Skip to main content

Posts

[LATIN AMERICA NEWS] Why are Latin American democracies suddenly attacking the free press?

] Juan Mabromata / AFP-Getty Images Argentine President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner has gone after her enemies in the press. The Read and the Black Why are Latin American democracies suddenly attacking the free press? Here’s a puzzler. Latin America has never been more democratic: of 34 nations in Central and South America and the Caribbean, all except one (Cuba) are constitutional democracies, with laws guaranteeing open elections, independent courts, legislatures, and freedom of expression. So why do so many governments still trample on citizens’ rights, bully journalists, harass private business, and generally lord over hearth and home? Incidents in just the last few weeks range from the grave (the Argentine government’s order to shut down the main Internet provider in retaliation to criticism from its owner) to the ridiculous (a Brazilian law banning parents from spanking kids). But the breadth of official incursions into citizen’s lives has sent out distress signals from Patago...

[LATIN AMERICA NEWS] How Hugo Chávez wins by losing in Venezuela

Ariana Cubillos / AP Posters for the September 26 legislative election. Failing Upward How Hugo Chávez wins by losing in Venezuela. by  Mac Margolis September 20, 2010 Consider what President Hugo Chávez’s “Bolivarian Revolution” has wrought on Venezuela. The national economy is deep in recession. Chronic power outages darken homes, factories, and shops. Inflation, at 30 percent a year, ranks among the world’s worst. Ditto for murders, which according to  official numbers  spiked to 21,132 in 2009—or one homicide every half hour. Just about anywhere on the planet, such failed leadership would prove toxic for an incumbent and bolster his challenger. But in Venezuela, where Chávez presides with a combination of fear, favors, cooked books, and rigged rules, the standard political calculus doesn’t always apply. Chávez has suffered, surely. Serial crises have galvanized his enemies, frustrated loyalists, and sunk his approval rating below 40 percent. That’s his lowest leve...

[TECHNOLOGY NEWS] Look, a unicorn! Music video pays tribute to geeky gals and gamer girls

http://technolog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2010/09/11/5092629-look-a-unicorn-music-video-pays-tribute-to-geeky-gals-and-gamer-girls "Hello friends, don't you want to meet a nice girl?" So asks Seth Green — TV, movie and video game star — as he opens the "Geek and Gamer Girls" music video unleashed on the Internet Friday by  Team Unicorn . Seems Green knows where you can find all the nicest (and badass-est) girls: playing video games and hanging out in comic book stores. The video, which pays tribute to all the women out there who love gaming, manga and all things sci-fi, stars the members of  Team Unicorn . These four women have got some serious game and geek cred. They are:  Michele Boyd (actress from  "The Guild" ), Clare Grant (voice actress for "Robot Chicken" and Green's wife), Milynn Sarley ( TheGamerChick ) and Rileah Vanderbilt (actress from horror films "Hatchet" and "Frozen"). Grant and Vanderbilt also starred i...

[WORLD NEWS] Cuba: Communist Economic Model Loses a Stalwart Defender

September 8, 2010 Cuba: Communist Economic Model Loses a Stalwart Defender By REUTERS Fidel Castro  said  Cuba ’s economic model no longer worked, an American journalist reported Wednesday. Jeffrey Goldberg wrote in his  blog  for Atlantic magazine that he asked Mr. Castro, left, last week if Cuba’s model of Soviet-style Communism was still worth exporting to other countries. “The Cuban model doesn’t even work for us anymore,” Mr. Castro said, according to the report. Mr. Goldberg said that Julia Sweig, a Cuba expert at the  Council on Foreign Relations , thought Mr. Castro’s answer was an acknowledgment that the state played too big a role in the economy. The comment appeared to reflect Mr. Castro’s support for the economic reforms instituted by his younger brother, President Raúl Castro . In the interview, Mr. Castro, 84, also criticized President  Mahmoud Ahmadinejad  of Iran for anti-Semitism and denying the Holocaust. He also criticized his own ac...

[INTERESTING NEWS] Why Do IQ Scores Vary By Nation?

Why Do IQ Scores Vary By Nation? Global differences in intelligence is a sensitive topic, long fraught with controversy and still tinged by the disgraceful taint of pseudosciences such as craniometry that strove to prove the white “race” as the most clever of them all. But recent data, perplexingly, has indeed shown cognitive ability to be higher in some countries than in others. What’s more, IQ scores have risen as nations develop—a phenomenon known as the “Flynn effect.” Many causes have been proposed for both the intelligence gap and the Flynn effect, including education, income, and even nonagricultural labor. Now, a new study from researchers at the University of New Mexico offers another intriguing theory: intelligence may be linked to infectious-disease rates. The Idea The brain, say author Christopher Eppig and his colleagues, is the “most costly organ in the human body.” Brainpower gobbles up close to 90 percent of a newborn’s energy. It stands to reason, then, that ...

[WORLD NEWS] Russia’s Activists Lose Hope in President

Russia’s Activists Lose Hope in President The resignation of Russia’s top human-rights chief highlights the Kremlin’s backsliding. by  Anna Nemtsova August 03, 2010 Oxana Onipko / AFP-Getty Images Police officers in Moscow arrest an opposition protester at a rally on July 31 When Dmitry Medvedev was elected president of Russia two years ago, he publicly criticized the country’s human-rights record as “far from perfect” and called for reform. But just last week, Medvedev’s image as a civil-rights champion was dealt a stunning blow when his chief adviser on human rights, Ella Pamfilova, resigned. Her reason? A new wave of violent attacks and threats against Russia’s human-rights activists, as well as what Pamfilova calls the “never-ending wave of hate” from the Kremlin toward anyone critical of its policies. (A Kremlin spokesperson would only comment that Pamfilova was not pushed out, but resigned of her own accord.) The past year has been a brutal one for activists in Russia: three...

[POLITICAL ECONOMIC NEWS]Warren Buffett's likely successor: Chinese Tiananmen protestor, hedge fund manager

Warren Buffett's likely successor: Chinese Tiananmen protestor, hedge fund manager Who will succeed billionaire super-investor  Warren Buffett  when the 79-year-old Oracle of Omaha finally retires as chairman of his  Berkshire Hathaway  holding company? Perhaps no question in global finance has preoccupied investors like this one in recent years. The answer,  at least according to Friday's Wall Street Journal , appears to be a 44-year-old Chinese hedge fund manager who participated in the deadly  Tiananmen Square  protests 20 years ago named  Li Lu . Li  was taken from his parents in China when they were sent through Mao's brutal  Cultural Revolution  re-education process, which set China back decades and was responsible for more than 1 million deaths. He became a student activist and took part in the Tianamen Square resistance, in which as many as 7,000 Chinese were killed by their own government, according to NATO intelligence. A...