Monday, August 12, 2013

National educators strengthen private sector English education ...

The English education sector in Sri Lanka is being enriched by a platform set up by a group of Sri Lankans with strong professional and academic credentials. The team has gotten together to empower children, youth and adults with communication skills in English, through programs carrying globally recognised benchmarks.
This is a timely initiative mooted by national university academics, senior teachers and corporate trainers who have? set up the Rainbow Institute of Communication and English (www.rainbow.lk), affiliated to City and Guilds International, UK.
The institute is headed by Manique Mendis, a leading communication specialist, with more than 25 years of senior management experience in local and international organisations, and Sandra Fernando, a literary personality with experience in teaching in international schools in Sri Lanka and overseas, providing leadership for quality assurance benchmarking and academic development. The well known academic Dr. Mahim Mendis, a British Chevening Scholar with postgraduate research degrees from UK, USA and Singapore is the chief educational adviser of the institute.
?The Rainbow Institute of Communication and English is filling a vacuum for high quality teaching at an affordable price in a context where private sector education has become a highly commercialised commodity,? stated Dr. Mahim Mendis. He elaborated that a large number of Sri Lankans are greatly constrained in maximising their potential, both locally and internationally,?? due to lack of skills and confidence in English.
The aim of the institute is to provide top quality English and communication training with international benchmarks from City and Guilds, UK at an affordable rate to Sri Lankans.
The Rainbow Institute is offering English courses to a wide range of groups such as young learners, college students, English teachers, school leavers, housewives, job seekers, managers, executives, shop and office workers, clergy and politicians.
The Young Learners courses for children between the ages of six to 13 years of age are offered in two categories. The first focuses on spoken English, whilst the second focuses on reading, writing and listening skills.
The Diploma comes in six levels. It is a combination of two City and Guilds courses ? the spoken course and the general course focusing on reading, writing and listening skills.
The Access Certificate of English Language Teaching is a six month course which includes a foundation in the theory of English language teaching and teaching practice in real classrooms. It?? offers a prestigious City and Guilds qualification to current teachers of English, those who want to become English teachers and teachers of other subjects who want to shift to English.
The Business English Courses are offered at three levels, for clerical, executive and managerial level staff. These courses are offered at the institute?s premises in Haig Road, Bambalapitiya and also conducted for groups of employees in their own organisational premises.
The course for politicians is an innovative program designed to equip Sri Lankan politicians to win public confidence by bringing out their inherent strengths with a strong intellectual and moral foundation, whilst improving their skills in English.
The institute will provide free-of-charge a range of extra-curricular activities such as a public speaking club, reference library, career guidance clinics, guest lectures, debates, competitions and mock exams. These activities are geared to develop the personalities of students and improve their communication skills in an English learning environment.
Rainbow Institute of Communication and English is a project of the consultancy and training company Rainbow Resources Lanka Ltd.

Source: http://www.ft.lk/2013/08/12/national-educators-strengthen-private-sector-english-education/

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Sunday, August 11, 2013

Fort Hood victims want shooting designated terror

FILE - In this Tuesday, June 4, 2013 file photo, retired Staff Sgt. Alonzo Lunsford describes one of his wounds from the 2009 Fort Hood shooting rampage, at his home in Lillington, N.C. Victims and others are asking why the November 2009 attack at Fort Hood is being tried as a case of workplace violence and not as an act of terror? (AP Photo/Chuck Burton, File)

FILE - In this Tuesday, June 4, 2013 file photo, retired Staff Sgt. Alonzo Lunsford describes one of his wounds from the 2009 Fort Hood shooting rampage, at his home in Lillington, N.C. Victims and others are asking why the November 2009 attack at Fort Hood is being tried as a case of workplace violence and not as an act of terror? (AP Photo/Chuck Burton, File)

FILE - In this Aug. 6, 2013 file courtroom sketch, military prosecutor Col. Steve Henricks, right, speaks as Nidal Malik Hasan, center, and presiding judge Col. Tara Osborn look on during Hasan's court-martial. Victims and others are asking why the November 2009 attack at Fort Hood is being tried as a case of workplace violence instead of an act of terror. (AP Photo/Brigitte Woosley)

FILE - In this Aug. 3, 2013 file photo, retired U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Shawn Manning poses for a photo at his home in Lacey, Wash., as he holds a photograph from the memorial for victims of the 2009 mass shooting at Fort Hood, Texas. Manning, who still carries two bullets in his body from the shooting that killed 13 people, estimates he has lost $2,000 a month in pay and benefits because of the decision to classify the injuries as resulting from workplace violence rather than combat or terrorist-related. Had his injuries been classified as terrorist-related, the military would have paid the difference between his civilian and reserve salary, offered him better medical benefits and granted him greater disability payments. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren, File)

Army Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan admits pulling out a pistol, shouting "Allahu akbar" (God is great) and opening fire on unarmed people, killing 13 of them. All, he says, in an effort to stop them from going to Afghanistan and killing his fellow Muslims.

Concluding he was on the "wrong side" in America's war, he told jurors at his court-martial that he switched sides.

So, victims and others are demanding, why is the November 2009 attack at Fort Hood being tried as a case of workplace violence and not as an act of terror?

Military law expert Scott L. Silliman says the answer is simple. Because the Uniform Code of Military Justice does not have a punitive article for "terrorism."

"They really didn't have an option," says Silliman, director emeritus of Duke University's Center on Law, Ethics and National Security in Durham, N.C. "He was an active-duty officer. The crime occurred on a military installation. ... It was obvious he was going to face a court-martial."

Victims of the shooting rampage filed a lawsuit last year over the administration's decision to treat the incident as workplace violence. They say that designation has robbed them of benefits and made them ineligible to receive the Purple Heart, awarded to service members wounded in battle.

On Monday, the staff of the magazine National Review launched a petition drive directed at Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel, arguing that the Army psychiatrist should be tried as an enemy combatant for what they consider "an Act of Terror."

