Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Assad?s Barbaric Endgame

Syrian rebel fighters in Aleppo. Syrian rebel fighters take their position during fighting with government troops in the old city of Aleppo in late September.

Photo by Miguel Medina/AFP/Getty Images.

Aleppo was burning last week: On YouTube, you could watch the flames consuming the walls of the 600-year-old souk, the central landmark of one of the world's oldest cities. If you looked further, you could also find film of what appears to be Syrian government planes strafing the city and a video made inside the ruins of the passport office in the heart of the historic center. Ominously, Human Rights Watch has documented at least 10 government attacks on bakeries in Aleppo?in other words, attacks on places where people are standing in line for bread.

The bombardment of civilians in Syria is not new. According to the Syrian opposition, at least 30,000 people have been killed since the conflict began 18 months ago. Nor are civilian casualties unusual in a civil war. What are new and unusual?at least in the annals of recent warfare?are the Syrian regime's tactics, which now include the deliberate targeting of civilians. One has to go back to the Battle of Britain or the firebombing of Dresden to find another war in which one side purposefully set out to kill enemy noncombatants?women, children, and the elderly?from the air. But even those comparisons aren't really analogous. Unlike the air forces operating during World War II, Bashar al-Assad isn't trying to kill enemy noncombatants. He's trying to kill his own people.

Several explanations are available for Assad's use of extreme military tactics. Some believe that the Syrian president's strategy is designed not just to defeat the rebels but also to scare off anyone else who might have ever wanted to join them or to persuade his opponents that their cause is futile. Others think he is motivated by bitterness: If he can't control a town or neighborhood, then he prefers to see it reduced to rubble. Some see a grim silver lining in this strategy: If Assad is destroying Aleppo, that may mean he no longer expects to win it back.

Recently I've also heard another explanation: Aside from creating fear and destroying defiant towns and cities, Assad is deliberately provoking and defying the West in general and the United States in particular. By firing on his own people and carrying out mass slaughter, he is crossing every "red line" the international community has ever set. Each new atrocity sends a message to the Syrian opposition: Nobody in the outside world will help you. By that logic, Assad will soon be using chemical weapons, if only because we've told him not to. And what then?

There are no real military options in Syria, and I understand the arguments against arming the rebels. To date, the Syrian opposition has failed to coalesce around a single idea, structure or leadership. Nobody wants to pump more weapons into a region already awash with guns, especially if it's not clear who might wind up using them or for what purpose. Yet keeping our distance does not remove us from the conflict, nor does it absolve us from responsibility for the outcome.

The Syrian civil war is already a sectarian war and may become a proxy war: The authoritarian forces of Assad, backed by Iran and Russia, could wind up fighting a bitter war against Islamists, armed by the Gulf states and Saudi Arabia. If the West is absent, if we can't provide moral and material support for a liberal, secular alternative?a constitution that guarantees minority rights, an inclusive political order and an open economic system?then there might not be one.

We are not entirely powerless. Some areas of Syria, abandoned by the Assad regime, are now controlled by local coordination committees. We should be there to help them?and not just with emergency aid. Some months ago, I argued that Syrians should start thinking about transitional justice: how, exactly, former regime allies would be treated if the rebels win; and how victims would be compensated. But it's also possible to start thinking, now, about the economics of postwar Syria, a country whose budgets will be drained and whose infrastructure is in ruins. By focusing on concrete problems, the opposition, the rebels and the coordination committees may find that they can unify around the solutions.

It sounds absurd to plan for the post-Assad future while Assad is devastating his cities and murdering his citizens. But if no one is proposing a better future, he may win.

Source: http://feeds.slate.com/click.phdo?i=273aa1b5687cf9fbaf33947ca65483fc

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40 Days of Meditation #Zensperiment: Community | Greatist

This is Week 4 of 5 in Shana Lebowitz?s #zensperiment series. Catch up on?Week 0?(why she?s learning to meditate),?Week 1?(meditating in real life),?Week 2?(challenges of meditation), and Week 3 (meditating in groups).

We hugged, and I felt the softness of her sweater and the strength in her upper arms, smelled the faint odor of shampoo in her curls.

Her name? I have no idea.

