Archive for June 5th, 2012

Evidence of Biblical cult from time of King David discovered

By Wynne Parry, Senior LiveScience Writer

Published May 10, 2012

LiveScience

  • shrine-ed

    The excavation of a shrine in the 3,000-year-old city of Khirbet Qeiyafa near Jerusalem. (Hebrew University of Jerusalem)

For the first time, archaeologists have uncovered shrines from the time of the early Biblical kings in the Holy Land, providing the earliest evidence of a cult, they say.

Excavation within the remains of the roughly 3,000-year-old fortified city of Khirbet Qeiyafa, located about 19 miles (30 kilometers) southwest of Jerusalem, have revealed three large rooms used as shrines, along with artifacts, including tools, pottery and objects, such as alters associated with worship.

The three shrines were part of larger building complexes, and the artifacts included five standing stones, two basalt altars, two pottery libation vessels and two portable shrines, one made of pottery, the other of stone. The portable shrines are boxes shaped like temples.

The shrines themselves reflect an architectural style dating back as early as the time of King David (of the biblical David and Goliath story), providing the first physical evidence of a cult in the time of King David, according to an announcement by Yosef Garfinkel, an archaeologist at Hebrew University of Jerusalem. [Religious Worship: Top 10 Cults]

The research is presented in the book, “Footsteps of King David in the Valley of Elah” (Yedioth Ahronoth, 2012).

Radiocarbon dating on burnt olive pits found in the ancient city of Khirbet Qeiyafa indicate it existed between 1020 B.C. and 980 B.C., before being violently destroyed.

According to Biblical tradition, the ancient Isrealites’ belief in one God and their ban on human and animal figures set them apart from their neighbors. However, it hasn’t been clear when these distinct practices arose.

The discoveries offer a clue to the timing, since they contain none of the human or animal figurines common at other sites. No bones from pigs showed up here or elsewhere in the city.

“This suggests that the population of Khirbet Qeiyafa observed two Biblical bans — on pork and on graven images — and thus practiced a different cult than that of the Canaanites or the Philistines,” Garfinkel said in a press release issued by the university. The discoveries also offer support for the Biblical depiction of King David, he said.

Garfinkel suggests some of the features and styles of the structures appear analogous to those described in the Bible. For instance, one of the shrines, the clay one, is decorated with an elaborate façade that includes two guardian lions, two pillars, folded textile and three birds standing on the roof. The two pillars are suggestive, he said, of Yachin and Boaz described in the Bible as belonging to Solomon’s Temple.

The announcement was met with some skepticism from scientists such as Aren Maeir of Bar-Ilan University, who has studied the ruins of the nearby Philistine city of Gath. Maeir told the Times of Israel the new finds don’t conclusively prove the site was inhabited by Israelites, and that the images of lions and birds also undercut that no animal or human figures were found.

“There’s no question that this is a very important site, but what exactly it was — there is still disagreement about that,” Maeir said in the Times of Israel, adding that the finding doesn’t add dramatic new evidence to the broader debate over whether the Bible is an historical record of events, largely mythical or a mix between fact and fiction.

Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2012/05/10/earliest-evidence-biblical-cult-discovered/?intcmp=obinsite#ixzz1wxUVgnL4

Build a Homemade Mosquito Trap

By: Gene Rodriguez, III

Mosquitoes are more than just annoying pests in your yard or garden. Mosquitoes carry many diseases including West Nile, encephalitis and malaria.

There are many commercial products to rid your landscape of these dangerous insects. Most of these products are quite expensive, however. A homemade mosquito trap is a simple, cost effective way to protect your yard and family from unsafe mosquitoes.

How it Works
Mosquitoes are attracted to the carbon dioxide (CO2) that we exhale. Commercial mosquito traps work by generating CO2 and broadcasting it into the air. Mosquitoes are attracted by the gas, fly to the trap and are sucked into a net bag where they die of dehydration.

Your homemade mosquito trap will use yeast to create CO2. Yeast is an organism that eats sugar and exhales CO2. (We use this feature of yeast all the time when we bake bread.)

Materials
To build your homemade mosquito trap, you’ll need: Continue reading

AT&T barges into home security and automation

Published May 07, 2012

Associated Press

  • ATT logo AP.jpg

    The AT&T logo is on display at a RadioShack store in Gloucester, Mass. (AP Photo/Lisa Poole)

NEW YORK –  AT&T Inc. will start selling home automation and security services nationwide, taking on incumbents led by Tyco International Ltd.’s ADT.

The installations and services will be sold in AT&T stores, starting with a trial this summer in Dallas and Atlanta.

Several of AT&T’s competitors, including cable TV company Comcast Corp. and phone company Verizon Communications Inc., have ventured into the home automation and security field. Dallas-based AT&T is showing more ambition with its stated goal of selling nationwide, rather than sticking to its landline service territory, as Verizon does.

