens shrunk because of fears the insurer would suffer massive losses if a big hurricane hits. Unlike private companies, Citizens has the power to place a surcharge on nearly every insurance bill in the state if it can?t cover such losses. Although industry estimates vary somewhat, Citizens could pay roughly $20 billion, including $6.5 billion from the Florida Hurricane Catastrophe fund, before assessing policyholders. That would be a pittance if a Category 4 or 5 hurricane hit a major metropolitan area.

The company was created by the Legislature in 2002 to provide coverage for businesses and homeowners in high-risk areas and those who cannot afford coverage in the private market. It was largely an offshoot of an underwriting association formed by the state in the aftermath of Hurricane Andrew, a Category 5 storm that devastated Homestead and other towns south of Miami in August 1992. It caused more than $20 billion in damage in the state.

The state hasn?t been hit with a hurricane since getting hit with eight in 2004 and 2005 ? a six-year run that?s unprecedented since records began more than a century ago ? but the Legislature hasn?t been able to use the lull to fix the system.

?They?ve begun to right the ship, but we may be running out of time,? said Sam Miller, vice president of the Florida Insurance Council. ?We?ve still got crises with Citizens growing by a thousand policies a day and the CAT fund still can?t totally pay off all of its claims. We?ve got to hurry and take the steps that would make a critical difference.?

(TM and ? Copyright 2011 CBS Radio Inc. and its relevant subsidiaries. CBS RADIO and EYE Logo TM and Copyright 2010 CBS Broadcasting Inc. Used under license. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

Source: http://miami.cbslocal.com/2011/12/20/gov-scott-wants-insurance-issues-fixed/

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

Paul emerges as outsider alternative in GOP race

Republican presidential candidate Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, laughs as he sits down with Elizabeth Rose Chamberlain, 3, of Epping, N.H., while campaigning at the Early Bird Cafe in Plaistow, N.H., Tuesday Dec. 20, 2011. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Republican presidential candidate Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, laughs as he sits down with Elizabeth Rose Chamberlain, 3, of Epping, N.H., while campaigning at the Early Bird Cafe in Plaistow, N.H., Tuesday Dec. 20, 2011. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Republican presidential candidate Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, signs an autograph on a baseball while campaigning in Exeter, N.H., Tuesday Dec. 20, 2011. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Republican presidential candidate Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, stops to talk with lunchtime patrons while campaigning in Plaistow, N.H., Tuesday Dec. 20, 2011. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Republican presidential candidate Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, poses for a photograph while campaigning at Sandy's Variety Store in Manchester, N.H., Tuesday Dec. 20, 2011. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Republican presidential candidate Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, shakes hands while campaigning at Sandy's Variety Store in Manchester, N.H., Tuesday Dec. 20, 2011. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

(AP) ? Suddenly, Ron Paul is in contention to win the Iowa caucuses and do well in the New Hampshire primary two weeks before the first votes are cast, reflecting the fluidity of the Republican presidential race as well as the inability of the party's social conservative, tea party and establishment wings to coalesce behind a favored candidate.

Yet, while the libertarian-leaning Texas congressman is earning support for his tight-fisted fiscal positions, he's so out of step with the GOP mainstream on foreign policy and some domestic issues that even his most loyal aides doubt he can use his momentum to win the Republican nomination.

"I'm very much in the Republican tradition," Paul insisted Tuesday as he campaigned in New Hampshire before heading back to Iowa on Wednesday. "Very much in the American tradition."

True or not, this much is certain: Paul is having a major impact on the campaign. His outsider persona and refusal to acquiesce to the ways of Washington ? he's nicknamed "Dr. No" on Capitol Hill for voting against much legislation ? has earned him a loyal following that he's leveraged to build a strong organization in Iowa and elsewhere. The respect that has long eluded him in the party may finally be coming to him.

Still, it's questionable how far he can go.

"He can get 15 to 20 percent in a multi-candidate field but, just like in 2008, when the field gets down to three candidates, voters will focus more clearly and his support will wane," predicted Michael Dennehy, an unaligned GOP operative in New Hampshire. "And, fair or not, the majority of voters will not feel comfortable with their nominee being a 76-year-old man who generally comes across as a character in Grumpy Old Men."

Paul's rise comes as the final push to the Jan. 3 Iowa caucuses begins and Newt Gingrich becomes the latest candidate to slide in a race where Republicans have struggled to settle on an alternative to former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney. The ferment underscores the degree to which Republicans remain sharply divided over whether to select with a nominee seen as more capable of beating President Barack Obama or one seen more as the Democrat's ideological opposite.