"By not designating this event as such an act, it disrespects the lives of the 13 who lost their lives that day, and dozens more who were injured," the petition reads. "This is outrageous and I call on you to change the official designation now" before proceedings against Hasan go further.

While Silliman understands the outrage, he says transferring the case to civil courts ? where a terror charge could attach ? was just not possible.

"It would have been totally unprecedented to have that sort of thing occur," says Silliman, who has served as senior attorney at two large military installations and three major Air Force commands. "Now, if the crime had occurred off the post, then there might have been what we call concurrent jurisdiction between the civilian authorities and the military authorities."

Why can't the administration call this an act of terror without charging Hasan as a terrorist? According to a widely quoted Pentagon position paper opposing Purple Hearts for the victims that would allow the defense to argue that Hasan "cannot receive a fair trial because a branch of government has indirectly declared that Major Hasan is a terrorist ? that he is criminally culpable."

Reed Rubinstein, one of the attorneys representing a number of the shooting victims and their families, calls that argument "disingenuous."

The National Counterterrorism Center and State Department both counted the incident among terror attacks that year, he notes. The White House and Department of Defense have balked, he argues, because too many people didn't heed warning signs that Hasan was becoming increasingly radical leading up to his deployment to Afghanistan.

"The truth of the matter is, it comes down to politics," the Washington attorney says. "It comes down to covering up the political correctness that was the proximate cause of this attack in the first instance." Rubinstein is not calling for a terrorism charge but argues the government could administratively rule this was an act of terror so his clients can qualify for more benefits and the Purple Heart, which comes with its own set of recognitions and privileges.

Hasan is representing himself during the court-martial. Because he faces the death penalty, military law precluded him from entering a guilty plea. But he conceded in his opening statement Tuesday, as he has previously, that he did the shooting.

Military prosecutors could have added a civilian charge of terrorism, says Geoffrey Corn, a retired lieutenant colonel and former military lawyer. But he argues that would have added an unnecessary layer of complexity with little, if any, benefit.

"It's never been done in a military court before," says Corn, a professor at the South Texas College of Law. "Was he motivated by a terrorist agenda? Certainly. Will they present that evidence? Certainly. But the crimes he committed were premeditated murder and attempted premeditated murder."

Corn says it would be difficult to make the case for Hasan as an enemy combatant. While Hasan may have been inspired by al-Qaida and even had contact with known terror suspects, it does not appear he received orders from the group, Corn says.

Rubinstein terms the government's refusal to call the shooting incident a terrorist attack for purposes of awarding benefits "a kick in the teeth to the victims.

"They have to hear about workplace violence," he says. "They're told that what happened to them was no big deal. Pay no attention to the fact that he was a jihadist. Never mind that we knew and the FBI knew. But his career, because of his ethnicity and his religion, was more important to us than your lives. Forget all that."

Government attorneys have asked a federal judge to postpone the civil case, which seeks to reclassify the incident so as to make combat-related pay and other benefits available to the victims, until after the court-martial and post-trial processing are completed. That could take up to nine months.

Victim Shawn Manning estimates he has lost $2,000 a month in pay and benefits because of the decision to classify the injuries as resulting from workplace violence rather than combat or terrorist-related. Had his injuries been classified that way, the military would have paid the difference between his civilian and reserve salary, offered him better medical benefits and granted him greater disability payments.

"And Hasan is still collecting his major pay," growls Manning, who now works as a civilian mental health specialist at Fort Lewis, Wash.

"That's not correct," agrees former Staff Sgt. Alonzo Lunsford, who was shot seven times and still carries one slug in his back. He and Manning spoke to The Associated Press before a military judge's order this week not to discuss the case.

Silliman says that, too, is the way the military system operates.

"Remember, he is innocent until determined otherwise," he says. "He's going to be drawing full pay as a United States Army major ... until a sentence is awarded in the case and that sentence is approved by the convening authority."

___

Breed reported from Raleigh, N.C., and Plushnick-Masti from Houston.

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

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2013-08-10-Fort%20Hood%20Shooting-Terror%20or%20Not/id-b12b37ec7d144d58933e0959f43df739

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Monday, August 5, 2013

Lync, Azure, Office 365 And The Shifting Center Of Microsoft's Gravity

TechCrunch writes, You might have missed it, but Lync, Microsoft?s enterprise-focused communications suite brought its parent company $1 billion in revenue during its 2013 fiscal year. That a milestone of that sort could all but slip through the news coverage of Microsoft?s earnings report is almost interesting. The reason for the mild coverage of Lync and its performance is in fact a non-puzzle: One billion dollars in revenue stacked next to Microsoft total fiscal 2013 top line of $77.8 billion isn?t much, and enterprise-facing products from incumbent firms aren?t sexy, thus often getting lost in the?

Continue reading Lync, Azure, Office 365 And The Shifting Center Of Microsoft's Gravity at TechCrunch

Source: http://technewstube.com/techcrunch/251152/lync-azure-office-365-and-the-shifting-center-of-microsofts-gravity/

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Sunday, August 4, 2013

IFAD Finance Assistant (Loans and Grants) Job in Kenya | Jobs in ...

Title: Finance Assistant ? Loans and Grants
?

Organisation: International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD)
?

Deadline: 09 August 2013
?

Vacancy Number: GS-13-25
?

Position Summary
?

The International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) seeks to recruit a Finance Assistant, with a minimum of secondary school education and at least 4 years? experience in loans and grants or financial administration.?


A first level professional qualification in finance or accounting would be a plus.? The position also requires fluency in oral and written English and in Arabic and/or French.
?

Application Procedure
?

For details of the job functions and how to apply, please visit the following website: http://www.unon.org under employment ? UNON-Other Agencies-Open Vacancies-Finance Assistant-Loans and Grants.
?

Please send your application by email to recruitment@unon.org quoting the Vacancy Number: GS-13-25 and Functional Title: Finance Assistant (Loans and Grants) on the email?s subject line.?

Applications should be received by (09 August 2013).
?

The United Nations does not charge a fee at any stage of the recruitment process (application, interview meeting, processing, training or any other fees).

