Sunday 30 June 2013

Zachary Pleat: Fox News Sunday Panelists Ignore Majority Opposition To Texas Abortion Ban

Fox News Sunday panelists ignored a poll showing a majority of Texans oppose a proposed abortion ban bill, instead pushing the baseless claim that the bill is supported by that state's public.

Republicans in Texas recently attempted to pass a bill during a special legislative session that would ban abortions after 20 weeks, which is unconstitutional under Supreme Court precedent, with lower courts recently striking down similar bans?in two other states. The bill did not include exemptions for rape or incest and contained other restrictions that would force all but five clinics that provide abortions in the state to close. The bill was defeated after Texas Senator Wendy Davis filibustered the bill for 11 hours, causing the special session to expire before the bill was passed. But Governor Rick Perry said he would convene another special session on July 1 to pass the bill.

When discussing the second attempt to pass the bill, the June 30 Fox News Sunday panel focused solely on the bill's 20 week ban provision to baselessly claim that the bill would pass because it has the support of the Texas public.?Washington Post conservative blogger Jennifer Rubin said Gov. Perry "is completely in tune with public opinion" on the bill. Fox News contributor Juan Williams backed Rubin, saying that polling shows "abortions after 20 weeks are not popular with anybody." Wall Street Journal editorial board member Kimberley Strassel said that the ban is "something that Americans actually have a great deal of unanimity on."

But a mid-June poll of Texas residents showed that a majority of Texans oppose the abortion ban bill. The poll, conducted by the Democratic polling firm Greenberg Quinlan Rosner, found that 51 percent of Texans opposed the bill. Sixty-three percent of respondents said that Texas has enough abortion restrictions already, and 52 percent said they think that abortion should be legal in most or all cases. Seventy-four percent, including a majority of Republicans and Independents, felt that private medical decisions about abortion should not be made by politicians.

Source: http://feeds.mediamatters.org/~r/MediaMattersForAmerica-All/~3/AFa8U5Ylv84/194683

30 rock live nfl draft picks 2012 space shuttle enterprise ryan leaf ryan leaf luke kuechly brad miller

Washington Post reveals new PRISM slides, offers greater clarity into the US' surveillance operation

Washington Post reveals new PRISM slides, offers greater clarity into the US surveillance operation

PRISM: The surveillance story that started with four leaked slides from the Washington Post, today gets a bit clearer. The publication has revealed four more annotated slides about the once-secret NSA operation, along with detailing the various levels of scrutiny from the FBI and NSA that happen before, during and after approved wiretaps take place. It seems that many of the measures make sure the warrantless data mining of US citizens occurs to the smallest extent possible and that FISA rules are followed -- still unsettling, nonetheless.

Detailing the process further, NSA analysts perform checks with supervisors to be certain intended targets are foreign nationals who aren't on US soil; approval is provided by way of "51-percent confidence" in assessments. During a "tasking process" search terms are entered, dubbed "selectors," which can tap into FBI gear installed within the private properties of participating companies -- so much for those denials. For live communications, this data goes straight to the NSA's PRINTAURA filtering system, while both the FBI and NSA scan pre-recorded data independently. Notably, live surveillance is indeed possible for the likes of text, voice and and instant message-based conversations, according to a slide that details how cases are notated. It's also worth mentioning that much of the collected metadata comes from programs outside of PRISM, as WP points out.

PRINTAURA is an overall filter for others, like NUCLEON for voice communications and MAINWAY for records of phone calls. Another two layers beyond that, called CONVEYANCE and FALLOUT, provide further filtering. Again, all of these checks apparently fine-tune results and help make sure they don't match up with US citizens. Results that return info about those in the US get scrapped, while those that have info about foreign targets mixed with US citizens get stored for up to five years -- restrictions are in place to limit the snooping of citizens. A total number of 117,675 active targets were listed as April 5th, but the paper notes that this doesn't reflect the amount of data that may also have been collected on American citizens in the process. If you haven't already, now might be a great time to catch up on this whole PRISM fiasco to learn about how it might affect you. You'll find all the new slides and more detailed analysis at the source links.

Comments

Source: The Washington Post (1), (2)

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/SK2-WcCpfe0/

Kinesio tape randy travis Allyson Felix Kourtney Kardashian Baby Girl Ashton Eaton London 2012 basketball London 2012 Slalom Canoe

Violence hits China's west ahead of anniversary

BEIJING (AP) ? Violent attacks have spread this week in a tense minority region of western China, state media reported Saturday, just days before the anniversary of a bloody clash between minority Uighurs and the ethnic Han majority that left almost 200 dead and resulted in a major security clampdown.

China's communist authorities have labeled some of the incidents ? including one which left 35 people dead ? as terrorist attacks, and President Xi Jinping has ordered that they be promptly dealt with to safeguard overall social stability, state media reported.

The latest violent incidents were reported in southern Xinjiang's Hotan area. In one, more than 100 knife-wielding people mounted motorbikes in an attempt to storm the police station for Karakax county, the state-run Global Times reported.

Another was an attack mob in the township of Hanairike on Friday afternoon, according to the news portal of the Xinjiang regional government. It said the mob was armed, but did not say with what sort of weapons.

The official Xinhua News Agency reported a "violent attack" Friday afternoon on a pedestrian street in downtown Hotan city. No casualties were reported for any of the incidents, which state media say were quickly brought under control. The government's news portal, Tianshan Net, said there was no civilian casualty in Hanairike.

It has not been possible to independently verify the reports because of tight controls over information in the region.

The incidents on Friday in Xinjiang came after what the government described as attacks on police and other government buildings on Wednesday in eastern Xinjiang's Turpan prefecture's Lukqun township killed 35 people.

That was one of the bloodiest incidents since the July 5, 2009, unrest in the region's capital city, Urumqi, killed nearly 200.

Xinjiang (shihn-jeeahng) is home to a large population of minority Muslim Uighurs (WEE'-gurs) in a region that borders Central Asia, Afghanistan and Pakistan, and has been the scene of numerous violent acts in recent years.

Critics often attribute the violence in Xinjiang to what they say is Beijing's oppressive and discriminatory ethnicity policies. Many Uighurs complain that authorities impose tight restrictions on their religious and cultural life.

The Chinese government says that it has invested billions of dollars in modernizing the oil- and gas-rich region and that it treats all ethnic groups equally.

Calls to local government agencies were either unanswered or returned with the answer that they were unauthorized to speak.

State-run media reported that the incident Wednesday started when knife-wielding assailants targeted police stations, a government building and a construction site ? all symbols of Han authority in the region.

Photos released in state media show scorched police cars and government buildings and victims lying on the ground, presumably dead.

An exiled Uighur activist has disputed that account, saying the violence started when police raided homes. It was impossible to independently confirm the conflicting accounts.

Xinhua said 11 assailants were shot dead, and that two police officers were among the 24 people they killed.

"This is a terrorist attack, there's no question about that," Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said Friday at a regular news briefing. "As to who masterminded it, local people are still investigating."

State news reports did not identify the ethnicity of the attackers, nor say what may have caused the conflict in the Turkic-speaking region. The reports said police captured four injured assailants.

The Global Times newspaper said Saturday that police had stepped up security measures, deploying more forces to public areas, governmental institutes and compounds for police and military police. It said a suspect was captured Friday afternoon in Urumqi.

Dilxat Raxit, spokesman for the Germany-based World Uyghur Congress, questioned Beijing's account of the event, saying local residents had told him police had forcefully raided homes at night, triggering the deadly conflicts.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/violence-hits-chinas-west-ahead-anniversary-044148211.html

London 2012 basketball London 2012 Slalom Canoe Alex Morgan Misty May Treanor Marvin Hamlisch Megan Rossee grenada

Kerry's palate gets workout in Mideast peace talks

JERUSALEM (AP) ? Red tuna and sea bream with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. A two-hour lunch of shish tawook and rice with Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. Back again with Netanyahu, it was hummus and mixed nuts. Secretary of State John Kerry's palate is getting a workout during his stepped-up rounds of Mideast diplomacy.

This is Kerry's fifth trip to the region to try his hand at helping craft a two-state solution, and his flurry of meetings between the Israeli and Palestinian camps have increased expectations that his latest chat 'n chews will yield progress in getting the two sides to reopen negotiations to end their decades-long conflict.

Kerry's initial plans to talk to both sides just once before traveling on to Brunei for a Southeast Asia security conference have turned instead into hurried shuttle diplomacy at a pace that is testing his aides ability to book the logistics of moving his delegation in tow.

