10)[+2] One Direction - What Makes You Beautiful
Monday, December 26, 2011
TOP AUSTRALIA
10)[+2] One Direction - What Makes You Beautiful
TOP UK
2) [-1] Little Mix - Cannonball
3) [NEW] Lou Monte - Dominick The Donkey
4) [NEW] Alex Day - Forever Yours
5) [-3] Coldplay - Paradise
6) [-3] Olly Murs - Dance With Me Tonight
7) [-1] Flo Rida - Good Feeling
8) [-4] Lloyd - Dedication To My Ex
9) [-2] Avicii - Levels
10) [-5] Rihanna - We Found Love
TOP ASIA
3) [+1] Bruno Mars - It Will Rain
4) [-1] LMFAO - Sexy And I Know It
5) [+1] Katy Perry - The One That Got Away
6) [-1] Adele - Someone Like You
7) [+4] Lady Gaga - Marry The Night
8) [-1] Foster The People - Pumped Up Kicks
9) [=] Christina Perri - A Thousand Years
10) [=] Jason DeRulo - It Girl
Hunting dogs attack 5 people in rampage: Australia
The staghound cross dogs attacked five people in Wagga Wagga during a 30-minute frenzy on Christmas Eve.
Inspector Jeff Barr says a 49-year-old woman suffered the most serious injuries, and was transferred to Canberra for surgery.
"The woman was attacked from behind. She was pulled off a motorcycle and dragged some 10 metres around the back of a motor vehicle," Inspector Barr said.
"Her son, being alerted by her screams, came out and put himself between the dog and his mother. He sustained some injuries there and ended up wrestling with the dog.
"The dog was very violent, very hostile, very aggressive. Police had no choice and, assisted by the young man, the dog was actually destroyed."
Earlier the dogs had attacked a cyclist then a man and his small dog.
Inspector Barr praised the bravery of a young woman who came to the man's aid and was also attacked.
He says police have now tracked down the dogs' owner, who is out of town. more
TOP ESPAÑA
3)[-1] Rihanna - We Found Love
4)[+1] Sean Paul - Got 2 Love U
5)[+5] Michel Teló - AI Se Eu Te Pego
6)[=] Enrique Iglesias - I Like How It Feels
7)[=] Flo Rida - Good Feeling
8)[-4] Maroon 5 - Moves Like Jagger
9)[NEW] La Oreja De Van Gogh - Cometas Por El Cielo
10)[NEW] Coldplay - Paradise
TOP USA
2) [=] LMFAO - Sexy And I Know It
4) [+1] Flo Rida - Good Feeling
5) [-1] Katy Perry - The One That Got Away
6) [=] Jay-Z & Kanye West - Ni**as In Paris
7) [=] Adele - Someone Like You
8) [+1] David Guetta feat. Usher - Without You
9) [-1] Maroon 5 feat. Christina Aguilera - Moves Like Jagger
How Social Media Fuels Social Unrest
In any case, the essay, by Bill Wasik, offers pretty compelling explanation for how social media enable radicals and inflame protests. See "#Riot: Self-Organized, Hyper-Networked Revolts—Coming to a City Near You." This passage was particularly interesting:
In trying to understand how and why crowds go wrong, you can have no better guide than Clifford Stott, senior lecturer in social psychology at the University of Liverpool. Stott has risked his life researching his subject. Specifically, he has spent most of his career—more than 20 years so far—conducting a firsthand study of violence among soccer fans. On one particularly dicey trip to Marseilles in 1998, Stott and a small crowd of Englishmen ran away from a cloud of tear gas only to find themselves facing a gang of 50 French toughs, some of them wielding bottles and driftwood. “If you are on your own,” a philosophical fellow Brit remarked to Stott at that moment, “you’re going to get fucked.” This, in a sense, is the fundamental wisdom at the heart of Stott’s work—though he does couch it in somewhat more respectable language."BBM" is BlackBerry Messenger, the main device that helped set off the rioting in Enfield, near London, earlier this year.
