Read more at www.enfieldindependent.co.ukA POLICE car has been attacked in Enfield Town amid clashes between rioters and police.
The vehicle in Church Street was pelted with bricks, while police have confirmed that two shops were targeted by gangs of people with hoods and scarves covering their face.
Rumours that riots in Tottenham last night were due to spread to Enfield were spread across social networking sites earlier this afternoon, but riot police were lined up outside Enfield Town station carrying out stop-and-searches on those arriving.
Trouble flared at around 6.30pm, before police pushed back the group past the Tesco store in Southbury Road.
The circles and hangouts are allowing a paradigm shift in social.
It really is happening on G+.
Read more at allthingsd.comWhile following the activity of tech industry folks and celebrities on Google+ might lead you to believe that Google’s new social network is a sort of long-form Twitter, where users pontificate for a public audience, Google says that’s not the case.
(Seriously, watching the volume and speed of comments on new posts by Myspace founder and Google+’s leading armchair critic Tom Anderson is simply insane.)
In fact, Google+ users are two to three times more likely to share privately with one of their Circles than post publicly, Google revealed for a profile in the San Jose Mercury News. (The Merc article talks about “general” posts, but Google+ commander Vic Gundotra clarified that this means “public” posts.)
That’s an important metric, and one that validates Google+’s aim to be a more private social network.
Google announced last week that Plus is already facilitating one billion items shared and received per day. That measurement does not include public shares, and it’s counted a bit oddly, as I wrote at the time:
Essentially, each counted “share” is the number of people who potentially see any one item.
If a user shares a picture with a Google Circle of 40 people, that counts as 40 shares — even if all 40 people don’t actually look at the photo. If a user shares something publicly, it’s not counted.
Google said this is consistent with the way it counts sharing in Gmail and other products. However, it’s a bit of a tricky metric; at first glance it would be easy to think that Google means one billion items are posted to Google+ on a daily basis already — which it doesn’t.
https://plus.google.com/_/notifications/ngemlink?path=%2F%3Fgpinv%3DmCw3Uw0goyw%3AGqLyMk4aPRw http://amplify.com/u/a1ack1
There are more pictures here that would not clip:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/crime/8686957/Tottenham-riot-eight-police-in-hospital-as-night-of-violence-follows-fatal-shooting.html
Read more at www.thedailybeast.comRiots rocked the north London area of Tottenham Saturday night as crowds pelted police officers with bricks and burned police cars, a double-decker bus, and buildings. Police arrested 42 people and 26 officers were injured. Some 50 fires were set. “There is no justification for the aggression the police and the public faced,” Downing Street said Sunday morning. The demonstration started peacefully when about 30 friends and relatives gathered outside the Tottenham police station to protest the death of Mark Duggan, 29, who was shot dead by officers Thursday during a traffic stop. The rally quickly swelled to include around 300 people. Commissioner Rachel Cerfontyne of the Independent Police Complaints Commission said there will be an investigation into Duggan’s death.
Read more at www.thedailybeast.comFive New Orleans police officers have been convicted in the shooting deaths of two civilians in the immediate aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. The shootings occurred on September 4, 2005, one week after the storm. A group of police officers went to the Danziger Bridge after hearing a distress call from a fellow officer who said men were shooting at police. Once the officers arrived at the bridge, they began shooting, killing one person, James Brissette, and injuring four others. Police also chased down two passersby who were running from the shots, eventually killing one of them. Investigators later found that none of the victims were armed. A lawyer for one of the defendants said, “It is a time of disorder, chaos and lawlessness. That doesn’t mean the rules change, but the perception changes.” Four officers were convicted of civil rights violations, and one was convicted in the cover-up.
Heat Advisories in 14 States
Global Warming is a left winged conspiracy.
Read more at www.thedailybeast.comStates in the South are baking in a heat wave that the head of the National Weather Service says is longer than any he can remember. Fifteen states have heat advisories in effect, and Dallas had its 34th consecutive day of temperatures over 100 degrees. Texas is also suffering from the most severe one-year drought on record, and last month was the state’s hottest on record. In Kansas City, Mo., a man died and 12 others were hospitalized while running an endurance race known as the “Warrior Dash.” “He ran straight on into glory,” said the deceased man’s mother.
I’ve tried consciously eating before and had great results, but I fell off the wagon and have gained weight recently.
Thought this was a great article to inspire slower more conscious eating.
About a century ago, a new craze gripped the country’s health conscious: mastication. Chewing each bite of food precisely 32 times would help people control how much food they consumed—turning them from gluttons to epicureans—according to the early 20th-century dietician Horace Fletcher.
Among his many ardent adherents the tactic became known as “Fletcherizing.” And Fletcher, in turn, has gone down in dietary history as “The Great Masticator,” with the purported catch phrase: “nature shall castigate those who don’t masticate.”
