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Friday, December 31, 2010

MY PRAYER

 God grant Me the serenity to accept the people I cannot change..  the courage to change  the one I can... and the wisdom   to know it's Me...




God Knows

 

 
When you are tired and discouraged
from
fruitless effort,
GOD knows how hard you have tried.
 

When you've cried so long your
heart is in anguish,
GOD has counted your tears.
 

If you feel that your life is on hold
and time has passed you by,
GOD is waiting for you.

When nothing makes sense and you
are confused or frustrated,
GOD has the answer.
 


If suddenly your outlook is brighter
and you find traces of hope,
GOD has whispered to you.
 

When things are going well and you
have much to be thankful for,
GOD has blessed you.
 

When something joyful happens
and you are filled with awe,
GOD has smiled upon you.

Remember that wherever you are or
whatever you are feeling,
GOD knows!

16 rules to follow

wallpaper_16_rules_1024x768.jpg

DESIDERATA




Go placidly amid the noise and haste,
and remember what peace there may be in silence.
As far as possible, without surrender,
be on good terms with all persons.


Speak your truth quietly and clearly;
and listen to others,
even to the dull and ignorant;
they too have their story.

Avoid loud and aggressive persons;
they are vexations to the spirit.

If you compare yourself with others,
you may become vain or bitter,
for always there will be greater
and lesser persons than yourself.

Enjoy your achievements as well as your plans.
Keep interested in your own career, however humble,
it's a real possession in the changing fortunes of time.

Exercise caution in your business affairs,
for the world is full of trickery.
But let this not blind you to what virtue there is;
many persons strive for high ideals,
and everywhere life is full of heroism.

Be yourself.
Especially do not feign affection.
Neither be cynical about love;
for in the face of all aridity and disenchantment,
it is as perennial as the grass.

Take kindly the counsel of the years,
gracefully surrendering the things of youth.

Nurture strength of spirit
to shield you in sudden misfortune.
But do not distress yourself with dark imaginings.
Many fears are born of fatigue and loneliness.

Beyond a wholesome discipline,
be gentle with yourself.

You are a child of the universe
no less than the trees and the stars;
you have a right to be here.
And whether or not it is clear to you,
no doubt the universe is unfolding as it should.

Therefore be at peace with God,
whatever you conceive him to be.
And whatever your labors and aspirations,
in the noisy confusion of life,
keep peace in your soul.

With all its sham, drudgery and broken dreams,
it is still a beautiful world.
Be cheerful.
Strive to be happy.
 

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Laurent Gbagbo: Delegation Leaves Ivory Coast Without Gbagbo

Ivory Coast - Laurent Gbagbo Ivory CoastLaurent Gbagbo, president of the Republic of Cote d'Ivoire, addresses the 62nd General Assembly at the United Nations on September 26, 2007 in New York City. (UPI Photo/Monika Graff)
Source: YellowBrix
Laurent Gbagbo was delivered an ultimatum to either step down or face a military ouster by West African leaders.  Those same leaders left the Ivory Coast late Tuesday without taking him into exile a month after the U.N. said he lost the disputed election.
In a sign of escalating tensions in the country, the U.N. mission said that one of its peacekeepers had been wounded with a machete when a large crowd in a pro-Gbagbo neighborhood encircled a convoy and set one of its three vehicles on fire.
The regional delegation led by presidents from Sierra Leone, Cape Verde and Benin held meetings with both Gbagbo and internationally recognized winner Alassane Ouattara, then returned to meet with Gbagbo a second time late Tuesday before leaving the country.
Gbagbo, the incumbent leader who has been in power for a decade in Ivory Coast, has shown no interest in stepping aside despite the international calls for him to go. While Ouattara has been endorsed by most of the world, Gbagbo still maintains control of Ivory Coast's military and security forces.
Weeks of postelection violence have left at least 173 people dead, according to the United Nations. The toll is believed to be much higher: The U.N. said it has been unable to investigate reports of a mass grave because of restrictions on U.N. personnel movements.
There also have been growing concerns about violence targeting peacekeepers since Gbagbo called for the U.N. mission known as UNOCI to leave earlier this month, and the U.N. said Tuesday one of its peacekeepers had been wounded.
"UNOCI vigorously condemns this attack and reiterates its determination to pursue its work in the service of the Ivorian people," the U.N. mission said in a statement.
The regional leaders had hoped to persuade Gbagbo to leave Ivory Coast with them after their one-day mission, saying he would be offered asylum in neighboring countries.
The 15-nation regional bloc ECOWAS threatened to use "legitimate force" if Gbagbo does not relinquish power though it has not publicly specified a deadline. Nigeria has the strongest army in the region and is expected to play a major role if an operation is launched to oust Gbagbo.
Ouattara's camp has been confident in recent days that such help is coming.
"It's not a bluff," one senior Ouattara adviser said Monday on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter. "The soldiers are coming much faster than anyone thinks."
ECOWAS has intervened in past regional disputes, including the seizing of Sierra Leone's capital in 1998 that forced military junta leaders to flee and allowed an elected president to return to power. ECOWAS also intervened in Liberia in 1990 and its forces stayed for several years. It has sent troops to Guinea-Bissau as well.
Some analysts feel an ECOWAS mission in Ivory Coast would entail a full-scale invasion, causing numerous civilian casualties.
The French government says its forces in Ivory Coast will protect French citizens but won't be making any decisions about an international military intervention.
U.S. State Department spokesman Mark Toner on Tuesday commended ECOWAS' leadership, and said that the United States was prepared "to take even stronger actions _ such as financial sanctions _ as needed."
"The strong, measured response from both the (African Union) and ECOWAS to the Ivorian crisis demonstrates the pre-eminent role that regional organizations play in addressing crises," he said.
Late Tuesday, Gbagbo's allies lashed out on state television at the nations that have recognized Ouattara's representatives as Ivorian ambassadors. State television can only be seen in the largest city of Abidjan as it has been yanked from the airwaves in most of the country.
Gbagbo's government "reserves the right to apply the principle of reciprocity by ending the missions of ambassadors of the countries concerned in Ivory Coast," the communique said.
Many Ivorians are terrified of Gbagbo's security forces. Human rights groups blame them for hundreds of arrests and dozens of cases of torture and disappearances since the election. A Gbagbo adviser has said he does not believe his supporters could be behind the violence.
Gbagbo has been in power since 2000 and had already overstayed his mandate by five years when the long-delayed presidential election was finally held in October, with the runoff coming in November. The election was intended to help reunify a country that was divided by a 2002-2003 civil war into a rebel-controlled north and a loyalist south.
The U.N. was tasked with certifying the results of the election as part of a peace agreement that ended the civil war.
While Ivory Coast was officially reunited in a 2007 peace deal, Ouattara still draws his support from the northern half of the country, where residents feel they are often treated as foreigners within their own country by southerners.
The regional bloc ECOWAS is comprised of Benin, Burkina Faso, Cape Verde, Ivory Coast, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone and Togo.

