Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Fernando Espuelas: In Republican Debates, Ideology Trumps Intelligent Immigration Policy

Living in Los Angeles I drive by multi-car pile-ups on the freeway at least once a week. An occurrence so common that it no longer shocks or surprises. Yet it is impossible to take your eyes off the wreckage.

Similarly, you'd think that when the Republican presidential candidates debate each other I would simply look away, turn the volume down on the TV, and wait until the obligatory segment on immigration "policy" is over. Really, how many ideological wrecks posing as "solutions" to America's immigration crisis can one listen to?

And yet, the second South Carolina GOP debate sure felt like rush hour on the 405 Freeway, America's biggest bumper-car ride. Rick Santorum, recently endorsed by a group of prominent Evangelical Christians, was joined by establishment favorite Mitt Romney in bashing Newt Gingrich's proposals on immigration.

The former Speaker's rather modest immigration proposal - to allow people who have been in the U.S. at least 25 years to apply to a "World War II-style Draft Board" made up of local citizens who will then decide whether to deport or allow these people to stay with their families - was forcefully rejected during the debate by Gingrich's competitors.

In a deliberate attempt to satisfy the anti-immigrant wing of the GOP, Santorum and Romney expressed positions on immigration so radical, so destructive to the American economy, our historical heritage and to our collective sense of decency, that the car wreck metaphor truly took hold.

Both Santorum, the son of Italian immigrants, and Mexican-American Romney bid for the title of Most Divisive onstage. While both men speak constantly about their Christian faith and the centrality of family to their core beliefs, their approach to immigration is much closer to ethnic cleansing than an actual immigration policy that strengthens America.

In short, the former Senator from Pennsylvania and the ex-Governor of Massachusetts are advocating mass deportations - 11 million people sent back "home." To be clear, Gingrich's supposedly more "humane" approach would result, as the Speaker said during the debate, in "most of them go[ing] home." The "them" in this instance are undocumented immigrants who have been in the U.S. fewer than 25 years.

Putting aside for the moment the horrendous human and moral costs of deporting 11 million people (a number of people comparable to the whole population of Belgium), tearing families and communities apart in the process, this is simply bad economic policy.

Daniel Griswold, a senior scholar at the Cato Institute, has documented the self-defeating nature of the GOP's harsh enforcement approach to immigration. Recently writing in the National Review, Griswold stated that "Study after study confirms that immigrants help to boost the productivity and incomes of native-born Americans. A 2009 Cato Institute study by Peter Dixon and Maureen Rimmer calculated that legalizing low-skilled immigration would boost the collective income of U.S. households by $180 billion per year."

Moreover, beyond the hit to economic growth that mass deportations would cause, there is the actual cost of a deportation policy. In 2010, the Center for American Progress undertook a comprehensive study of the financial impact of the deportation approach advocated by Santorum and Romney.

According to the study's authors, "the total five-year immigration enforcement cost under a mass deportation strategy would be approximately $285 billion." These are direct costs to tax payers - it does not include the loss in economic activity represented by immigrant labor and consumption, taxes paid by immigrants and the decreased productivity across the U.S. economy as workers basically disappear.

For the GOP hopefuls now battling it out in South Carolina, it is clear that taking a hard-line on undocumented people is good politics. But beyond the hypocrisy of parading your Christian bona fides while advocating the breaking up of millions of families, these supposed saviors of the American economy seem to be completely disconnected from the real-world impact of their policy positions.

At a time when America is trying to bring its budget into balance, keep our military the preeminent fighting force in the world, and rebuild our transportation and education infrastructure to effectively compete in the 21st century, the Romney-Santorum mass deportation approach to immigration policy is, to paraphrase New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, a form of "national suicide."

As last week's "pile-up" showed, it's time to reveal the candidates' proposed solutions for the wrecks they truly are.

