Sensual Poem
October 26, 2009

Peaceful retreat inside my humble heart,
Inside my vivid dreams,
Weeping for the world,
Peaceful retreat inside my humbled soul,
A river of tears bled through eyes so ashamed of you all,
Peaceful retreat inside my crazy head,
Where sublime in subliminal,
Lovers re-wed…
Peaceful retreat where my still self mediates,
Betwixt the worlds nine,
My souls in sync this time…
Peaceful retreat where can I get that?
Surrounded by the same you…
Oh! the suffering of it all…
Oh! the indignity of it all…
Peaceful retreat
I have found it at last,
I am here in meditation,
Where visions
…visualised,
You are all my spiritual outcasts !
Peaceful retreat
In the fall,
Before winters hibernation…
Love to go warm inside itself…
Giving to itself,
Giving to me!
Ah!
Peaceful retreat away from everything I know,
As I invite change,
Yet again,
Adapting to my desires of the soul,
For peace!
Defence Industry Daily
October 26, 2009
F-35 Joint Strike Fighter: 2009-2010
25-Oct-2009 19:38 EDT
Related Stories: Alliances, Americas – USA, BAE, Britain/U.K., Contracts – Awards, Contracts – Modifications, Design Innovations, ECM, Electronics – General, Engines – Aircraft, Europe – Other, FOCUS Articles, Fighters & Attack, Finmeccanica, GE, Issues – International, Issues – Political, Lobbying, Lockheed Martin, Middle East – Israel, Northrop-Grumman, Official Reports, Other Corporation, Partnerships & Consortia, Policy – Procurement, R&D – Contracted, Radars, Rumours, Security & Secrecy, Sensors & Guidance, Testing & Evaluation, Transformation

The F-35 Lightning II is a major multinational program which is intended to produce an “affordably stealthy” multi-role strike fighter that will have three variants: the F-35A conventional version for the US Air Force et. al.; the F-35B Short Take-Off, Vertical Landing for the US Marines, British Royal Navy, et. al.; and the F-35C conventional carrier-launched version for the US Navy. The aircraft is named after Lockheed’s famous WW2 P-38 Lightning, and the Mach 2, stacked-engine English Electric (now BAE) Lightning jet. System development partners included The USA & Britain (Tier 1), Italy and the Netherlands (Tier 2), and Australia, Canada, Denmark, Norway and Turkey (Tier 3), with Singapore and Israel as “Security Cooperation Partners.” Now the challenge is agreeing on production phase membership and arrangements, to be followed by initial purchase commitments around 2008-2009.
This updated article has expanded to feature more detail regarding the $300 billion F-35 program, including other contracts as well as notable events. New material is highlighted by putting it in green type. Recent news include American calls to restructure the program in the wake of the Pentagon’s new cost estimate, a possible 2/3 cut in Britain’s order, reports that Japan has had to pay to look at the F-35’s specifications, and a Danish decision to cut the number of fighters its competition will buy…
- The F-35 Family of Aircraft (i.e. “Continue reading…”)
- F-35 Program: Production Timelines & Structure
- F-35 Program: Controversies and Competitions
- F-35 Program: Events & Developments, CY 2009-2010 [updated]
- F-35 Program: System Development & Production Contracts, FY 2009-2010 [updated]
- F-35 Program: Ancillary and Sub-contracts, FY 2009 – 2010 [updated]
- Additional Readings & Sources
Continue Reading… »
Up to $853.3M to Lockheed Martin for Trident Ballistic Missile Support
25-Oct-2009 18:01 EDT
Related Stories: Americas – USA, Contracts – Awards, Lockheed Martin, Missiles – Ballistic, Submarines
Lockheed Martin Space Systems in Sunnyvale, CA received a not-to-exceed $853.3 million cost-plus-incentive-fee/ cost-plus-fixed-fee contract to provide support for production of Trident II D-5 ballistic missiles as well as maintenance of deployed D-5 and C-4 missiles.
The Trident C-4 has been in service since 1979, but the Trident II D-5 is more recent. First deployed in 1990, the D-5 is scheduled for operational deployment until 2042.
At the same time as it moves ahead with D-5 production, the US Navy is replacing D-5 missiles on 4 Ohio-class SSBNs with Tomahawk cruise missiles. “SSGN ‘Tactical Trident’ Subs: Special Forces and Super Strike” has more on that story.
