Thursday, 10 October 2013

Israel’s Other Land Grab

Abu Aziz stands outside his tent in the village of al-Arakib, one of the dozens of ramshackle Bedouin Arab communities in the Negev desert which are not recognised by the Israeli state, in southern Israel August 18, 2013.
Abu Aziz stands outside his tent in the village of al-Arakib, one of the dozens of ramshackle Bedouin Arab communities in the Negev desert that are not recognized by the Israeli state, in southern Israel on Aug. 18, 2013.

Photo by Ronen Zvulun/Reuters








In August, despite the fragility of the newly resurrected peace talks between Israel and the Palestinian Authority, the Israeli government announced plans to build 1,187 new housing units for Jews in East Jerusalem and the West Bank. This announcement came hard on the heels of the 1,096 new units promoted by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) Civil Administration and the 91 settlements the government recently added to the “national priority list,” presumably rendering them non-negotiable.














With the eyes of the world focused on this defiant expansion of Israeli “facts on the ground,” few were paying attention to a simultaneous land grab taking place in the Negev: Israel’s systematic expropriation of areas that for generations have been inhabited by Bedouins.










On my first trip to Israel 37 years ago, I was hosted for dinner in a Bedouin tent in the desert. Our delegation of eight or 10 American media types sat on beautiful hand-loomed rugs. We ate with our hands. We heard about Bedouin culture and traditions. The men who sat with us in that tent (the women were behind a curtain, though we saw one peeking out) were warm, welcoming, and responsive to our questions. Only later did it occur to me that our travel agent or the Israel tourism authority was paying the Bedouins to exhibit their “native” ways to visiting foreigners. And while other stops on our itinerary—Masada, Mea Shearim, Rachel’s Tomb—were introduced with extensive background information, the Bedouins were presented as ethnic exotica, a people without a history. Only later did I wonder how they really felt about these encounters.












Since then, the Jewish state seems to have become markedly less appreciative of Bedouin culture and traditions. Hundreds of times during the last few years, Bedouin homes and villages have been summarily demolished by IDF and Jewish National Fund (JNF) bulldozers.










Media sources and advocacy groups such as the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, the Campaign for Bedouin-Jewish Justice in Israel, and the New Israel Fund report that Bedouins have been beaten, shot, and forcibly evacuated from their ancestral lands so that this fertile area can be developed for Jewish agricultural development, JNF forests, and Jewish habitation.










In 2007 the government appointed the Goldberg Commission to address the Bedouin “problem.” (Needless to say, there were no Bedouins on the commission.) Their findings led to the Prawer Plan, a proposed law that would relocate up to 40,000 seminomadic Bedouins, concentrating them in seven “officially recognized” urban townships that rank at the bottom of every Israeli socioeconomic measure, with an infant mortality rate four times higher than that of any Jewish Israeli community. Last June the Prawer Plan passed its first Knesset reading by a slim majority. The final two readings needed in order for the Knesset bill to pass are expected this month.










Somehow, it’s unthinkable to evacuate thousands of Jews from their West Bank settlements in the interests of Israeli-Palestinian peace. But expelling 40,000 Arab Israeli citizens from their homes for the sake of Jewish development is considered acceptable. Moreover, Israel presents its transfer policy in a benevolent light, as if by trashing Bedouin dwellings, the IDF is expelling these noble savages from their “primitive” habitats for their own good.










Mind you, I’m not romanticizing the Bedouins. They don’t just keep their women behind a curtain; they keep them uneducated, isolated, and cut off from modern health care. And though they are not responsible for their extreme impoverishment and rampant unemployment, these conditions have spawned alarming rates of criminal behavior and drug use.













Bedouin youths are seen in their tent in the village of al-Arakib, one of the dozens of ramshackle Bedouin Arab communities in the Negev desert which are not recognized by the Israeli state, in southern Israel August 18, 2013.
Bedouin youths work in their tent in the village of al-Arakib.