His talks with Israel and the Palestinians head into a third day on Saturday. So far, they have amounted to talks about talks ? discussions to nail down what exactly each side needs to agree to resume negotiations, which broke down in 2008. There have not been any public statements of progress, yet Kerry's changing schedule has spawned rumors that progress has been made.

On Saturday, Kerry heads back to Amman for a second meeting with Abbas in two days. Then, instead of continuing his two-week swing through the Mideast and Asia, Kerry is returning to Jerusalem for a third time for additional meetings, the State Department said.

He began his shuttle diplomacy on Thursday night when he made the 90-minute drive from Amman to Jerusalem in a convoy of SUVs. Once in Jerusalem, he had four hours of talks with Netanyahu and a dinner, which included tuna sashimi with roots salad and wasabi cream, dried salted beef and salmon ceviche with chili, mint and pineapple.

On Friday, he had a two-hour-plus lunch with Abbas, and then returned to Jerusalem ? this time via helicopter ? to meet Netanyahu again. A table in a hotel suite where they talked was filled with trays of hummus, baba ghanoush, spiced pickles, tabouli salad, dates and nuts.

"So soon," Kerry said with a smile as he shook hands with the Israeli leader for the second time in less than 24 hours.

Kerry spokesmen were tight-lipped about how the talks went, saying only that he had a "detailed and substantive" three-hour conversation with Netanyahu.

Israeli officials also have declined to provide details about the talks. Palestinian officials could not be reached for comment despite numerous attempts.

So far, there have been no public signs that the two sides are narrowing their differences. No progress was publicly reported during Kerry's four earlier visits to the region either.

In the past, Abbas has said he won't negotiate unless Israel stops building settlements on war-won lands or accepts its 1967 lines ? before the capture of the West Bank, Gaza Strip and east Jerusalem in a Mideast war that year ? as a starting point for border talks. The Palestinians claim all three areas for their future state.

Netanyahu has rejected the Palestinian demands, saying there should be no pre-conditions ? though his predecessor conducted talks on the basis of the pre-1967 lines, and the international community views the settlements as illegal or illegitimate.

People who have watched Mideast peace negotiations come and go are skeptical, but hold out hope that a deal can be crafted.

"There's no question that Kerry could be successful restarting negotiations," said Jon Alterman, a Middle East expert from the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington. "The real question is whether those negotiations can be successful.

"The problem is twofold: First, the parties don't trust each other, and each fears that the other will start negotiations only to pull out and blame the other for the collapse. Second, there's not much political support in either Israel or the Palestinian Authority for negotiations generally, let alone making any concessions to the other side."

State Department officials say that beyond trying to precisely ascertain their conditions for restarting talks, Kerry wanted to talk with them about the positive outcomes, such as enhanced economic growth, of a two-state solution. At the same time, they said he would remind them of what's at stake if the conflict is left unresolved.

Earlier this month, in a speech to the American Jewish Committee Global Forum in Washington, Kerry warned of serious consequences if no deal is reached with what he termed the current "moderate" Palestinian leadership. "The failure of the moderate Palestinian leadership could very well invite the rise of the very thing that we want to avoid: the same extremism in the West Bank that we have seen in Gaza or from southern Lebanon," he told the Jewish audience.

William Quandt, who was involved in negotiations that led to the Camp David Accords and the Egyptian-Israeli Peace Treaty, said Kerry might succeed in getting the two sides back to the table, "but that does not count for much." He said he doubts the two sides have agreed to an outline of territory for a Palestinian state. "I'm not very optimistic," he said.

Efraim Inbar, director of the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies at Israel's Bar-Ilan University, doesn't have high hopes for the two sides getting back into negotiations, but said that as long as Kerry continues to visit the region, his attempt won't be seen as a failure.

"As long as he keeps coming, people will have some hope," Inbar said. "He is very perseverant but the chances of him renewing negotiations are very slim."

Inbar said Abbas faces opposition to talks with Israel from within his own Fatah party as well as from its rival, the Islamic militant group Hamas. The Palestinians have been split since 2007 when Hamas overran Gaza ousting forces from the Fatah party led by Western-backed Abbas. Abbas has since governed only in parts of the West Bank, and Hamas rules Gaza.

"The Palestinians are not interested in negotiations because of domestic politics, Hamas pressure and with the whole region becoming more Islamic it's more difficult for them to make a deal," Inbar said. Within Netanyahu's own party, "there are those who are openly saying that negotiations go nowhere," he added.

After meeting with Netanyahu, Kerry visited Israeli President Shimon Peres, who received the 1994 Nobel Peace Prize for his role in a landmark interim peace accord in 1003. Peres, who turns 90 in August, encouraged Kerry to soldier on.

"All of us admire your investment in creating really the right environment to open the peace," Peres said. "I know it's still difficult. There are many problems, but as far I am concerned, I can see there is a clear majority for the peace process and the two-state solution and the great expectation that you will do it and that you can do it."

___

Associated Press writers Ian Deitch in Jerusalem and Jamal Halaby in Amman, Jordan, contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/kerrys-palate-gets-workout-mideast-peace-talks-191410648.html

NCAA Bracket 2013 Robert Morris spring lululemon jon hamm southern university biggest loser

Saturday 29 June 2013

WD Arkeia R120s and R220s Network Backup Appliances Debut


New Fourth Generation?Delivers Higher Performance, Doubled Disk Capacity, and Improved Ease-of-Use

By Western Digital

WD?, a Western Digital (NASDAQ:?WDC) company and world leader in digital storage solutions, today unveiled the fourth generation of?WD Arkeia? network backup appliances, delivering an all-in-one backup and disaster recovery solution for small- and medium-sized businesses (SMBs).

The new line up consists of four rack-mount appliance models with larger internal disk capacities, faster processors, increased memory, and integrated solid state drives (SSDs) to shorten backup time and accelerate data recovery. The bundled WD Arkeia v10.1 software delivers new support for ?seed and feed? technology to support hybrid cloud backups. This allows companies to move backups offsite via network replication rather than shipment of tapes.

?In announcing their fourth generation of purpose-built network backup appliances, WD Arkeia is delivering comprehensive SMB backup solutions that go beyond simple raw capacity increases,? said?Liz Conner, senior research analyst, IDC. ?WD Arkeia offers easy-to-use data protection that takes the guess work out of purchasing, configuring and managing data backup & recovery, while also embedding features such as deduplication and hybrid cloud backup for small- and medium-sized businesses or remote offices.?

WD Launches Fourth Generation WD Arkeia Network Backup Appliances.

?WD is committed to providing the growing SMB marketplace with a comprehensive suite of storage solutions,? said?Jim Welsh, executive vice president and general manager of WD?s branded business unit. With unique features, these next-generation WD Arkeia network backup appliances offer solutions providers and their customers a simple, smart way to protect their data.

Fourth-Generation Performance and Ease-of-Use

Fourth-generation WD Arkeia backup appliances deliver performance and ease-of-use at an affordable price for SMBs. These new appliances extend the upper range of WD Arkeia appliances and complement available lower-range appliances. WD Arkeia R120s and R220s, both with optional LTO4 tape drives, integrate dual-core Atom and quad-core Xeon processors, respectively.? Existing appliances deliver disk capacities from 2 TB to 12 TB and will also bundle WD Arkeia v10.1. The new fourth-generation appliances offer:

  • Increased Backup and Recovery Speed: New features include integrated LTO5 tape drives, processor upgrades to a maximum of 2 hex-core Intel? Xeon?, integrated SSDs on select models, and memory up to 96 GB to allow for increased data backup and recovery speeds of both files and disk images. WD Arkeia?s patented Progressive Deduplication? technology accelerates backups by compressing data at source computers before transfer over local area networks (LANs) or wide area networks (WANs).
  • Higher Storage Capacity: Storage capacity doubles from the third generation, with raw capacity now ranging up to 48 TB, configured in RAID-6.
  • Improved Ease-of-Use: Version 10.1 of WD Arkeia software, delivered with the new generation, includes an on-boarding wizard to streamline the appliance setup process.
  • Storage Reliability: All new WD Arkeia appliances feature WD enterprise-class WD RE? hard drives for maximum data integrity.
  • Simplified Tape-free, Offsite Storage: Version 10.1 of WD Arkeia software extends support for hybrid cloud backup capabilities to the full line of WD Arkeia appliances. ?Seed and feed? capabilities allow administrators to supplement network replication of backup sets offsite by using USB-connected hard drives to transfer initial and large backup sets and also to size WAN bandwidth for the replication of nightly incremental backups.