To Stott, members of a crowd are never really “on their own.” Based on a set of ideas that he and other social psychologists call ESIM (Elaborated Social Identity Model), Stott believes crowds form what are essentially shared identities, which evolve as the situation changes. We might see a crowd doing something that appears to us to be just mindless violence, but to those in the throng, the actions make perfect sense. With this notion, Stott and his colleagues are trying to rebut an influential line of thinking on crowd violence that stretches from Gustave Le Bon, whose 1895 treatise, The Crowd, launched the field of crowd psychology, up to Philip Zimbardo, the psychologist behind the infamous Stanford Prison Experiment of 1971. To explain group disorder, Zimbardo and other mid-20th-century psychologists blamed a process they called deindividuation, by which a crowd frees its members to carry out their baser impulses. Through anonymity, in Zimbardo’s view, the strictures of society were lifted from crowds, pushing them toward a state of anarchy and thereby toward senseless violence.
By contrast, Stott sees crowds as the opposite of ruleless, and crowd violence as the opposite of senseless: What seems like anarchic behavior is in fact governed by a shared self-conception and thus a shared set of grievances. Stott’s response to the riots has been unpopular with many of his countrymen. Unlike Zimbardo, who would respond—and indeed has responded over the years—to incidents of group misbehavior by speaking darkly of moral breakdown, Stott brings the focus back to the long history of societal slights, usually by police, that primed so many young people to riot in the first place.
Meeting Stott in person, one can see how he’s been able to blend in with soccer fans over the years. He’s a stocky guy, with a likably craggy face and a nose that looks suspiciously like it’s been broken a few times. When asked why the recent riots happened, his answers always come back to poor policing—particularly in Tottenham, where questions over the death of a young man went unaddressed by police for days and where the subsequent protest was met with arbitrary violence. Stott singles out one moment when police seemed to handle a young woman roughly and an image of that mistreatment was tweeted (and BBMed) throughout London’s black community and beyond. It was around then that the identity of the crowd shifted, decisively, to outright combat against the police.
Stott boils down the violent potential of a crowd to two basic factors. The first is what he and other social psychologists call legitimacy—the extent to which the crowd feels that the police and the whole social order still deserve to be obeyed. In combustible situations, the shared identity of a crowd is really about legitimacy, since individuals usually start out with different attitudes toward the police but then are steered toward greater unanimity by what they see and hear. Paul Torrens, a University of Maryland professor who builds 3-D computer models of riots and other crowd events, imbues each agent in his simulations with an initial Legitimacy score on a scale from 0 (total disrespect for police authority) to 1 (absolute deference). Then he allows the agents to influence one another. It’s a crude model, but it’s useful in seeing the importance of a crowd’s initial perception of legitimacy. A crowd where every member has a low L will be predisposed to rebel from the outset; a more varied crowd, by contrast, will take significantly longer to turn ugly, if it ever does.
It’s easy to see how technology can significantly change this starting position. When that tweet or text or BBM blast goes out declaring, as the Enfield message did, that “police can’t stop it,” the eventual crowd will be preselected for a very low L indeed. As Stott puts it, flash-mob-style gatherings are special because they “create the identity of a crowd prior to the event itself,” thereby front-loading what he calls the “complex process of norm construction,” which usually takes a substantial amount of time. He hastens to add that crowd identity can be pre-formed through other means, too, and that such gatherings also have to draw from a huge group of willing (and determined) participants. But the technology allows a group of like-minded people to gather with unprecedented speed and scale. “You’ve only got to write one message,” Stott says, “and it can reach 50, or 500, or even 5,000 people with the touch of a button.” If only a tiny fraction of this quickly multiplying audience gets the message and already has prepared itself for disorder, then disorder is what they are likely to create.
But check the whole piece, at the link.
Ron Paul Campaign Pushes Back Against Former Staffer's Report
National Journal reports that the Paul campaign is going ballistic over Eric Dondero's hit piece out today, "Ex-Aide: Ron Paul Foreign Policy is 'Sheer Lunacy': Eric Dondero says Paul is an anti-Israel 9/11 truther."