Photo by Ronen Zvulun/Reuters








Likewise, I’m mindful of the legal complexities of the land use issue. The Bedouins don’t hold title; their system of land acquisition and ownership recognition is based on oral agreements that date back to the Ottoman Empire. Expecting them to produce airtight proof of ownership of territory they’ve inhabited for centuries would be like asking Native American Indians, who believe the earth cannot be owned, to produce a deed from Christopher Columbus, or asking the Australian Aborigines, who mark territorial borders by transmitting “songlines” known only to the indigenous tribes, to produce transmittal documents signed by the British.










The bottom line is that Bedouin Arabs are citizens of the state of Israel. Some of their elders fought with the Palmach, the early elite fighting force that preceded Israel’s founding. Many Bedouin men have volunteered for the IDF, serving as trackers and defending the country’s borders. Yet these citizens are being targeted for internal dislocation on the basis of their ethnicity, race, religion, and normative social arrangements. And Israel shows little respect for their historic ties to the land.










Rather than herd them into the seven ghettolike “recognized” villages with inadequate services, pathetic infrastructure, and few jobs, Israel should improve the conditions of everyday life for Bedouins in the 35 “unrecognized” villages. The government should invest in Bedouin roads, schools, job creation, and health care, and connect these villages to the Israeli water, sewage, and electricity systems.










Likewise, rather than turn a blind eye to the ongoing injustice of forcible Bedouin dislocation, American Jews should think twice before buying a tree from the JNF in a forest that may have been created on the ruins of Bedouin homes.










And Jews in the United States should insist that our communal organizations address both the moral and political dimensions of this issue. Israel cannot claim to be “the only democracy in the Middle East” if it continues uprooting thousands of its citizens against their will.










 This article originally appeared in Moment magazine’s September/October issue. Moment magazine is an independent bimonthly of politics, culture, and religion, co-founded by Nobel Prize laureate Elie Wiesel. For more go to momentmag.com.








Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/moment/2013/10/israel_s_expropriation_of_bedouin_lands_the_jewish_state_s_other_land_grab.html
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Sunday, 4 August 2013

Fort Hood and the rarity of military executions

DALLAS (AP) -- Hundreds of unarmed soldiers, some about to deploy to Afghanistan, were waiting inside a building for vaccines and routine checkups when a fellow soldier walked inside with two handguns and enough ammunition to commit one of the worst mass shootings in American history.

Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan climbed onto a desk and shouted "Allahu Akbar!" - an Arabic phrase meaning "God is great!" Then he fired, pausing only to reload.

Hasan doesn't deny that he carried out the November 2009 rampage at Fort Hood, Texas, that left 13 people dead and more than 30 others wounded. There are dozens of witnesses who saw it happen. Military law prohibits him from entering a guilty plea because authorities are seeking the death penalty. But if he is convicted and sentenced to death in a trial that starts Tuesday, there are likely years, if not decades, of appeals ahead.

He may never make it to the death chamber at all.

While the Hasan case is unusually complex, experts also say the military justice system is unaccustomed to dealing with death penalty cases and has struggled to avoid overturned sentences.

Eleven of the 16 death sentences handed down by military juries in the last 30 years have been overturned, according to an academic study and court records. No active-duty soldier has been executed since 1961.

A reversed verdict or sentence on appeal in the Hasan case would be a fiasco for prosecutors and the Army. That's one reason why prosecutors and the military judge have been deliberate leading up to trial, said Geoffrey Corn, a professor at the South Texas College of Law and former military lawyer.

"The public looks and says, `This is an obviously guilty defendant. What's so hard about this?'" Corn said. "What seems so simple is in fact relatively complicated."

Hasan is charged with 13 specifications of premeditated murder and 32 specifications of attempted premeditated murder. Thirteen officers from around the country who hold Hasan's rank or higher will serve on the jury for a trial that will likely last one month and probably longer. They must be unanimous to convict Hasan of murder and sentence him to death. Three-quarters of the panel must vote for an attempted murder conviction.