Source: http://kenyanjobs.blogspot.com/2013/08/ifad-finance-assistant-loans-and-grants.html

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Friday, August 2, 2013

Mexico?s on-the-road diplomacy in this Washington

The Hispanic population of Washington ? 82 percent with origins in Mexico ? has nearly doubled in the past decade to more than 750,000, and is spread across the state, growing in northwest Washington but also centered in places like Walla Walla and Columbia Counties in Southeast Washington.

As a result, the Mexican consul-general?s office in Seattle has resorted to a form of on-the-road diplomacy.

Two vans take off one weekend each month for a distant destination, say Kennewick or Walla Walla, carrying a six-member team headed by a foreign service officer.? They set up shop on Friday night, for six hours Saturday and again Sunday offer passport services, consular ID papers, powers of attorney, register children of Mexican parents, and extend notary services.

?We take the office with us,? jokes Eduardo Baca Cuenca, Mexico?s newly arrived consul-general in Seattle.? Hundreds of people use the consul-general?s services, making appointments in advance or just showing up.

A weekday visit to the usually crowded consul-general?s office in Belltown underscores that there is lots of demand for the services of a distant government.

A consul-general?s job is often to ?show the flag,? promote trade and raise a country?s profile.? Canada has employed such high-profile figures as ex-Prime Minister Kim Campbell, who did a stint in Low Angeles, and former member of parliament and junior cabinet minister Roger Simmons in Seattle.

But Baca Cuenca?s job is a little different.

?Our first job is attention to our local community, and we have a very big community,? he said.? ?No other consulate has the volume of work that we do.?

The Hispanic population of Washington was just over 200,000 in 1990.? It more than doubled to over 450,000 in 2000, and leaped to more than 750,000 in the 2010 census.? Hispanic residents, documented and undocumented, make up a majority of the populations in Franklin and Adams Counties, and between 25 and 50 percent through much of Central Washington.

The North American Free Trade Agreement has also boosted trade between Mexico and Washington State to more than $3 billion a year.? For instance, Mexico is buying lots of Washington apples, many picked by migrants from Mexico. But, as Baca Cuenca notes, not many people are aware of the two-way economic connection.

Given the attention he must pay to ?our local community? ? the Seattle consul-general?s responsibilities extend into northern Idaho ? Baca Cuenca is hoping to get a separate Mexican trade office established in Seattle.? ?You cannot attend to this part-time,? he said.

By 2025, Washington is expected to have nearly one million Hispanic residents.

Source: http://blog.seattlepi.com/seattlepolitics/2013/08/01/mexicos-on-the-road-diplomacy-in-this-washington/

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PNC SPORTS: Ben Schulte Represents Guam at FINA in Barcelona. http://t.co/OGP7Ck...

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Source: http://www.facebook.com/pncnews/posts/657569154254419

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Rome Shriners telethon will kick off Friday; goal set at $60,000

by Lauren Jones, staff writer Rn T.Com

Some of the crowd at the start of the 17th Annual Rome Shrine Club Telethon from The Forum in Rome. (Doug Walker, RN-T)

Some of the crowd at the start of the 17th Annual Rome Shrine Club Telethon from The Forum in Rome. (Doug Walker, RN-T)

slideshow

Since 1995, the?Rome Shrine Club?has been raising money for hospitalized children ? and 150 Shriners will sit by the phones at The Forum, starting Friday, for this year?s annual telethon.

The annual telethon, which will be televised on Comcast Channel 4, will kick off Friday from 8 to 11 p.m. On Saturday, the event will run from 8 a.m. to 11 p.m. with a live auction taking place from 2 to 3 p.m. where callers can dial in and bid on items. On Sunday, the telethon will run from 8 a.m. to 11 p.m., with a break from 11 a.m. to noon for church services.

Shriners first vice president Johnny Powell said this year?s goal is to raise $60,000 and as a special treat, several local and out-of-town gospel groups will perform throughout the telethon.

In its 18th year, the telethon started out benefiting burned and handicapped children. It has since expanded to helping children with other medical issues, such as cleft lips and spinal cord injuries. The proceeds will be available to child patients in more than 50 hospitals.

Powell said the Shriners are very excited about the event that they plan for year-round.

?It?s a big event for us, and when it?s over on Aug. 4 we start working on it for next year,? he said.

Source: http://rn-t.com/bookmark/23259228

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Monday, July 29, 2013

iTunes Beta Adds iTunes Radio, Slide-To-Unlock Tweak And Screenshot Detection API Added To iOS 7

itunes-radio-itunesApple has released a new beta of iOS 7 today, which is the fourth in the series. There are only a couple of months to go at most before we see the final edition roll out, so it's not surprising that this update contains a variety of notable visual changes that smooth out some of iOS 7's rough spots. There's also a new iTunes beta of version 11.1, which brings iTunes Radio to the OS X desktop.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/krjq0TdJXik/

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Sunday, July 28, 2013

The Storm and The Flood

This is the auto-generated OOC topic for the roleplay "The Storm and The Flood"

You may edit this first post as you see fit.

These violent delights have violent ends
And in their triumph die, like fire and powder,
Which, as they kiss, consume.


-Romeo and Juliet

Deep into that darkness, peering, I stood there, wondering, fearing, doubting...
Dreaming dreams no mortal ever dreamed to dream before.

-Edgar Allan Poe

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/f-O5Rrl909o/viewtopic.php

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Got Gwap? Nene Leakes Faces Lawsuit Over Her $1.8 Milli Wedding

nene-and-greg-leakes-wedding

Nene Leakes is at the center of some drama again. This time it?s over her pricy summer nuptials!

Via Baller Alert reports:

Nene Leakes owes big for her lavish second wedding to husband, Gregg Leakes. Celebrity wedding planner, Tiffany Cook of Dream Design Weddings, was hired by the Leakes family to coordinate Nene & Gregg?s wedding on June 22, 2013. The wedding is set to appear on a Bravo TV special in September.
Tiffany Cook claims that NeNe?s budget for the wedding was $1.8 million and was promised 15% of the entire wedding budget PLUS fees design and execution of the wedding PLUS travel expenses to the event. Cook claims she was due $270k (the 15%) PLUS another $889,900 (design fees) PLUS $1,750 (4 coach tickets from Florida to Georgia).