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Opposition Calls for New Constitution in Tanzania

Opposition Calls for New Constitution in Tanzania

Police dispersed hundreds of opposition supporters who were yesterday planning to demonstrate in Dar es Salaam in support of calls for a new Constitution.



CUF supporters cheer the party’s presidential candidate Prof Ibrahim Lipumba (not in picture) during the closing of campaign rally at Mabibo Mpakani area in Dar es Salaam (file photo).

Tanzania:   Opposition Members Call for New Constitution (news)
The Citizen
28 December 2010

Police fired in the air to disperse hundreds of opposition supporters who were yesterday planning to demonstrate in Dar es Salaam in support of calls for a new constitution. 

LUKAZA: CHUO KIKUU CHA DODOMA CHAZINDULIWA JANA

LUKAZA: CHUO KIKUU CHA DODOMA CHAZINDULIWA JANA: "

CHUO KIKUU CHA DODOMA CHAZINDULIWA JANA

Jiwe La Msingi Lililofunguliwa Na Rais Jakaya Kikwete Katika Uzinduzi Wa Chuo Kikuu Cha DODOMA Jana
Makamu wa Rais wa Jamhuri ya Muungano wa Tanzania Dk Mohamed Gharib Bilal akitoa ufafanuzi wa jambo kwa Mheshimiwa Rais wa Jamhuri ya Muungano wa Tanzania Dk Jakaya Mrisho Kikwete muda mfupi baada ya Rais Kikwete kuzindua rasmi Chuo Kikuu cha Dodoma Jana. Picha na mdau Clarence Nanyaro wa VPO

LUKAZA: MAWAZIRI NA MANAIBU WAZIRI WAAPISHWA IKULU JANA

LUKAZA: MAWAZIRI NA MANAIBU WAZIRI WAAPISHWA IKULU JANA: "Naibu Waziri wa Ujenzi Mh. Harrison Mwakyembe na familia yake baada ya kuapishwa Ikulu jijini Dar Jana..."

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Kenya's Odinga named to mediate Ivory Coast political crisis

Kenya's Odinga named to mediate Ivory Coast political crisis

Kenya's Odinga named to mediate Ivory Coast political crisis

Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga has been named by the African Union to mediate Ivory Coast's political crisis and avert another civil war.

Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga speaks at a conference, in Nairobi, Kenya, Dec. 2. Odinga has been named to mediate Ivory Coast's political crisis and help avert another civil war.

Khalil Senosi/AP


By Scott Baldauf, Staff writer / December 27, 2010

Nairobi, Kenya

The African Union has named Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga to lead a delegation to mediate the ongoing political crisis in Ivory Coast.

Related Stories

With two men – incumbent President Laurent Gbagbo and Alassane Ouattara – claiming victory in the Ivory Coast’s November runoff presidential elections, the crisis has become bitter and violent, claiming over 200 lives, and sending some 14,000 Ivorians fleeing into neighboring countries. The elections were tightly contested and international observers and the nation’s electoral commission gave the nod to Mr. Ouattara. The West African Economic Community (ECOWAS), the United Nations, the African Union, the European Union, and most individual nations have acknowledged him as president-elect, but President Gbagbo has so far refused to cede power.

Jean Ping, the head of the African Union Commission, told reporters he had asked Mr. Odinga to "lead the monitoring of the situation in Ivory Coast and bolster the efforts being undertaken" to end the crisis.

The November elections were supposed to be the final step in bringing peace to Ivory Coast, which experienced a brutal civil war in 2002, divided largely along ethno-religious lines between a mainly Muslim north and a mainly Christian south.

Mr. Ouattara, a northerner, continues to take refuge in the Gulf Hotel in Abidjan, surrounded by UN peacekeepers. Troops loyal to Mr. Gbagbo have attacked the hotel on several occasions.