The jury will likely hear from victims and relatives of the dead. A handful of victims still carry bullet fragments in their body. Others have nightmares.

"It never goes away - being upset that it's taken so long for this trial to come," said Staff Sgt. Alonzo Lunsford, who was shot in the head, stomach and upper body. "So now's the day of reckoning, which is positive - very positive."

The trial's start has been delayed over and over, often due to requests from Hasan. Any of the hundreds of decisions large or small could be fair game on appeal. The entire record will be scrutinized by military appeals courts that have overturned most of the death sentences they've considered.

"A good prosecutor, in military parlance, would be foolish to fight only the close battle," Corn said. "He's got to fight the close battle and the future battle. And the future battle is the appellate record."

Hasan has twice dismissed his lawyers and now plans to represent himself at trial. He's suggested he wants to argue the killings were in "defense of others" - namely, members of the Taliban fighting Americans in Afghanistan. The trial judge, Col. Tara Osborn, has so far denied that strategy.

Hasan has grown a beard while in custody that he says expresses his Muslim faith, but violates military rules on decorum. After a military judge ordered him forcibly shaved, an appeals court stayed that order and took another judge off the case.

The last man executed in the military system was Pvt. John Bennett, hanged in 1961 for raping an 11-year-old girl. Five men are on the military death row at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., but none are close to being executed.

An inmate was taken off death row just last year. Kenneth Parker was condemned for killing two fellow Marines in North Carolina, including Lance Cpl. Rodney Page. But Parker was given life without parole last September by an appeals court. The court found his trial judge should have not allowed him to be tried for both murders at the same time, nor should the judge have allowed testimony that the appeals court said was irrelevant to the crimes.

Parker's accomplice in the killings, Wade Walker, was also sentenced to death, only for the sentence to be overturned.

Examples abound of other death sentences set aside. They include William Kreutzer Jr., who killed one soldier and wounded 18 others in a 1995 shooting spree at Fort Bragg, N.C.; James T. Murphy, who killed his wife in Germany by smashing her head with a hammer; and Melvin Turner, who killed his 11-month-old daughter with a razor blade.

Part of the problem, experts say, is that death penalty cases are rare in military courts.

A study in the Journal of Criminal Law & Criminology identified just 41 cases between 1984 and 2005 where a defendant faced a court-martial on a capital charge. Meanwhile, more than 500 people have been executed since 1982 in the civilian system in Texas, the nation's most active death-penalty state.

While lawyers and judges in Texas may get multiple death penalty cases a year, many military judges and lawyers often are on their first, said Victor Hansen, another former prosecutor who now teaches at the New England School of Law. The military courts that are required to review each death-penalty verdict are also more cautious and likely to pinpoint possible errors that might pass muster at a civilian court, Hansen and Corn said.

Hansen compared the military's conundrum to small states that have a death-penalty law on the books, but never use it.

"You don't have a lot of experience or institutional knowledge," said Hansen, who compared it to "the reinventing of the wheel every time one is done."

If Hasan is convicted and sentenced to death, his case will automatically go before appeals courts for the Army and the armed forces. If those courts affirm the sentence, he could ask the Supreme Court for a review or file motions in federal civilian courts.

The president, as the military commander in chief, must sign off on a death sentence.

"If history is any guide, it's going to be a long, long, long time," Hansen said.

---

Associated Press writer Allen G. Breed contributed to this report.

Follow Nomaan Merchant on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/nomaanmerchant

Source: http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_FORT_HOOD_SHOOTING_DELAYS?SITE=ORAST&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT

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Bank Enters 10-Year Deal To Power Texas Branches With Green Energy


BBVA Compass, a commercial banking company that operates 688 branches in several states, and Choice! Energy Services, a Houston-based retail energy consultant and broker, have signed a 10-year fixed contract to bring renewable power to a large number of the bank's branches and facilities in Texas.

Under the deal, Choice says it will provide 41 million kWh of solar- and wind-generated electricity annually to more than 300 of the bank's branches, offices and ATMs. The agreement runs through May 22, 2023.