The Navy recently tested 2 D-5 ballistic missiles from the USS West Virginia [SSBN 736] submarine in the Atlantic Ocean…
Continue Reading… »
Up to $202M for US Navy Sheet Metal Repair and Fabrication Work
25-Oct-2009 16:17 EDT
Related Stories: Americas – USA, Bases & Infrastructure, Contracts – Awards, Delivery & Task Orders, Small Business, Submarines, Support & Maintenance, Surface Ships – Combat, Surface Ships – Other

The Southwest Regional Maintenance Center in San Diego, CA awarded 6 firm-fixed-price multiple award 5-year term contracts to provide sheet metal repair and fabrication services – such as repairs to partitions, ductwork, and piping – onboard US Navy ships and other government vessels within a 50-mile radius of San Diego. The maximum ceiling value for all 6 contracts is $202 million.
The 6 small business qualifiers will compete for delivery orders under the terms and conditions of the contracts. Each contractor will provide all personnel, management, administrative and production services, material, tools, equipment, and required support to perform the work.
Continue Reading… »
Modern Homo sapiens is still evolving
October 26, 2009
Modern Homo sapiens is still evolving. Despite the long-held view that natural selection has ceased to affect humans because almost everybody now lives long enough to have children, a new study of a contemporary Massachusetts population offers evidence of evolution still in action.
A team of scientists led by Yale University evolutionary biologist Stephen Stearns suggests that if the natural selection of fitter traits is no longer driven by survival, perhaps it owes to differences in women’s fertility. “Variations in reproductive success still exist among humans, and therefore some traits related to fertility continue to be shaped by natural selection,” Stearns says. That is, women who have more children are more likely to pass on certain traits to their progeny. (See the top 10 scientific discoveries of 2008.)
Stearns’ team examined the vital statistics of 2,238 postmenopausal women participating in the Framingham Heart Study, which has tracked the medical histories of some 14,000 residents of Framingham, Mass., since 1948. Investigators searched for correlations between women’s physical characteristics – including height, weight, blood pressure and cholesterol levels – and the number of offspring they produced. According to their findings, it was stout, slightly plump (but not obese) women who tended to have more children – “Women with very low body fat don’t ovulate,” Stearns explains – as did women with lower blood pressure and cholesterol levels. Using a sophisticated statistical analysis that controlled for any social or cultural factors that could impact childbearing, researchers determined that these characteristics were passed on genetically from mothers to daughters and granddaughters.
If these trends were to continue with no cultural changes in the town for the next 10 generations, by 2409 the average Framingham woman would be 2 cm (0.8 in) shorter, 1 kg (2.2 lb.) heavier, have a healthier heart, have her first child five months earlier and enter menopause 10 months later than a woman today, the study found. “That rate of evolution is slow but pretty similar to what we see in other plants and animals. Humans don’t seem to be any exception,” Stearns says. (See TIME’s photo-essay “Happy 200th Darwin Day.”)
Douglas Ewbank, a demographer at the University of Pennsylvania who undertook the statistical analysis for the study, which was published Oct. 21 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), says that because cultural factors tend to have a much more prominent impact than natural selection in the shaping of future generations, people tend to write off the effect of evolution. “Those changes we predict for 2409 could be wiped out by something as simple as a new school-lunch program. But whatever happens, it’s likely that in 2409, Framingham women will be 2 cm shorter and 1 kg heavier than they would have been without natural selection. Evolution is a very slow process. We don’t see it if we look at our grandparents, but it’s there.”
Other recent genetic research has backed up that notion. One study, published in PNAS in 2007 and led by John Hawks, an anthropologist at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, found that some 1,800 human gene variations had become widespread in recent generations because of their modern-day evolutionary benefits. Among those genetic changes, discovered by examining more than 3 million DNA variants in 269 individuals: mutations that allow people to digest milk or resist malaria and others that govern brain development. (Watch TIME’s video “Darwin and Lincoln: Birthdays and Evolution.”)
But not all evolutionary changes make inherent sense. Since the Industrial Revolution, modern humans have grown taller and stronger, so it’s easy to assume that evolution is making humans fitter. But according to anthropologist Peter McAllister, author of Manthropology: the Science of Inadequate Modern Man, the contemporary male has evolved, at least physically, into “the sorriest cohort of masculine Homo sapiens to ever walk the planet.” Thanks to genetic differences, an average Neanderthal woman, McAllister notes, could have whupped Arnold Schwarzenegger at his muscular peak in an arm-wrestling match. And prehistoric Australian Aborigines, who typically built up great strength in their joints and muscles through childhood and adolescence, could have easily beat Usain Bolt in a 100-m dash.
