Daily News

News and Video. Top Stories, World, US, Business, Sci/Tech, Entertainment, Sports, Health, Most Popular.

Just 11% of Republicans are Hispanic or Non-White

PrintPrintEmailEmailPDF   PDF

CQ Politics notes a new Gallup survey found that only 11% of Republicans are Hispanics or blacks or members of other races. That compares with 36% of Democrats who are non-white and 27% of independents.





Just 11% of Republicans are Hispanic or Non-White

[Source: Good Times Society - by The American Illuminati]


Just 11% of Republicans are Hispanic or Non-White

[Source: Rome News]


Just 11% of Republicans are Hispanic or Non-White

[Source: Home News]


Just 11% of Republicans are Hispanic or Non-White

[Source: Abc 7 News]


Just 11% of Republicans are Hispanic or Non-White

posted by tgazw @ 10:23 AM, ,

Emma Soames on fashion and style for the older generation

PrintPrintEmailEmailPDF   PDF


My cup of sartorial joy brims over with the discovery of Ari Cohen's blog, Advanced Style, which chronicles the style of the chicest, wackiest and best dressed of America's older generation. Here you will find inspiration from vintage style mavens, ranging from 93-year-old model Mimi Weddell, to a dude from Seattle whose fine legs are displayed in stockings and who is topped off with a blazer and cap. Then there's fabric designer Elizabeth Sweetheart, who dresses entirely in green - a different outfit every day. She was recently profiled in New York magazine where she explained the genesis of her eccentric but bizarrely successful look. "I began wearing green nail varnish and it just spread all over me."


Cohen, 27, started the blog last summer. He works in the bookstore at the New Museum but originally came from Seattle where his best friend was his grandmother. "I adored my grandparents. Older people's style has evolved and they don't mind what other people think so much. They just aren't so self-conscious." He says that when he moved to New York last May he noticed immediately how vibrant and stylish older people in the city were, and wanted to start a project to bring that into focus.


The site is gathering momentum along with a mood of greater acceptance and respect for the older practitioners of style consciousness. "People have started to notice older people more," explains Cohen. "You can learn so much from the way an old person wears a coat that they have had for ever with maybe a hat, for instance - these are the last people around who know how to dress formally and they have a confidence about them that younger people just don't have."


Recent trends spotted on the site include bright red lipstick and huge dark glasses - neither of which are age specific but do look fabulous on the denizens of Advanced Style. There's no doubt that when the fat lady finally starts singing, she will do so in Balenciaga, with a slash of red lipstick and possibly some kid gloves taken out of a closet and smelling of the lavender in which they were for decades preserved.


? Emma Soames is editor-at-large of Saga magazine.



guardian.co.uk ? Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds





Emma Soames on fashion and style for the older generation

[Source: Good Times Society - by The American Illuminati]


Emma Soames on fashion and style for the older generation

[Source: Mexico News]


Emma Soames on fashion and style for the older generation

[Source: Abc 7 News]


Emma Soames on fashion and style for the older generation

[Source: State News]


Emma Soames on fashion and style for the older generation

posted by tgazw @ 10:19 AM, ,

Now It's The UK's Turn For Some Bogus Piracy Stats

PrintPrintEmailEmailPDF   PDF

There are plenty of instances of misleading and otherwise bad stats being used by anti-piracy groups, like the recent BSA numbers from Canada that were basically made up. Now, a group from the UK is saying that piracy costs that country's economy tens of billions of pounds. It makes the same mistake as plenty of other studies before it: counting every instance of piracy, or perhaps even just the availability of copyrighted material on file-sharing networks, as a lost sale. It's fallacious to assume that every single person that downloads a piece of content, or simply has access to it for free, would pay for it if the free version wasn't available. Furthermore, any study like this that says an entire economy is being harmed by X amount of money because of piracy is pretty much bogus. This money that's supposedly being lost because of piracy isn't being lost by the economy, as undoubtedly it's being spent elsewhere. It's not being flushed down the toilet or turned into ether, it's just not ending up in content companies' bank accounts.

Carlo Longino is an expert at the Insight Community. To get insight and analysis from Carlo Longino and other experts on challenges your company faces, click here.


Permalink | Comments | Email This Story















Now It's The UK's Turn For Some Bogus Piracy Stats

[Source: Good Times Society - by The American Illuminati]


Now It's The UK's Turn For Some Bogus Piracy Stats

[Source: Home News]


Now It's The UK's Turn For Some Bogus Piracy Stats

[Source: World News]


Now It's The UK's Turn For Some Bogus Piracy Stats

[Source: Mexico News]


Now It's The UK's Turn For Some Bogus Piracy Stats

posted by tgazw @ 9:56 AM, ,

Obama: U.S. serving 'as a role model'

PrintPrintEmailEmailPDF   PDF

by Mark Silva


As President Barack Obama prepares to depart Tuesday for a trip that will carry him from Saudi Arabia to France -- with an address to the Muslim world from Cairo in the middle of the journey -- he is starting to aim his megaphone at a global audience.


In an interview with the BBC on the eve of the trip, the president was asked about delivering his appeal for peace to the Muslim world from a city, Cairo, where many political prisoners are being held, and how he can reconcile the two.