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Follow Fernando Espuelas on Twitter: www.twitter.com/espuelasvox

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/fernando-espuelas/in-republican-debates-ide_b_1220288.html

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Polywell Ignition X7900i-3960


The year's most scorching gaming machines on the market tend to arrive hot on the heels of Intel releasing a new flagship processor, and that's certainly true of 2011. In the wake of the debut of the Intel Core i7-3960X, manufacturers are falling over themselves to put out the fastest, most decked-out desktops that anyone living on a trust fund will be dying to have. One such system is the Polywell Ignition X7900i-3960, a $4,599 (street) behemoth bearing the smoking new processing and enough other new hardware to send the most trembling enthusiast into flights of ecstasy. And, oh yeah, it's fast, too. But if you're spending over $4,500 on a desktop, you undoubtedly want the speediest, best-designed, and most feature-packed one you can get. For its numerous virtues and outstanding performance scores, however, the Ignition X7900i-3960 is not quite that.

Design
At least the Ignition X7900i-3960 is an eye-catcher. Its full-size tower case is cast in gleaming, glossy white with sharp accents that give each part of it a uniquely striking appearance. A band of silvery metal wraps around the top and the bottom, though it's interrupted on the latter with a black plastic ventilation grille. You'll find a similar grille at the bottom of the front panel: It's covering the intake fans and is in turn covered by a series of shiny black fins. This look, in turn, is replicated on the top panel; on the two side panels, you'll find the black grille as well, albeit without the fins. The rear panel is solid black metal, though cut with many hexagonal holes for ventilation.

Both the side panels eschew thumbscrews in favor of a key-and-knob locking mechanism. The knob is found on either side of the rear panel: Turn it one way to free the panel, which you can then just pull away; turn it back the other way to secure it shut; or use the keys (on our model, attached via a twist tie to one of the ventilation holes) to prevent anyone from getting into the computer. It's a somewhat bulky and inelegant system, but it works.

Features
Dashing as the Ignition X7900i-3960 may be in the attractiveness department, it's what's inside that counts even more?and there's a lot. In addition to the Core i7-3960X processor cooled by a sedate-looking, Polywell-branded fan?and?heat sink combo, plugged into the Intel Desktop Board DX79SI is a whopping 32GB of 1,600MHz DDR3 memory. Because Intel's new X79 Express chipset supports quad-channel memory, this is divided among eight DIMMs, and there are no free slots for putting in more. (Not that you'll need to upgrade anytime soon, anyway!) Video capabilities come courtesy of two video cards using the Nvidia GeForce GTX 590 GPU design, the fastest the company makes. This gives you an enormous amount of graphics potential, but requires a lot of power?thankfully, this is provided by a 1,250-watt power supply. All these internal components are cooled by four fans: one 150mm for intake, located at the bottom of the internal drive well, and three for exhaust (two in the top panel, one in the rear panel).

There's plenty more to be found on the front panel, too. Let's start with the two optical drives: one LG "Super Multi Blue" model that combines Blu-ray playing and DVD recording functionality, and one traditional DVD?RW drive. In another of the 5.25-inch bays you'll find a multiformat card reader. This leaves two bays free, and from them you can directly access the internal storage, all without having to unplug any SATA data or power cables. This gives you 240GB spread across two 120GB solid-state drives (SSDs) and an additional 3TB hard drive.

Only when you get to the collection of front-panel ports do you start to see what you're missing: One eSATA, three USB 2.0, and headphone and microphone jacks flank the power button on the top edge?that's right, no USB 3.0 ports. You'll only find two of those on the rear panel, joining six USB 2.0 ports, two Gigabit LAN jacks, a FireWire port, and S/PDIF digital and 8.1-channel analog audio ports for connecting speakers. Another nice feature is the "back to BIOS" button, which lets you safely roll back any changes you make to your system's configuration (such as overclocking).

A Logitech Cordless Desktop X100 keyboard and an associated OptiMouse complete the hardware side of the spectrum. Two warranties, one for three years for parts and one for five years for labor, should keep you decently protected.

Performance
Polywell Ignition X7900i-3960Any performance tweaking you may want from the X7900i-3960 you will have to do yourself: Polywell has provided no out-of-the-box overclocking for it. The good news is that because the rest of the system?s components are so advanced, you still get amazing frame rates. But overall performance isn?t going to compare with what you?ll see on an overclocked system such as the Falcon Northwest Mach V that uses this same CPU and many similar components?with one big difference that further accelerates its gaming prowess.