#zensperiment

Illustration by Bob Al-Greene

Aside from embracing strangers, for the past few days I?ve been thinking a lot about the meaning of community and how meditation is helping me find it. Second maybe to using the bathroom, meditation is pretty much the most solitary practice I can imagine. But as this #zensperiment carries on, I?m starting to realize that meditation is not just about finding yourself, but about figuring out where you fit in the rest of the world.

Last Saturday Jordan, Sophie, and I headed to the Hudson River for Yoga in the Park, an outdoor event led by the husband-and-wife celeb yoga team, Rodney Yee and Colleen Saidman. Personally, I was there for the free swag (yoga mat, water bottle, and pedometer!) but Jordan and Sophie were ready to commune with nature and their fellow yogis.

At noon Rodney turned up his mike and told the 300 people lounging on purple yoga mats under a hazy sky to turn to their neighbor and give them a big hug. There was surprisingly little hesitation and awkwardness as we locked total strangers in hearty embraces without so much as introducing ourselves. As the chuckles and chatter died down, Rodney and Colleen invited us to tune into the breeze around us and the grass underneath us as we participated in a five-minute meditation.

Earlier that week I?d gone with Becca to a class at the Kadampa Meditation Center in Chelsea. After a silent meditation, the class broke out in a chant that sounded something like asking the Buddha to help us find love, patience, and kindness. I?ll admit I was turned off at first ? the last time I sang in public might have been during a summer camp play ? but after a few minutes I started to feel a little sad. I still don?t know why exactly, though I suspect it was the bittersweet realization that the crowd surrounding me was filled with basically good-hearted people who were here to ask for help living in a world that isn?t always kind.

It wasn?t about the Buddha, or about the man leading the chanting from a cushion up front; it wasn?t even about achieving perfect pitch. These people were drawing strength from each other, and from the knowledge that the classmate in the next seat over was struggling, too. Ultimately, everyone there was just looking for peace.

Typically I shy away from vague directions like ?feel the energy of the people around you? in yoga and meditation classes. But, at Yoga in the Park, when Colleen told us to notice the energy of all the people on the grass around us, I could almost feel the simultaneous excitement and calm that was sweeping over the crowd at that moment. We were sitting there thinking our separate thoughts but breathing, meditating, and letting go as a unit. The next morning I woke up looking forward to my meditation routine more than usual ? at last I?d had the breakthrough I?d (secretly) been hoping for! But when I sat down to meditate, something felt wrong. I started thinking about the work I had to do to prepare for Monday. I opened my eyes, closed them, then opened them again. The magic was gone.

For the rest of the day I felt a little unnerved, and wondered whether I should start meditating exclusively in classes, with a group. After a while, though, I relaxed and started thinking more about our experience in the park. At that moment community hadn?t felt like something I?d found, just something that was there. No one could guarantee I would feel like part of a community while sitting by myself in my room, but looking for that sensation and demanding that it appear would definitely ensure that I?d feel more isolated than ever.

Just before Yoga in the Park ended, Rodney spoke and it was like he?d read our minds. ?You are not alone,? he told us. And we weren?t.

Next week marks the end of the Zensperiment, so come back for a final update and recap Tuesday. Until then follow my journey on Twitter at?@ShanaDLebowitz!

Source: http://greatist.com/happiness/zensperiment-meditation-community/

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Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Razer Blade (Late 2012) Review: Sharper, Better, But Still Not a Revolution [Review]

In retrospect, the first Razer Blade only seemed insane because we'd gone down such a preposterous path with gaming laptops. Bigger, huger, less practical. Then Razer decided to bring premium gaming back to regular computers. Its first outing succeeded with looks, but choppy gameplay fell way short of "premium." The new Blade is its stab at making that right. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/SQ0QvKzhZP4/razer-blade-late-2012-review-sharper-better-but-still-not-a-revolution

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Don Johnson's Payout in Nash Bridges Case Reduced by $35M

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Monday, October 1, 2012

'Beasts of the Southern Wild' ineligible at SAG

LOS ANGELES (AP) ? The independent-film hit "Beasts of the Southern Wild" will be ineligible for the Screen Actors Guild Awards because its stars were not professional actors.

Guild officials said Monday that "Beasts" was not made under provisions of the union's contracts.

The producers have until Oct. 25 to bring the film into guild compliance to become eligible for the awards, though that likely would mean paying the actors more money.

