Italian earthquake survivors protest against Berlusconi


This 7 July 2010 video says about itself:

Hundreds of demonstrators from the earthquake-hit city of L’Aquila clashed with police as they attempted to protest outside government buildings hosting Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi‘s offices.

After the earthquake disaster in L’Aquila, Italy, the Berlusconi government has proved to be better in “compassionate” rhetoric than in helping the quake survivors.

Ten thousands of them still are homeless, having to live in tent camps.

The survivors have demonstrated in Rome against Berlusconi.

Berlusconi‘s starlet scandals: here. And here.

New Mongolian Psittacosaurus species discovered


Psittacosaurus

From The Daily Telegraph in England:

Parrot-like dinosaur found in Mongolia

A new dinosaur resembling a giant parrot has been discovered in Mongolia

The creature, Psittacosaurus gobiensis whose name means “parrot lizard”, is thought to have lived about 110 million years ago.

Psittacosaurs are noted for being the most species-rich dinosaur genus with at least nine different species, including the latest found in the Gobi Desert, a famous dinosaur graveyard.

Features of the dinosaur included a near perfect skull, strong jaw muscles and a powerful biting and crushing bill – showing that it evolved structures like those in today’s parrots.

The three feet long psittacosaurs may also have had a diet dominated by nuts and seeds, owing to the presence of many large stomach stones, according to the findings published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.

Prof Paul Sereno, a Biologist from the University of Chicago, said analysis of its skull showed it chewed its food in a similar way to modern parrots.

“These and other features, along with the presence of numerous large stomach stones, suggest that psittacosaurs may have had a high-fibre, nut eating diet,” he said.

Its short snout just a third of the skull length was different to most dinosaurs, giving the skull its parrot-esque profile.

They ate nothing but plants and walked normally on two legs but could reach the ground with their three-fingered hands.

They were good runners and were extremely successful in Asia about 100 million years ago, during the Cretaceous Period.

“Psittacosaurs are all relatively small in body size, ranging from one to two metres in body length. Their geographic range is limited to central Asia, and their temporal range may be as narrow as 10-20 million years in the mid Cretaceous,” said Prof Sereno.

It is a member of the Ceratopsia group of herbivorous, beaked dinosaurs, which also include the more famous Triceratops.

This is a National Geographic video on the new discovery.

Lujiatun Psittacosaurids: Understanding Individual and Taphonomic Variation Using 3D Geometric Morphometrics: here.

Psittacosaur juvenile-eating Cretaceous mammals: here.

Limusaurus inextricabilis discovery: here. And here. And here.

Ornithomimids – The “Bird Mimic” Dinosaurs: here.

Racism in the USA today


This video from the USA is called March on Palo Alto: A Rally to End Racial Profiling.

From British daily The Morning Star:

US needs to act to end discrimination

Wednesday 17 June 2009

The United Nations special rapporteur on racism has urged Washington to do more to address “ongoing issues of racism and ethnic discrimination” in the US.

Offering recommendations before the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) on Tuesday, special rapporteur Githu Muigai said that, “for the US to lead by example, it should do more to address ongoing issues of racism and ethnic discrimination.”

At the invitation of the US government, former special rapporteur Doudou Diene toured the US in May and June 2008 to conduct an analysis of ongoing racism and ethnic discrimination.

Mr Diene’s report highlighted racism in the criminal justice system, the disparity between sentencing for crack and powder cocaine, abuses facing immigrant and black workers in the Gulf coast in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, the overall vulnerability of immigrant workers and the need to meaningfully address the “school-to-prison pipeline,” referring to an emphasis on punishment over rehabilitation in the school and prison systems.

The report also called on Congress to pass the End Racial Profiling Act and create a bipartisan commission to evaluate the fight against racism.

Lingering White Supremacy In South Africa Sounds Much Like United States: here.

Professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr. arrested: here.

USA: The ease with which we criminalize black youth in this country would be astounding if it weren’t so routine: here.

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Campaign against corrupt Blairite politician Hazel Blears


Hazel Blears Must Go poster

From British daily The Morning Star:

Campaign aims to get Blears out

Wednesday 17 June 2009

Disgraced Salford MP Hazel Blears faces the wrath of her constituents after they launched a campaign to force her to stand down.

Supporters of the Hazel Blears Must Go campaign say it stems from the anger and frustration many of her constituents are feeling following the expenses scandal.