That would be its setup of three Nvidia GeForce GTX 580 video cards, which let it deliver results that surpass those of the Polywell. We saw this in every gaming test, whether PCMark 7 (6,154 versus 5,990), 3DMark 11 (6,505 versus 6,148 at the Extreme preset), Crysis at 1,920 by 1,080 with Very High details (75 frames per second, or fps, versus 73fps), or Lost Planet 2 at 1,920 by 1,080 with High details (168fps versus 122fps). And the Falcon Northwest?s overclocking helped it excel at non-gaming tasks, too (on the off chance you?ll ever want to do them), again trumping the Polywell in every match-up.

So if you?re looking for the best Core i7-3960X gaming machine you can find, right now the Editors? Choice Mach V takes the prize?in addition to superior performance, it also gives you more storage space (with the help of two 256GB SSDs), a more forward-thinking case design, and a more adventurous motherboard loaded with features (including a lot more USB 3.0 ports) that Intel?s doesn?t attempt. But it?s important to note that the Mach V also comes with a faint-worthy $6,899 price tag. The Polywell Ignition X7900i-3960 offers an incredibly compelling alternative for $2,300 less, with most of the same pluses and only some minor minuses. The only way it will disappoint is your hunger for speed can only be sated by the most tip of the top desktop out there.

BENCHMARK TEST RESULTS

More desktop reviews:
??? Polywell Ignition X7900i-3960
??? iBuypower Chimera 4-V1
??? Velocity Micro Vector Holiday Edition (2011)
??? Falcon Northwest Mach V (Core i7-3960X)
??? Cybernet ZPC-D5
?? more

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/fn3RE_Lr4PE/0,2817,2398335,00.asp

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Monday, January 23, 2012

The David Dewhurst vs. Ted Cruz Senate Race -- the State of Play (ContributorNetwork)

An analysis in the Fort Worth Star Telegram suggests the U.S. Senate race in Texas between Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst and for Solicitor General Ted Cruz is like the race for the president in miniature.

The idea is Dewhurst equals Mitt Romney and Cruz equals the not Mitt Romney, Newt Gingrich or Rick Santorum. But the differences might have less to do with politics that with political status. Dewhurst is part of the hated establishment. Cruz is the tea party style insurgent.

What does Dewhurst believe?

According to the Dewhurst for Senate campaign website, the candidate's agenda is solidly conservative. He is in favor of repealing health care reform, also known as Obamacare, in favor of a free market based health care reform. He advocates curbing the Environmental Protection Agency. He supports developing American domestic oil resources. And he is in favor of cutting spending and taxes, according to his issues page

What does Cruz Advocate?

Cruz frames the case for his candidacy in his record of supporting issues that conservative believe in. He is in favor of smaller government, against abortion, for domestic energy production, for gun owners' rights, against same sex marriage, against illegal immigration, and against frivolous lawsuits.

What is the bottom line?

While each candidate emphasizes different issues, they seem to be equally conservative, at least in how they are running for the Senate.

What about Dewhurst's record?

Dewhurst, as a statewide office holder, does not carry Romney's burden of having once been pro-abortion or of having supported a health care reform measure with a disturbing resemblance to Obamacare, or so his lieutenant governor's website suggests. According to My San Antonio, some conservatives blame Dewhurst for the failure of a bill that would have made TSA "enhance pat downs" at airports a felony in the state of Texas. Such a bill, had it been passed into law, would have set up a constitutional wrangle between the federal government's right to handle airport security and Texas' right to keep innocent people from being physically molested while traveling.

What is the Senate race all about then?

Basically it comes down to a fight between experience vs. independence. Dewhurst will point to his ability to get things done in a legislative body, not an unimportant thing for a potential senator. Cruz will emphasize is independence and his unwillingness to compromise conservative principles. Which quality Texas voters hold to be more important will determine who gets the Republican nomination and hence likely wins the election. Thus far Dewhurst has the upper hand with 36 percent support in the polls, with Cruz following at 18 percent. But 31 percent of Texas Republicans are undecided, so anything could happen.