According to Cook, NeNe did fork over the initial down payment of $18,750 but she hasn?t seen a penny since so she?s suing for the remaining $1,142,900 balance PLUS damages.

Well damn, isn?t she making $800K a year filming for ?Real Housewives?? And why isn?t Bravo footing the bill ? wasn?t all this lavishness for the sake of reality TV?

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Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/bossiprss/~3/IVCHhyvooTU/

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A Race to Save the Orange by Altering Its DNA

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Growers turned to genetics in hopes of building a tougher orange tree. But what intervention would the public accept?
    


Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/28/science/a-race-to-save-the-orange-by-altering-its-dna.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

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Saturday, July 27, 2013

Essence reveals Amar'e Stoudemire & Alexis Welch's stunning wedding photos http:...

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Source: http://www.facebook.com/globalgrind/posts/10151538589065163

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North Korea Shows Military Might at Mass Rally

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Source: www.nytimes.com --- Friday, July 26, 2013
The North Korean Military marked the anniversary Saturday of the end of the Korean War by showing what may be its first intercontinental missiles at a parade in Pyongyang. ...

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/28/world/asia/north-korea-shows-military-might-at-mass-rally.html

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Factor In Food Cost When Deciding Whether to Fly or Drive

Factor In Food Cost When Deciding Whether to Fly or Drive

Trips to places about 200-400 miles away present an interesting dilemma; should you drive or fly? While most peoples' first instinct is to guesstimate the cost of gas vs. a plane ticket, factoring in food can make a big difference in your overall budget.

Trent from The Simple Dollar notes that many people forget that car trips can save you a ton of money on food, because you can bring a cooler to your final destination and avoid a few trips to the snack bar. Even during the drive itself, you can stop at cheaper diners, or pack some sandwiches yourself, avoiding airport markups. Your savings will vary with this tip depending on the length of your stay, but it's an easy thing to forget when you're arranging your itinerary.

The Traveler's Dilemma | The Simple Dollar

Photo by Katie@!

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/d0RVNpGcVCw/factor-in-food-cost-when-deciding-whether-to-fly-or-dri-929382016

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Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Mandela's health showing "sustained improvement": government

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - Former South African President Nelson Mandela is showing "sustained improvement" in hospital although he remains in a critical condition, the government said on Monday.

The government statement said President Jacob Zuma had visited the 95-year-old Mandela in the Pretoria hospital where he has been for the last seven weeks receiving treatment for a recurring lung infection.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/mandelas-health-showing-sustained-improvement-government-120641875.html

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Sunday, July 21, 2013

Oil Paintings by Sandy Scruggs featured at Art in City Hall in Lakeland

Sandy Scruggs is the City of Lakeland?s featured artist for the July-September Quarterly ?Art at City Hall? exhibit.?
?

Sandy was first introduced to oil painting in 1979. Her first instructor was Jewel Armstrong, whom she spent 3 ? years learning the style and techniques of the old masters.??From there she attended various workshops and began focusing more on the works of the Impressionists and their?use of color.??Sandy was part of a local group of artists who went to France to study art history by touring Paris and the surrounding area, and with classroom instruction at the College of Art in Angers, France.

?

Since 1999, Sandy has devoted much of her creative energy to instruction and encouraging others who share her love of art.??She enjoys capturing the beauty of nature in her landscapes and still-life's. Her true love is the challenge of painting animals.?Her works may currently be seen at Market Central and Fountain Art Gallery, of which she has been a member for 15 years in Memphis, TN. Visit her website at?www.sandyspaintings.com.

?

Artists interested in being considered for future exhibits may contact Joy Cloud at 867-2717 or?jcloud@lakelandtn.org.

Source: http://bartlett.wmctv.com/news/arts-culture/173242-oil-paintings-sandy-scruggs-featured-art-city-hall-lakeland

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Motorola's going to show everyone the new Moto X on August 1, in New York.

Motorola's going to show everyone the new Moto X on August 1, in New York. Or well, actually, it showed us the phone right there on the invite, on the left. May as well give up all pretense of these things being some big surprise. We'll tell you more about the phone from the event.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/WdOfXSVFvFM/motorolas-going-to-show-everyone-the-new-moto-x-on-augu-842077624

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Saturday, July 20, 2013

Budget Carefully for Your Home Improvement ? Defiance Windows Offers Remodeling Tips

(EMAILWIRE.COM, July 19, 2013 ) Delaware, OH --Hansons Delaware siding, a prominent provider of siding for local customers, has reports: Older awnings over porches and windows can greatly detract from the appearance of your home. By removing them, you are updating your house with a more modern look that allows its distinctive character to shine through. Furthermore, you will find that more natural light enters your house through the windows, brightening the mood.

Building a screened in porch on the back or front of ones house can provide an additional room for one to relax in. An individual or whole family can enjoy the view of the outdoors while staying free from mosquitoes and most other bugs. A screened in porch can be a worthwhile home improvement project.

If you replace your old, inefficient windows with modern, efficient ones, you will save money on energy and enjoy a much more attractive home. This is a great home improvement project, because it adds so much value in so many ways.

About Hansons Vinyl Siding:

Our premier Delaware vinyl siding keeps your home cool in the summertime and warm in the wintertime. When choosing new siding for your home, nothing can beat siding products. Since 1988, Hansons has been satisfying Michigan and Ohio homeowners with the finest Delaware vinyl siding products at the lowest prices in the business. Our siding specialists install both vinyl siding. It is Hansons goal, everyday, to make all of its Michigan and Ohio customers happy and 100% satisfied, and the way that is accomplished is by offering the best home improvement products in the industry at the lowest prices in the market.

