Noonan: Low Turnout and the Big Tune-Out

On February 11, 2012, in Uncategorized, by mrkeybiz

Voters aren’t bothering with the GOP, but Obama has lost their attention too.

Read the original post:
Noonan: Low Turnout and the Big Tune-Out

Tagged with:
 

This clip from Neil Cavuto ‘s Fox News program “Your World” aired last Friday, but it wasn’t available to share at the time. In his “Common Sense” segment, Cavuto pulled news media personalities by the hair for dismissing Donald Trump while simultaneously hanging on to his every word. This was just after Trump had endorsed Mitt Romney to be the Republican nominee for president. “They covered Trump live. He didn’t ask them to cover him live. They made it a spectacle, he didn’t make it a spectacle,” Cavuto said. “They called him showman but not a one of them admitted Donald Trump was good for their show, actually very good for their show, all of their shows.” Cavuto is generally right. Trump is a walking headline. I write about him frequently (see here , here and here ). And he is all too readily dismissed by figures in the media as a carnival barker without the slightest acknowledgement that that’s the very thing that attracts their attention. Let me be the first: Trump is a total crank. But yes, I’ll write about him the next time he opens his perpetually pursed mouth anyway. Watch: Watch the latest video at video.foxnews.com

Excerpt from:
Neil Cavuto’s spot-on criticism of Trump-media relationship

Part of the Eggner Ferry Bridge remains on the cargo ship that hit it. (Photo: AP/ Tina Carroll)

AURORA, Ky. (The Blaze/AP) — On Thursday, a cargo ship carrying rocket parts stuck and partially collapsed a Kentucky bridge. But less than 24 hours later, Kentucky’s governor is already promising speedy work to begin replacing the structure that sees nearly 3,000 cars pass over it a day. Amazingly, there are no reported injuries, but one man driving Thursday evening had quite the shock when he had to slam on his brakes seeing a section missing ahead of him. “All of a sudden I see the road’s gone and I hit the brakes,” said Parker, who lives in Cadiz. “It got close.” Parker said he stopped his pickup within five feet of the missing section. He said he didn’t feel the vessel strike the bridge but “felt the bridge was kind of weak.” Two spans of the Eggner Ferry Bridge at US 68 and Kentucky 80 were destroyed Thursday night by the Delta Mariner, which was too tall to pass beneath the structure. No injuries were reported on the bridge or in the boat, which was carrying rocket components from Decatur, Ala., to Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida. Here is a local news report: The ship was traveling on the Tennessee River on its typical route to Florida’s Atlantic coast when it hit the aging steel bridge, which was built in the 1930s and handles about 2,800 vehicles a day. Check out this arial footage of the ship with bridge pieces still attached to it: The U.S. Coast Guard is investigating the collision. And it’s too early to speculate on exactly what caused the wreck until that probe is done, said Sam Sacco, a spokesman for ship owner and operator Foss Marine. Sacco said the boat was not severely damaged, and some of the crew remained on the ship Friday afternoon to make sure the cargo is safe. Gov. Steve Beshear on Friday said an immediate review of options to restore the bridge would take place. “We’ll turn our attention to a full inspection of the bridge and determine what steps we can take next to speed up the replacement of that important artery,” Beshear said.

The Delta Mariner is idle at the US68/KY80 Eggner's Ferry Bridge, with two destroyed spans of the bridge draped over her bow. (Photo: AP/Stephen Lance Dennee)

The 312-foot Delta Mariner hauls rocket parts for the Delta and Atlas systems to launch stations in Florida and California, according to a statement from United Launch Alliance, which builds the rocket parts in Alabama. The cargo was not damaged in the collision with the bridge, the company said. The rocket parts are used by the Air Force, NASA and private companies to send satellites into space, said Jessica Frye, a spokeswoman with United Launch Alliance. Sacco said the ship’s typical route to Florida takes it along the Tennessee and Ohio Rivers, then onto the Mississippi River to the Gulf of Mexico and on to Florida’s east coast. Lt. Gov. Jerry Abramson and Transportation Cabinet Secretary Mike Hancock were visiting the crash area Friday, officials said. Transportation Cabinet spokesman Keith Todd told The Paducah Sun he believes most of the navigational lights were functioning on the bridge at the time of the impact. The bridge opened in 1932, connecting Trigg County and Marshall County at the western entrance to Land Between the Lakes National Recreation Area. The transportation cabinet said the bridge was in the process of being replaced, and preconstruction work began months ago.