Pricing and Availability

WD Arkeia fourth generation network backup appliances ? models RA4300, RA4300T, RA5300, RA6300 ? will be available inJuly 2013?through select DMR?s and WD-authorized value-added resellers (VARs) in the US,?Canada, and?Europe. ?Manufacturer?s Suggested Retail Price, including hardware and software, begins at?$9,990 USD.? WD Arkeia network backup appliances are covered by one year of unlimited access to technical support, one year of software updates, and a one-year limited hardware warranty.

About WD Arkeia Software and Appliances

WD Arkeia backup appliances are fast, easy-to-use, and affordable solutions for data backup and disaster recovery. The award-winning WD Arkeia solutions safeguard more than 100,000 networks for 7,000 customers in 70 countries.

About WD

WD, a Western Digital company, is a long-time innovator and storage industry leader. As a storage technology pacesetter, the company produces reliable, high-performance hard disk drives and solid state drives. These drives are deployed by OEMs and integrators in desktop and mobile computers, enterprise computing systems, embedded systems and consumer electronics applications, as well as by the company in providing its own storage products. WD?s leading storage devices and systems, networking products, media players and software solutions empower people around the world to easily save, store, protect, share and experience their content on multiple devices. WD was established in 1970 and is headquartered in?Irvine, Calif.?For more information, please visit the company?s website at?www.wd.com.

Western Digital Corp. (NASDAQ:?WDC),?Irvine, Calif., is a global provider of products and services that empower people to create, manage, experience and preserve digital content. Its companies design and manufacture storage devices, networking equipment and home entertainment products under the WD, HGST and G-Technology brands. Visit the Investor section of the company?s website (www.westerndigital.com) to access a variety of financial and investor information.

This news release contains forward-looking statements, including statements relating to the expected availability date for the WD Arkeia fourth generation network backup appliances in?July 2013?in the US,?Canada, and?Europe. These forward-looking statements are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those expressed in the forward-looking statements, including changes in markets, demand, global economic or political conditions and or other risks detailed from time-to-time in our Securities and Exchange Commission filings and reports, including, but not limited to, our most recent quarterly report on Form 10-Q and our annual report on Form 10-K, to which your attention is directed. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which speak as of the date hereof, and WD undertakes no obligation to update these forward-looking statements to reflect subsequent events or circumstances.

Western Digital, WD, and the WD logo are registered trademarks of Western Digital Technologies, Inc. in the U.S. and other countries; WD Arkeia is a trademark of Western Digital Technologies, Inc. in the U.S. and other countries. Intel and Xeon are trademarks of Intel Corporation in the U.S. and other countries.?Other marks may be mentioned herein that belong to other companies. All other brand and product names mentioned herein are the property of their respective companies. As used for storage capacity, one terabyte (TB) = one trillion bytes. Total accessible capacity varies depending on operating environment.


Source: http://benchmarkreviews.com/990/wd-arkeia-r120s-and-r220s-network-backup-appliances-debut/

northern mariana islands summer time coolio ricky rubio day light savings time peter paul and mary edgar rice burroughs

Some super rich in Europe really are getting richer

wealth

33 minutes ago

Mercedes-Benz cars are displayed in a dealership of German car manufacturer Daimler in Munich May 17, 2013. How many Mercedes staff does it take to se...

MICHAELA REHLE / Reuters

Mercedes-Benz cars are displayed in a dealership of German car manufacturer Daimler in Munich May 17, 2013. Latest data show that the super rich in Europe increased their wealth last year.

Europe's top economies may be stalled, but in some countries there, the rich really are getting richer.

The report, from Wealth-X, a wealth research firm, said the number of people worth $30 million or more in Germany, Switzerland, France and Italy grew 6 percent in 2012. Their combined fortunes surged 13 percent to $3.4 trillion.

Germany posted the strongest gains, with the number of ultra-wealthy people growing 6 percent to 16,734, with total fortunes of more than $2 trillion. Switzerland's ultra-rich saw their fortunes grow 15 percent.

Even France?often portrayed as the country of wealth flight rather than wealth creation?saw its super-wealthy population grow 5 percent and fortunes gain 12 percent.

Based on Wealth-X?s methodology, the report only focused on those four countries, and excluded other European nations including Britain and Spain.

(Read More: Luxury Real Estate Braces for Troubles From China, Brazil)

Wealth-X attributed the improvements to smart investing. "Smart investments and prudent estate planning among the UHNW (ultra-high-net worth) individuals in these economies explain why they performed better than other European nations in the current economic climate," said Wealth-X President David Friedman.

Yet there may be another reason: globalization. Many of the ultra-rich in European countries own global businesses or companies that benefit from growth in other countries, making them far less dependent on their home countries. Many luxury companies in France, top manufacturers in Germany and design firms in Italy have decoupled from Europe and continue to see sales growth from China, the U.S. and other (relatively) stronger economies.

(Read More: US Back on Top: Most Millionaires in 2012)

Just consider Amancio Ortega, the founder of Spanish clothing chain Zara. Spain is hurting, but Ortega's wealth has soared by more than $10 billion over the past year to more than $50 billion. That makes him among the five richest men in the world.

? 2013 CNBC LLC. All Rights Reserved

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/663286/s/2df18aad/l/0L0Snbcnews0N0Cbusiness0Csome0Esuper0Erich0Eeurope0Ereally0Eare0Egetting0Ericher0E6C10A483490A/story01.htm

cicely tyson falling skies johnny depp John Zawahri Suki Waterhouse apple apple

Tiny Allegiant Air thrives on low costs, high fees

LAS VEGAS (AP) ? There are no sure things in this city ? with one exception: Allegiant Air.

While other U.S. airlines have struggled over the past decade from the ups and downs of the economy and the price of jet fuel, Allegiant has been profitable for 10 straight years.

The tiny airline focuses on a niche ignored by other airlines: It only flies from small cities to sunny vacation spots.

Allegiant entices people who otherwise wouldn't fly with low fares and non-stop flights. Then it aggressively pitches them hotels, rental cars, show tickets and other entertainment, earning millions in commissions.

Passengers face fees for almost every service and amenity imaginable. At Allegiant, fees for checked baggage and changing an itinerary ? which are common on many airlines ? are just the beginning.

The Las Vegas-based airline charges extra to book flights online, or to use a credit card. Selecting a seat in advance costs $5 to $75 each way, depending on the length of a flight. Even a bottle of water costs $2.

Flying Allegiant isn't glamorous. While other airlines tout new aircraft with Wi-Fi and TVs in every seat, Allegiant buys old planes to avoid hefty aircraft loans. And to pack in as many passengers as possible, its seats don't recline. But for small-town Americans with limited flight options, these inconveniences are worth it for a few days of sunshine.

"They could be the worst airline in the world and we'd fly them because we want to go to Vegas," says Tom Mayo of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, who recently flew there with his family. "It's our only option."

Allegiant offers non-stop service from places like Owensboro, Ky., Casper, Wyo. and Appleton, Wis., to popular destinations in Nevada, Florida, Hawaii and Arizona. These may not be the most coveted routes in the airline business, but that is precisely why Allegiant likes them.

Only 17 of Allegiant's 203 routes are flown non-stop by another airline.

"Typically, the best way to make money is not to compete with somebody," says Andrew C. Levy, president of Allegiant Travel Co., who sits in a cubicle next to the rest of his staff.

Rather than battle major carriers for customers on routes between major cities, Allegiant uses its marketing muscles to convince people in small towns to fly away for a vacation.

"Allegiant tends to bring people into the airport who wouldn't normally fly," says Tim Bradshaw, director of the Eastern Iowa people Airport in Cedar Rapids. "It brings people off the couch."

Last year, 7 million passengers took a flight on Allegiant. That is a sliver of the 642 million people who took a domestic flight last year. But Allegiant earned a whopping $11.22 each way from those passengers. On average, the airline industry earned 37 cents each way, per passenger, according to Airlines for America, the industry's lobbying group. Southwest Airlines, one of the industry's most profitable carriers, made $3.85 per passenger last year.

Allegiant is ruthless about keeping its costs down. Its employees are some of the lowest paid in the industry, in some cases making $20 an hour less than colleagues at other airlines. It pays cash for airplanes nearly twice as old as everyone else. It only sells directly to vacationers, refusing to pay Expedia, Orbitz or other sites to list its flights.

And if you have a question, it will cost you: the airline doesn't have a toll-free number.

Like some other budget airlines, Allegiant advertises extremely low base fares and then tacks on numerous fees. A roundtrip ticket with Allegiant costs $195, on average. But passengers pay an additional $83 in fees ? or 30 percent of the total cost of flying.