Contact Information:
Imlay City Windows
Brian Elias
810-250-7811
48202
webmaster@hansons.com
Delaware OH-Vinyl Siding
http://www.hansons.com/Vinyl_Siding.htm
http://sidingdelaware.blogspot.com/

Source: http://emailwire.com/release/128415-Budget-Carefully-for-Your-Home-Improvement-Defiance-Windows-Offers-Remodeling-Tips-.html

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Desktop printing at the nano level

[unable to retrieve full-text content]A new low-cost, high-resolution tool is primed to revolutionize how nanotechnology is produced from the desktop, according to a new study.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_science/~3/UtDbxj44-aQ/130719085146.htm

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Virginia Is Corrupt

Gov. Bob McDonnell speaks at the Opportunities in Motion Commonwealth of Virginia Governor's Transportation Conference in Vienna, VA. Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell in 2012

Photo by Bonnie Jo Mount/Washington Post/Getty Images

If you?re looking for indoor fun in 100-degree weather, go ahead and Google Virginia?s ethics laws for elected officials. First thing you?ll notice? The word ?lax? is used to modify the words ?Virginia Ethics Laws? so often in news accounts that you could not be faulted for believing ?Lax Virginia Ethics Laws? to be the official title of the statute.

The next thing you?ll notice? That seems to just be the way things are, here in the Old Dominion.

Embattled Gov. Bob McDonnell has probably just cratered a once-promising political career over $145,000 in undisclosed gifts?each worthy of its own episode of Real Housewives of Richmond?including a $6,500 Rolex, a New York shopping spree for his wife, limo rides, catering for his daughter?s wedding, and a ride in a Ferrari. Is it shocking that McDonnell and his wife?twisted themselves into pretzels to shill for the donor company?s weird tobacco-based nutritional supplements?

Under the ?Lax Virginia Ethics Law,? there is no cap on the amount of gifts an elected official can receive, so long as all gifts valued at more than $50 are disclosed annually. Moreover, any gifts to spouses and immediate family members are not counted as gifts to the official. So that when, for instance, Jonnie R. Williams Sr., the chief executive of the foundering nutritional supplements company Star Scientific, paid out $15,000 to cater the governor?s daughter?s wedding in 2011, that was considered a gift to the daughter?even though the governor signed the catering contract and the caterers refunded the overpayment to his wife.

McDonnell is now subject to tanking poll numbers, an FBI investigation, and a grand jury probe over the possibility that he did favors for Star Scientific in exchange for gifts and cash. Indeed nobody can have been happier than McDonnell when the commonwealth?s attorney general, Ken Cuccinelli, pushed him out of the headlines midweek with ethics questions about his own relationship with Star Scientific and an unerringly Victorian zeal for criminalizing every act of consensual oral sex within state lines.

Cuccinelli was cleared Thursday following a three-month ethics probe by an independent investigator who found no ethics violations in his failure to disclose $5,100 in gifts from the CEO of Star Scientific. The attorney general had no conflict of interest when he purchased shares of Star Scientific and vacationed at the CEO?s various properties, all while his office defended a tax-assessment lawsuit filed by Star Scientific, the same Star Scientific in which he held more than $10,000 in stock. This, while occasionally failing to disclose gifts from Williams in his annual disclosure forms. Because a guy forgets.

As the independent inquiry determined, ?Although one cannot help but question whether repeated omissions of Williams are coincidence or a pattern reflecting intent to conceal, the disclosure of several other benefits and gifts from Williams in his original statements suggests that the attorney general was not attempting to conceal the relationship.? My friend Scott Pilutik memorably characterizes this legal conclusion as follows: ?Because Cuccinelli didn't always conceal the fact that he was creating an appearance of impropriety by accepting gifts, well, nothing to see here. If only everyone earned so much mileage out of all the times they choose not to break the law.?

(Actually, the best zinger in Thursday?s ethics report is not even the bit about how Cuccinelli did disclose some lavish gifts. It?s where the investigator explains that the attorney general took $6,000 in free food supplements from Star Scientific since, ?because of his engineering background, [Cuccinelli] became interested in the purported science surrounding the company?s Anatabloc product.? It?s heartening to hear that the same attorney general who doesn?t believe in the science behind climate change can be such a staunch believer in the science behind unregulated food supplements.

So there it is. No ethics violations by Cuccinelli. And that?s because of Virginia?s lax ethics laws. Actually, not just lax. Ephemeral. Actually, no. Virginia was ranked 47 out of 50 and awarded an F in a comprehensive study on corruption risk in a recent national State Integrity Investigation. So it?s not so much ethics laws as ethics suggestions.

Jessica Tillipman has been blogging hard about the Virginia disclosure rules for the FCPA blog, and she points out that the commonwealth?s F is well-earned:

?Per the State Integrity Investigation, [Virginia] is one of only nine states without a statewide ethics commission and one of four states without campaign finance limits. Moreover, according to the National Conference of State Legislators, Virginia is one of just ten states in the country that, as noted above, does not limit the value of personal gifts provided to elected officials.? ?

Tillipman told me that the fact that there is no cap on the amounts one can give as a gift in Virginia is ?almost unheard of.? She added that the gifts given to McDonnell, including the Rolex, the NFL tickets, and the lavish vacation loaners, would have been clearly impermissible under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. ?Why is it,? she wonders, ?that we permit people to accept gifts in Virginia that they couldn?t accept if they worked in India??

Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/jurisprudence/2013/07/mcdonnell_cuccinelli_star_scientific_virginia_s_lax_ethics_laws_let_politicians.html

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Friday, July 19, 2013

Vin Diesel Teases Big Marvel News During 'Riddick' Panel

MTV News shares all the cool stuff we learned during the 'Kick-Ass 2' and 'Riddick' Comic-Con panels.
By Ryan J. Downey

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1710922/vin-diesel-riddick-movie.jhtml

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Israel plans settlements despite EU?s tougher line


Israel is pushing ahead with West Bank settlement construction plans despite the fact US secretary of state John Kerry is in the region in an effort to finalise a formula to get Israel and the Palestinians around the negotiating table.

An Israeli planning committee yesterday approved the construction of 741 West Bank homes for Jewish settlers, most in the ultra-Orthodox community of Modi?in Elit.