The selection of Odinga as head of a mediation team is both bold and curious, given that Odinga himself was in a very similar post-election crisis in Kenya. In the Dec. 27, 2007 elections, Odinga challenged incumbent President Mwai Kibaki in elections that international observers said were rife with irregularities and evidence of ballot box manipulation. Kenya’s electoral commission declared Mr. Kibaki the winner, and Odinga’s supporters went on a violent rampage. In total, some 1,200 people were killed and 300,000 displaced from their homes by the violence wreaked by supporters of Odinga’s Orange Democratic Party and Kibaki’s Party of National Unity.

An African Union mediation team led by former UN Secretary General Kofi Annan finally convinced both sides in 2008 to form a coalition government of national unity, a formula that at least ended the violence and produced a newly-passed constitution that would presumably prevent future electoral crises of this kind.

Odinga may carry valuable experience of power-sharing deals with him as mediator, but he will also be carrying some rhetorical baggage. Last week, the Kenyan prime minister called on the AU to remove Ivorian President Gbagbo by force.

“Gbagbo must be forced, even if it means using military means to get rid of him, because now he is just relying on military power, not the people's power," Iranian news agency Press TV quoted Odinga as saying at a press conference Nairobi. “The AU must start taking seriously the situation in Ivory Coast instead of lamenting. Democracy must be preserved.”

Prostate Cancer Pictures Slideshow: Guidelines to Symptoms, Tests and Treatment on MedicineNet.com

Prostate Cancer Pictures Slideshow: Guidelines to Symptoms, Tests and Treatment on MedicineNet.com

Prostate Cancer Prevention, Surgery, Stages, Causes, Treatment, Symptoms and Signs by MedicineNet.com

What is the prostate gland?

The prostate gland is an organ that is located at the base or outlet (neck) of the urinary bladder. (See the diagram that follows.) The gland surrounds the first part of the urethra. The urethra is the passage through which urine drains from the bladder to exit from the penis. One function of the prostate gland is to help control urination by pressing directly against the part of the urethra that it surrounds. The main function of the prostate gland is to produce some of the substances that are found in normal semen, such as minerals and sugar. Semen is the fluid that transports the sperm to assist with reproduction. A man can manage quite well, however, without his prostate gland. (See the section on surgical treatment for prostate cancer.)
In a young man, the normal prostate gland is the size of a walnut (<30g). During normal aging, however, the gland usually grows larger. This hormone-related enlargement with aging is called benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), but this condition is not associated with prostate cancer. Both BPH and prostate cancer, however, can cause similar problems in older men. For example, an enlarged prostate gland can squeeze or impinge on the outlet of the bladder or the urethra, leading to difficulty with urination. The resulting symptoms commonly include slowing of the urinary stream and urinating more frequently, particularly at night. Patients should seek medical advice from their urologist or primary-care physician if these symptoms are present.
Picture of the prostate gland
Prostate Cancer Prevention, Surgery, Stages, Causes, Treatment, Symptoms and Signs by MedicineNet.com

Monday, December 27, 2010

6 cancer-fighting superfoods

6 cancer-fighting superfoods

Getty Images
Getty Images
By Leslie Barrie

To reduce your risk of cancer, look no further than your fridge. "All the studies on cancer and nutrition point to eating plant-based foods for their phytonutrients and other special compounds," says Richard Béliveau, PhD, chair in the prevention and treatment of cancer at the University of Québec at Montreal and author of Foods to Fight Cancer.

Aim for five to nine daily servings of all kinds of fruits and vegetables—especially these six superstars.

Broccoli
All cruciferous veggies (think cauliflower, cabbage, kale) contain cancer-fighting properties, but broccoli is the only one with a sizable amount of sulforaphane, a particularly potent compound that boosts the body's protective enzymes and flushes out cancer-causing chemicals, says Jed Fahey, ScD. A recent University of Michigan study on mice found that sulforaphane also targets cancer stem cells—those that aid in tumor growth.

Helps fight: breast, liver, lung, prostate, skin, stomach, and bladder cancers

Your Rx: The more broccoli, the better, research suggests—so add it wherever you can, from salads to omelets to the top of your pizza.

Health.com: 13 easy pizza recipes

Berries
All berries are packed with cancer-fighting phytonutrients. But black raspberries, in particular, contain very high concentrations of phytochemicals called anthocyanins, which slow down the growth of premalignant cells and keep new blood vessels from forming (and potentially feeding a cancerous tumor), according to Gary D. Stoner, PhD, a professor of internal medicine at The Ohio State University College of Medicine.

Helps fight: colon, esophageal, oral, and skin cancers

Your Rx: Stoner uses a concentrated berry powder in his studies but says a half-cup serving of berries a day may help your health, too.

Health.com: Go wild for berries!

Tomatoes
This juicy fruit is the best dietary source of lycopene, a carotenoid that gives tomatoes their red hue, Béliveau says. And that's good news, because lycopene was found to stop endometrial cancer cell growth in a study in Nutrition and Cancer. Endometrial cancer causes nearly 8,000 deaths a year.

Helps fight: endometrial, lung, prostate, and stomach cancers

Your Rx: The biggest benefits come from cooked tomatoes (think pasta sauce!), since the heating process increases the amount of lycopene your body is able to absorb.

Health.com: 10 tasty tomato recipes

Walnuts
Their phytosterols (cholesterol-like molecules found in plants) have been shown to block estrogen receptors in breast cancer cells, possibly slowing the cells' growth, says Elaine Hardman, PhD, associate professor at Marshall University School of Medicine in Huntington, West Virginia.