To book a trip by phone, Allegiant charges $50 for each roundtrip ticket. To book online costs $20 for each roundtrip ticket. The only way to avoid the fees is to purchase tickets at the airport, something fewer than 3 percent of its customers did last year.

But whether you book by phone, Internet or in person, paying with a credit card costs an extra $8.

Placing a suitcase in an overhead bin is $10 to $25. Boarding passes signify who has paid the fee. If passengers show up at the airport with a large carry-on bag and haven't prepaid the fee, the airline penalizes them an additional $25 to $50, depending on the route.

But what really makes Allegiant different are the commissions it earns from selling hotel rooms, rental cars and other extras including Everglades boat tours and theme-park tickets. It even gets people to attend timeshare sales presentations. Before a passenger can finalize a ticket purchase online, they must click through page after page offering them these add-ons.

Last year, revenue from commissions totaled $36 million, or nearly $12 per roundtrip passenger.

"I don't think of them as an airline. I think of them as a travel company," says Helane Becker, an airline analyst at Cowen Securities.

Once onboard, Allegiant passengers are again bombarded with sales pitches. On a recent flight from Cedar Rapids to Las Vegas, flight attendants came over the loudspeaker and hawked show tickets and airport shuttles. The in-flight magazine is filled with ads for shows and attractions instead of stories. One ad offers $30 off a Las Vegas helicopter tour if purchased from flight attendants, who are paid extra for each item sold.

"They do a fantastic job packaging," says JetBlue CEO David Barger. "I think we can learn a lot from what Allegiant does."

Ben Baldanza, CEO of Spirit Airlines ? the only other U.S. carrier to charge for overhead bin space or for booking over the Internet ? also respects Allegiant's ability to sell extras, such as a round of golf in Myrtle Beach, S.C.

"They developed that expertise earlier than we did," Baldanza says.

Spirit focuses on getting passengers between big cities cheaply; Allegiant taps into people's desire to escape small-town life for a few days.

Most airlines promote their new first-class seats or individual TV screens. Allegiant ? which only offers coach seats ? promotes its destinations: Las Vegas gamblers smiling after winning at roulette, a hot-air balloon floating over the Arizona desert or a woman in a bikini sipping a frozen drink on a Hawaiian beach.

Allegiant's passengers aren't sold on the airline but on the escape.

An hour and a half before a recent flight from Cedar Rapids to Las Vegas, a spare seat couldn't be found in the airport bar. It was only 11 a.m., but travelers like Bridget Estrada and her four friends were too excited for their trip to wait.

It was only Estrada's second trip on a plane and her first in 13 years. She was nervous and gave a quick thought to her husband and three kids at home. But she and her friends quickly got back to drinking hard lemonade, mapping out their weekend away from Iowa.

A few feet away, other passengers shared tips on attractions, buffets and the cheapest blackjack tables.

"You must see the pirate show," one insisted.

Allegiant finds ways to profit on routes other airlines couldn't make work, often swooping in after they pull out. This month, it started flying between Asheville, N.C., and Tampa, Fla., a route abandoned by AirTran after Southwest Airlines acquired it.

Like other discount carriers, Allegiant prefers small airports that charge airlines lower rents, even if they aren't the most convenient. In Orlando, that means flying into Sanford, Fla., 30 minutes further from Walt Disney World than Orlando International Airport.

Frugal decisions like that helped Allegiant post a net profit of $78 million last year on revenue of $909 million. Its 8.6 percent profit margin was the highest of any U.S. airline, making it a darling of Wall Street.

The last five years have been good for airline investors. After a major spike in fuel prices in 2008 and a drop in business travelers, airlines tweaked their business models, adding baggage fees and cutting unprofitable flights. They started to make money and their stock prices climbed. While the S&P 500 climbed 26 percent in the past five years, an index of all U.S. airline stocks has tripled. Allegiant's stock has done even better, increasing more than fivefold to $105.40

Allegiant has 64 planes and flies to 87 cities, but it's tiny compared with an airline like United, which carried 20 times as many people last year, often on much longer flights.

The airline got its start in 1998 as a charter operation with one airplane. By February the following year, it had started scheduled flights between Fresno, Calif. and Las Vegas.

But its business struggled and less than two years later, it filed for bankruptcy protection. Maurice J. Gallagher, Jr., the airline's major creditor and a founder of ValuJet Airlines, gained control during the reorganization and became CEO. ValuJet was a low-cost carrier that changed its name to AirTran after a 1996 fatal crash in Florida.

Gallagher moved the airline from Fresno to Las Vegas; secured a lucrative contract with Harrah's to provide charter services to its casinos in Laughlin, Nev., and Reno, Nev.; and started to transform Allegiant into a low-cost carrier.

"The model evolved out of survival," says Gallagher, who is still CEO.

By 2003, the airline started turning profits, and it hasn't stopped. Gallagher's nearly 20 percent stake in the airline is now worth more than $380 million.

Allegiant benefits from paying lower salaries and having work rules that are more favorable to management than at most airlines. Flight attendants with 15 years of experience are paid $34 for each hour their plane is in the air ? $10 to $20 less than colleagues at larger carriers. Planes and crews typically end up at their home cities overnight, avoiding hotel rooms.

Wages could eventually shoot up. Pilots, flight attendants and dispatchers have all voted in the past two and a half years to join unions. The company has yet to sign a contract with any of them.

"We've been told several times at the (negotiating) table: If you don't like this job, there's the door," says Debra Petersen-Barber, who has been an Allegiant flight attendant for eight years and is the lead negotiator for the Transport Workers Union of America. "We have no value. We're easily replaced."

Thanks to its choice of aircraft, Allegiant has more flexibility than other airlines in deciding when and where to fly.

Instead of buying the newest, most expensive planes, the airline buys used, inexpensive jets. Its planes are 23 years old, on average, compared with the industry average of 14 years.

Each used MD-80 costs $3 million, compared with $40 million for a new Boeing 737 or Airbus A320 of similar size.

"When you have such little investment in an aircraft, you only fly it when it's going to be full of passengers," says Peter B. Barlow, an aircraft finance lawyer at Smith, Gambrell & Russell. "Other airlines don't have that luxury. They need to keep their aircraft in the air in order to make the economics work."

So on Tuesdays, when most of Allegiant's customers are stuck in the office, the airline keeps nearly all its planes on the ground.

Flying older planes has drawbacks, though. They burn more fuel, something Allegiant combats by squeezing 166 passengers onto planes ? 26 more than American Airlines has on comparable jets. They also have more mechanical problems, resulting in more delays.

One of every four Allegiant flights last year was at least 15 minutes late, the worst record in the industry, according to flight tracker FlightAware.

The bigger problem is if a mechanical issue forces a plane to be grounded. Given its limited schedule and packed planes, there usually isn't another flight to book passengers on. Instead, they are left waiting six hours while a new plane is flown in.

Sometimes flights are postponed to the next day. In one extreme situation in March, more than 1,700 passengers flying to and from Hawaii saw multi-day delays, including one flight that was 52 hours late.

That's a lot of time to kill at an airport bar.

__

Scott Mayerowitz can be reached at http://twitter.com/GlobeTrotScott.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/tiny-allegiant-air-thrives-low-costs-high-fees-070304427.html

tebow jets romney etch a sketch jeb bush sherry arnold snooty fox el debarge portland weather

Tensions Swelling as Beach Erodes

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Some say a rebuilt sea wall caused the scouring of Ditch Plains, on the Montauk Peninsula, while others say Hurricane Sandy did the damage.
    

Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/28/nyregion/as-a-beach-erodes-in-the-hamptons-community-tensions-swell.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

jamie moyer bone cancer hossa the cell dickclark gavin degraw gavin degraw

Wednesday 26 June 2013

Snowden's whereabouts a mystery; Paula Deen loses major deal



>> but first, edward snowden remains at large. an international showdown is brewing over to justice. this morning russian officials have called u.s. demands for snowden 's extradition unacceptable while simultaneous simultaneously saying that snowed hans not entered russia. dozens of journalists booked tickets aboard a flight from moscow to cuba awaiting snowden 's arrival. had some people covering it on tv, maps, this is where he could be, but it's not. it was fantastic.

>> did any network rent a helicopter.

>> who knows. but snowden never appeared. one reporter tweeting his empty seat. wikileaks founder julian assange who helped snowden flee from hong kong said snowden is healthy and safe and awaiting word over his asylum request from ecuador. president obama says the government exploring all legal options as the u.s. puts pressure on moscow to hand over the former contractor.