Ms Blears had to resign as Communities Secretary earlier this month over her expenses claims, including revelations that she avoided paying capital gains tax on a property sale.

Community magazine Salford Star is urging residents’ associations and trade unions to back the initiative.

Hazel Blears survives: here.

Victimization of an expenses scandal whistleblower: here.

Economic crisis in Britain, workers fight back


Left economists have accused Alistair Darling of paving the way for a return to the “casino economy” yesterday after the Chancellor ruled out tighter banking controls: here.

UNISON conference: Delegates have overwhelmingly endorsed the call to campaign to “put people before profit” in the midst of the recession: here.

Engineering and construction workers have shut down massive oil refineries and power stations as unofficial strikes against bosses breaking union agreements have spread to new sites: here.

Black-tailed godwit and grebe nest


This is a video from the Netherlands about a green-eyed hawker dragonfly on a ship.

Today, on the white stork nest near the nature reserve, both adults on the nest.

In the forest, sounds of song thrush, chaffinch, and edible frog.

A song thrush looking for food on the path.

A great tit in an oak. Green woodpecker sound.

Grass rush flowers along the bank of the castle moat.

Red-eyed damselflies on water-lily leaves. Flying above them, green-eyed hawker.

In the meadow: oystercatcher, lapwing, coot. A black-tailed godwit flying not far away, alarmed by a farmer’s dog.

Behind me, chiffchaff sound. Before me, on the meadow: barn swallow, starlings, grey heron, Egyptian goose.

The great crested grebe is still sitting on its castle moat nest.

Dragonfly vs. tadpole video: here.

Anti-Romanian racism in Belfast


This video is called Belfast racist attacks on Romanian families condemned by McGuinness.

From British daily The Morning Star:

Romanians flee racist attacks

Wednesday 17 June 2009

by Paddy McGuffin

Over 100 Romanians have been forced out of their homes because of the vicious racist attacks

More than 100 Romanians who have been driven out of their homes in Belfast have been offered temporary housing by the Northern Ireland Executive.

Social Development Minister Margaret Richie offered them temporary refuge in vacant student accommodation for a week, while the Housing Executive worked on a more permanent solution.

Dozens of parents and children including a five-day-old baby had fled from their homes in the Lisburn Road area in fear for their lives.

The migrants, who are of Roma origin, took refuge in a nearby church hall on Tuesday night, too terrified to return to their homes.

Sections of a mob of youths had chanted “Combat 18“.

Combat 18 is an international, but primarily England-based, nazi terrorist organization, a tendency within the so called “Blood and Honour” movement. The “18” is an acronym for AH, Adolf Hitler, their “hero”. Combat 18 has links to sectarian “loyalist” gangs in Northern Ireland.

and given nazi salutes while they threw bricks through windows, while masked men directly threatened the refugees, telling them to get out or they would be shot.

The attack followed an anti-racist demonstration in support of the families by their neighbours on Monday evening, which had also been subjected to abuse and missile-throwing.

Belfast City Church pastor’s wife Trish Morgan said: “We had 113 people here overnight, including small babies and toddlers. The families were bewildered, frightened and just not sure how the situation had reached that stage.”

Politicians of all stripes have roundly condemned the horrific attacks.

Deputy First Minister and Sinn Fein MP Martin McGuinness, who visited the area today along with DUP MP Jeffrey Donaldson, said: “I met with numerous families who are genuinely fearful for their lives and those of their families. I held a five-day-old baby girl in my arms today. She was born in Belfast and is now forced to leave her home as a result of attacks by racist, criminal thugs.”

Mr Donaldson said: “The actions of a tiny number of racist thugs in South Belfast is serving only to tarnish the image of Northern Ireland right across the globe.”

However, trade union representatives and equality workers argue that the attacks are indicative of a deepening malaise in Northern Ireland, at least partly fuelled by the main parties’ inaction.

Kevin Doherty of the Irish Committee of Trade Unions told the Star: “we totally condemn what has happened. We are still trying to get to the bottom of these attacks.

“We know the BNP have been trying to get a foothold in Northern Ireland and that they have a call centre in Belfast.

“We are not sure whether the BNP and Combat 18 are behind this attack or whether it is disaffected youths from the area.

“There were a spate of attacks on Polish workers in that area a while ago, but that wasn’t really reported. Around 60 families had to move out as a result.