"At BBVA Compass, we are always looking for ways to reduce the bank's impact on the environment," says Troy Lindsey, head of real estate for the bank. "This contract ensures that our growing Texas operations will be powered by reliable green energy sources and significantly reduces our carbon footprint."

Source: http://www.nawindpower.com/e107_plugins/content/content.php?content.11848

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Monopoles and Magnetricity

[unable to retrieve full-text content]szotz writes "Although there was once a hint from a cosmic ray experiment (on Valentine's Day, no less), no one's found any solid evidence of monopoles (unpaired north and south magnets) flying around the cosmos. But physicists did find monopole-like quasiparticles in some exotic crystals in 2009. One of the discoverers has an article this month in IEEE Spectrum that looks at how the particles were found and what's happened since. They might seem like a wacky curiosity, but the author says we shouldn't write them off — they might one day make useful new 'magnetronic' devices."

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Source: http://rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdotScience/~3/8JevVqm6lo0/story01.htm

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Saturday, 3 August 2013

Frankel Photography Offers Wedding, Bar Mitzvah Discounts Photo Packages

SAN MARCOS, CA, August 03, 2013 /24-7PressRelease/ -- Frankel Photography, a leading wedding, Bar Mitzvah, pet and family portrait photography studio in San Marcos, California, is having a huge summer sale on all wedding and Bar Mitzvah packages.

Through September 15, all Frankel Photography customers will receive a 10% discount on the package of their choice for Bar Mitzvah and wedding photo packages from this leading San Diego wedding photographer.

Owner and lead photographer at Frankel Photography, Albert Frankel has been in the photography business for more than three decades and knows that providing top quality customer service and professionalism go hand-in-hand when photographing a family's special occasion.

He said his studio is happy to offer discounted packages to two of the biggest special events possible. The summer sale on wedding and Bar Mitzvah packages at Frankel Photography will continue until September 15, 2013.

"We are happy to offer this discount on our top quality photography services for the summer months," said Frankel. "We know that these events can be very costly for a family so we'd like to make it a little easier for them use our professional photography services for their wedding or Bar Mitzvah."

Frankel also has enough experience in the photography business to know that using the most advanced equipment and lighting is the only way to deliver the very best photographic images to his clients. Recently, Frankel Photography starting using state of the art LED lighting in addition to traditional lighting methods when working on a photo shoot. "LED lighting give us much greater ability to create images that are guaranteed to amaze," said Frankel.

As lead photographer at Frankel Photography, Al Frankel brings an extensive portfolio of knowledge and experience to every event he covers. Frankel's uncanny camera sense and ability to capture the moment is evidenced in the warmth and style of his work. Heather Frankel is also a big part of the team, specializing in digital image processing and album design, her skills are essential in turning photographs into treasured memories.

About Frankel Photography: Frankel Photography, located in San Marcos, California, just outside San Diego, offers more than 27 years of experience as professional photographers specializing in wedding photography, Bar and Bat Mitzvah photography. The company offers expert special event photography, as well as pet photography and portrait photography.

For more information about Frankel Photography visit their website or call 760-402-2531.

---
Press release service and press release distribution provided by http://www.24-7pressrelease.com

Source: http://finance.boston.com/boston/news/read?GUID=24802616

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Cowboys State Of The Union, Training Camp Edition

As Ol' Rabble wraps up his leg of Training Camp 2013, he reflects back on his two weeks in Oxnard to deliver some thoughts on the state of the team as they prepare to play the first preseason game.

Your Dallas Cowboys have now conducted ten practices in a little less than two weeks time. Every year, this proves to be an interesting two weeks, in no small part because of the news cycle. Because the three to four week period immediately prior to camp is usually, to say the least, a slow news time, and the kickoff of the season such a news-rich time, saturated with stories, training camp reports, etc., we often struggle to adapt to the new paradigm. In the training camp bubble, everything is magnified ("Dez Bryant missed practice today? The season is lost! Mike Woicik and his staff are amateurs! Why does this ALWAYS happen? WHHHHYYY?"). As we struggle to return to news saturation, the most important thing we can do is to refocus, and see the forest where it is, standing behind the trees.

