Monthly Archives: January 2010
Official: Haiti death toll 100,000-plus
The death toll from Haiti’s 7.0 magnitude earthquake is at least 100,000 and could be several times that number, Haitian officials said Wednesday.
Haitian Consul General Felix Augustin said the capital Port-au-Prince “is flattened, CNN reported.
“More than 100,000 are dead,” Felix Augustin told reporters.
Haitian Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive said it could be much worse, saying several hundred thousand people may have been killed.
Makes the heart very sad–the Lord be with them. Read it all.
ENI: Election to decide if Britain to have first female Anglican bishop
Britain might soon have its first female Anglican bishop, serving the 38,000-member Scottish Episcopal Church, part of the worldwide Anglican Communion.
The Rev. Alison Peden, 57, is one of three candidates for the post of bishop of Glasgow and Galloway. The election is scheduled for Jan. 16.
Observers say that if Peden is elected it is likely to increase pressure on the neighbouring (Anglican) Church of England to allow the appointment of women bishops.
A Year of Terror Plots, Through a Second Prism
As terrorist plots against the United States have piled up in recent months, politicians and the news media have sounded the alarm with a riveting message for Americans: Be afraid. Al Qaeda is on the march again, targeting the country from within and without, and your hapless government cannot protect you.
But the politically charged clamor has lumped together disparate cases and obscured the fact that the enemies on American soil in 2009, rather than a single powerful and sophisticated juggernaut, were a scattered, uncoordinated group of amateurs who displayed more fervor than skill. The weapons were old-fashioned guns and explosives ”” in several cases, duds supplied by F.B.I. informants ”” with no trace of the biological or radiological poisons, let alone the nuclear bombs, that have long been the ultimate fear.
And though 2009 brought more domestic plots, and more serious plots, than any recent year, their lethality was relatively modest. Exactly 14 of the approximately 14,000 murders in the United States last year resulted from allegedly jihadist attacks: 13 people shot at Fort Hood in Texas in November and one at a military recruiting station in Little Rock, Ark., in June.
Such statistics would be no comfort, of course, if an attack with mass casualties succeeded some day.
Fleming Rutledge–Death and Life: The Apostolic Vocation
And so to you, beloved of God at the church of the Good Shepherd:
The apostolic ministry has lost standing in the Episcopal Church, even in Virginia where it used to be very highly valued. Here in this parish, however, you have responded to it, and that is a cause for great thanksgiving and great hope. There is no greater need in the church today than that of feeding the flock with the full, concrete, biblical, Trinitarian content of the gospel of Jesus Christ crucified and risen. Ross Wright has spent his entire life studying that full content. In your embrace of him to be your rector, you have an idea of what you are receiving, and that is therefore part of your calling also, your service also. That reception of the gospel translates into the good works that identify Christ’s life in the world. Christ’s life, not ours. The transcendent power belongs to God and not to you, to God and not to me, to God and not to Ross.
It will cost Ross a good deal to bring you this message week in and week out, as it costs every parish priest, but you will receive life from it. The transcendent power of God is defined by Paul in Romans as the power that raises the dead and calls into existence the things that do not yet exist (Romans :17). And as you receive that divine life, you will be moved, invigorated, and sustained by it. It will send you out to serve his needy, broken, suffering world””the world for which he poured out his life, the world for which he gave himself in surpassing love, for which he conquered death, and for which he came again in the fulness of his resurrection power to bear you up in all your trials and bring you into his everlasting kingdom.
New cricket species filmed pollinating orchids
A new species of cricket has been caught on camera – and its bizarre behaviour has surprised scientists.
Far from living up to the cricket’s plant-destroying reputation, this species lends a helping hand to flora by acting as a pollinator.
Scientists say this is the first time a cricket has been spotted pollinating a flower – in this case, an orchid.
A study of the nocturnal insect, which was found on the island of Reunion, has been published in the Annals of Botany.
Bloomberg TV: Alan Blinder Interview About Financial Regulation
Alan Blinder, a former Federal Reserve vice chairman who is an economics professor at Princeton University, talks with Bloomberg’s Mark Crumpton and Julie Hyman about the outlook for an overhaul of financial regulation in the U.S. Blinder also discusses the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission.