The move came a day after the decision by the European Union banning European funding for Israeli enterprises in occupied territory.

It remains to be seen if the new settlement plans, which require the approval of defence minister Moshe Ya?alon, will affect Mr Kerry?s efforts to break the diplomatic deadlock. After two meetings in the Jordanian capital Amman with Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas, Mr Kerry sounded optimistic that a breakthrough was close.

?We have been able to narrow these gaps very significantly. And so we continue to get closer and I continue to remain hopeful that the sides can soon be able to come and sit at the same table.?


US package
Mr Abbas was due to convene senior officials today to brief them on the American package to renew the talks, which broke down in 2010 in a dispute over Israeli settlement building.

Israel warned that the EU decree excluding all Israeli bodies operating in the West Bank, east Jerusalem and the Golan Heights from agreements signed with Israel will encourage Palestinian intransigence. Prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu yesterday talked by phone to a number of European leaders in an effort to persuade them to delay implementation of the decree, which is due to go into effect tomorrow.

However, Israeli officials conceded the chances were slim of changing the European decision.


Cost
Israeli economists estimated that the new decree could cost Israel hundreds of millions of euro and there was a danger that the same policy will be adopted by individual EU member states.

An Israeli official accused the EU of taking a unilateral, pro-Palestinian position, meaning Europe could no longer be considered an honest broker with a role to play in peace efforts.

Some right-wing Knesset members advocated an aggressive Israeli response, such as blocking EU-funded development projects for Palestinians or restricting the movement of European diplomats in the West Bank. They also proposed cancelling all planned gestures to the Palestinians, such as a prisoner release.

Justice minister Tzipi Livni termed the EU move a ?resounding wake-up call? for Israel. ?It is regrettable that we?ve reached this situation, but I hope that now all those who thought that it was possible to continue the impasse and who said that our situation has never been better, will realise that we must act and begin negotiations.?

A Palestinian source said the next stage was to ensure the EU enforces its directives and creates obstacles to the settlement enterprise.

Source: http://rss.feedsportal.com/c/851/f/10846/s/2ecf25b0/l/0L0Sirishtimes0N0Cnews0Cworld0Cmiddle0Eeast0Cisrael0Eplans0Esettlements0Edespite0Eeu0Es0Etougher0Eline0E10B1466898/story01.htm

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Android Backups Could Expose Wi-Fi Passwords to NSA

Google's "back up my data feature" for Android may be a convenient and easy way to back up files, but it also may put network security at risk by exposing the passwords of encrypted Wi-Fi networks.

On his personal blog, Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) staff technologist Micah Lee pointed out that the backup feature syncs all the network passwords your Android devices remember to Google's cloud storage.

"Because Android is so popular, it's likely that Google has plaintext Wi-Fi passwords for the majority of password-protected Wi-Fi networks in the world," Lee wrote.

As an Android device owner adds Wi-Fi network passwords over the course of using the device, every new password is saved on the device. But because Android devices aren't equipped to encrypt passwords, the devices must be saving and transmitting those passwords in plaintext.

"With your home Wi-Fi password, an attacker can sniff Wi-Fi traffic outside your house (without connecting to your network) and then decrypt it all, passively eavesdropping on your private network," Lee wrote.

"If the attacker wants to do more active attacks, they can connect to your Wi-Fi network and mount a man-in-the-middle attack to eavesdrop on and modify any unencrypted Internet traffic," Lee added. "If you download a file, they can serve you a malicious version instead."

In a statement to tech blog Ars Technica, Google said that Android backup data was "encrypted in transit, accessible only when the user has an authenticated connection to Google and stored at Google data centers, which have strong protections against digital and physical attacks."

[The 5 Best Android Security Apps]

The Google representative did not specify whether the data was encrypted on Google's servers, but added that disabling backup on an Android device would cause all backups to be erased.

Lee noted that since Google at least partly cooperates with NSA data-mining operations, it's possible that the spy agency could get hold of Wi-Fi passwords.

The Android backup feature is turned on by default on stock Android devices, which includes the Nexus line of smartphones and tablets. It can be switched on or off under Backup & Reset in the stock Android Settings menu.

(Manufacturers that tweak their Android builds, such as Samsung or HTC, have their own policies.)

Backup is part of the main Android application program interface, or API, meaning it can be accessed by other apps in order to transmit data to the cloud in case the device were to become compromised.

Follow us?@TechNewsDaily,?on?Facebook?or?on?Google+.?Originally published on TechNewsDaily.com.

Mobile Malware: The Smartphone Security Quiz

With cybercriminals now targeting mobile devices, securing smart phones is more important than ever. Test your knowledge of how safe your mobile devices are.

0 of 10 questions complete

0 of

With cybercriminals now targeting mobile devices, securing smart phones is more important than ever. Test your knowledge of how safe your mobile devices are.

Source: http://www.technewsdaily.com/18563-android-backup-passwords.html

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Opponents of Dell buyout say don't delay vote

By Greg Roumeliotis and Ross Kerber

(Reuters) - Opposition to Michael Dell's bid to take his computer company private grew on Wednesday, and billionaire Carl Icahn argued Dell Inc had no right to delay a shareholder vote, even if the deal looked more likely to fail.

Holders of nearly 30 percent of Dell stock oppose the $24.4 billion offer by founder Dell and private equity firm Silver Lake, which is now scheduled for a vote in Austin, Texas on Thursday morning. That includes shareholders who say they will vote against the buyout or have been reported to oppose it.

Dell may decide to delay the July 18 vote to gain time to win support for the deal, a person familiar with the matter said on Tuesday, asking not to be identified because the deliberations are confidential.

In an open letter to shareholders on Wednesday, billionaire activist investor Carl Icahn, who has amassed an 8.7 percent stake in Dell, said Dell's special board committee must allow a final vote to be completed on July 18 as scheduled. He once again urged shareholders to oppose the buyout.

"Can you imagine a political election contest where one side could push off the election to wait for a better day to hold the election - a date when it is hoped they might do better in the vote than they would have done on the originally scheduled election date?" he wrote.