Helps fight: breast and prostate cancers

Your Rx: Munching on an ounce of walnuts a day may yield the best benefits, Hardman's research found.

Health.com: 8 super nuts

Garlic
Phytochemicals in garlic have been found to halt the formation of nitrosamines, carcinogens formed in the stomach (and in the intestines, in certain conditions) when you consume nitrates, a common food preservative, Béliveau says. In fact, the Iowa Women's Health Study found that women with the highest amounts of garlic in their diets had a 50 percent lower risk of certain colon cancers than women who ate the least.

Helps fight: breast, colon, esophageal, and stomach cancers

Your Rx: Chop a clove of fresh, crushed garlic (crushing helps release beneficial enzymes), and sprinkle it into that lycopene-rich tomato sauce while it simmers.

Health.com: Surprising health benefits of garlic

Beans
A study out of Michigan State University found that black and navy beans significantly reduced colon cancer incidence in rats, in part because a diet rich in the legumes increased levels of the fatty acid butyrate, which in high concentrations has protective effects against cancer growth. Another study, in the journal Crop Science, found dried beans particularly effective in preventing breast cancer in rats.

Helps fight: breast and colon cancers

Your Rx: Add a serving—a half-cup—of legumes a few times a week (either from a can or dry beans that've been soaked and cooked) to your usual rotation of greens or other veggie

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Why ICC trial of six prominent Kenyans would be a first

Why ICC trial of six prominent Kenyans would be a first

The chief prosecutor of the world's only permanent war-crimes tribunal has accused six leading Kenyans of crimes against humanity in a case that could break Kenya's pattern of impunity.

International Criminal Court's (ICC) Chief Prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo speaks during a news conference announcing suspects behind Kenya's post-election violence following the 2007 elections, in the Hague on Dec. 15.

Jerry Lampen/Reuters

Why ICC trial of six prominent Kenyans would be a first


Human rights groups fault MPs on plans to raise funds for ICC suspects


Updated 18 hr(s) 52 min(s) ago
BY BEAUTTAH OMANGA
Several human rights groups have opposed plans by some MPs to raise about Sh600million towards the defence of the six Kenyans facing International Crimes charges at The Hague.
The groups and Prof Yash Pal Ghai said it will be immoral to use State resources to boost the battle of the six suspects when the case commences at The Hague.
"Those out to raise funds are confirming that they don’t care about the Kenyans who were killed during the chaos and they want to defend criminality" said Ngujiri Wambugu, Convener Kenyans for Change.
They also criticised Prime Minister Raila Odinga’s pledge to stand by ODM’s members in the list.
Another group comprising of victims of the violence drawn from Nairobi said they were watching keenly on how the ICC process will be handled saying some of the suspects who fuelled their predicament were still left to loam freely in the country.
Set freeThe Prof Ghai team while addressing a press conference in Nairobi on Wednesday said the ICC process should run full course and those found guilty jailed while those who will be proved innocent set free.
" As a country, we need reconciliation but we cannot achieve that without first getting the truth of what happened and who did what" said Ghai.
He accused MPs of dragging their feet on the implementation of the new constitution saying some leaders’ conduct and utterances were a confirmation that they wanted to retain impunity in the face of the new constitution.
" We are four months into the operations of the new constitution but it is distressing to see the manner our leaders are conducting themselves. We must have in place the implementation and Revenue Allocation Commissions in place as a matter of urgency’ said Prof Ghai.

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

GeeNeMPubs: Green DIY energy

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Tuesday, December 21, 2010

I Thought I was Loving You poem - Thoughts about God

I Thought I was Loving You poem - Thoughts about God

Reading and meditating in Your Word day and night
I thought I was in the light.
Fasting and in consistent prayer
With no need to fear,
Having Your armor to wear.

Yet when treated meanly......love began to slow.
I thought I was loving You.....only to find the test
Of loving You is really more than just reading and
Meditating in Your Word day and night....more than
Fasting and in consistent prayer.

I thought I was loving You then You visited me....
And just the awe of Your presence....Your Love
Exposed and up rooted all bitterness and unforgiveness.

I thought I was loving You but Your love is really tested
In hostile environments and in adversities!
I thought I was loving You....truth is I wasn't....but as
Your Love flows to me I feel it flowing out to all who
Have wronged me.....yes from Your river of Love.
Now I can really say I am loving You, for now I love
Those who do not love me and those who reject and despise.
Now I no longer say I thought I was loving You.

Thank You Lord for loving me even when I was not displaying
Your love and thought I was loving You!

Written By : Margaret C Mullings

Opening Prayer and Closing Prayer - Thoughts about God

Opening Prayer and Closing Prayer - Thoughts about God

Opening Prayer
Loving heavenly Father we come to you this hour asking for your blessing and help as we are gathered together. We pray for guidance in the matters at hand and ask that you would clearly show us how to conduct our work with a spirit of joy and enthusiasm. Give us the desire to find ways to excel in our work. Help us to work together and encourage each other to excellence. We ask that we would challenge each other to reach higher and farther to be the best we can be. We ask this in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ. Amen

Closing Prayer
Heavenly Father as we come to the end of our time together we thank you for what has been accomplished here today. May the matters discussed serve as a catalyst to move us forward and cause us to advance and see growth in all areas of our lives. May we leave here recognizing You are the God of all wisdom and You are willing to lead us forward. This we pray in the name of the Lord Jesus. Amen