Alan Blinder: When Greed Is Not Good
When economists first heard Gekko’s now-famous dictum, “Greed is good,” they thought it a crude expression of Adam Smith’s “Invisible Hand”””which is one of history’s great ideas. But in Smith’s vision, greed is socially beneficial only when properly harnessed and channeled. The necessary conditions include, among other things: appropriate incentives (for risk taking, etc.), effective competition, safeguards against exploitation of what economists call “asymmetric information” (as when a deceitful seller unloads junk on an unsuspecting buyer), regulators to enforce the rules and keep participants honest, and””when relevant””protection of taxpayers against pilferage or malfeasance by others. When these conditions fail to hold, greed is not good.
Plainly, they all failed in the financial crisis. Compensation and other types of incentives for risk taking were badly skewed. Corporate boards were asleep at the switch. Opacity reduced effective competition. Financial regulation was shamefully lax. Predators roamed the financial landscape, looting both legally and illegally. And when the Treasury and Federal Reserve rushed in to contain the damage, taxpayers were forced to pay dearly for the mistakes and avarice of others. If you want to know why the public is enraged, that, in a nutshell, is why.
American democracy is alleged to respond to public opinion, and incumbents are quaking in their boots. Yet we stand here in January 2010 with virtually the same legal and regulatory system we had when the crisis struck in the summer of 2007, with only minor changes in Wall Street business practices, and with greed returning big time. That’s both amazing and scary….
Tanya Ballard Brown–When it comes to Marriage Black Brothers, Where Art Thou?
One day late last month, I powered up my laptop and pulled up my Google reader to find post after post about what some of the bloggers I follow had decided was the latest in a growing assault on successful single black women: this ABC News Nightline piece exploring the low marriage rate in the African-American community.
Watch it and you’ll see a group of attractive, well-groomed ladies ”” an attorney, a chemist, a doctoral student, a payroll specialist ”” discussing what they perceive as their lack of marriage options. The reporter cites this statistic: “Forty-two percent of U.S. black women have never been married, double the number of white women who’ve never tied the knot.”
This report followed a Dec. 10 story in The Washington Post and one a few months earlier from MSNBC about the dwindling marriage prospects for black women. We discussed it here at NPR in September, UPI had its version in August, CNN covered it last year, and Oprah tackled it in 2007….
RNS: Pope Laments Slow Pace in Tackling Climate Change
Referring to last month’s United Nations climate summit in Copenhagen, where political leaders failed to negotiate a way to curb greenhouse-gas emissions, Benedict said the summit offered evidence of “economic and political resistance to combating the degradation of the environment.”
“I trust that in the course of this year … it will be possible to reach an agreement for effectively dealing with (climate change),” Benedict said. “The issue is all the more important in that the very future of some nations is at stake, particularly some island states.”
China rises above recession, inviting Scrutiny
Please note that the headline above is from the print edition–KSH.
As much of the world struggles to clamber out of a serious recession, a gradual flow of economic power from West to East has turned into a flood.
New high points, it seems, are reached daily. China surged past the United States to become the world’s largest automobile market ”” in units, if not in dollars, figures released Monday show. It also toppled Germany as the biggest exporter of manufactured goods, according to year-end trade data. World Bank estimates suggest that China ”” the world’s fifth-largest economy four years ago ”” will shortly overtake Japan to claim the No. 2 spot.
The shift of economic gravity to China has occurred partly because growth here remained robust even as the world’s developed economies suffered the steepest drop in trade and economic output in decades.
But that did not happen by chance: China’s decisive government intervention in the economy, combined with the defiant optimism of its companies and consumers, has propelled an economy that until recently had seemed tethered to the health of its major export markets, including the United States.
Britain Moves to Ban Islamic Group
Britain said Tuesday it was outlawing a radical Islamic group that had incited outrage by planning a protest march through the streets of a town made famous for its somber ceremonies honoring British soldiers killed in Afghanistan.
Some patients willing to pay for 'boutique' primary care doctors
Over the counter cold-and-flu remedy: $5.99.
Trip to the doctor’s office: $20.
Extra time to bend your doctor’s ear: $1,500 a year and up.
Primary care physicians are increasingly offering exclusivity to those willing to pay for it.
These practices, known as concierge, boutique or retainer practices, typically charge annual fees that range from $1,500 to $10,000 or more. The fee allows the businesses to prosper with a far smaller roll of patients than has become the norm under the traditional system.
Patients like the extra attention and lack of crowded waiting rooms. Doctors say they need alternatives to a payment system that forces them to cram their schedule with appointments.