Texas resident Mark Whittington writes about state issues for the Yahoo! Contributor Network.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/uscongress/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20120122/pl_ac/10868909_the_david_dewhurst_vs_ted_cruz_senate_race__the_state_of_play

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Libyan Islamists rally to demand sharia-based law (Reuters)

TRIPOLI (Reuters) ? Hundreds of Libyan Islamists rallied on Friday to demand that Muslim sharia law inspire legislation in what organizers called a response to the emergence of secular political parties after the fall of Muammar Gaddafi's dictatorship last year.

Assembled by Islamist political and religious groups, mostly young and bearded men holding up copies of the Koran demonstrated in squares in the capital Tripoli, the eastern city of Benghazi and in Sabha in the southern desert.

In Tripoli's Algeria Square, Islamists burned copies of the "Green Book," Gaddafi's eccentric handbook on politics, economics and everyday life, to underline that the Koran should be the country's main source of legislation.

By contrast, a group of secularists who have staged a sit-in in the square for more than a month chanted: "We want a civil state."

The Islamist demonstrators encompassed members of the conservative Muslim Brotherhood and harder-line Salafis, who both back strict versions of Islam, and relative moderates who prefer a civil state simply inspired by sharia.

The protests offered a glimpse into Libya's political future in which Islamist and secularist parties are expected to vie for seats in a national assembly scheduled to be elected in June to draft a constitution for the North African country.

Experts believe the Muslim Brotherhood is the most organized political force and could emerge as the leading political player in Libya after Gaddafi, who harshly suppressed Islamists during his 42 years in autocratic power.

Western powers are coming to accept that the advent of democracy in the Arab world means bringing Islamists to power. They have become the biggest election winners in Egypt, Tunisia and Morocco over the past few months.

The chairman of Libya's ruling National Transitional Council (NTC), Mustafa Abdul Jalil, promised in October to uphold Islamic law. "We as a Muslim nation have taken Islamic sharia as the source of legislation, therefore any law that contradicts the principles of Islam is legally nullified," he said.

The deputy central bank governor said last month a law regulating Islamic banking would be issued in the first quarter of 2012, but stressed that both conventional and Islamic banks would be allowed to operate in Libya.

Islamists in Algeria Square held up placards demanding a financial system respecting Islam's ban on interest and calling for a constitution derived from sharia's legal and moral codes.

"We want to run our life according to Islamic principles, be it the economy, politics or our relations with other countries," said Abdul Basit Ghuwaila, a preacher at a Tripoli mosque. "Most people think Islam is just about harsh penalties."

Ghuwaila, 49, said sharia should not govern all Libyan law, but insisted that legislation should not contradict it.

Nour al-Zintani, a participant in the month-long sit-in for a secular state, said the majority of Libyans wanted Islam to be a part of their life but not a strict interpretation of it.

"We all want sharia," she said, standing next to her teenage daughter, both of them wearing a Muslim headscarf, "but not the one they're talking about, the one that rejects women. We want a moderate Islam that gives women their rights."

(Additional reporting by Mohammad Al Tommy; Editing by Mark Heinrich)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/africa/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20120120/wl_nm/us_libya_sharia_rallies

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Sunday, January 22, 2012

PFT: Rex Ryan says he might tone it down

Indianapolis' Brown runs from Tennesee's Finnegan during an NFL football game in IndianapolisReuters

A few East-West Shrine Game participants that could fit with the Bills.

An analysis of the Dolphins? choice to hire Joe Philbin as their head coach.

Patriots CB Devin McCourty is looking forward to facing off with Ravens RB Ray Rice, his teammate at Rutgers.

The Jets signed G Trevor Canfield to a futures contract.

The Ravens defense knows that they need to make Tom Brady uncomfortable on Sunday.

Some reaction to the Bengals? decision to hold training camp at Paul Brown Stadium.

The healthy return of G Eric Steinbach will give the Browns needed depth on the offensive line.

The Steelers may buck their tradition of promoting from within when it comes to hiring a new offensive coordinator.

Texans C Chris Myers and DE Antonio Smith are fired up for their first trip to the Pro Bowl.

Peter King of SI.com believes Peyton Manning?s status will have nothing to do with the Colts? search for a new coach.

The Jaguars signed four more assistant coaches for Mike Mularkey?s staff.