Steve Jones, an evolutionary biologist at University College London who has previously held that human evolution was nearing its end, says the Framingham study is indeed an important example of how natural selection still operates through inherited differences in reproductive ability. But Jones argues that variation in female fertility – as measured in the Framingham study – is a much less important factor in human evolution than differences in male fertility. Sperm hold a much higher chance of carrying an error or mutation than an egg, especially among older men. “While it used to be that men had many children in older age to many different women, now men tend to have only a few children at a younger age with one wife. The drop in the number of older fathers has had a major effect on the rate of mutation and has at least reduced the amount of new diversity – the raw material of evolution. Darwin’s machine has not stopped, but it surely has slowed greatly,” Jones says. (See TIME’s special report on the environment.)
Despite evidence that human evolution still functions, biologists concede that it’s anyone’s guess where it will take us from here. Artificial selection in the form of genetic medicine could push natural selection into obsolescence, but a lethal pandemic or other cataclysm could suddenly make natural selection central to the future of the species. Whatever happens, Jones says, it is worth remembering that Darwin’s beautiful theory has suffered a long history of abuse. The bastard science of eugenics, he says, will haunt humanity as long as people are tempted to confuse evolution with improvement. “Uniquely in the living world, what makes humans what we are is in our minds, in our society, and not in our evolution,” he says.
yahoo news
Are the rich morally obliged to share their wealth?
October 26, 2009
This is the story on bbcnews.com. ‘A group of rich Germans has launched a petition calling for the government to make wealthy people pay higher taxes. The group say they have more money than they need, and the extra revenue could fund economic and social programmes to aid Germany’s economic recovery.’ Would you like a tax hike for the rich in your country?
Do you agree with their sentiments? If you’re one of your country’s higher earners, do you want your government to take more money from you? And if you’re in a lower wage bracket, should the rich in your country be giving more to help you to get through the economic downturn?
Responses:
1.Wow. The rich already pay the vast majority of taxes. In the US, the top 1% of income earners pay well over 60% of all the income taxes. They should pay even more? A lot of people pay absolutely no income tax, and still receive benefits.
If it becomes an obligation for wealthy (relative term, I’m by no means wealthy, yet I pay well over 25% on my income in federal income taxes alone, not including state, social security, medicare, etc), should the wealthy get something in return, like perhaps 2 votes? Why should the wealthy have to support everyone else’s lifestyles, yet only get the same one vote? That means that the wealthy have even less rights, if they have to pay for everyone else, yet get only the same benefits, are they not discriminated against?
It’s like saying there are 2 people, X and Y. Y doesn’t make much money, cannot really support himself, and X makes good money, can support himself, so X is taxed to provide aid to Y, so Y gets his food and housing paid for, whereas X has to pay for that himself. Both only get one vote, both have all other the same “rights” and “privileges” but X has to pay a lot more in taxes, and doesn’t get the benefits that Y does. Why should X be compensated in some other way if society is going to rely on him to support everyone else?
2.Steve, not true. the majority of taxes come from people who make less than $1M. The rates are much lower for people who earn dividends and capital gains, than for wage earners. Only 40% of taxpayers pay anything in the US, and they pay the bulk of the taxes. People at the bottom all pay their 12.5% FICA off the top for their own social security no matter what they earn. And the majority of our Fed Budget is just that, social security.
Exxon Mobile and all the other oil companies pays so little in Fed tax, yet the US military provides security services for them for free, all over the world in the “troublespots” they themselves make!
These figures are out there. Warren Buffet himself says he pays less % wise than his secretary. We need the facts here not myths! The Myths only serve 1% of the population, meanwhile the states are failing, universities are closing down, and more and more people are living desperate lives. Not necessary!
Conclusion:
Don’t confuse social security with taxes. It’s a whole seperate thing.
bbc.radio service
innocent optimism
October 16, 2009
| Written by Shawn Roske |
| Thursday, 17 September 2009 |
| innocent optimism
Initial grace upon the road to love, Beloved before me, Such be the simple of my being,
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NASA Spacecraft Provides First View of Our Place in the Galaxy
October 16, 2009

WASHINGTON — NASA’s Interstellar Boundary Explorer, or IBEX, spacecraft has made it possible for scientists to construct the first comprehensive sky map of our solar system and its location in the Milky Way galaxy. The new view will change the way researchers view and study the interaction between our galaxy and sun.
The sky map was produced with data that two detectors on the spacecraft collected during six months of observations. The detectors measured and counted particles scientists refer to as energetic neutral atoms.