Dondero's report is at Right Wing News, "Statement from fmr. Ron Paul staffer on Newsletters, Anti-Semitism."
I saw it earlier at Althouse's, where she lasers in on the intensity of Dondero's descriptive language, "Ron Paul is not an anti-Semite, but he is 'most certainly Anti-Israel, and Anti-Israeli in general'." She also calls out Dondero for astonishingly bad writing, and commenter Deb provides this observation: "Dondero sounds a bit clueless too in his assessment of what is/is not anti-Semitic and homophobic." I agree. Because according to the report, Paul is vehemently, viciously anti-Israel --- and pro-Palestinian to boot. And combined with the statements Dondero says Paul made on Nazi Germany --- that the U.S. had no business fighting World War II --- there literally is no other conclusion to make. It's a devastating indictment. Pamela Geller picked up on that last bit big time, "RON PAUL: U.S. SHOULDN'T HAVE FOUGHT HITLER JUST TO SAVE JEWS FROM HOLOCAUST."
And in an epic example of trying to have your cake and eat it too, the New York Times has this, "Paul Disowns Extremists’ Views but Doesn’t Disavow the Support."
There's lots of links at Memeorandum as well.
I won't be surprised by a Herman Cain type meltdown for Ron Paul anytime now. And if it happens, credit bloggers for doing the heavy lifting.
5.1 Magnitude Earthquake MINDANAO, PHILIPPINES - 26th Dec 2011
4.5 Magnitude Earthquake SOUTHERN IRAN - 26th Dec 2011
Nashville Occupy Protesters Fight on Christmas Day
At Frugal Cafe Blog Zone, "Christmas Day Fight Among Occupy Protestors in Nashville, Including Pregnant Woman, Police Called in."
And at Blazing Cat Fur, "Occupests In Christmas Day Cat Fight."
Final Iowa Ad War Begins
And for your full Iowa coverage, check the Des Moines Register's "Iowa Caucuses" blog and, of course, The Other McCain, "Fear and Loathing at BWI."
4.8 Magnitude Earthquake SOUTHEAST OF THE LOYALTY ISLANDS - 26th Dec 2011
The epicenter was 136 km (84 miles) NNE Ile Hunter, Loyalty Islands, New Caledonia
No Tsunami Warning Issued - No Reports of Injuries or Damage at this time
Hundreds of residents flee Nigerian cities in fear of more violence - 26th Dec 2011
Damaturu, which was struck by two blasts on Sunday, killing three, has been at the centre of clashes between Islamists and authorities in recent days, and saw groups gathered at bus and taxi stations looking to leave.
Meanwhile in Potiskum, residents fled after arsonists set alight 30 Christian-owned shops as well as the home of a Christian leader, on Sunday night in what appeared to be the continuation of religious violence that peaked with the bombing of churches on Christmas Day.
"I can't stay here any longer," a man waiting at a bus stop in Potiskum told the Reuters news agency. "It's peaceful today, but it's no guarantee that in the next hours it will remain the same," the 31-year-old said. "People have been killed and it could be me next."
Police in Madalla, Jos and Damaturu – the three cities targeted in Sunday's bombings – ramped up their investigations on Monday.
Marilyn Ogar, a spokesman for the State Security Services would not confirm the number of arrests made in connection with the incidents, citing the sensitivity of the ongoing investigations. But she told the Daily Telegraph that police are "arresting as many people as possible" for questioning. Read More
4.7 Magnitude Earthquake NEW IRELAND REGION, PAPUA NEW GUINEA - 26th Dec 2011
The epicenter was 46 km (28 miles) Southeast of Taron, New Ireland, Papua New Guinea
No Tsunami Warning Issued - No Reports of Injuries or Damage at this time
Ship spends 10th day stuck in frozen waters off Antarctica - 26th Dec 2011
The Sparta hit underwater ice December 16, leaving a one-foot hole in the ship's hull, according to the New Zealand Rescue Coordination Center.