Here is the original post:
Giant Cargo Ship Carrying Rocket Parts Smashes and Collapses Kentucky Bridge

Tagged with:
 

CNN S.C. GOP Debate Post-Mortem

On January 20, 2012, in barack obama, Health Care, Uncategorized, by Richard Riker

Here are my final thoughts on tonight’s GOP Debate in Charleston, South Carolina which aired on CNN. Ron Paul – He was marginalized in the debate. It was too much for the audience which forced moderator John King to include him on a question concerning abortion. Paul was right to say that as a medical professional, an OBGYN in particular, his views might be worth hearing. In the limited time allotted to him, he performed reasonably well. As with other debates where foreign policy is on the backrunner, Paul kept the hysterics to a minimum. Newt Gingrich – You know a candidate has done well when he receives not one, but two standing ovations in the first five minutes of the debate. Even Ronald Reagan didn’t get two standing ovations when he said he was paying for that microphone. I mean when Quin Hillyer comes to Newt’s defense , well, then you’ve got something. Newt provided good detailed answers about SOPA, illegal immigration, reasonably defended Rick Santorum’s criticisms on health care, illegal immigration and abortion.

Excerpt from:
CNN S.C. GOP Debate Post-Mortem

Do Babies Read Lips?

On January 17, 2012, in Uncategorized, by

WASHINGTON (The Blaze/AP) — Watch the faces of babies around six months of age and you may see them working their lips and watching intently the lips of adults around them. A new study is showing that babies don’t learn to talk just from hearing sounds — they’re lip-readers too. Florida scientists discovered that starting around age 6 months, babies begin shifting from the intent eye gaze of early infancy to studying mouths when people talk to them. Slowly gibberish begins to turn into syllables — think repetitive “ba ba ba ba” — and eventually “mama” and “dada”. Here’s a viral YouTube video from last year showing you the beginnings of speech between two twin boys: “The baby in order to imitate you has to figure out how to shape their lips to make that particular sound they’re hearing,” explains developmental psychologist David Lewkowicz of Florida Atlantic University, who led the study published Monday. “It’s an incredibly complex process.” Watch this ABC News report on the study: video platform video management video solutions video player Apparently it doesn’t take them too long to absorb the movements that match basic sounds. By their first birthdays, babies start shifting back to look you in the eye again — unless they hear the unfamiliar sounds of a foreign language. Then, they stick with lip-reading a bit longer. “It’s a pretty intriguing finding,” says University of Iowa psychology professor Bob McMurray, who also studies speech development. The babies “know what they need to know about, and they’re able to deploy their attention to what’s important at that point in development.” The new research appears in this week’s issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. It offers more evidence that quality face-time with your tot is very important for speech development — more than, say, turning on the latest baby DVD. It also begs the question of whether babies who turn out to have developmental disorders, including autism, learn to speak the same way, or if they show differences that just might provide an early warning sign. Unraveling how babies learn to speak isn’t merely a curiosity. Neuroscientists want to know how to encourage that process, especially if it doesn’t seem to be happening on time. Plus, it helps them understand how the brain wires itself early in life for learning all kinds of things. Those coos of early infancy start changing around age 6 months, growing into the syllables of the baby’s native language until the first word emerges, usually just before age 1. A lot of research has centered on the audio side. That sing-song speech that parents intuitively use? Scientists know the pitch attracts babies’ attention, and the rhythm exaggerates key sounds. Other studies have shown that babies who are best at distinguishing between vowel sounds like “ah” and “ee” shortly before their first birthday wind up with better vocabularies and pre-reading skills by kindergarten. But scientists have long known that babies also look to speakers’ faces for important social cues about what they’re hearing. Just like adults, they’re drawn to the eyes, which convey important nonverbal messages like the emotion connected to words and where to direct attention. Lewkowicz went a step further, wondering whether babies look to the lips for cues as well, sort of like how adults lip-read to decipher what someone’s saying at a noisy party. So he and doctoral student Amy Hansen-Tift tested nearly 180 babies, groups of them at ages 4, 6, 8, 10 and 12 months. How? They showed videos of a woman speaking in English or Spanish to babies of English speakers. A gadget mounted on a soft headband tracked where each baby was focusing his or her gaze and for how long.