>> we are just not buying that this was a technical decision by a hong kong immigration official. this was a dplib brats choice by the government to release a fugitive despite a valid arrest warrant and that decision unquestionably has a negative impact on the u.s./china relationship.

>> i suppose there's no small irony here. i mean i wonder if mr. snowden chose china and russia as assistance in his -- in his flight from justice because they're such powerful bastions of internet freedom and wonder if while he was in either of those countries he raised the questions of internet freedoms since that seems to be what he champions.

>> secretary kerry says people will die because of the information that snowden has revealed. meanwhile, the south china post --

>> people will also die if they eat paula deen 's food.

>> we're getting there.

>> a related story.

>> we're getting there. you might want to be careful and take lipitor.

>> i crushed it up in my -- you crush up your pills, i crush up my pills in my oatmeal.

>> don't talk about my pills. snowden took his job with contractor booz allen hamilton to try to expose nsa programs through media leaks. he went into it, into the job, working to screw over our government.

>> yes.

>> the company he works for. you want to hear about paula deen . i don't know why. the court deposition in which paula deen admitted to using racial slurs and jokes continues to take a financial toll on the celebrity chef . on friday, the food network announced it will not renew deen's contract at the end of the month, a deal worth a reported $50,000 per episode and now smithfield foods has cut ties with deen, condemning her, quote, use of offensive and discriminatory language. deen has endorsed smithfield foods since 2006 . forbes ranked paula deen as its fourth highest earning chef pulling in $17 million in 2012 .

>> have you seen what she does? have you seen the cookbooks.

>> i've eaten her food. i went on "the view" and they had like a whole table of food that paula made and i had let's just say an obsessed moment. i ate it all. it was all fat and sugar and butter and it was so absolutely unhealthy and delicious, but totally, totally unhealthy. nothing good on the table.

>> you see the cookbook.

>> all --

>> it was just like --

>> fat fat fat.

>> m&m waffles.

>> who would have thought that the solution to america's obesity crisis would be paula deen saying a few racially insensitive things. now she's ban from the air the average weight of america's children will now drop by two or three pounds progressively.

>> we'll read it later.

>> what has happened to this country, "forbes" magazine now keeps track of the highest earning chefs?

>> these celebrity chefs.

>> what is going on with this country?

>> mike barnicle --

>> really makes the food --

>> cook. how much does the cook make? stop it.

>> i know. it's --

>> look at mike. he's a man out of time. he was complaining yesterday that "mad men" get past 1963 .

>> that's the last i remember.

>> you haven't seen "mad men" this year?

>> i saw a couple episodes.

>> i saw the finale.

>> did you see the finale?

>> i did.

>> oh, my gosh. i cannot believe he got shot at the end.

>> oh, no.

>> i never saw it coming.

>> did you just do that? are you making it up?

>> put on the journey song.

>> it was a little weird to have the -- --

>> "don't stop believing" in 1968 .

>> it wasn't out in '68.

>> exactly.

>> why did they kill him and what is he doing in jersey.

>> they killed him?

>> you're kidding.

>> he went to a diner in jersey and put on journey and --

>> you're all --

>> i don't have to watch it.

>> what's coming up next?

>> can i talk and move us through this?

>> the bruins lost.

>> what a shock.

>> awful.

>> coming up on " morning joe ," senator tom coburn will be here along with david axelrod , reverend al sharpton and actor adrian grenier here with his documentary "how to make money selling drugs".

>> you can make money selling drugs if who knew.

>> star of this show. coming up next the top --

>> my challenge to get adrian to smile.

>> i'm going to brief you in the commercial about who

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653381/s/2dc2c7c1/l/0Lvideo0Bmsnbc0Bmsn0N0Cid0C5230A4196/story01.htm

cardinals san diego weather frances bean cobain north korea missile launch modesto st louis weather guinea bissau

Teaching business poets and quants to make nice - Fortune ...

130626122011-science-humanities-614xa

FORTUNE -- Let's say you've got a crucial strategic decision to make, and a team of analysts has painstakingly built a complex mathematical model that's supposed to show you which way to go. The trouble is, even after the data scientists have laid out the details of their statistical algorithm in what they think are simple terms, it's Greek to you.

Don't panic. In a new book called Keeping Up with the Quants: Your Guide to Understanding + Using Analytics, Thomas H. Davenport and co-author Jinho Kim set out to advise executives on how to make sensible use of big data, including which questions to ask and how to tell whether the quant jocks really understand the business problem they're purporting to solve.

Davenport, a visiting professor at Harvard Business School, a research fellow at the MIT Center for Digital Business, and the author of two previous books about quantitative analysis, quotes eminent British statistician George Box: "All [mathematical] models are wrong, but some are useful." Even more useful is seasoned managers' intuition. "Few executives are skilled at both analytics and intuition," Davenport writes. "The goal, then, is to make analytical decisions while preserving the role of the executive's gut."

MORE:?China's hostage-taking is a relic

Karl Kempf, for one, agrees. Kempf is a senior scientist who heads a decision engineering group at Intel (INTC), and whose nicknames around the company are UberQuant and Chief Mathematician. Even so, Kempf believes that good quantitative decisions "are not about the math. They're about the relationships." Notes Davenport, "If someone referred to as the Chief Mathematician declares that it's not about the math, we should pay attention."

Keeping Up with the Quants goes into fascinating detail about how Intel and other successful companies -- including Verizon Wireless (VZ), TD Bank Group (TD), and Merck (MRK) -- help managers and data scientists understand each other well enough to collaborate effectively. In Intel's case, Kempf sends the "math people" charged with solving a problem on a kind of junior year abroad among non-math types, to listen, learn, and pick up some general business knowledge.

"At most, the analyst can be trained, as a new hire would be, to participate in the business process," Davenport writes. "Kempf judges the low bar for success as when the math person thinks he or she understands the business problem. The high bar is when the business person thinks the math person understands the business problem."

For their part, executives may need to brush up on their algebra. "The business person doesn't have to understand, for example, hyperbolic partial differential equations," Davenport writes. (Well, there's a relief.) "But at a minimum there has to be a diagram on the white board setting out such questions as, 'Since A and X are related, if A goes up, in what direction does X go?'" He adds, "As with any other type of model, a few concrete examples -- historical or made up -- are extremely useful." So are visual aids like pie charts and bar graphs, a favorite tool of Patrick Moore, who heads the commercial analytics group at Merck.

One of the book's most practical features is a series of checklists spelling out exactly what managers should expect from quant jocks and vice versa. A sample tip: "As a business decision maker, you should politely push back if you don't understand something and ask for a different or better explanation." That might seem obvious, but many non-math types are too intimidated to press for clarity.

MORE:?On climate change, we are the ones we've been waiting for

"We've seen a number of organizations in which quantitative people seemed to delight in making 'normal' businesspeople feel stupid," Davenport notes. "They would say things like, 'Surely you know what regression analysis is?' or 'I'm sorry, a chi-square test is just too elementary for me to have to explain.'"

If you're getting that kind of guff, Davenport contends, it's probably your own fault. Most data analysts are "wonderful people to work with," he writes, but attitude problems sometimes pop up "in organizations that somehow hired quantitative analysts but ignore them when important decisions come along. Quants, like most people, respect others when they are respected." Enough said.

Source: http://management.fortune.cnn.com/2013/06/26/collaboration-work-quants-math/

beasley trailblazers michael beasley jermaine jones hbo luck unc asheville stephen jackson

Windows developers itching to get their hands on Xbox One's new Kinect are in luck.

Windows developers itching to get their hands on Xbox One's new Kinect are in luck. Pre-orders for the new Kinect's development kits?going at $399 a pop?have just opened up.

Read more...

    


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/vw4gBW3cQQY/windows-developers-itching-to-get-their-hands-on-xbox-o-586592158

Evil Dead halle berry kurt cobain Kamala Harris URI Facebook Home Ncaa Basketball Tournament 2013

Wyndham Worldwide to Report Second Quarter 2013 Earnings on ...

Wyndham Worldwide logoConference Call and Webcast at 8:30am EDT

Parsippany, N.J. (June 24, 2013) ??Wyndham Worldwide Corporation (NYSE: WYN) announced today that it will report second quarter 2013 results on Wednesday, July 24, 2013. Steve Holmes, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, and Tom Conforti, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, will host a conference call with investors to discuss the results and business outlook at 8:30am EDT that morning.