The stock ended down 1.1 percent on Wednesday at $12.88, its lowest level since July 5.

Michael Dell and Silver Lake have so far resisted calls, including from Dell's special committee, to raise their $13.65 per share offer.

Two people familiar with the matter said on Tuesday the bidders would stick to their offer even if the vote was postponed. The sources asked not to be identified because they were not authorized to speak to the media.

The Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday that Vanguard Group Inc, the largest U.S. mutual fund manager and holder of a 3.7 percent stake in Dell, and State Street Corp , which has a 3.5 percent stake, were set to vote against the buyout. Vanguard and State Street declined to comment.

Vanguard and State Street run index funds that typically follow the lead of shareholder advisory firms. Their decision to defy all the three major advisory firms that have recommended the Dell buyout would add to the uncertainty over the vote outcome.

Other key minority shareholders, including BlackRock Inc , T. Rowe Price Group Inc , Highfields Capital Management, Pzena Investment Management and Yacktman Asset Management, have already come out against the buyout or have declined to comment on reports that they are against it.

Under so-called majority-of-the-minority voting provisions, a majority of Dell shareholders, excluding Michael Dell's roughly 16 percent stake in the company, have to vote for the buyout in order for it go through.

This means shareholders, other than Michael Dell, who collectively own almost 43 percent of the Round Rock, Texas-based company need to vote for the buyout for it to go through.

Accounting for the stakes of Icahn and his partner Southeastern Asset Management Inc, the total against the buyout approaches 30 percent of Dell's shareholder base.

To be sure, some shareholders supportive of the deal are holding their ground, including Invesco Ltd's PowerShares line of exchange traded funds, which held a roughly 1 percent stake of Dell according to recent filings.

Asked how they would vote, Invesco spokeswoman Kristin Sadlon said in an e-mail that the funds will vote in accordance with recommendations by Glass Lewis & Co. Like other proxy advisors, Glass Lewis has recommended shareholders vote in favor of the acquisition.

Dell's special board committee will likely decide by Thursday morning whether or not to delay the vote, based on the number of votes that have been cast to block the buyout. Dell's board has set up the special committee to independently assess the best option for shareholders, without influence from Michael Dell, who is the company's chairman and chief executive officer.

Icahn has argued since March that Dell's founder is trying to steal the company away from shareholders almost 30 years after he founded it with just $1,000.

Icahn and Southeastern announced their latest alternative offer for Dell last week. It calls for a buyback of up to 1.1 billion shares at $14 apiece and a Dell warrant offered for every four shares held.

Each warrant would entitle the holder to buy one Dell share for $20 each within the next seven years.

Icahn estimates the value of his latest offer at $15.50 to $18 per share although Dell's special committee dispute this.

In order for his proposal to be put forward for consideration by Dell shareholders, he must first succeed in having Michael Dell's offer voted down and then win enough shareholder support to replace the members of Dell's board with his own nominees.

(Reporting by Nicola Leske, Jessica Toonkel and Greg Roumeliotis in New York and Ross Kerber in Boston; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick and Richard Chang)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/opponents-dell-buyout-dont-delay-vote-001237563.html

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Thursday, July 18, 2013

China blocks UK drug company exec from leaving the country

China

10 hours ago

A flag (L) bearing the logo of GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) flutters next to a Chinese national flag outside a GlaxoSmithKline office building in Shanghai Ju...

ALY SONG / Reuters

A flag (L) bearing the logo of GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) flutters next to a Chinese national flag outside a GlaxoSmithKline office building in Shanghai July 12, 2013.

Pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline revealed more bad news Wednesday, disclosing that Beijing officials have barred its head of finance for China from leaving the country amid accusations of a $490 million bribery scandal.

GSK's China finance director Steve Nechelput's foreign travel has been restricted since late June, according the British drug company, which pointed out he is still working and allowed to travel within China.

"It is important to stress that at no time has he been questioned or arrested?nor is he one of the individuals in detention," said a GSK spokesman of the British national Nechelput.

That's small comfort to GSK, which has seen four of its Chinese executives detained because of the alleged bribery scandal, which comes on the heels of the company firing its head of research in development in China over a published article that misrepresented data.

After GSK fired its R&D boss, the company said in June that it had investigated allegations made by an anonymous tipster that GSK employees engaged in bribery and corruption to influence doctors in China to prescribe drugs for years. The company said a four-month probe found no evidence of wrongdoing.

But within weeks, Chinese police accused Glaxo of funneling almost $490 million to 700 travel agencies and other businesses over the years to dole out bribes to officials and doctors in the country.

(Read more: GSK fires China R&D boss)

GSK has said it is "deeply concerned and disappointed by these serious allegations," calling them "shameful," and insisting the company has "zero tolerance for any behavior of this nature."

The company in 2010 had revealed that both the Justice Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission had spoken to GSK as part of a probe into the pharmaceutical business in countries including China.

On Tuesday, Chinese state television aired an interview with GSK's vice president and manager for operations of its China investment company, Liang Hong, who is one of the four execs detained.

Liang in that interview admitted paying bribes to government officials at agencies responsible for approving drug sales and setting prices.

Although that, and GSK's humbled response to the allegations, suggest Chinese authorities may well have strong evidence against the company, observers of China argue that the GSK crackdown may indicate more concern about foreign competition than foreign corruption.

In recent weeks, Chinese officials have announced a series of probes into foreign makers of baby formula, pharmaceuticals and food packaging. On Wednesday, China said it was launching a six-month long crackdown on the pharmaceutical sector, targeting unauthorized drug manufacturers as well as illegal Internet drug sales and fake traditional Chinese medicines.

"We must resolutely punish illegal acts, expose illegal enterprises, recall problematic products," Wu Zhen, deputy commissioner for China's state Food and Drug Administration, said in a statement.

(Watch: Is China playing by the rules?)

"It's too concerted," said Daniel Gour?, vice president of the Lexington Institute, a public policy research organization, about the probes, which have rocked foreign companies in those sectors.