The energetic neutral atoms are created in an area of our solar system known as the interstellar boundary region. This region is where charged particles from the sun, called the solar wind, flow outward far beyond the orbits of the planets and collide with material between stars. The energetic neutral atoms travel inward toward the sun from interstellar space at velocities ranging from 100,000 mph to more than 2.4 million mph. This interstellar boundary emits no light that can be collected by conventional telescopes.
The new map reveals the region that separates the nearest reaches of our galaxy, called the local interstellar medium, from our heliosphere — a protective bubble that shields and protects our solar system from most of the dangerous cosmic radiation traveling through space.
“For the first time, we’re sticking our heads out of the sun’s atmosphere and beginning to really understand our place in the galaxy,” said David J. McComas, IBEX principal investigator and assistant vice president of the Space Science and Engineering Division at Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio. “The IBEX results are truly remarkable, with a narrow ribbon of bright details or emissions not resembling any of the current theoretical models of this region.”
NASA released the sky map image Oct. 15 in conjunction with publication of the findings in the journal Science. The IBEX data were complemented and extended by information collected using an imaging instrument sensor on NASA’s Cassini spacecraft. Cassini has been observing Saturn, its moons and rings since the spacecraft entered the planet’s orbit in 2004.
The IBEX sky maps also put observations from NASA’s Voyager spacecraft into context. The twin Voyager spacecraft, launched in 1977, traveled to the outer solar system to explore Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. In 2007, Voyager 2 followed Voyager 1 into the interstellar boundary. Both spacecraft are now in the midst of this region where the energetic neutral atoms originate. However, the IBEX results show a ribbon of bright emissions undetected by the two Voyagers.
“The Voyagers are providing ground truth, but they’re missing the most exciting region,” said Eric Christian, the IBEX deputy mission scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. “It’s like having two weather stations that miss the big storm that runs between them.”
The IBEX spacecraft was launched in October 2008. Its science objective was to discover the nature of the interactions between the solar wind and the interstellar medium at the edge of our solar system. The Southwest Research Institute developed and leads the mission with a team of national and international partners. The spacecraft is the latest in NASA’s series of low-cost, rapidly developed Small Explorers Program. NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center manages the program for the agency’s Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington.
The Cassini-Huygens mission is a cooperative project of NASA and the European and Italian Space Agencies. NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., provides overall management for Cassini and the Voyagers for the Science Mission Directorate.
To view the sky map and for more information about IBEX, visit:
For more information about other NASA science missions on the Web, visit:
Tender for Second Fixed Line Operator in Serbia
October 16, 2009
Belgrade | 16 October 2009 | Bojana Barlovac
Daily Blic reports that Deutche Telecom, which has a trackrecord of buying into Balkan operators, will not take part in the tender since the company is interested in purchasing Serbia’s only current fixed-line operator Telekom Srbija.
Telenor and SBB have expressed an interested in the second fixed-line operator and have been negotiating with Serbian government representatives thereon for some time, Blic has learned.
Telecommunications and Information Society Minister Jasna Matic said earlier that several companies will participate in the tender for the second fixed-line licence. She added that the competition would lead to the “expeditious improvement” of the market.
The minister refused to comment on the state’s negotiations with potential operators, but expressed her belief that Telenor will take part in the tender.
She added that the nature of the license would be defined in the tendering process.
It remains unknown how much money the deal will garner.
Macedonia Mulls Kosovo Border Agreement
October 16, 2009
Skopje | 16 October 2009 | Sinisa-Jakov Marusic
On Friday afternoon, the Macedonian government requested an urgent session of parliament to discuss the ratification of a border agreement with neighbouring Kosovo.
Democracy ‘not needed’ in Russia
October 16, 2009
More than 40% of respondents said Russia needed “an iron fist” leader
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A growing number of Russians believe their country does not need democracy, a nationwide survey by one of Russia’s leading polling agencies suggests.
The poll by the Levada-Centre showed that 57% of those questioned considered that Russia needed democracy – the lowest number since 2006.
It said 26% believed that democratic governing was not suitable for Russia.
Nearly 95% of respondents said they had little or no influence on what was happening in the country.
‘Rigged’ election
Levada-Centre said 1,600 people across Russia had been questioned in the poll which was released on Friday.
Russian police dispersed a protest rally in Moscow, arresting some activists
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Although the majority of them believe the country needs to be democratic, the results of the survey are an intriguing mix, the BBC’s Richard Galpin in Moscow says.
The majority (60%) also said it would be better for Russia if the president controlled both the courts and the parliament, which can hardly be described as a democratic aspiration, our correspondent says.
The poll also suggested that 43% agreed with the question that the country sometimes needed an “iron fist” leader.