The theory, almost quaint in its specificity, soon fell out of popularity to be replaced by more familiar mid-20th-century forms of calorie-limiting diets.
But a recent study out of China provides a new look at the role that chewing might have in helping our bodies regulate the amount of food we take in—without having to consult calorie labels.
Jie Li of the School of Public Health at Harbin Medical University and colleagues found that both healthy-weight and obese men consumed fewer calories (about 12 percent less) at an unlimited half-hour meal when they chewed their food more.
Wolfing down a whole meal is often considered poor form, and previous research has linked slower eating habits with a healthier weight. The common wisdom is that eating more slowly gives the body more time to “feel full.”
But as logical as it is that slower eating—coupled with or aided by more chewing—might be linked to consuming less, the specifics have yet to be fully worked out. One theory is that breaking food down in the mouth via more chewing allows the body easier access to nutrients, which would allow less consumption for the same nutritional benefit. But how does the body know when it should stop stuffing its face?
“Mastication apparently plays a role in the gut hormone profile, which consequently influences energy intake,” the scientists wrote in their paper, published in July in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. Hunger is largely controlled by hormonal signals, including that from ghrelin, which spurs the feeling of hunger. The team found that when study participants chewed more, their ghrelin levels were consistently lower post-mealtime. It might be that the longer the body senses food in the mouth, the more ghrelin is released.
The study centered on a series of experimental breakfasts. Young men recruited for the study—16 of whom had body mass indexes (BMIs) of 18.5 to 23, which is considered lean for Asian men, and 14 of whom had BMIs of 27.5 or greater, which qualified them as obese for their demographic, sat down each morning to 300 grams of pork pie (a standard Chinese breakfast dish), with an option for additional servings. Researchers videotaped each subject eating and subsequently counted how many times they chomped down on each bite. The range across subjects was roughly 15 to 40 chews. During subsequent breakfasts, each subject was told to chew their bites either15 or 40 times.
Left to their own devices, all of the men had roughly the same preferred bite size (about 10 grams), but obese men ate each gram of food more quickly and with fewer chews than those who were leaner.
But after breakfasts during which they had to chew each bite 40 times, subjects consumed 11.5 percent fewer calories overall—and had lower concentrations of the hunger-piquing ghrelin hormone in their bloodstream afterward—than after morning meals during which they chewed each bite only 15 times.
So will more mastication help people slim down or keep the pounds from piling on in the first place? The researchers suggest “interventions for improved chewing activity” as a possible means for helping to stem obesity. The new study was too preliminary to tell whether The Great Masticator’s historical message could help rein in expanding waistlines for the long term. But the new findings at least give us something to chew on.
See more at blogs.scientificamerican.com
Monsanto accidentally sued Pennsylvania farmers over allegedly saving genetically-modified seeds.
Death to Monsanto
On July 12, a lawsuit was filed in the Pennsylvania Western District Court naming Monsanto and Hubner Seed Company as plaintiffs. The lawsuit accused defendants Harold Wiser, Harold V. Wiser, and Steve Wiser of saving seeds from Monsanto’s genetically modified wheat in 2009 and 2010 and planting it this year. The lawsuit sought triple any damages the Wisers might have cost Monsanto and also included a claim for more than $160,000 in unpaid invoices to Huber Seed.
Monsanto files about a dozen lawsuits each year against farmers, accusing them of planting genetically-modified seeds without paying fees to the company. Most of these are settled out of court with secrecy agreements.
On July 14, a Monsanto spokesperson issued a statement:
The filing was submitted by a third-party vendor and mistakenly included a claim for patent infringement and named Monsanto as the plaintiff. The filing will be amended today.
Read more at eatdrinkbetter.comThe Wisers have the largest wheat growing operations in Pennsylvania, according to Steve Wiser’s lawyer Al Lindsay.
Former President George W. Bush says his apparent lack of reaction to the first news of the September 11 2001 attacks was a conscious decision to project an aura of calm in a crisis.
Worst president ever.
Read more at www.thedailybeast.comHe might have overshot the mark. In an interview with National Geographic Television, former president George W. Bush explains his much-criticized blank reaction to the news of the September 11 terrorist attacks as his attempt at projecting calm. Describing getting the news while visiting a Florida classroom, he says: “My first reaction was anger. Who the hell would do that to America? Then I immediately focused on the children, and the contrast between the attack and the innocence of children.” Then he realized a lot of people would be watching his reaction. “So I made the decision not to jump up immediately and leave the classroom. I didn’t want to rattle the kids. I wanted to project a sense of calm.”
Click through to check out the day by day totals for what the US will have to pay (or not pay as the case may be).