Listeners can access the webcast live through the company?s website at www.wyndhamworldwide.com/investors/. The conference call may also be accessed by dialing 800-369-2125 and providing the pass code ?WYNDHAM?. Listeners are urged to call at least 10 minutes prior to the scheduled start time. An archive of this webcast will be available on the website for approximately 90 days beginning at 12:00pm EDT on July 24, 2013. A telephone replay will be available for approximately 90 days beginning at 12:00pm EDT on July 24, 2013 at 866-430-8799.

About Wyndham Worldwide Corporation
One of the world?s largest hospitality companies, Wyndham Worldwide provides a wide range of hospitality products and services through its global portfolio of world-renowned brands. The world?s largest hotel company based on the number of properties, Wyndham Hotel Group is home to many of the world?s best-known hotel brands, with approximately 7,380 franchised hotels and over 631,800 hotel rooms worldwide. Wyndham Exchange & Rentals is the worldwide leader in vacation exchange and the world?s largest professionally managed vacation rentals business, providing more than 5 million leisure-bound families annually with access to over 106,000 vacation properties in 100 countries through its prominent exchange and vacation rental brands. The industry and timeshare ownership market leader, Wyndham Vacation Ownership develops, markets, and sells vacation ownership interests and provides consumer financing to owners through its network of 190 vacation ownership resorts serving approximately 915,000 owners throughout the United States, Canada, Mexico, the Caribbean, and the South Pacific. Based in Parsippany, NJ, Wyndham Worldwide employs approximately 32,500 associates globally.
For more information about Wyndham Worldwide, please visit the Company?s website at www.wyndhamworldwide.com.

SOURCE: Wyndham Worldwide

Jun 24th, 2013 | Category: ALL NEWS HEADLINES, Finance, USA & Canada | Tell a Friend?Tell a Friend

Source: http://www.insidethegate.com/2013/06/wyndham-worldwide-to-report-second-quarter-2013-earnings-on-july-24-2013/

espn3 pacers Grumpy Cat Boston Strong concert john tortorella the voice miranda lambert

Tuesday 25 June 2013

Kim Kardashian Baby Name: What Does It Mean?

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/06/kim-kardashian-baby-name-what-does-it-mean/

obama trayvon martin pietrus cheney tori spelling marion barber marion barber syracuse

UCSB sociologist studies issues of privilege from a geographical perspective

UCSB sociologist studies issues of privilege from a geographical perspective [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 24-Jun-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Andrea Estrada
andrea.estrada@ia.ucsb.edu
805-893-4620
University of California - Santa Barbara

Santa Barbara, Calif.) For almost everyone in the world, privilege financial or otherwise derives from who we are, where we are born, where we happen to live at any given time, and how well we can convert those factors into social power.

In her new book, "Geographies of Privilege" (Routledge, 2013), France Winddance Twine, a professor of sociology at UC Santa Barbara, argues that physical space, geography, and locality are key to understanding how power and privilege operate in diverse national contexts. Geography and locality, she says, are central to an analysis of power or social inequality.

"One of the reasons I published this book is because, at least in sociology, when people have studied privilege the focus has been on the vulnerable ethnic and racial minorities, women, groups perceived as powerless," Twine said. "And I think it's important that we adjust the lens to see how global privileges operate from the perspective of the elite, as well as the disempowered."

The book, co-edited with Bradley Gardener, a visiting assistant professor at Temple University, is an interdisciplinary and transnational volume that includes contributions from sociologists, anthropologists, historians, cultural geographers, and ethnic studies and social justice scholars working in regions typically neglected in much of mainstream sociology. "One of the main concepts that inspired me was that of spatial justice, which comes from the Marxist theorist Edward Soja," Twine said. Soja, a distinguished professor emeritus of urban planning at UCLA, Twine noted, wrote the groundbreaking book, "Spatial Justice," in which he argued that space is not neutral, and that how we experience it is informed by power relations.

In the section on post-colonial racism and transnational migration, Twine examines issues of privilege from the perspective of those who do have the advantages in question i.e., forms of social, economic, and cultural capital as well as those who don't. "These chapters move between South Africa, the United Kingdom, the European Union, and Italy to examine how easy it is for some people to travel across nation-state boundaries while others are incarcerated in detention camps," she explained. As an example, she cited her recent trip to Lebanon. "When I went to Beirut, I entered as a United States citizen," she said. "I could apply for a visa upon arrival at the airport and not pay a fee and enter the country. This is an example of a form of privilege that I possess and that wouldn't have been the case if I were another nationality."

So citizenship status clearly matters in that situation. In another, not so much. "It's important to think about how we move through spaces, and who's policed and who isn't, and which bodies bear the cost of violence as they move through spaces," Twine said. "As Americans, we've become accustomed to seeing the shooting of unarmed males all across the country. One could argue that those of us who aren't in that body have privileges that are invisible to the rest of us who aren't routinely stopped, harassed, and defined as dangerous." In that case, racial status, gender, and age are more relevant than citizenship status for U.S.-born men who have native English accents.

"In Chicago, citizenship status did not protect U.S. citizens from police violence or routine discrimination in public places," she said.

And for immigrants, the question of privilege often lies in their countries of birth, their skin color, and their occupation. "I didn't grow up around Spanish-speaking immigrants," said Twine, who was raised in Chicago. "The immigrants I knew in Chicago Irish, Polish, Russian, Latvian, and other Eastern Europeans were what I would call privileged immigrants. Nobody questioned their right to be in this country." It wasn't until Twine moved to the Mission District of San Francisco that she became aware of how her citizenship was sometimes a form of privilege. It meant she didn't have to worry about some of the issues that preoccupied her Spanish-speaking neighbors.

That, Twine continued, is how power and privilege operate. It doesn't have to be named. "It's what we don't have to take for granted if we're a citizen, heterosexual, white middle class, or speak English with a particular accent," she said. "The issue is what forms of currency social, symbolic, cultural you have as you navigate through economic, public, private, and occupational spaces. The book provides case studies that help students understand this package of invisible privileges."

Complicating the concept of privilege is its dynamic nature and the way it morphs as people move across geographic zones. A person considered privileged in one location is not necessarily so in another. "I may be a elite same body, same color in Brazil, but I come to the U.S. and all of a sudden I'm not just an elite," Twine said. "Here, I'm also black, or Latina, or racially ambiguous. Privilege is dynamic, and it's paradoxical because we aren't even aware of a lot of the privileges we possess we don't really see them until they're taken away."

A goal of the book, Twine explained, is to help readers understand that many of the privileges we enjoy are contingent upon locality and geography as well as with the people with whom we are interacting, our nationality, social characteristics such as gender and occupation and, perhaps most important, how these social attributes are interpreted by those who possess power.

###


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


UCSB sociologist studies issues of privilege from a geographical perspective [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 24-Jun-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Andrea Estrada
andrea.estrada@ia.ucsb.edu
805-893-4620
University of California - Santa Barbara

Santa Barbara, Calif.) For almost everyone in the world, privilege financial or otherwise derives from who we are, where we are born, where we happen to live at any given time, and how well we can convert those factors into social power.

In her new book, "Geographies of Privilege" (Routledge, 2013), France Winddance Twine, a professor of sociology at UC Santa Barbara, argues that physical space, geography, and locality are key to understanding how power and privilege operate in diverse national contexts. Geography and locality, she says, are central to an analysis of power or social inequality.

"One of the reasons I published this book is because, at least in sociology, when people have studied privilege the focus has been on the vulnerable ethnic and racial minorities, women, groups perceived as powerless," Twine said. "And I think it's important that we adjust the lens to see how global privileges operate from the perspective of the elite, as well as the disempowered."

The book, co-edited with Bradley Gardener, a visiting assistant professor at Temple University, is an interdisciplinary and transnational volume that includes contributions from sociologists, anthropologists, historians, cultural geographers, and ethnic studies and social justice scholars working in regions typically neglected in much of mainstream sociology. "One of the main concepts that inspired me was that of spatial justice, which comes from the Marxist theorist Edward Soja," Twine said. Soja, a distinguished professor emeritus of urban planning at UCLA, Twine noted, wrote the groundbreaking book, "Spatial Justice," in which he argued that space is not neutral, and that how we experience it is informed by power relations.

In the section on post-colonial racism and transnational migration, Twine examines issues of privilege from the perspective of those who do have the advantages in question i.e., forms of social, economic, and cultural capital as well as those who don't. "These chapters move between South Africa, the United Kingdom, the European Union, and Italy to examine how easy it is for some people to travel across nation-state boundaries while others are incarcerated in detention camps," she explained. As an example, she cited her recent trip to Lebanon. "When I went to Beirut, I entered as a United States citizen," she said. "I could apply for a visa upon arrival at the airport and not pay a fee and enter the country. This is an example of a form of privilege that I possess and that wouldn't have been the case if I were another nationality."