“There are huge numbers of alienated youth in areas like this which have massive social deprivation and the peace process has passed these people by.

“Stormont has done nothing for these people and groups such as the BNP seek to exploit this.”

Equality Commission chief executive Evelyn Collins said: “The attacks over the past few days which have forced a number of Romanian families to leave their homes are a grim reflection of the persistence of racial prejudice within our society.”

Urgent meetings of community activists were in progress today in an attempt to resolve the issue.

2,500-year-old gyrfalcon’s nest in Greenland


From the BBC:

2,500-year-old bird’s nest found

Matt Walker

Editor, Earth News

A 2,500-year-old bird’s nest has been discovered on a cliff in Greenland.

The nesting site is still continually used by gyrfalcons, the world’s largest species of falcon, and is the oldest raptor nest ever recorded.

Three other nests, each over 1,000 years old, have also been found, one of which contains feathers from a bird that lived more than 600 years ago.

However, ornithologists fear climate change may soon drive the birds from these ancient nesting sites.

Gyrfalcons live circumpolar to the Arctic. The birds range in colour from being almost exclusively white in Greenland to usually black in Labrador in Canada.

Like many falcons, they do not build nests out of sticks and twigs, but typically lay eggs in bowel-shaped depressions they scrape into exiting ledges or old nests made by other birds such as ravens.

But while stick nests are often frequently damaged, preventing their repeated use, gyrfalcons will often revisit some ledges and potholes from year to year.

To find out just how long the birds return to the same site, ornithologist Kurt Burnham of the University of Oxford, UK and colleagues decided to carbon date the guano and other debris that birds leave at various nest sites around Greenland.

The cold dry climate of Greenland slows the decay of the falcons’ droppings and various nest sites had built up levels of guano almost 2m deep.

But Burnham was still surprised to find out just how old these nests are.

Carbon dating revealed that one nest in Kangerlussuaq in central-west Greenland is between 2,360 and 2,740 years old, the researchers report in Ibis.

Three other nests in the area are older than 1,000 years, with the youngest nest site first being occupied 520 to 650 years ago.

These ancient nests are still being regularly used by gyrfalcons.

“While I know many falcon species re-use nest sites year after year, I never imagined we would be talking about nests that have been used on and off for over 2,000 years,” says Burnham.

Within the nests, Burnham’s team also found intriguing clues as to the past inhabitants.

In the 13 nests sampled, they found three feathers belonging to previous tenants. The youngest came from a bird residing in the nest 60 years ago, while the oldest came from a falcon that used the nest some 670 years ago.

The ancient guano samples also gave an indication of what the birds ate in times long past.

Those gyrfalcons living in central-west Greenland, which is farther from the ice sheet and nearer the ocean, fed from a diet much richer in marine animals, such as little auks and black guillemots.

Falcons living further north closer to the ice fed on terrestrial prey such as rock ptarmigan and arctic hare.

“These findings put new emphasis on just how important nest site characteristics can be for raptor species, particularly large raptors,” Burnham says.

“Something, be it nest ledge depth, or the amount of cliff overhang above the nest, is so attractive at these locations that gyrfalcons are re-using them for thousands of years.”

Yet the fact that gyrfalcons remain faithful to certain nest sites for hundreds of generations suggest that they may be especially vulnerable to climate change, says Burnham.

“As a result of a warming and ameliorating climate other bird species, such as peregrine falcons, are moving further north.”

“As peregrine populations continue to increase in density they will likely use more and more of these traditional gyrfalcon nests, forcing gyrfalcons to find alternate locations to nest in which may not offer the same amount of protection from the harsh Arctic environment in Greenland.”

Similar studies have been used to show when whole colonies of birds first took up residence at certain sites.

By carbon dating solidified stomach contents, peat moss deposits and bone and feather samples from various moulting sites, researchers have in the past shown that colonies of snow petrel have returned to the same sites for 34,000 years and Adelie penguins for 44,000 years.

Conformists may kill civilizations (like early medieval Greenland): here.

Greenland photos: here.

A long cooling period may have led to famine in Greenland and Iceland more than 1,000 years ago: here.

New View on the Origin of First Settlers in Iceland: here.

IF SOME of the spectacular calving of ice shelves in Antarctica is down to global warming, then why did we not see break-ups on the same scale in Greenland, which is much warmer? It turns out that, counter-intuitively, it’s because Greenland is warmer: here.

PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — The end of the Norse settlements on Greenland likely will remain shrouded in mystery. While there is scant written evidence of the colony’s demise in the 14th and early 15th centuries, archaeological remains can fill some of the blanks, but not all: here.

ATMOSPHERIC PRESSURES IN THE PLEISTOCENE AND TEMPERATURE CHANGES IN GREENLAND: here.

Although researchers have long known that the last two interglacial periods experienced warming in the Arctic due to changes in the Earth’s orbit, a mix of fly species preserved from these times in a rare lake sediment core shows that Greenland was even warmer than previously thought. This information could help researchers better gauge Greenland’s sensitivity to warming, by testing and improving models of climate and ice sheet behavior: here.

Afghans mourn US bombing deaths


This video is called You won’t see THIS on [Rupert Murdoch’s] FOX News: Starving Afghan Family Displaced by US Airstrike (Clip 2).

From The Frontier Post in Pakistan; based on a report in the London Times; which is owned by arch-warmonger Rupert Murdoch, so, Rightists, quit moaning about so called “liberal media“:

A woman mourning 19 of her dearest relatives

KABUL (NNI): Tears streaming down her face, the Afghan woman sat in a corner of a room with no roof and broken windows, mourning 19 of her closest and dearest relatives. “They were parts of my heart,” she said.

Six weeks after American warplanes bombed her village in Farah province, on Afghanistan’s remote western border, mistakenly killing dozens of innocent women and children, the terror of the moment when the bombs fell and the ground erupted, turning one mud-walled house after another into rubble, still lives in her mind. “I lost them all at a glance. Why am I still alive?” the 62-year-old woman asked.

The dead men, women and children, many of them her relatives, now lie in graves. The survivors still wonder why their families were wiped out by American airmen with whom they had no quarrel, The Sunday Times reported. The Americans have paid families $2,000 compensation for each of those killed and $1,000 for each person injured.

But the bombing in Farah on May 4, which caused the single highest civilian death toll of any incident this year, remains a significant political issue. It has weakened Afghans’ support for their government, for the presence of international forces and for the war against the Taliban. It has also raised tensions with President Hamid Karzai, who condemns foreign forces for the rise in civilian casualties, partly to bolster his own support in advance of August’s presidential elections. A United Nations investigation has found that 828 civilians were killed by Afghan or American-led forces last year, most in airstrikes. …

There is concern that 21,000 extra American troops will increase civilian casualties as fighting increases. Violence is already at its highest level since the Americans toppled the Taliban at the end of 2001. The Americans have investigated the Farah bombing but their preliminary findings provided no real answers beyond admitting that a bomber’s crew had violated procedures. In such cases there has always been a large discrepancy between estimates of the fatalities by Americans and those made by the UN and other agencies. The Americans rarely admit to making mistakes.

In Farah, Afghan officials said that as many as 140 civilians died, but the US military put the civilian toll at no more than 30, along with about 65 insurgents. Other international investigators believe that as many [as] 85 civilians died. Last year the Americans killed 90 civilians in a bombing raid on Azizabad. An investigation by Dispatches, to be broadcast on Channel 4 tomorrow, will show that the Americans carried out the raid on the basis of faulty intelligence provided by an Afghan to settle a score with a rival. He is now on death row. But the American military has still not admitted the truth.

The Farah airstrikes were more straightforward but no less disastrous. They happened during a day of heavy fighting between Taliban insurgents and Afghan forces supported by American marines. During the fighting several 500lb bombs were dropped. A lull ensued and villagers say many Taliban fighters withdrew. Many civilians fled, too, but some were still crammed into one compound. At 8pm a B1 bomber dropped a 2,000lb bomb on the compound, which American commanders suspected of sheltering Taliban but which contained mostly civilians. The bomber had to make an elongated approach, which meant the target should have been reassessed first. “Either their intelligence was so bad and they believed there were no civilians there, or they made a calculation that killing some civilians allowed them to get rid of Taliban fighters, too,” said Rachel Reid, a Human Rights Watch researcher.

Canada: Winnipeg Walk for Peace 2009: here.

German ministers agreed on Wednesday to send 300 additional troops and several reconnaissance aeroplanes to bolster the US-led counterinsurgency campaign in Afghanistan: here.

Air traffic controllers ordered a cargo plane chartered by the US government and carrying munitions to Afghanistan to land at Mumbai airport after it violated Indian airspace, officials said on Saturday: here.