And nearly 25% said the Soviet Union had a better political system that the current Russian model (36%) or that in Western countries (15%).
The poll came as Russian police arrested 10 people in Moscow who were protesting against an alleged fraud in last weekend’s regional and local elections.
Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s United Russia party tightened its already overwhelming grip on power after the polls, our correspondent says.
But three parties walked out of parliament earlier this week, protesting against the outcome of the elections. Two later returned, but the Communists are continuing their boycott.
bbc.co.uk
Oil rush
October 16, 2009
Left behind by Iraq’s oil rush
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By Andrew North
BBC News, al-Ahdab oil field, southern Iraq |
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Critics of the US invasion six years ago often said its ultimate aim was to control Iraq’s vast deposits of oil.
So it is ironic, perhaps, that the first foreign oil company to sign a production agreement with the Iraqi government since 2003 should be from America’s growing rival, China.
A year since it signed a 23-year, $3bn (£1.84bn) deal to exploit the small al-Ahdab field, in Wasit province, south of Baghdad, China’s National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) has already struck oil.
But in the next door village of al-Mazzagh, there is rising discontent among residents who say their interests are being forgotten.
The deal with the Chinese is the first test of Iraq’s readiness to host foreign oil concerns – with BP, Shell and many other Western giants also jostling for access to what its oil minister Dr Hussein Sharistani calls “the last frontier” for big oil discoveries.
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Site manager
China National Petroleum Corporation |
With its budget almost entirely dependent on oil revenues, the government is desperate to boost output – which still barely matches pre-invasion levels – so it has turned to foreign companies for help.
For these companies, there’s been no opportunity like this in decades.
Iraq boasts the world’s third largest reserves of oil, with many potential fields not even tapped.
With many oil enterprises used to working in difficult places, few will be deterred by the still fragile security situation.
The regional government in Iraqi Kurdistan has signed a few deals of its own with foreign oil companies. But the central government in Baghdad is so far refusing to recognise them and is threatening to bar the companies involved from bidding on other contracts.
Complaints
But the biggest challenge may come from Iraqis living in the oil-producing areas – as the Chinese are finding.
Their drilling operation at the Ahdab field is right next to al-Mazzagh village.
And, complains one resident, Abu Abed, right on top of his land.
Iraq’s oil sources have attracted international interest
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From his front door, he looks straight onto the blast walls and concrete gun towers protecting one of the Chinese drilling platforms.
“When I protested, they said they would pay compensation,” he says, “but I have received nothing.”
There were hopes too, when the Chinese company first arrived, of an employment bonanza.
“We thought everyone will find a job,” said Zahi, a village elder.
So far, they have taken on just a handful of al-Mazzagh’s residents as guards.
But the CNPC says there is little more they can do for local people.
“We are sorry, but they don’t have skills and they can’t speak English,” says a site manager who agreed to come out to talk to the BBC.
He said he wasn’t allowed to bring reporters or anyone else inside.
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Zahi
Village elder |
Although some people said the Chinese were still welcome, the mood has hardened.
There have been several reported acts of sabotage, including power lines to the drilling compounds being severed.
The Iraqi government has increased security at the site. American helicopters from a nearby base occasionally keep watch.
And with the project due to expand once full production gets underway, Zahi warned of trouble if al-Mazzagh does not start to see more tangible benefits.
“People who don’t find jobs could become thieves and looters.”
Despite the billions it is preparing to commit, this is just a small project for the Chinese company – a pump-primer to build relations with the Iraqi government.
It is actually based on an old deal first signed with the government of Saddam Hussein in the late 1990s, but which never went any further.
Most of the projected 100,000 barrels a day output will go to a local power station, rather than for export, and CNPC is unlikely to make much profit.
Community development
This strategy appears to be working, as it is finalising terms for a joint contract with British oil giant BP to work on one of Iraq’s so-called super giant fields at Rumailah, near Basra.
Dr Sharistani says local people in places like al-Mazzagh will have to be more patient, but insists their interests will not be forgotten.
“We are instructing the oil companies,” he says, “to help build roads, bridges and other infrastructure, as part of the deals the government is signing.
“So people feel these companies are there to develop their region and not just to produce the oil and take it away.”
A new oil rush could be underway in Iraq.
But getting the oil out is likely to be the easy part for the Chinese and other foreign companies scrambling to come here.
There is just one tarmac-sealed road to the single-storey, mud-walled houses of a-Mazzagh.
Few people have any kind of steady job. There is hardly ever any electricity and no running water in their homes.
“Life is just the same as in Saddam’s time,” says one man.