So citizenship status clearly matters in that situation. In another, not so much. "It's important to think about how we move through spaces, and who's policed and who isn't, and which bodies bear the cost of violence as they move through spaces," Twine said. "As Americans, we've become accustomed to seeing the shooting of unarmed males all across the country. One could argue that those of us who aren't in that body have privileges that are invisible to the rest of us who aren't routinely stopped, harassed, and defined as dangerous." In that case, racial status, gender, and age are more relevant than citizenship status for U.S.-born men who have native English accents.

"In Chicago, citizenship status did not protect U.S. citizens from police violence or routine discrimination in public places," she said.

And for immigrants, the question of privilege often lies in their countries of birth, their skin color, and their occupation. "I didn't grow up around Spanish-speaking immigrants," said Twine, who was raised in Chicago. "The immigrants I knew in Chicago Irish, Polish, Russian, Latvian, and other Eastern Europeans were what I would call privileged immigrants. Nobody questioned their right to be in this country." It wasn't until Twine moved to the Mission District of San Francisco that she became aware of how her citizenship was sometimes a form of privilege. It meant she didn't have to worry about some of the issues that preoccupied her Spanish-speaking neighbors.

That, Twine continued, is how power and privilege operate. It doesn't have to be named. "It's what we don't have to take for granted if we're a citizen, heterosexual, white middle class, or speak English with a particular accent," she said. "The issue is what forms of currency social, symbolic, cultural you have as you navigate through economic, public, private, and occupational spaces. The book provides case studies that help students understand this package of invisible privileges."

Complicating the concept of privilege is its dynamic nature and the way it morphs as people move across geographic zones. A person considered privileged in one location is not necessarily so in another. "I may be a elite same body, same color in Brazil, but I come to the U.S. and all of a sudden I'm not just an elite," Twine said. "Here, I'm also black, or Latina, or racially ambiguous. Privilege is dynamic, and it's paradoxical because we aren't even aware of a lot of the privileges we possess we don't really see them until they're taken away."

A goal of the book, Twine explained, is to help readers understand that many of the privileges we enjoy are contingent upon locality and geography as well as with the people with whom we are interacting, our nationality, social characteristics such as gender and occupation and, perhaps most important, how these social attributes are interpreted by those who possess power.

###


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-06/uoc--us062413.php

Granbury Tx Jaden Smith eminem eminem google io Kelly Rowland Dirty Laundry star trek

Sherri Shepherd's Impression Of Two Women Trash-Talking Each Other (VIDEO)

  • "Sister Act" Broadway Opening Night - Arrivals & Curtain Call

    NEW YORK, NY - APRIL 20: (L-R) TV personality Barbara Walters, actress/producer Whoopi Goldberg and TV personality Elisabeth Hasselbeck attend the Broadway opening night of 'Sister Act' at the Broadway Theatre on April 20, 2011 in New York City. (Photo by Joe Corrigan/Getty Images)

  • JOY BEHAR, SANDRA FLUKE, SHERRI SHEPHERD, ELISABETH HASSELBECK, BARBARA WALTERS

    Georgetown University law student and activist Sandra Fluke, center, speaks as co-hosts Joy Behar, left, and Sherri Shepherd speak during an appearance on the daytime talk show, "The View," Monday, March 5, 2012 in New York. Fluke talked about conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh and the comments he made on his program after she testified to Democratic members of Congress in support of a requirement that health care companies provide coverage for contraception. Fluke told ABC's "The View" on Monday that she hasn't heard from Limbaugh since he issued a written apology late Saturday. (AP Photo/ABC, Lou Rocco)

  • Barack Obama, Michelle Obama, Barbara Walters, Joy Behar, Sherri Shepherd,

    President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama appear on the ABC Television show ?The View? in New York, Monday, Sept. 24, 2012, From left are, Barbara Walters, president and first lady, Joy Behar, and Sherri Shepherd. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

  • ROBIN ROBERTS, SHERRI SHEPHERD, VAL CHMERKOVSKIY

    In this April 11, 2012 photo released by ABC, host Robin Roberts, left, speaks with TV personality Sherri Shepherd and her dance partner Val Chmerkovskiy after they were eliminated from the celebrity dance competition series "Dancing with the Stars," during an appearance on the morning show "Good Morning America" in New York. The Nielsen Co. said Monday that ABC's ?Good Morning America? beat NBC's morning show last week by a razor-thin margin of 13,000 viewers. (AP Photo/ABC, Donna Svennevik)

  • "Sister Act" Broadway Opening Night - Arrivals & Curtain Call

    NEW YORK, NY - APRIL 20: Actress/producer Whoopi Goldberg and TV personality Elisabeth Hasselbeck, attend the Broadway opening night of 'Sister Act' at the Broadway Theatre on April 20, 2011 in New York City. (Photo by Joe Corrigan/Getty Images)

  • "Sister Act" Broadway Opening Night - Arrivals & Curtain Call

    NEW YORK, NY - APRIL 20: TV personalities Elisabeth Hasselbeck and Barbara Walters attend the Broadway opening night of 'Sister Act' at the Broadway Theatre on April 20, 2011 in New York City. (Photo by Joe Corrigan/Getty Images)

  • "Sister Act" Broadway Opening Night - Arrivals & Curtain Call

    NEW YORK, NY - APRIL 20: (L-R) Actress/producer Whoopi Goldberg, actor Sylvester Stallone and TV personality Barbara Walters attend the Broadway opening night of 'Sister Act' at the Broadway Theatre on April 20, 2011 in New York City. (Photo by Joe Corrigan/Getty Images)

  • Kelly Ripa Co-Hosts Dr. Fredric Brandt's SiriusXM Launch Event

    NEW YORK, NY - SEPTEMBER 26: Television personality Joy Behar attends Dr. Fredric Brandt's SiriusXM launch event at SiriusXM Studio on September 26, 2011 in New York City. (Photo by Cindy Ord/Getty Images)

  • BARBARA WALTERS, STAR JONES, JOY BEHAR

    In this image released by ABC, co-host Barbara Walters, left embraces former co-host Star Jones as Joy Behar, right, looks on during a broadcast of the daytime talk show "The View," Wednesday, Feb. 22, 2012, in New York. Jones made a guest appearance Wednesday after quitting the show six years ago. (AP Photo/ABC, Ida Mae Astute)

  • 2012 Made In NY Awards

    NEW YORK, NY - JUNE 04: New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg,actress/TV personality Whoopi Goldberg, and New York City Film Commissioner Katherine Oliver attend the 2012 Made In NY Awards at Gracie Mansion on June 4, 2012 in New York City. (Photo by Stephen Lovekin/Getty Images)

  • Joy Behar

    FILE - In this March 13, 2010 file photo, TV personality Joy Behar attends the 21st annual GLAAD Media Awards in New York. Current TV says Joy Behar will soon be joining the network to host a prime-time talk show. Behar, whose nightly program on cable channel HLN ended last December, will return with a show on Current in September, the network announced Monday. It will originate Monday through Thursday at 6 p.m. Eastern time. (AP Photo/Peter Kramer, file)

  • Joy Behar

    FILE - This April 20, 2011 file photo shows Joy Behar arriving to the opening night performance of the Broadway musical ?Sister Act? in New York. Current TV says Joy Behar will soon be joining the network to host a prime-time talk show. Behar, whose nightly program on cable channel HLN ended last December, will return with a show on Current in September, the network announced Monday. It will originate Monday through Thursday at 6 p.m. Eastern time. (AP Photo/Charles Sykes, file)

  • 2012 Made In NY Awards

    NEW YORK, NY - JUNE 04: Actress Meryl Streep and actress/TV personality Whoopi Goldberg attend the 2012 Made In NY Awards at Gracie Mansion on June 4, 2012 in New York City. (Photo by Stephen Lovekin/Getty Images)

  • Sherri Shepherd

    Television personality Sherri Shepherd arrives before the 84th Academy Awards on Sunday, Feb. 26, 2012, in the Hollywood section of Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Amy Sancetta)

  • Nora Ephron Memorial Service

    NEW YORK, NY - JULY 09: Actress Joy Behar attends the Nora Ephron Memorial Service on July 9, 2012 in New York City. (Photo by Ilya S. Savenok/Getty Images)

  • SHERRI SHEPHERD, VAL CHMERKOVSKIY

    In this April 9, 2012 photo released by ABC, TV personality Sherri Shepherd and her partner Val Chmerkovskiy perform on the celebrity dance competition series "Dancing with the Stars," in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/ABC, Adam Taylor)