"They definitely want to bolster the domestic side," said Gour?, a national security analyst who also sees the Chinese actions as an effort to divert attention away from still-unresolved scandals by their domestic manufacturers in some of the same sectors, included a notorious tainted baby formula debacle, even as foreign companies rack up big gains in those areas.

"I think the Chinese are being smart, saying 'If you've got a stain on you, then throw mud on someone else,'" said Gour?.

"This is not a coincidence?it can't be," agreed author Gordon Chang, a longtime critic of China who believes the country is headed for financial meltdown because of heavy debt and dramatically slower growth. "This is actually systematic. ... I believe this is all part of a concerted plan of going after foreign companies."

"I think that what China is doing is trying to basically limit the business of foreign companies," he said.

However, a commentary in the Communist party's People's Daily newspaper said: "A crackdown on commercial bribery by multinationals is deeply significant to safeguarding the order of the market economy and protecting an environment of fair competition," Reuters reported Wednesday.

?By CNBC's Dan Mangan. Follow him on Twitter @_DanMangan

? 2013 CNBC LLC. All Rights Reserved

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663286/s/2ecc7b4f/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Cbusiness0Cchina0Eblocks0Euk0Edrug0Ecompany0Eexec0Eleaving0Ecountry0E6C10A660A693/story01.htm

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DOD expects to save $2.4B by reforming military health care

The Pentagon expects to save $2.4 billion over the next six years by reforming military health care.

Staff Washington Business Journal

Under a new Defense Health Agency that will begin operation Oct. 1, the Pentagon expects to save $2.4 billion over the next six years, according to Nextgov.

The Defense Department will do this by consolidating functions previously performed by the three services and the Tricare Management Activity. DHA, with a staff of 1,039 and headed by Air Force Lt. Gen. Douglas Robb , will achieve these savings by providing common shared services for the TRICARE Health Plan, information technology, medical logistics and facilities management.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/vertical_35/~3/j5-I3gHsrRY/dod-expects-to-save-24b-by-reforming.html

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Stairs Next Step In Fighting Obesity, Mayor Says

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Study: African nations should give citizens a direct cut of their mineral wealth

Sometimes the most efficient solution to poverty alleviation is the simplest: give poor people more money to spend.

By Tom Murphy,?Guest blogger / July 18, 2013

A worker shows gold found through gold panning at the Wad Bushara gold mine near Abu Delelq in Gadarif State, Wad Bushara, Sudan, April 27, 2013.

Mohamed Nureldin Abdallah/Reuters

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?A version of this post originally appeared on the blog A View From the Cave. The views reflected are the author's own.

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Natural resources could be the next great development financing tool.

It is quite simple. Take the money that a government makes from the sale of oil, gold, copper, etc. and give citizens a cut.

Giving direct cash will help out the people that need it most and it could spur on development as people will then spend the money on local businesses and services. Additionally, it will reduce corruption and let the average citizen hold his or her government accountable for how money is spent.

That is the basic case made by Todd Moss of the Center for Global Development with his oil-to-cash initiative. A new working paper from World Bank economists?Shanta Devarajan and Marcelo Giugale takes the idea and applies it to resource-rich African nations. They come up with some theoretical ways that countries can design schemes that will turn natural resources from a curse to a blessing.

It matters now because more African countries are discovering major reserves that will significantly alter their national trajectories.?The researchers suggest that governments can follow the example of Alaska and the Canadian province of Alberta who developed schemes that distribute a fixed proportion of resource revenues to all citizens, adopting what the researchers call direct dividend payments (DDPs).

Giving a modest amount of natural resource revenues to citizens can contribute significantly to the elimination of poverty in some countries.

?A transfer of about 10 percent of oil revenues in Angola, Equatorial Guinea and Gabon,?distributed universally, would be sufficient to close the poverty gap in these countries,? write Mr. Devarajan and Mr. Giugale. ?For larger countries such as Mozambique and Nigeria, the transfer would cover about half the poverty gap.?

Governments were initially resistant to DDPs for three reasons:

  1. Too hard and costly to identify citizens;
  2. No incentives for present leaders to give up resource revenues;
  3. Cash-strapped governments cannot afford to give away valuable revenue that pays for public services.

Devarajan and Giugale admit that all were problems year ago, but changes in countries and technological advances wipe away the three concerns. Identifying citizens is easier than ever. India, home to 1.2 billion people, is a third of the way done with its identification card scheme. If India can do it, so can smaller countries. The second concern is less of an issue due to increased democratization. With more countries having elections, candidates can campaign on the idea of initiating a DDP scheme.

Finally, the implementation of DDPs may actually make governments better. With less money, governments will have to eliminate wasteful spending and programs and may even increase public scrutiny for government spending. DDPs recognize the limitations of governments in accomplishing what they set out to do.

In an ideal world, where governments perfectly reflect the preferences of citizens and face no constraints in providing public goods, there is no need for DDPs or, indeed, for any type of cash transfer. The government will choose the correct mix of public investment and consumption, and implement it costlessly.

That sounds simple enough, but it may not be so easy. Prior research from?Devarajan shows that increased scrutiny can slow down the ability of the government to invest natural resource revenues into services. Other research shows that governments may react by providing people with the services they want in order to avoid further scrutiny. In such a case, DDPs would ensure that governments are more responsive to the needs of citizens in order to keep people happy.

This careful balance means that DDPs will work well in countries already benefiting from natural resources, where the transfers would increase level of government scrutiny and the political system where the ruling party has to respond to citizen needs.

It will also work better in smaller countries where taking a small cut from revenues will go a long way. However, large countries should not be dismissed, say the authors. The transfers can move people living in poverty above or closer to the poverty line. Picking up on DDPs will improve transparency in governments, something that the authors say is a good thing.

They are not a substitute for continuing and enhanced efforts at developing the institutional capacity of governments. On the contrary, they complement those efforts, because they trigger additional demands for public accountability.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/ZccD4XSljbo/Study-African-nations-should-give-citizens-a-direct-cut-of-their-mineral-wealth

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