Steven Winoker, an analyst at Sanford Bernstein, said about 23 percent of U.S. homes have security systems, so there’s plenty of room to grow. Even fewer have automation systems for controlling appliances, lights, heating and cooling. Continue reading

Apple to release ‘most important product we’ve done’

Published May 24, 2012

 

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    Apple executive Jonathan Ive heads up design for the consumer electronics company, and is responsible for many of Apple’s most iconic designs. (Apple)

And you thought the iPad was insanely great.

Apple’s chief designer and scion of cool Jonathan Ive told London paper the Telegraph that neither the iPad nor the Macintosh nor the iPhone is the most important product the company has ever done.

It’s the secret something he’s currently working on that has his heart racing.

“What we’re working on now feels like the most important and the best work we’ve done,” Ive told the paper, when asked what he would like to be remembered for.

“It would be what we’re working on right now, which of course I can’t tell you about.”

Ive, who has worked at Apple since 1992 and has headed up design for the company since 1997, was in London to receive an honorary knighthood, something he called an “incredibly humbling” experience.

 

‘What we’re working on now feels like the most important and the best work we’ve done.’

– Jonathan Ive

Continue reading

Technology waits for NO ONE !

Nevada issues Google first US license to test driverless cars

 

CARSON CITY, Nev. –  Nevada has granted Google what is believed to be the first U.S. license to test driverless cars.

The Nevada Department of Motor Vehicles announced Monday it has approved Google’s application to test the autonomous vehicles on public streets. However, the DMV will require at least two people in the vehicles during testing, including one in the driver’s seat.

Before it was approved, the car was tested on freeways and in neighborhoods around Carson City and Las Vegas, Fox 5 reports. The tests showed the car was just as safe, if not safer, than a human driver. Continue reading

T-Mobile’s network should be ready for iPhone in Fall

Published May 08, 2012

AllThingsD

  • t-mobile-iphone
    BGR

NEW ORLEANS –  While much of the attention on T-Mobile’s planned $4 billion network upgrade has centered around its plans to launch Long Term Evolution (LTE) technology next year, there is another key component to the strategy.

The company also is looking to free up space in another part of its spectrum that should finally allow iPhone users to run on its network at full speed. The company has about a million iPhone subscribers even though devices can only run at slow 2G speeds. T-Mobile USA also does not sell the iPhone itself.

At a dinner event in New Orleans late Monday, T-Mobile chief technology officer Neville Ray said the effort to reclaim some of its 1,900-MHz spectrum should reach a critical mass in the fourth quarter of this year, allowing the company to more aggressively court AT&T subscribers who are no longer under contract.

He declined to comment on whether the company would directly target iPhone users in a big marketing push planned for later this year.

“It would make sense,” Ray agreed, but added, “We’re not there yet.”

Read more on T-Mobile’s plans for the iPhone at AllThingsDigital.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2012/05/08/t-mobile-network-should-be-ready-for-iphone-in-fall/?intcmp=related#ixzz1wwydByVZ

New York governor to decriminalize small-quantity cannabis possession

Published June 04, 2012

NewsCore

CuomoMay12.JPG

May 22, 2012: New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo speaks during a news conference in Albany, N.Y. (AP)

ALBANY, N.Y. –  New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo will ask state lawmakers Monday to decriminalize the possession of small quantities of cannabis aka marijuana, according to The New York Times, in a bid to save young men from minorities who find themselves charged with a crime after being stopped and frisked. Continue reading

Operation Cannabis 420 – The OFFICIAL Press Release – #TeamVendetta

Operation Cannabis 420 – The OFFICIAL Press Release – #TeamVendetta.

via Operation Cannabis 420 – The OFFICIAL Press Release – #TeamVendetta.

http://wp.me/poKjl-uN √ it I am here by exposing the secret to creating the domino effect you all need for this plant to be set free along with the minds of all humans.

We still need a DOX of the individuals behind these massacre departments. Lets get ’em!! #PUFMM #OpCannabis

Let’s go, the police and soldiers are now awaking to this nightmare. We must have non-confrontational nonviolent nonphysical civil disobedience. THATS THE KEY< PASS THIS ONE URGENTLY!!!

T34M V3ndeTT4

Greetings From Anonymous and Team Vendetta,

After careful consideration and much debate within the 420 community it has been decided that Operation Cannabis 420 needs to evolve beyond marches and social networking campaigns and we have decided to concentrate on communications and outreach. Therefore the operation has been upgraded and the following has been decided:

1) Instead of yet another march, Team Vendetta will be organizing and building a live streaming web site that encompasses all of the Global Marijuana March in each city so the world can watch and follow the march as it travels around the earth. We will also be building and organizing a website for cannabis live streams that exist today and will exist tommorow on the web. As part of this effort we will be recruiting live streamers to cover the Million Marijuana March (aka Global Marijuana March or World Marijuana March). We are hoping…

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Medical marijuana monopoly

Currently, the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) has a monopoly on the supply of research-grade marijuana, but no other Schedule I drug, that can be used in FDA-approved research. NIDA uses its monopoly power to obstruct research that conflicts with its vested interests. MAPS had two of its FDA-approved medical marijuana protocols rejected by NIDA, preventing the studies from taking place. MAPS has also been trying without success for almost four years to purchase 10 grams of marijuana from NIDA for research into the constituents of the vapor from marijuana vaporizers, a non-smoking drug delivery method that has already been used in one FDA-approved human study.