  • Sherri Shepherd

    Television personality Sherri Shepherd arrives before the 84th Academy Awards on Sunday, Feb. 26, 2012, in the Hollywood section of Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Matt Sayles)

  • US-VOTE-2012-DEMOCRATIC CAMPAIGN

    Barbara Walters listens as US President Barack Obama speaks during a break in a taping of 'The View' at ABC Studios September 24, 2012 in New York, New York. Obama is traveling for a two day trip to New York City where he will participate in a taping of 'The View' before attending the United Nations General Assembly and related events. AFP PHOTO/Brendan SMIALOWSKI (Photo credit should read BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP/GettyImages)

  • Through The Kitchen Benefit For Cancer Research Institute

    NEW YORK, NY - MAY 20: Media personality Barbara Walters is served in the kitchen during the Through The Kitchen Benefit For Cancer Research Institute at The Four Seasons Restaurant on May 20, 2012 in New York, United States. (Photo by Jemal Countess/Getty Images)

  • Barbara Walters, Bill Geddie

    Barbara Walters, right, presents the lifetime achievement award to Bill Geddie onstage at the 39th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards at the Beverly Hilton Hotel on Saturday, June 23, 2012 in Beverly Hills, Calif. (Photo by Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP)

  • SHERRI SHEPHERD, VAL CHMERKOVSKIY

    In this April 2, 2012 photo, TV personality Sherri Shepherd, left, and her partner Val Chmerkovskiy perform on the celebrity dance competition series "Dancing with the Stars," in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/ABC, Adam Taylor)

  • "The Words" New York Screening - Arrivals

    EAST HAMPTON, NY - AUGUST 25: TV personality Joy Behar attends 'The Words' screening at Goose Creek on August 25, 2012 in East Hampton, New York. (Photo by Paul Zimmerman/Getty Images)

  • Backstage At 54 Below

    NEW YORK, NY - SEPTEMBER 17: TV personality Joy Behar speaks with comedian Carol Burnett backstage after a performance by Linda Lavin at 54 Below on September 17, 2012 in New York City. (Photo by Cindy Ord/Getty Images for 54 Below)

  • Backstage At 54 Below

    NEW YORK, NY - SEPTEMBER 17: (L-R) Joy Behar, Harold 'Hal' Prince, Linda Lavin and Carol Burnett pose backstage after a performance by Linda Lavin at 54 Below on September 17, 2012 in New York City. (Photo by Cindy Ord/Getty Images for 54 Below)

  • Actress Whoopi Goldberg arrives at the 2

    Actress Whoopi Goldberg arrives at the 20th Annual Elton John AIDS Foundation Academy Awards Viewing Party at the City of West Hollywood Park on February 26, 2012 in West Hollywood, California. AFP PHOTO/PATRICK T. FALLON (Photo credit should read Patrick T. Fallon/AFP/Getty Images)

  • 20th Annual Elton John AIDS Foundation's Oscar Viewing Party - Arrivals

    LOS ANGELES, CA - FEBRUARY 26: Actress Whoopi Goldberg arrives at the 20th Annual Elton John AIDS Foundation's Oscar Viewing Party held at West Hollywood Park on February 26, 2012 in West Hollywood, California. (Photo by Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images)

  • 2012 MoMA Party In The Garden Benefit - Arrivals

    NEW YORK, NY - MAY 22: Barbara Walters attends the 2012 Party in the Garden benefit at the Museum of Modern Art on May 22, 2012 in New York City. (Photo by Theo Wargo/Getty Images)

  • 10th Annual TV Land Awards - Show

    NEW YORK, NY - APRIL 14: Actress Whoopi Goldberg speaks onstage at the 10th Annual TV Land Awards at the Lexington Avenue Armory on April 14, 2012 in New York City. (Photo by Andrew H. Walker/Getty Images)

  • 10th Annual TV Land Awards - Show

    NEW YORK, NY - APRIL 14: Actress Whoopi Goldberg speaks onstage at the 10th Annual TV Land Awards at the Lexington Avenue Armory on April 14, 2012 in New York City. (Photo by Andrew H. Walker/Getty Images)

  • 2012 Made In NY Awards

    NEW YORK, NY - JUNE 04: Comedian Joan Rivers, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, and actress/TV personality Whoopi Goldberg attend the 2012 Made In NY Awards at Gracie Mansion on June 4, 2012 in New York City. (Photo by Stephen Lovekin/Getty Images)

  • 2012 Made In NY Awards

    NEW YORK, NY - JUNE 04: Actress Whoopi Goldberg attends the 2012 Made In NY Awards at Gracie Mansion on June 4, 2012 in New York City. (Photo by Stephen Lovekin/Getty Images)

  • 2012 Made In NY Awards

    NEW YORK, NY - JUNE 04: New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg and actress Whoopi Goldberg attend the 2012 Made In NY Awards at Gracie Mansion on June 4, 2012 in New York City. (Photo by Stephen Lovekin/Getty Images)

  • Jon Patricof, Whoopi Goldberg

    IMAGE DISTRIBUTED FOR ADVERTISING WEEK - President and COO of Tribeca Enterprises Jon Patricof, left, and actress Whoopi Goldberg participate in the "Future of Film" seminar at Advertising Week on Monday, Oct. 1, 2012, in New York. (Photo by Charles Sykes/Invision for Advertising Week/AP Images)

  • Whoopi Goldberg

    IMAGE DISTRIBUTED FOR ADVERTISING WEEK - Actress Whoopi Goldberg speaks at the "Future of Film" seminar at Advertising Week on Monday, Oct. 1, 2012, in New York. (Photo by Charles Sykes/Invision for Advertising Week/AP Images)

  • Katie Couric, Barbara Walters

    FILE - In this Jan. 12, 2012 file photo, Barbara Walters attends the "Today" show 60th anniversary celebration at the Edison Ballroom in New York. Walters is apologizing for trying to help a former aide to Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad land a job or get into college in the United States. Sheherazad Jaafari is the daughter of the Syrian ambassador to the United States and a one-time press aide to Assad. Jaafari played a role in Walters' landing an interview with the Syrian president in December.(AP Photo/Evan Agostini)

  • Bill Geddie, Barbara Walters

    Bill Geddie, left, and Barbara Walters pose backstage with Geddie's lifetime achievement award at the 39th Annual Daytime Emmy Awards at the Beverly Hilton Hotel on Saturday, June 23, 2012 in Beverly Hills, Calif. (Photo by Todd Williamson/Invision/AP)

  • Nora Ephron Memorial Service

    NEW YORK, NY - JULY 09: Barbara Walters attends the Nora Ephron Memorial Service on July 9, 2012 in New York City. (Photo by Ilya S. Savenok/Getty Images)

  • Nora Ephron Memorial Service

    NEW YORK, NY - JULY 09: Barbara Walters attends the Nora Ephron Memorial Service on July 9, 2012 in New York City. (Photo by Rob Kim/Getty Images)

  • New York City Ballet Celebrates Legendary Fashion Designer Valentino Garavani

    This Sept. 20, 2012 photo released by Starpix shows Barbara Walters at the New York City Ballet Fall Gala honoring Valentino Garavani at Lincoln Center in New York. Valentino, who created most of the vibrant costumes and dramatically upped the glamour quotient of the evening, attracting movie stars, supermodels and socialites galore. (AP Photo/Starpix, Amanda Schwab)

  • US-VOTE-2012-DEMOCRATIC CAMPAIGN

    (L-R) Whoopi Goldberg, Barbara Walters US President Barack Obama, and US first lady Michelle Obama sit during a break in a taping of 'The View' at ABC Studios September 24, 2012 in New York, New York. Obama is traveling for a two day trip to New York City where he will participate in a taping of 'The View' before attending the United Nations General Assembly and related events. AFP PHOTO/Brendan SMIALOWSKI (Photo credit should read BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP/GettyImages)

  • Barack Obama, Michelle Obama, Whoopi Goldberg, Barbara Walters, Joy Behar, Sherri Shepherd, Elisabeth Hasselbeck

    President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama appear on the ABC Television show "The View" in New York, Monday, Sept. 24, 2012, From left are, Whoopi Goldberg, Barbara Walters, the president, the first lady, Joy Behar, Sherri Shepherd and Elisabeth Hasselbeck. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

  • Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/06/24/sherri-shepherd-women-trash-talking_n_3490759.html

    ramon sessions portland trail blazers blagojevich new mexico state kevin rose sessions march madness scores