How to be Filled with the Holy Spirit

How to be Filled with the Holy Spirit

Getting to know God - Thoughts About God

Getting to know God - Thoughts About God

About success

Along with success comes a reputation for wisdom.
Euripides
They can because they think they can.
Virgil
Nothing can stop the man with the right mental attitude from achieving his goal; nothing on earth can help the man with the wrong mental attitude.
Thomas Jefferson

Keep steadily before you the fact that all true success depends at last upon yourself.
Theodore T. Hunger
We are all motivated by a keen desire for praise, and the better a man is, the more he is inspired to glory.
Cicero
Success is the sum of small efforts, repeated day in and day out.
Robert Collier
The thing always happens that you really believe in; and the belief in a thing makes it happen.
Frank Loyd Wright
A failure is a man who has blundered, but is not able to cash in on the experience.
Elbert Hubbard

Some inspiring quotes

Try not to become a man of success but a man of value.
Albert Einstein
                                                                                                                        If you have built castles in the air, your work need not be lost; that is where they should be.
Now put foundations under them.

Henry David Thoreau
                                                                                                                     Inspiration and genius--one and the same.
Victor Hugo
                                                                                                                                                                                            To find what you seek in the road of life, the best proverb of all is that which says:
"Leave no stone unturned."
                           Edward Bulwer Lytton

Female teacher jailed for sex with boys

  • Teacher had indecent dealings with boys
  • Had pleaded guilty to nine charges
  • Sentenced to two years, four months in jail
A FEMALE physical education teacher broke down in tears when a Perth judge sentenced her to more than two years in prison for having sex with two teenage boys in her care.
The 25-year-old woman from New South Wales, whose name has been suppressed, held her head in her hands while judge Phillip Eaton recounted her indecent dealings with two boys, aged 15 and 16.
The woman faced nine charges relating to sexual acts that happened between December 2009 and January 2010.
She previously pleaded guilty to all charges.
The District Court heard the woman sent text messages to the boys, as well as nude and provocative pictures.

She invited them on separate occasions to her home, drank alcohol with them, and had sex with them in her bedroom.
Judge Eaton noted that the woman had a troubled past, including a history of alcohol and drug abuse.
She was in a violent relationship in NSW when she got the job as a physical education teacher at a high school in the Pilbara region.
Judge Eaton also noted that the woman was a popular teacher who had won awards for her teaching excellence.
Her defence lawyer had made the submission that the woman was upset about having to relocate to Newman and had begun drinking more as a result of the impending move, which led her to commit the crimes.
Judge Eaton described the woman's action as "self-destructive" and said it was "a pity" that her conviction meant she would never teach in an Australian school again.
The woman was sentenced to two years and four months in prison, but will be eligible for parole after serving 14 months.

Friday, December 17, 2010

We need more Wikileaks

Ron Paul: ‘What we need is more WikiLeaks’

By Stephen C. Webster
Friday, December 3rd, 2010 -- 2:36 pm
1,090diggsdigg
ronpaulassociatedpress Ron Paul: What we need is more WikiLeaksPopular Texas Republican Congressman Ron Paul is no stranger to breaking with his party, but in a recent television appearance the libertarian-leaning Rep. went even further than any member of Congress in defending whistleblower website WikiLeaks.
Speaking to Fox Business host Judge Napolitano on Thursday about recent revelations at the Federal Reserve, Paul's typical candor showed through.
"What we need is more WikiLeaks about the Federal Reserve," he said. "Can you imagine what it'd be like if we had every conversation in the last 10 years with our Federal Reserve people, the Federal Reserve chairman, with all the central bankers of the world and every agreement or quid-pro-quo they have? It would be massive. People would be so outraged."
Paul, a longtime critic of the US Federal Reserve, is the incoming chairman of a House subcommittee on monetary policy. His most recent book, titled "End the Fed," takes aim at central banks the world over, blaming fiat money systems and fractional reserve banking for the world's increasingly volatile economies.
“In a free society we're supposed to know the truth,” Paul insisted. “In a society where truth becomes treason, then we're in big trouble. And now, people who are revealing the truth are getting into trouble for it
He added: "This whole notion that Assange, who's an Australian, that we want to prosecute him for treason -- I mean, aren't they jumping to a wild conclusion? [...] I mean, why don't we prosecute The New York Times or anybody that releases this?"
The Texas congressman echoed his message from Fox Business in a twitter post early Friday.
"In a free society, we are supposed to know the truth," he wrote. "In a society where truth becomes treason, we are in big trouble."
Many Republicans have called for WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, an Australian, to be prosecuted under the US Espionage Act, or for his site to be deemed a "foreign terrorist organization." The Department of Justice said it was looking into who leaked the massive caches of documents to Assange and whether or not he could be prosecuted. He added: "This whole notion that Assange, who's an Australian, that we want to prosecute him for treason -- I mean, aren't they jumping to a wild conclusion? [...] I mean, why don't we prosecute The New York Times or anybody that

Do yourself a favor, and do the people you love a favor.

Posted: 10 Dec 2010 06:23 PM PST
WHEN YOU'RE HAVING a difficult moment with any person, stop whatever you're doing and start applying this method: Listen completely and speak only truth. This is one of the most useful, all-purpose and powerful methods in human relations. This one principle, applied with vigor, will straighten out almost any mess a relationship can get itself into.

One of the biggest mistakes people make is not listening. When you have something you want to say or when the other person is saying something you don't want to hear, what can you do? Interrupt, leave, start doing something else — you have a lot of obvious options.