Titans CB Cortland Finnegan doesn?t think shuffling the front office will change much about the organization.

The Broncos will spend some time evaluating QB Adam Weber this offseason.

The New Yorker checks in on the phone tapping allegations hurled at the Chiefs last week.

Paul Gutierrez of CSNBayArea.com thinks the Dolphins making a coaching hire puts the pressure on the Raiders.

Ron Meeks is the leading candidate for the job as Chargers? defensive backs coach.

Cowboys LB Keith Brooking hopes that WR Dez Bryant doesn?t waste his talent.

Giants defensive backs credit group meetings for their improved play.

More questions about where the Eagles defense is going this offseason.

A trial date has been set for the man accused of shooting and killing Redskins S Sean Taylor.

A look at what Phil Emery might bring to the table as Bears general manager.

Does RB Kevin Smith have a future with the Lions?

Packers S Nick Collins will learn more about his future after a meeting with doctors in March.

USC T Ryan Kalil and Oklahoma State WR Justin Blackmon are both candidates for the Vikings in the first round.

The Falcons signed RB Dimitri Nance to a futures contract.

It isn?t guaranteed that the Panthers will opt for a defensive player in the first round of the draft.

Looking back at Gregg Williams? run as defensive coordinator of the Saints.

Five players the Buccaneers should be watching at the Senior Bowl.

The Cardinals lost painful games to the Ravens and Giants, but managed a split with the 49ers.

Said Rams executive vice president of football operations Kevin Demoff of the team?s plans to play games in London the next three years, ?And our fans are going to have conspiracy theories and be skeptics of our intentions. But hopefully throughout this process, our actions about wanting to be here will speak for us.?

49ers coach Jim Harbaugh didn?t get a chance to hold a practice in rainy conditions.

The Seahawks did well in sudden change situations this season.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2012/01/21/rex-says-he-may-tone-it-down/related/

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Jury scheduled to return in war crime trial (AP)

CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. ? Court proceedings were scheduled to reconvene Friday in the trial of a major Iraq war crimes case, after a military judge excused jurors for nearly two days and asked lawyers to explore their options.

The judge's actions fueled speculation that a plea deal was in the works that could end the trial of Staff Sgt. Frank Wuterich of Meriden, Conn., who led a squad that killed 24 unarmed Iraqi civilians.

But defense attorney Neal Puckett told The Associated Press late Thursday that he expected a full day of testimony Friday, with a squad mate and a forensic scientist with the Naval Criminal Investigative Service expected to take the stand.

Wuterich led the squad that killed 24 Iraqis during raids on homes in the town of Haditha in 2005 after a roadside bomb killed one Marine. He faces nine counts of involuntary manslaughter, among other charges.

Puckett said prosecutors also will show outtakes from an interview that Wuterich gave in 2007 to CBS's "60 Minutes." The trial was delayed for years by pre-trial wrangling between the defense and prosecution, including over whether the military could use the unaired outtakes. Prosecutors eventually won the right to view the footage.

The all-Marine jury at Camp Pendleton, Calif., was excused after a lunch break Wednesday.

The judge, Lt. Col. David Jones, told lawyers after jurors left the room to explore their options. He called for the court to be back in session at 1 p.m. Thursday. But 30 minutes before then, military officials told reporters the jury had been informed not to come back until Friday morning.

Wuterich is one of eight Marines initially charged. None has been convicted.

Wuterich has said he regretted the loss of civilian lives but believed he was operating within military combat rules.

Prosecutors have argued Wuterich lost control of himself after seeing the body of his friend blown apart by the bomb.

The incident still fuels anger in Iraq today and was a main reason behind the country's demands that U.S. troops not be given immunity from its legal system. Those demands were the deal breaker in keeping forces there after the war ended in December.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120120/ap_on_re_us/us_marines_haditha

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Saturday, January 21, 2012

Live-Blogging The Google Q4 2011 Earnings Call

We're live and listening....

A bunch of the execs are on. You can also follow along here....

Chief executive Larry Page (paraphrased): Good afternoon everyone. Google had a very strong quarter with revenue up 25% year over year...

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/E87D_RU4yDg/

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