The ship has been stranded in an area about 2,000 miles from New Zealand, where the ice has been so thick that rescue ships have had difficulty getting close.
Since becoming stuck, 32 crew members have been working with rescuers to try to patch up the hole to keep the ship from sinking. They had been given tools dropped by a New Zealand Air Force plane, helping them pump out freezing water that was rushing into the ship.
But it has been difficult for the crew to both patch up the hole and pump out water, an official said.
"They are having difficulty in trying to fix a patch to the damaged part of the hull because they need to stop one of the pumps to do this, and then the water level creeps up again," Search and Rescue Mission Coordinator Neville Blakemore told the New Zealand Herald. Read More
Is the Arab Spring failing its people? - 26th Dec 2011
But at the one year mark, those on the ground here in the region are asking a simple question: Are we better off today than we were before the Arab Spring? People talk of a “The New Middle East” with a mixture of both optimism and despair, from Bahrain to Yemen.
Clearly the voice of the people has been heard and resonates on the streets of Cairo, for example, but unemployment is at a decade long high in Egypt, tourism is down officially by a quarter from a year ago and the Cairo Stock Exchange is the world’s worst performer of 2011.
“This country is literally and figuratively burning and we are approaching the threshold which it will become very hard to rebuild trust in the system,” says Mohamad Al-Ississ, a professor of economics at the American University of Cairo.
Al-Ississ is not optimistic the region’s most populous country can escape “financial Armageddon,” with the erosion of trust in the military. The window of time between now and presidential elections scheduled for late June is considered critical. Read More
4.8 Magnitude Earthquake KERMADEC ISLANDS REGION - 26th Dec 2011
The epicenter was 163 km (101 miles) East of Raoul Island, Kermadec Islands
No Tsunami Warning Issued - No Reports of Injuries or Damage at this time
4.8 Magnitude Earthquake CARLSBERG RIDGE - 26th Dec 2011
Jameela Barnette sent monkey stuffed with Fake 'virus' to senator is shot dead by police - 26th Dec 2011
In April, Jameela Barnette, 53, mailed a vial of perfume, a hateful letter and a stuffed monkey with a star of David on it to New York state Sen Greg Ball, because she believed he was biased against her Islamic faith.
She also sent a bloody pig's foot and an anti-Semitic letter to Rep Peter King because he was hosting Congressional hearings about 'radicalization' in the American Muslim community.
On Saturday, police were called to Barnette's apartment by a panic alarm. When an officer arrived, police say, Barnette attacked him with a knife and a handgun.
The officer defended himself and shot Barnette, killing her. Read More
Obama condemned for rewriting online gambling rules - and announcing it at Christmas so no one notices - Bet he got a huge Xmas Bonus though
A Justice Department opinion dated September - but only made public on Friday - reinterprets a decades-old policy which saw civil and criminal charges against operators of some of the most popular online poker sites.
It is a switch that could spur web-based gambling - and which critics fear will only deepen families' spiraling debts.'I think the notion that the government - during these economic times - is working even harder to increase personal debt goes against the very purpose of what government is supposed to do,' Les Bernal, executive director of Stop Predatory Gambling, told MailOnline.
'Every home, dorm room and office in the country has a internet connection. Why is the government actively pushing for them to be able to gamble?' Read More
Man Stabbed To Death In Oxford Street - 26th Dec 2011
Most of Oxford Street has been closed in the wake of the attack, which took place at around 13.45 at the junction with Stratford Place, opposite Bond Street underground station.
The victim was pronounced dead at the scene.
The Metropolitan Police said a number of arrests had been made, but that enquiries were continuing.
Sky correspondent Ashish Joshi, who is on Oxford Street, said there were "dozens and dozens" of police officers stopping any pedestrians going near the crime scene.
"We think the stabbing happened outside the Foot Locker shop, but that cannot be confirmed," he said.
"At the moment it is pandemonium on the streets leading up to the West End and it is effectively gridlocked. Read More