Or there are subtler possibilities. Have you ever been angry while someone was talking and you were "listening" to what they were saying, but you listened to find something wrong with what they were saying? Sure you have. I have too. But it never does any good. It isn't really listening.

I'm sure you already know it works better to really listen. And when the other person has gotten across what they need to say, and all they need to say, and you have understood them, then speak. I'll bet you already knew that. But the natural and automatic thing to do is anything but that. Thus this article.

Drill it into your head. Practice it at every opportunity, which means any time you're talking with someone. And when you notice other people don't do that, don't say to yourself, "Well they aren't doing it with me, so I won't do it either."

It certainly would be ideal if both of you listened completely and spoke only truth, but it isn't likely.

And that's okay. Your relationships will work better for you, be more satisfying to you, benefit you, if you listen completely and speak only truth even if the other person in the relationship doesn't do it. And it'll be worse for you if you don't do it, regardless of what the other person does.

But there is a good chance that your practice of this method will influence them to do it back, or at least do more of it than before. Especially if you explain what you're doing.

This principle really shows itself off during conflict. It can take someone from being really lousy at dealing with conflict to being really good at dealing with conflict in a very short time. But it is also good to use whenever you are talking with someone with whom you want to have a close relationship. Practice it all the time. Make it a new habit. Make it a new part of your personality. Your life will never be the same.


how to listen

Listening completely is not done with silence. Yes, while the other is talking, you need to be silent to listen. But at some point the person will stop. Is there something missing? Is there something more you want to know? Is there a gap in your understanding? Ask a question that allows the other person to make you understand even more — of the situation, of their feelings, of their thoughts and understandings about it.

Ask questions, not in a lawyer-grilling-a-defendant sort of way, but in a share-yourself-with-me way. Your sincere desire to understand will draw the other person out. Your honest wish to know will bring questions into your mind which you can then ask.

And the suggestion to listen completely includes letting them know you understand. The look on your face isn't enough. Nonverbal communication is not always clear. You must say you understand, and not just by saying, "I understand," although that is at least something. Use the phrase, "It must have been..." to show that you understand — or give the person an opportunity to straighten you out if you don't understand. "It must have been frustrating to have so many things go wrong at once." "It must have been infuriating to see me do it again." "It must have taken the heart right out of you to see it break."

There's nothing sacred about the words "it must have been..." Any words that do the same job will do: "I'll bet you were...you must have felt..." "Did it seem dangerous?" "That had to make you mad." "Wow, three in a row? That's amazing."

Use words to let the person know you are listening, and you're not just hearing the words but you're understanding the feelings too. Another reason this is a good idea is that you might be getting it wrong. By saying out loud what you think they must have felt or what it must have been like for them, you allow them to correct you if you're wrong, so you'll get a better understanding. And the person you're talking to gets a better idea of how much is getting across. When they feel understood, something good happens. There's a relief or a completion or something. But whatever it is, it is good and it is healthy. You do the ones you love a favor by listening completely.

Studies have shown that confiding in someone, especially about troubling things, is much healthier than keeping it to oneself. You do people a real, measurable service to listen and let them know you understand.

A friend of mine I had known for about nine months confided in me and told me something that I'd never heard someone say. In the weeks before he confided in me, he had told me he had a lot on his mind and was waking up at night and unable to go back to sleep. But the things he told me he was worrying about didn't seem that serious: They were work-related or money-related. I wondered why they kept him awake at night.

Then he told me what was really bugging him. A long time ago, he had done something he felt very guilty about. It happened a long time ago, in another country. His circumstances then were very different than the life he was leading now, but he had a memory of his past and it haunted him.

I don't know what he was like before, but he is a good man now, and I could tell it was important that he say this thing. So I listened and I asked questions.

It did him good to get it off his chest. He was noticeably lighter. He was able to sleep again. He seemed relieved of a great burden. When people are able to confide an emotionally significant experience like that, it makes them more whole, more healthy, even more sane. It helps the person mend themselves.

When you listen, you give a great gift.


someone willing to listen

In an ongoing study at the University of Washington, something is becoming clearer and clearer: The amount of coronary artery disease you can measure isn't a very good indicator of how bad off a cardiac patient is. Other factors, such as the amount of anxiety or depression the person feels and how often, as well as how effective they feel they are in the world, are also important indicators of potential complications. One factor that enters the picture heavily is having someone who will listen.

The head of the Center for Living at Duke University, Martin Sullivan, MD, says, "Those patients who have a confidante do much better than those who don't."

Listening is that powerful. But it isn't really natural. It's natural to interrupt and out-talk other people. Every child does this unless they are trained to do otherwise. But most of us, even as adults, are still not very good at listening. You may be, and if you are, my hat's off to you — you're making the world a better, saner, healthier place.

And even as good as you are, you can probably be even better. You can listen more intently. You can ask better questions. You can get better at letting the person know you understand. You can improve your ability to judge when is the time to talk and when is the time to listen.

When you're dealing with a difficult moment with people, it can make a huge difference.

Listening, though, is only half the task. Remember, the formula is: Listen completely and speak only truth.


the truth

The truth needs a little explaining. I don't mean truth "as you know it." I mean just truth. And let's not get lost in a philosophical discussion about whether when you perceive the color red if it is really the same perception in my brain, or whether the universe really exists outside our own experience. Let's be a little more practical.

When I say, "The door was open when I walked in," that's truth (if I'm not lying). I'll give you a bunch of examples just to make it clear. And let's assume the person speaking is not lying.