(Photo: Florida Atlantic University)

They found a dramatic shift in attention: When the speaker used English, the 4-month-olds gazed mostly into her eyes. The 6-month-olds spent equal amounts of time looking at the eyes and the mouth. The 8- and 10-month-olds studied mostly the mouth. At 12 months, attention started shifting back toward the speaker’s eyes. It makes sense that at 6 months, babies begin observing lip movement, Lewkowicz says, because that’s about the time babies’ brains gain the ability to control their attention rather than automatically look toward noise. But what happened when these babies accustomed to English heard Spanish? The 12-month-olds studied the mouth longer, just like younger babies. They needed the extra information to decipher the unfamiliar sounds. That fits with research into bilingualism that shows babies’ brains fine-tune themselves to start distinguishing the sounds of their native language over other languages in the first year of life. That’s one reason it’s easier for babies to become bilingual than older children or adults. But the continued lip-reading shows the 1-year-olds clearly still “are primed for learning,” McMurray says. Babies are so hard to study that this is “a fairly heroic data set,” says Duke University cognitive neuroscientist Greg Appelbaum, who found the research so compelling that he wants to know more. Are the babies who start to shift their gaze back to the eyes a bit earlier better learners, or impatient to their own detriment? What happens with a foreign language after 12 months? Lewkowicz is continuing his studies of typically developing babies. He theorizes that there may be different patterns in children at risk of autism, something autism experts caution would be hard to prove.

Read the rest here:
Do Babies Read Lips?

Tagged with:
 

AP – Star Wars creator George Lucas may have had a tough time getting Hollywood interested in a movie about the Tuskegee Airmen, but he has the attention of President Barack Obama.

See the article here:
Tuskegee Airmen film being screened at White House
(AP)

Candidates Brace for S.C. Brawl

On January 12, 2012, in Uncategorized, by moshesharon

Republican presidential hopefuls turned their attention to South Carolina, with Romney’s rivals confronting the specter that the Jan. 21 primary there could represent the final chance to derail him.

Read the original post:
Candidates Brace for S.C. Brawl

ContributorNetwork – Saturday night’s debate among the Republican candidates for president came and went without appearing to make too much impact on the outcome of Tuesday’s New Hampshire primary, according to the Washington Post. Front-runner Mitt Romney focused most of his efforts on arguing against the policies of President Barack Obama, while the rest of the candidates turned their attention towards each other, in an effort to eke out what is increasingly looking to be a second place finish in New Hampshire.

Read more:
Republicans Hold First of Two Debates Ahead of New Hampshire Primary
(ContributorNetwork)

Auto steelmaker will not get DOE loan (Reuters)

On January 7, 2012, in Uncategorized, by BojorquezLowry932

Reuters – The Obama administration on Friday opted against closing a loan of up to $730 million for steelmaker Severstal North America, whose financing bid to expand a plant for auto steel production drew the attention of congressional investigators looking at Energy Department loan programs.

More here:
Auto steelmaker will not get DOE loan
(Reuters)

Arson Suspect Could Serve Life in Prison

On January 5, 2012, in Uncategorized, by uwwalum

At LAT , ” Suspect faces life term in arson rampage .” The guy has a history: Harry Burkhart, a 24-year-old who authorities said travels on German documents but was born in the restive Russian region of Chechnya, reportedly came to the attention of Los Angeles law enforcement because he erupted into a rage at his mother’s extradition hearing Dec. 29 in federal court. Burkhart was evicted by federal marshals after an expletive-laced diatribe against Americans and the U.S. government. A federal official who witnessed his tirade recognized him in security camera images from one of the weekend fires.

More:
Arson Suspect Could Serve Life in Prison