In another sign of the fissures in the GOP, board members of a prominent Iowa Christian organization, the Family Leader, on Tuesday chose not to endorse anyone in the presidential race after failing to rally behind any one of the several strict social conservatives campaigning in Iowa.

Instead, the group's president, Bob Vander Plaats, and another prominent social conservative, Chuck Hurley, president of the Iowa Family Policy Center, threw their personal support behind former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum, who is barely registering in polls.

"We've always said, the fear would be a fragmented vote, because we have a lot of good candidates," Vander Plaats said.

Separately, the national American Family Association on Tuesday endorsed the thrice-married Gingrich, the former House speaker. Gingrich helped the group raise money last year to campaign in Iowa against the retention of state Supreme Court judges who backed a 2009 ruling to allow gay marriage.

Tea party activists, many reluctant to support Romney, also have not rallied behind an alternative. The divide has prompted some prominent tea party groups to shift from the White House campaign and focus on influencing Capitol Hill.

With prominent social conservatives and the tea party divided chiefly among Santorum, Gingrich, Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann and Texas Gov. Rick Perry, Paul has emerged as a leading contender in some Iowa polls, along with Romney and Gingrich. The divisions among cultural conservatives have allowed Paul to cobble together a coalition, made up of strict fiscal conservatives and independent-minded Republicans, that has grown since the fall.

All that is good probably news for Romney, who all year long has been considered the Republican most likely to win.

Still, Paul's rise also reflects Romney's inability to seal the nomination early by becoming the chosen one of the establishment. The former Massachusetts governor launched a bus tour in New Hampshire on Tuesday and appeared ever more assured that his plan to win that key early state was working.

Romney was emphasizing his distinctions with Obama, asserting he would create an "opportunity society" while the Democrat would bring a welfare-dependent "entitlement society" if given a second term.

Elsewhere in New Hampshire, Paul expressed confidence about his prospects for strong finishes in Iowa and New Hampshire: "I'm doing very well."

He also answered rivals who have started assailing him at every turn, a signal that they recognize he's become a threat. He gave them an opening last week when he said he would not consider a military strike against Iran if there was proof the country had a nuclear military capability.

That sparked a heated exchange with Bachmann, who has called Paul's position "dangerous" and is trying to revive her campaign by attracting some of the tea party activists drawn to Paul.

Gingrich also jabbed at Paul's position.

He said Monday: "I cannot understand a mindset of somebody who says, 'Oh, they wouldn't do that with a nuclear weapon.' It strikes me that if they are willing to blow up a few of us, they would be thrilled to blow up a lot of us. And that's where I disagree."

A day later, Paul argued anew that his position was within the Republican mainstream "and very much on the side of emphasizing a strong national defense instead of intending that we can be the policeman of the world."

But his opposition to military intervention abroad stands in sharp contrast to GOP orthodoxy. Paul favors bringing all or almost all troops home from foreign bases, not just from conflict zones.

Influential Republicans here and elsewhere, including Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad, have predicted Paul's position will keep a healthy share of GOP activists, who dominate the caucuses, from supporting him.

Among the skeptics is Rosie Ford, a 77-year-old retiree waiting to see Gingrich at a Mount Pleasant, Iowa, grocery store on Tuesday.

"I like Ron Paul," she said. "His ideas are very bold and I think we need bold right now. But his foreign policy kind of scares me. He's a little too bold on that."

While Paul's supporters are devout, he does not appear to be even a consideration for many Iowa caucusgoers.

A New York Times/CBS News poll taken in early December found him to be the second choice of only 3 percent of likely caucus-goers, a key consideration in the fluid race. The Des Moines Register's poll, taken about the same time, found him to be the second choice of 7 percent.

But a good showing in Iowa could propel Paul strongly into New Hampshire, where, unlike the caucuses, independent voters can participate.

"The challenge is greater than it is for Romney," said Drew Ivers, Paul's Iowa campaign director. "So we start at the beginning and try to get the dominos to tip. Though, he acknowledged: "After that, the numbers become a challenge."

___(equals)

Associated Press writer Shannon McCaffrey contributed to this report from Mount Pleasant, Iowa.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/89ae8247abe8493fae24405546e9a1aa/Article_2011-12-20-The%20Ron%20Paul%20Factor/id-1e3ee360159c459dae75ee49dc5cdd1b

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