"I feel sad and confused." That's a statement of truth.

"You are mean to me." That is not a simple statement of truth. "Mean" is an interpretation of what actually happened. And this is one of the big things to look out for when you're trying to speak only truth. Interpretations and generalizations like this are a big cause of problems between people.

Let me explain what's wrong with the statement. First off, it would be more accurate to say, "You are mean to me sometimes." Because obviously you're too smart to keep interacting with someone who is mean to you all the time. But to be even more practical, you'd want to say, "You were mean to me this morning." It's more practical because something can be done about a real incident. Nothing can be done about a vague generality, other than answer with another vague generality: "Okay, I'll try to be less mean to you."

But even that is unsatisfactory. You're still using the "mean" interpretation. Let's get more accurate, more specific. More truthful. "This morning you slammed the door on the way out and I felt hurt by it — not because my finger was caught in the door but because I thought you must be angry at me and I didn't think I deserved it."

Of course, "you slammed the door" is a guess and not strictly truth. "When you closed the door it made a louder noise than it usually does," would be even more scientific and closer to speaking only truth (and not mixing up any interpretations and guesses about whether it was intentional, and without any generalizations about something vague like "meanness").

I'm going to use more examples in a minute, but first I want you to look at what the accuracy has done for your statement. It starts out as You are mean to me, which, if you can imagine someone saying it to you, would be hard do deal with — where do you start? You can start with That's bullshit! but that doesn't sound like the beginning of a fruitful conversation.

So it starts out as You are mean to me and ends up with This morning when you left, the door made a louder noise than it usually does and I was thinking maybe you slammed it on purpose because you were mad at me. Were you?

Compare the two statements. Imagine someone saying them to you. Do you see how this is a much easier statement to respond to? And how it might lead to a constructive conversation? That's what speaking only truth does for communication. It directly and literally increases communication because if you look at the two statements from the point of view of how much is being said you can easily see that the first sentence leaves a lot unsaid and leaves it up to the listener to figure out what he's talking about, while the second says quite a bit and doesn't make the listener guess anything. That's better communication. And you really have to concentrate on what you're doing to be able to do it. It does not come naturally.

Now, more examples. From now on, I want you to call me if you're going to be later than ten. Is that a true statement? Yes, absolutely. You're simply saying what you want.

You're so inconsiderate! Truth? No way. It's a generalization, an interpretation, and doesn't give anything specific. Looked at scientifically, it is not a fact, but a hypothesis, and one that could never be validated or invalidated. Any discussion about it will probably go nowhere.

I think you're a jerk. True or false? Ooh, that's a tricky one. You may indeed have the thought you're a jerk so technically it is a true statement, but it is unproductive to say so because the thought you're sharing is not true for all the same reasons as the previous paragraph. It's a generalization, an interpretation, and it can never be validated or invalidated conclusively. "Remember not only to say the right thing in the right place," wrote Benjamin Franklin, "but to leave unsaid the wrong thing at the tempting moment."

I think if you stopped doing that, I'd feel better. Is this a true statement? Yes. It is a hypothesis, and you state it accurately as one.

One more. I feel you're a jerk. What do you think? True or false? False again. Feelings are very basic: Anger, sadness, fear, and their milder and more extreme forms (for example, mildly angry might be annoyed, peeved, frustrated, etc., while extreme anger might be enraged, incensed, furious, etc.) Don't get fancy. Feelings are basic. You're a jerk is not a feeling. It is an opinion, and a highly abstract and worthless one at that.

I think that's enough examples. When you want to "speak the truth," here's where to focus your attention:

1. what you want
2. what you feel
3. what you observe

And be as accurate and specific as you can. That's what speak only truth means. Confucius said wisdom was "when you know a thing, to recognize that you know it, and when you do not know a thing, to recognize that you do not know it." And the better you get at it, the better your relationships will get, as long as you don't try to teach it to the person while you're arguing. I'm all for you helping other people to learn this stuff, but wait until you're happy with each other. During conflict, just do it yourself.

Keep in mind that listening needs to come first. People generally don't want to listen when they have something to say. So arguments develop where each person interrupts the other. Neither listens, and the conversation goes nowhere. Worse: It goes down. You're actually worse off than if you had said nothing because of all the untruth that has been spoken — all the generalizations and interpretations and unqualified opinions and hypotheses spoken as statements of fact.


research shows the way

William Swann, Jr., PhD, at the University of Texas found after studying about 200 couples, that before people get married, they want their partners to tell them how great they are, but after they're already married, they want honest. Too much flattery — praise that isn't justified — makes most people uncomfortable, and makes even people with a high level of self-esteem withdraw psychologically from the marriage. We want honesty. That's what makes people feel close to each other. Praise where it is deserved, for sure, but nowhere else.

Clifford Notarius, PhD, did a study on husbands who criticized their wives in a way that used mind-reading. That means saying things like, "I know you hate me," or "You're always thinking bad things about me." When husbands did that to wives, their children had more problems like substance abuse, headaches, social incompetence, nervousness, anxiety, insecurity. And the kicker is that the children don't even have to be present when the parents are fighting! It turns out that the way a man fights is not isolated to just fighting with his wife. That's the way he deals with conflicts and problems. And that way of dealing with conflicts and problems shows up in the way he interacts with his kids, which teaches them by example how to deal with life in a way that doesn't work.

You can make your children more psychologically and socially healthy by making the principle of speaking truthfully a part of your character. Learn to listen when talking to your spouse, also and it will change you in other ways too. It will teach you new ways of dealing with problems and conflicts, and this will spill over to benefit your kids.