"The message I hope to deliver is that democracy, rule of law, freedom of speech, freedom of religion those are not simply principles of the West to be hoisted on these countries, but rather what I believe to be universal principles that they can embrace and affirm as part of their national identity,'' Obama said in an interview airing this evening.


"Now, the danger, I think, is when the United States or any country thinks that we can simply can impose these values on another country with a different history and a different culture .. our job,'' Obama tells BBC interviewer Justin Webb.


"Absolutely we'll be encouraging ......and I think the thing that we can do most importantly is to serve as a role model, and that's why, for example, closing Guantanamo from my perspective -- as difficult as it is -- is important, because part of what we want to affirm to the world is that these are values that are important even when it's hard, maybe especially when it's hard -- and not just when it's easy."


Part of the interivew will be broadcast on BBC World News and BBC World Service radio at 9 pm United Kingdom time, and the full interview will air on Tuesday a 04:30 am UK time. The BBC Obama interview also will be shown online.


The president leaves Tuesday evening for Saudi Arabia, where he will hold private meetings with the king before traveling to Cairo for his public address on Thursday, and then on to Dresden, Germany, for a visit to the Buchenwald concentration camp, and finally to Paris for commemoration of the 65th anniversary of the Normandy landing.





Obama: U.S. serving 'as a role model'

[Source: Good Times Society - by The American Illuminati]


Obama: U.S. serving 'as a role model'

[Source: Msnbc News]


Obama: U.S. serving 'as a role model'

[Source: Mma News]


Obama: U.S. serving 'as a role model'

[Source: Broadcasting News]


Obama: U.S. serving 'as a role model'

[Source: Wb News]


Obama: U.S. serving 'as a role model'

[Source: Home News]


Obama: U.S. serving 'as a role model'

posted by tgazw @ 9:49 AM, ,

Yglesias Award Nominee

PrintPrintEmailEmailPDF   PDF

"Late-term abortion doctor George Tiller was gunned down at his church in Kansas Sunday morning in a thoroughly evil, cold-blooded act of domestic terrorism. Yes, terrorism. Not 'extremism,'" - Michelle Malkin.






Yglesias Award Nominee

[Source: Good Times Society - by The American Illuminati]


Yglesias Award Nominee

[Source: Murder News]


Yglesias Award Nominee

[Source: Mma News]


Yglesias Award Nominee

[Source: Cnn News]


Yglesias Award Nominee

[Source: News Paper]


Yglesias Award Nominee

[Source: State News]


Yglesias Award Nominee

posted by tgazw @ 9:15 AM, ,

Bin Laden in hiding, Obama in public

PrintPrintEmailEmailPDF   PDF

by Mark Silva



On the eve of President Barack Obama's address to the Muslim world from Cairo, where he will deliver an appeal for mutual understanding, the Arab world has heard from another voice: A recorded audio-tape attributed to Osama bin Laden, fugitive leader of al Qaeda, accusing Obama of fomenting "hatred'' with military action in Pakistan.



The purported broadcast of bin Laden's words, aired by the Arab-language Al Jazeera satellite television station as Obama was arriving in Saudi Arabia today, stood as a stark reminder of the hurdles that the United States still faces throughout the region.



While the president is intent on "resetting''' U.S. relations with the Muslim world in his planned televised address from the campus of Cairo University in Egypt, some of the long-elusive sponsors of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist assaults against the United States remain at large and refocused on overturning the governments of Pakistan and Afghanistan.



"I don't think it's surprising that al Qaeda would want to shift attention away from the president's historic efforts ... to reach out and have an open dialogue with the Muslim world,'' Robert Gibbs, Obama's press secretary, said as the president was holding private meetings with the king of Saudi Arabia.



Bin Laden, son of a Saudi family that gained enormous wealth in construction and built the royal palaces of the late King Saud, became involved in the militant Jihadist movement in Afghanistan after the Soviet Union invaded that nation. After returning to Saudi Arabia, he was confined to house arrest, and left the country in the early 1990s - his Saudi citizenship publicly revoked in 1994.



If Obama's mission in the Middle East has a clear purpose, the administration maintains, so does the timing of al Qaeda's message.



The tape's broadcast follows comments from al-Qaeda's second- in-command, Ayman al-Zawahiri, urging Egyptians to shun Obama and contending that the "torturers of Egypt" and "slaves of America'' had invited the American leader to speak in Cairo.



The administration has attempted to draw a contrast between an al Qaeda in hiding and an American leader taking a high-profile stance with his appeal to the Muslim world.



"You have, you know, the leader of the free world speaking from one of the great cities in the world, and you have, you know, bin Laden speaking from an undisclosed... location,'' said Philip J. Crowley, assistant secretary of state for public affairs. "That speaks volumes in terms of the contrast.''




Bin Laden in hiding, Obama in public

[Source: Good Times Society - by The American Illuminati]


Bin Laden in hiding, Obama in public

[Source: Accident News]


Bin Laden in hiding, Obama in public

[Source: Wesh 2 News]


Bin Laden in hiding, Obama in public

posted by tgazw @ 9:10 AM, ,

Multimedia

Top Stories

Sponsored Links

Sponsored Links


Sponsored Links

Archives

Previous Posts

Links