A spokesman for Fox Searchlight, which released the film domestically, said the company would not try to bring "Beasts" in line with SAG contract rules to qualify for the awards.

Director Benh Zeitlin cast locals in his film set in rural Louisiana, including his two stars, first-time actors Quvenzhane Wallis as a 6-year-old wild child, and Dwight Henry as her father.

"We appreciate and honor the spirit in which the film was produced and the way it was made," Fox Searchlight Presidents Stephen Gilula and Nancy Utley said in a statement. "It's truly an original."

"Beasts" is a critical darling, winning top honors at the Sundance Film Festival, so sitting out the Jan. 27 SAG Awards will not necessarily hurt its Academy Awards prospects.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/beasts-southern-wild-ineligible-sag-214351287.html

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Chris Christie Can't Wait to Tell You How Excited He Is for the Debates

Chris Christie is bursting at the seams with excitement for Wednesday's big debate. That conventional 'manage your expectations' going into the debates wisdom? Not if Chris Christie has anything to say about it.?"This whole race is going to be turned upside down come Thursday morning,??Gov. Christie told Bob Schieffer on CBS's Face the Nation. Maybe he's had a preview of those we've heard so much about. He's excited for Romney to speak on a platform where his message won't be "filtered" or "spun" by the media. Schieffer asked Christie about any aspirations for the oval office he has for 2016, but Christie shot him down.?"Mitt Romney is going to win, so it?s a question I don?t have to address," he said.?

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John McCain knows all about managing debate expectations. He might even sleep through Wednesday's debates. It's not like anything happens anyway.?"Sometimes we expect a major breakthrough, but that doesn't happen very often," McCain told CNN's State of the Union host Candy Crowley. He also credited Romney's lagging behind in the polls to a "glimmer of hope" for the economy in the voters' eyes. "I think he's behind because Americans probably feel better than they did about jobs and the economy," he said.?

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Paul Ryan also worked to manage debate expectations on Fox News Sunday, though he missed one party message memo.?"Well, we're running against an incumbent president. We're running against an incumbent president with incredible resources. But more importantly, I don't think one event is going to make or break this campaign," Ryan said. "Look, President Obama is a very -- he's a very gifted speaker. The man's been on the national stage for many years, he's an experienced debater, he's done these kinds of debates before. This is Mitt's first time on this kind of a stage." (Maybe he missed the nationally televised Republican primary debates, who knows.) But when it came time to talk about media coverage, Ryan slipped away from the party line. The directive has been to not complain about media coverage. Ryan didn't bother to read that memo, apparently. "It goes without saying that there is definitely media bias," Ryan said.?"I think most people in the mainstream media are left of center and, therefore, they want a very left-of-center president versus a conservative president like Mitt Romney."

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Chris Christie, for one, doesn't like whiners. Whining is a sign of losing, he said on an appearance on ABC's This Week with George Stephanopolous. "I?m not going to sit here and complain about coverage of the campaign," Christie said. "As a candidate, if you do that, you?re losing." Christie also expanded on why he thinks Wednesday night will be so big for the Romney ticket. "But what I will tell you that this is the first moment when the American people are going to see these two guys side by side laying out their vision unfiltered. I think that?s going to be a powerful moment for Mitt Romney," Christie explained.?

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Missouri Sen. Roy Blunt is riding shotgun on the 'rehabilitate Todd Akin' bandwagon. Akin's been behind on polls and receiving next to no funding since his comments about "legitimate rape." ?Blunt appeared on CNN's State of the Union to offer his thoughts on Akin's chances against Claire McCaskill. "Todd may well yet win," Blunt said on Sunday. He advised making the race about more national issues instead of about past mistakes. "We need to make the race a discussion of those issues rather than the ones Todd raised," Blunt said.