NIDA has a government granted monopoly on the production of medical marijuana for research purposes. In the past, the institute has refused to supply marijuana to researchers who had obtained all other necessary federal permits. Medical marijuana researchers and activists claim that NIDA, which is not supposed to be a regulatory organization, does not have the authority to effectively regulate who does and doesn’t get to do research with medical marijuana. Jag Davies of the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS) writes in MAPS Bulletin:[27]

NIDA administers a contract with the University of Mississippi to grow the nation’s only legal cannabis crop for medical and research purposes,[28] including the Compassionate Investigational New Drug program. A Fast Company magazine article pointed out, “Based on the photographic evidence, NIDA’s concoction of seeds, stems, and leaves more closely resembles dried cat brier than cannabis”.[29] An article in Mother Jones magazine describes their crop as “brown, stems-and-seeds-laden, low-potency pot—what’s known on the streets as “schwag””aka “Bobby Brown”[30] United States federal law currently registers cannabis as a Schedule I drug. Medical marijuana researchers typically prefer to use high-potency marijuana, but NIDA’s National Advisory Council on Drug Abuse has been reluctant to provide cannabis with high THC levels, citing safety concerns:[28]

Most clinical studies have been conducted using cannabis cigarettes with a potency of 2-4% THC. However, it is anticipated that there will be requests for cannabis cigarettes with a higher potency or with other mixes of cannabinoids. For example, NIDA has received a request for cigarettes with an 8% potency. The subcommittee notes that very little is known about the clinical pharmacology of this higher potency. Thus, while NIDA research has provided a large body of literature related to the clinical pharmacology of cannabis, research is still needed to establish the safety of new dosage forms and new formulations.

Speaking before the National Advisory Council on Drug Abuse, Rob Kampia of the Marijuana Policy Project criticized NIDA for refusing to provide researcher Donald Abrams with marijuana for his studies, stating that “after nine months of delay, Dr. Leshner rejected Dr. Abrams’ request for marijuana, on what we believe are political grounds that the FDA-approved protocol is inadequate.”[31]

In May 2006, the Boston Globe reported that:[32]

Then again, it’s not in NIDA’s job description-or even, perhaps, in NIDA’s interests-to grow a world-class marijuana crop. The institute’s director, Nora Volkow, has stressed that it’s “not NIDA’s mission to study the medicinal use of marijuana or to advocate for the establishment of facilities to support this research.” Since NIDA’s stated mission “is to lead the Nation in bringing the power of science to bear on drug abuse and addiction,” federally supported marijuana research will logically tilt toward the potential harms, not benefits, of cannabis.

Ricaurte’s monkeys

For more details on this topic, see Retracted article on neurotoxicity of ecstasy.

NIDA has drawn criticism for continuing to provide funding to George Ricaurte, who in 2002 conducted a study that was widely touted as proving that MDMA causeddopaminergic neurotoxicity in monkeys.[33] His paper “Severe Dopaminergic Neurotoxicity in Primates After a Common Recreational Dose Regimen of MDMA (‘Ecstasy’)” inScience[34] was later retracted after it became clear that the monkeys had in fact been injected not with MDMA, but with extremely high doses of methamphetamine.[35] A FOIArequest was subsequently filed by MAPS to find out more about the research and NIDA’s involvement in it.[36][37]

Alan Leshner, publisher of Science and former director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), has come under fire for endorsing the botched study at its time of publication… Leshner did help NIDA bring home the bacon: NIDA’s budget for Ecstasy research has more than quadrupled over the past five years, from $3.4 million to $15.8 million; the agency funds 85 percent of the world’s drug-abuse research. In 2001, Leshner testified before a Senate subcommittee on “Ecstasy Abuse and Control”; critics say Leshner manipulated brain scans from a 2000 study by Dr. Linda Chang showing no difference between Ecstasy users and control subjects. But NIDA insists it’s independent from political pressures. “We don’t set policy; we don’t create laws,” says Beverly Jackson, the agency’s spokesperson.

Effectiveness of anti-marijuana ad campaigns

In February 2005, Westat, a research company hired by NIDA and funded by The White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, reported on its five-year study of the government ad campaigns aimed at dissuading teens from using marijuana, campaigns that cost more than $1 billion between 1998 and 2004. The study found that the ads did not work: “greater exposure to the campaign was associated with weaker anti-drug norms and increases in the perceptions that others use marijuana.” NIDA leaders and the White House drug office did not release the Westat report for a year and a half. NIDA dated Westat’s report as “delivered” in June 2006. In fact, it was delivered in February 2005, according to the Government Accountability Office, the federal watchdog agency charged with reviewing the study.