This is a long and convoluted way of saying that we needn't panic about such things as injured offensive guards, because the general state of affairs in Cowboyland is very good. This is especially true when we compare the current state of the team to that which was happening a year ago. Then, you may recall, eighteen players - an even 20% - were unable to participate in the Blue-White scrimmage, which took place on August 5th. And, even though the current narrative is that the respective lines have been decimated by injuries, the hurts in question, as O.C.C. so astutely pointed out, have been neither as severe nor as widespread as those that plagued the team a mere twelve months ago.

More importantly: at this time last year, myriad questions about the team had not yet been answered, and continued to be open questions into and throughout the season. Here, just over halfway through camp, many of the questions that we posed coming into camp have been answered, most of them convincingly. Consider the questions that were posed by the various "offseason headscratcher" posts penned by the front page writers:

  1. How will they use their two TEs in 12 personnel? Who would play the "F"? the "Y"?
  2. Who would be the backup defensive linemen and where would they play?
  3. Who will man the three interior OL positions? Will Travis Frederick play OG?
  4. Who will be WRs 3-5? Will they keep six receivers?
  5. Who will be the backup linebackers?
  6. Who will start at safety? Who will back them up? Which of them will play strong safety? Free safety?
  7. Who will be the third running back?

Looking at these questions, the only ones I can't answer definitively as I sit here are numbers two and three, which pertain to the respective lines. And that can partly be attributed to positive developments: the backups on the defensive line have been so good that they have muddied the interpretive waters a bit and, while injuries have delayed clear understanding about the offensive side, the performances of David Arkin and Ronald Leary have been a revelation. Indeed, both have developed about as much as we could possibly have hoped. That goes in the "good news" column, my Cowboys-lovin' friends.

With that in mind, let's break the camp happenings down into two columns - things that are going as well or better than we hoped and things that aren't going as well as we imagined they might - as a way to gain a bit of perspective on our fave team:

Going As Well (or Better):

The Cowboys have four good running backs, each of whom has shown himself to be adept at the one-cut running style a zone blocking system demands. All are good to very good receivers. More importantly for Jason Garrett and his staff, all have proved to be willing (and, in the case of DeMarco Murray and Joseph Randle, downright combative) blockers.

The right side of the defensive line is superb. DeMarcus Ware has been the best defensive player in camp. No surprise there; what might surprise is that the second-best guy might well be Jason Hatcher, who has been lining up next to Ware as the three-technique. The two of them have stopped many a run to that side in its tracks, and have provided a potent, even overwhelming, pass rush.

Wide receiver is a talented and deep position, filled with guys capable of making plays. Unlike 2012, the down-roster receivers in this camp have been much more competitive and consistent across practices. It remains to be seen how many wideouts make the 53; whatever decision is made, they will cut more than one pass catcher who has had a better camp than guys who made the team in recent years.

The linebacking unit is dynamic. We know all about the starters. Sean Lee, Bruce Carter and the under-rated Justin Durant form arguably the best 4-3 LB unit in the league. But their backups have been very good as well; Ernie Sims has been reborn, and looks capable of stepping in for any of the starters if need be. DeVonte Holloman is big and superfast, and Brandon Magee is a football playin' dude. Plus, both Alex Albright and Caleb McSurdy have flashed, both on defense and special teams.

Twelve personnel. The two tight end offense looks to be as versatile as advertised. With four or five capable tight ends on the roster, the offensive staff can mix and match them in myriad interesting ways, setting them in motion, lining them up in the backfield, placing them both on one side of the line, etc. Jason Garrett loves to "go against formation" in his offensive calls, passing out of running sets and vice versa. With 12 personnel as the base offense, he'll be able to do it with regularity.