Notable and Quotable (II)
Household leverage in the United States and many industrial countries increased dramatically in the decade prior to 2007. Countries with the largest increases in household leverage tended to experience the fastest rises in house prices over the same period. These same countries tended to experience the biggest declines in household consumption once house prices started falling.
–Reuven Glick and Kevin J. Lansing of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco in a very important recent paper
Notable and Quotable (I)
“[O]ver-investment and over-speculation are often important; but they would have far less serious results were they not conducted with borrowed money.” ””Irving Fisher (1933)
From the Morning Scripture Readings
Since therefore the children share in flesh and blood, he himself likewise partook of the same nature, that through death he might destroy him who has the power of death, that is, the devil, and deliver all those who through fear of death were subject to lifelong bondage.
–Hebrews 2:14,15
A Prayer for the Feast Day of Hilary of Poitiers
O Lord our God, who didst raise up thy servant Hilary to be a champion of the catholic faith: Keep us steadfast in that true faith which we professed at our baptism, that we may rejoice in having thee for our Father, and may abide in thy Son, in the fellowship of the Holy Spirit; thou who livest and reignest for ever and ever.
Google, Citing Cyber Attack, Threatens to Exit China
Google threatened late Tuesday to pull out of its operations in China after it said it had uncovered a massive cyber attack on its computers that originated there.
As a result, the company said, it would no longer agree to censor its search engine in China and may exit the country altogether.
Google said that a primary goal of the attackers was accessing the Gmail accounts of Chinese human right activists, but that the attack also targeted 20 other large companies in the finance, technology, media and chemical sectors.
In a blog posting by David Drummond, the corporate development and chief legal officer, Google said that it had found a “highly sophisticated and targeted attack on our corporate infrastructure originating from China.”
Many Firms Reluctant to Hire Because of New Taxes, Rules
A potential wave of new regulation and higher taxes may be scaring many businesses from hiring, prolonging any rebound in employment, say business groups and economists.
The prospect of increased federal and state regulation and taxes has been particularly disruptive to the hiring plans of small- and medium-sized businesses, which have historically generated about two-thirds of the nation’s jobs.
“I don’t really see the private sector hiring much in the next few months,” says Brian Bethune, an economist at Global Insight. “For the small-business sector there is just too much uncertainty about what happens beyond 2010.”
Strong Earthquake Rocks Haiti
An earthquake with a magnitude of 7.0 has struck the impoverished Caribbean nation of Haiti.
The U.S. Geological Survey says the earthquake struck Tuesday afternoon. There are unconfirmed reports that a hospital has collapsed. A tsunami watch has been issued for the neighboring Dominican Republic, along with Cuba and the Bahamas.
A Message from Bishop Bill Atwood: A Story of the Underground Church
On the second day, we were driving in a small bus from our hotel to a reception, and drove by a theater with a sign in Russian that read “Kosmos Cinema.” I pointed to it and said to the co-pilot, look, that’s the ‘World Theater.'”
In a flash, our interpreter jumped from her seat in the front of the bus and ran back to me and said, “On your entry forms you all said that you didn’t speak Russian. How can you read that?”
I was startled, but said, “I can read Greek and the letters are a combination of English and Greek letters. I thought that was a reasonable translation of Kosmos Cinema.”
“Why did you learn Greek?” she asked.
“To understand the Bible better,” I replied.
See looked nervously at the other “guide” (guard) and then dropped her voice to a tiny whisper and said, “I have read ‘The Cross and the Switchblade.'”
From then, we tried to steal a moment of conversation here and there in which she talked about being a Christian, despite the persecution that would come if it became known.
Mark McGwire Admits That He Used Steroids
Mark McGwire, whose inflated statistics and refusal to address his past came to symbolize a synthetic era in baseball history, acknowledged on Monday that he used steroids through the 1990s.
McGwire has been out of baseball since retiring after the 2001 season, making few public appearances besides his infamous performance before Congress in 2005, when he dodged questions about steroid use. He starts next month as the hitting coach for the St. Louis Cardinals, and said he needed to make the admission to move forward.