Researchers at Ohio State University have shown that when arguments between couples disintegrates into put-downs and sarcasm, stress hormones cortisol and norepinephrine kick in, and send the immune system into the gutter. When you are listening well and speaking only the truth, you'll automatically avoid most put-downs and you'll completely avoid sarcasm, two of the most deadly forms of communication in close relationships.

Do yourself a favor, and do the people you love a favor. Use this method. Make it your new Law. Live by it. Repeat it to yourself every day until it becomes a habit-knit part of your personality. You will reach a whole new level in your relationships.

Statements by Hague Six ‘influenced’ Ocampo move

The prosecutor of the International Criminal Court Luis Moreno Ocampo gives a press conference in The Hague on December 15, 2010. AFP PHOTO / POOL - ANP  - Bas Czerwinski
The prosecutor of the International Criminal Court Luis Moreno Ocampo gives a press conference in The Hague on December 15, 2010. AFP PHOTO / POOL - ANP - Bas Czerwinski 
By OLIVER MATHENGE omathenge@ke.nationmedia.comPosted Thursday, December 16 2010 at 22:23

Public utterances by some of the six suspects named by The Hague on Wednesday convinced prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo to seek summons instead of warrants of arrest.
The suspects will however need to update the International Criminal Court twice a month on their whereabouts and are not supposed to communicate with each other in any way.
The prosecutor told the judges in his two applications that he had reason to believe the six would appear voluntarily before the court.
He said that three of the suspects, Deputy Prime Minister Uhuru Kenyatta, Eldoret North MP William Ruto and former Commissioner of Police Hussein Ali had expressed their willingness to cooperate with the court.
The applications say that since April, Mr Ruto had been in contact with the Prosecutor’s office “voicing his willingness to co-operate with the investigation.”
It also refers to the Eldoret North MP’s “voluntary” visit to The Hague last month.
“Upon his return to Kenya, Mr Ruto confirmed that his contact with the prosecution was positive, and that he had the opportunity to provide his version of the facts,” Mr Moreno-Ocampo told the three-judge bench.
In the application on Mr Ruto, the prosecutor told the judges that the other two suspects, Industrialisation minister Henry Kosgey and journalist Joshua arap Sang had not made public announcements on the matter.
“However, there is no indication that they would not cooperate if summoned,” he said.
In his second application against Mr Kenyatta, Mr Ali and head of Civil Service Francis Muthaura, the prosecutor pointed to the government’s commitment to cooperate with ICC.
He said that since the opening of investigations, the Kenyan authorities have consistently indicated its commitment and willingness to cooperate with his office and with the ICC.
“This commitment to cooperation has included a commitment to hand over any suspects who may be the subject of an arrest warrant application by the ICC,” the application said.
It added that Mr Kenyatta had consistently indicated in numerous public statements that he was willing to cooperate with the ICC. The prosecutors also said that Mr Ali’s representative had made similar suggestions.
“The Prosecution does not possess similar information as to Mr Muthaura. He has not made a public announcement on this matter. However, there is no indication that he would not cooperate if summoned to appear,” the application read.
The six are to provide the Chamber with all their residential addresses and telephone numbers. They shall verify the accuracy of this information on a bi-monthly basis.
They are also to report any change in the information provided to the court’s Registry.

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Are you defeating yourself?

I love competing and I love winning! Watching the Super Bowl was great, two great teams who left everything on the field. No this is not a post about what we can learn from the Super Bowl, but the Saints and the Colts are good examples of great competition.
Competing against a great competitor is great, it raises the level of play, it forces us to compete more strongly-bringing our best game to the situation. It helps our customers, strong competition should bring better solutions. Even if we lose, strong competition helps us, we learn from losing, we learn where we can improve and how we get better. Without this, our performance slips-often to the point that we are beating ourselves.
Too often, I'm not sure that we are beaten by strong competition. I tend to think we beat ourselves more often-this happens both at an individual performance level and at an organizational level. Business history is littered with companies that beat themselves-they took their eye off the ball, they failed to understand what customers needed and would buy, they failed to understand who their competition really was, they failed to deliver on their promise-to the customers, shareholders, and employees. Some chose tragic shortcuts - the Enrons, Worldcoms, and others. Some should have been the best, but didn't recognize changes in the markets, competition, and customer needs - the DEC's, Wang's, and hundreds of others. Some are struggling, the jury is out about whether they will get it or not, GM, Citibank, and too many others. You get the point, the list can go on. These companies lost or are losing, less because of competition, and more because of failure to be able to respond to their customers or the competition.
Sales people do this everyday-in less dramatic ways, but still in important ways. The sales person who hasn't really probed and understood what the customer wants and needs. The sales person who isn't listening, the sales person who is resting on their past successes-with this customer or in general. The sales person who fails to develop and execute a winning strategy, but reacts.
Too often, sales people are careless and sloppy. They don't understand what the customer is trying to achieve. They don't realize who is really involved in the decision and how they are perceived, choosing instead to call on their "friends." They don't understand who their real competition is. They are slow in responding to the customer, they present a standard boilerplate proposal. They chase the wrong opportunities. They fail to demonstrate to the customer that they have earned the customer's business. They have no strategy, but are doing a random walk through the deal.
Business and sales is tough. To win, you have to bring your "A" game, every day. If you don't, it won't be your competition that beats you, you will be beating yourself.