This is the best group of defensive backs the team has had in twenty years. The top five corners, Brandon Carr, Mo Claiborne, Orlando Scandrick, Sterling Moore and B.W. Webb have all played very well, and the safety unit has exceeded (my high) expectations. Together they are a tough, physical, cohesive (and, increasingly, playmaking) group - a tribute to secondary coach Jerome Henderson, who has done yeoman's work. Along those lines...

This coaching staff is coaching guys up, up, up. Jason Garrett has assembled a staff that, from top to bottom, is composed of excellent teachers. Thus far in camp, their lessons started with the micro (technique, hand placement, etc.) and built to the macro (assignment, scheme). At each stage, they have proven to be meticulous, consistent, clear and rigorous in their pedagogy.

Center is a position of strength. Not only did drafting Travis Frederick upgrade the center position, in relegating Phil Costa to second-team, it strengthened and deepened the position. While he might not be cut out for a full-time starting role, the tough, smart, tenacious Costa is arguably the best back-up center in the league, a guy capable of stepping into a close, heated game and taking over for Frederick if need be. A position in disarray a year ago is now one of real strength moving forward.

The team's depth in general is very good. The second and third teams are dotted with good, competitive players. As I have written in recent training camp reports, the seven-on-seven and OL-DL competition periods are featuring terrific matchups when second- and third-teamers go head to head. Its exciting, and suggests that roster spots 37-53 will be occupied by talented, competitive and tough-minded players. How can you ask for anything more than that?

Not What We Imagined:

The right side of the defensive line. The primary concern here isn't whether they have capable starters; in Anthony Spencer and Jay Ratliff, the team has two players who appear built to excel in this system. The question is when, and for how long, they'll have them. One positive side effect of their prolonged absences is that guys like Ben Bass, Monte Taylor, Jerome Long, George Selvie, and Nick Hayden have asserted themselves, to the degree that all of them are legitimately competing for roster spots. That said, they are all in the Costa mold; they don't have starting stuff, but will comfort the hearts of Cowboys fans in rotational or back-up roles.The one position where this is not the case is...

The backup/ swing tackle. This, to my mind (and to those of other close followers of the team whose opinions I respect), is the biggest problem nagging the team. Going into camp, it was thought that Doug Free and Jermey Parnell would duke it out for the right tackle position and whomever lost would be the third/ swing tackle. Sadly, Parnell spent two days struggling with basic technique material that had been covered in OTAs and minicamps, promptly got injured, and has been out for the duration.He may come back and end up being who we though he was capable of being: a naturally strong foot athlete whose arrow was pointing up. Until that happens, however, the team is hamstrung.

But there is another issue compounding Parnell's disappearance. I believed that former Oregon Duck Darrion Weems would be nimble-footed and athletic enough that we could picture him, after a bit of time in an NFL strength program, filling in for a starter without the offense going ker-plop. But he has looked slow and ponderous of foot, and has been beaten routinely by the down-roster defensive linemen. His and Parnell's struggles in camp, and the absence of another reasonable candidate, explain the team's continued interest in the bag-of-donuts shaped Demetress Bell.

As I promised, much of the news is good. A global overview like this serves as a restorative tonic when we get caught up in the teeth-gnashing about gloom and doom scenarios, the latest of which is the injuries at guard. Take a drink; you'll feel better. Doctor's orders.

Star_medium

More Cowboys Camp Coverage

Source: http://www.bloggingtheboys.com/2013/8/2/4584420/state-of-the-cowboys-union-training-camp-edition

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Friday, 2 August 2013

When galaxies switch off: Hubble's COSMOS survey solves 'quenched' galaxy mystery

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Some galaxies hit a point in their lives when their star formation is snuffed out, and they become "quenched". Quenched galaxies in the distant past appear to be much smaller than the quenched galaxies in the Universe today. This has always puzzled astronomers -- how can these galaxies grow if they are no longer forming stars? A team of astronomers has now used a huge set of Hubble observations to give a surprisingly simple answer to this long-standing cosmic riddle.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/h16epFgzoyk/130801095412.htm

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