“It’s something I’m certainly not proud of,” he said in an interview with The New York Times. “I’m certainly sorry for having done it. Someday, somehow, somewhere I knew I’d probably have to talk about this. I guess the steppingstone was being offered the hitting-coach job with the Cardinals. At that time, I said, ”˜I need to come clean about this.’ ”
Dean of the Anglican Church in North America Appointed
Bishop Donald Harvey, moderator of the Anglican Network in Canada, has been appointed Dean of the Anglican Church in North America (ACNA) by Archbishop Robert Duncan. This appointment was unanimously ratified by the ACNA Executive Committee. As dean, Bishop Harvey will support the Primate by representing Archbishop Duncan at various events and meetings both within North America and internationally when the Primate is unable to attend.
Lawyers challenge Ohio on executions
Proper training of prison officials could have prevented a botched execution in Ohio last year that led the state to overhaul its method of execution, lawyers for several death row inmates have argued in court filings.
The filings contend that Ohio prison officials have shown a consistent disregard for their own rules in carrying out executions, including failing to ensure that execution staff members attend required rehearsals and training.
And they contend that one of the people who helped conduct the botched execution on Sept. 15, involving an inmate named Romell Broom, was inadequately trained and had failed to attend all the required rehearsals.
That employee is a licensed emergency medical technician, but has not worked as one for several years, does not regularly establish IVs and was out of practice at the time of Mr. Broom’s attempted execution, according to the court documents filed Friday in Federal District Court in Columbus.
Corker questions Geithner on 'blank check' to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
Sen. Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) ”” a member of the Senate Banking Committee ”” sent a letter to Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner Monday with a list of questions regarding what the Republican called a “blank check” to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
In the letter, Corker criticized the Treasury’s removal of a cap on credit available to the two government-backed firms that were in at the nexus of the mortgage crisis.
“On Dec. 24, 2009, the United States Department of the Treasury announced amendments to the Preferred Stock Purchase Agreements it has with the government-sponsored enterprises Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Those amendments removed the $200 billion per enterprise cap ($400 billion total) and, in effect, wrote a blank check for the amount of ‘credit’ that will be made available to the two mortgage giants,” the letter reads.
Church Times: Canon John Armson looks at two different styles of spiritual writing
What a pleasure it was, then, to pick up [Barbara Brown] Taylor’s exciting book. It is aptly subtitled; for indeed she tells, in a homely and forthright way, of discovering the sacred beneath our feet ”” sometimes literally. Hers is a most down-to-earth book, bursting with life, offering imaginaÂtive and exciting advice, with no hint of a “holier-than-thou” attiÂtude.
Each chapter starts from incidents and anecdotes ”” some hilarious ”” in her life as a divinity teacher, wife, pastor, and friend. They are the kinds of experiences, good and bad, happy and sorrowful, any of us might have had or have. But she has the holiness (my word) to see beÂneath and behind them.
While she is clearly well-trained in spirituality at an academic level, that is not her source here ”” just her tool for interpreting and extraÂpolating from day to day events: finding a job, making eye contact with a check-out girl, getting lost in a wood.
Anglican Journal: Fewer staff at Anglican Church of Canada national office forecast
It will be a “challenging” year for staff at the General Synod office in Toronto.
More budget cuts will be needed to achieve a balanced budget for 2011 and eliminate deficits by 2012, said Archbishop Fred Hiltz, primate of the Anglican Church of Canada.
“There’s another cut to come and it will be bigger,” Archbishop Hiltz told a meeting of the House of Bishops held Jan. 7 to 9. “We’ll look at a smaller staff.” He said that decisions will be guided by priorities that will be set out at the upcoming General Synod this June.
In Tennessee a Faith-based program helps women leave behind 'horrors of the street'
Behind barbed wire and heavily secured gates, the women housed at the Mark H. Luttrell Correctional Center fixate on the days left until they’re up for parole.
But for many, the real hurdles lie beyond prison fences.
“The biggest problem is they don’t have the support system out there,” said Patrisha Bridges, pre-release coordinator for the East Memphis prison.
Too often, that means returning to drugs and prostitution and eventually back in jail.
But a faith-based program out of Nashville, which helps women with a history of prostitution and addiction turn their lives around, visited Memphis inmates on Monday to show there’s another way.
The Sun: God protect this blessed laptop
A vicar has launched a bizarre bid to attract city workers to his church ”” by offering to BLESS their mobile phones and laptops.
The Rev David Parrott issued his first blessing over a heap of high-tech laptops and smart phones on the altar of London’s 17th Century St Lawrence Jewry church today.