Paul Ryan said he's not getting himself caught up in his boss's big week when he knows he's got a worthy opponent ahead of him in Joe Biden. He knows he has prepared to go against a wily debate veteran like the Vice Presdient. Biden is someone?"you're not going to rattle," Ryan said on Fox News Sunday.?"He's fast on the cuff," Ryan said. "He's a witty guy. He knows who he is and he's been doing this for 40 years. So you're not going to rattle Joe Biden. Joe Biden?s been on the national stage, he ran for president twice, he's a sitting vice president." Ryan credited his Biden stand-in,?former Solicitor General Ted Olson, for getting him prepared for his time to shine.?"I hope Joe Biden shows up more than Ted Olson, because I tell you, this is one of the best litigators in America," Ryan said. "But what Ted has done is he has studied Joe Biden's tapes, Joe Biden's record, Joe Biden's, you know, style. And Ted, as you know, is one of the best litigators in America, he's pretty good at adapting to that."

Obama's senior advisor David Plouffe certainly isn't taking Mitt Romney's debate lightly. Romney is more prepared than any candidate, ever, according to Plouffe.?"He?s prepared more than any candidate I think maybe in history, certainly in recent memory. So we believe Gov. Romney. He?s been a good debater in the past. He?s very prepared. He?s got all these clever zingers and lines in his pocket, so we understand he?ll probably have a good night on Wednesday night," Plouffe said on ABC's This Week.

Chris Christie actually pulled triple duty this week. He appeared on Face the Nation, This Week, and NBC's Meet the Press to say the same thing. He's really, really excited about Wednesday's debate. He told David Gregory "the entire narrative" would change Thursday morning. He accused Obama of trying to "run out the clock with platitudes that sound nice." (Maybe he didn't see the ' ' commercial.) Chris Christie is fired up, you guys. Let's hope he can get some sleep before the big night.?

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/chris-christie-cant-wait-tell-excited-debates-184318668.html

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Calif. first to ban gay teen 'conversion' therapy

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) ? Gov. Jerry Brown has signed legislation that makes California the first state to ban a controversial form of psychotherapy that's aimed at making gay teenagers straight.

Effective Jan. 1, mental health practitioners are prohibited from performing sexual orientation change efforts ? known as reparative or conversion therapy ? for anyone under 18.

The therapies "have no basis in science or medicine and they will now be relegated to the dustbin of quackery," Brown said in a statement.

Mainstream associations representing psychiatrists and psychologists have dismissed reparative therapy in recent decades. A number of mental health associations in California ? including the state's Board of Behavorial Sciences, the California Association of Marriage and Family Therapists and the California Psychological Association ? supported the legislation.

But some organizations and ministries continue to use counseling and prayer to try to help conflicted Christians rid themselves of unwanted homosexual inclinations. Gay rights activists have said the damage they inflict on individuals can be deep and lasting and can put youth at higher risk of depression and suicide.

"We're grateful to Gov. Brown for standing with California's children," the Human Rights Campaign said in a statement. "LGBT youth will now be protected from a practice that has not only been debunked as junk science, but has been proven to have drastically negative effects on their well-being."

The group called on other states to follow California's lead on the issue.

Conservative religious groups and some Republicans have argued that banning conversion therapy would hinder parents' right to provide psychological care for children experiencing gender confusion.

The Encino, Calif.-based National Association for Research and Therapy on Homosexuality said in August that the bill was a case of "legislative overreach." They said Democratic state Senator Ted Lieu's claims of harm to children were based on politics, not research.

Lieu, who sponsored the bill, said the law will stop children from being psychologically abused.

Brown signed the bill Saturday amid a busy weekend that saw him act on more than 100 pieces of legislation, including a bill he signed late Sunday that would allow some illegal immigrants to get California drivers licenses.

The bill lets the Department of Motor Vehicles issue licenses to illegal immigrants eligible for work permits under a new Obama administration policy. It requires the department to accept as proof of legal residence whatever document the federal government provides to participants in its deferred action program.

The governor also signed into law a bill that will allow parents who don't have their children vaccinated to enroll their children in school. Parents would have to obtain a waiver from a physician or a nurse practitioner saying they received information about the benefits and risks of immunization.

Brown vetoed a bill that could have protected illegal immigrants from deportation if they committed minor infractions. The bill was dubbed "anti-Arizona" legislation, a reference to that state's immigrant identification law.

He also vetoed legislation that would have provided overtime pay, meal breaks and other labor protections to an estimated 200,000 caregivers, nannies and house cleaners. The Democratic governor said they deserve fair pay and safe working conditions but said the bill "raises a number of unanswered questions."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/calif-first-ban-gay-teen-conversion-therapy-081605486.html

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