Friday, November 30, 2012

We doin' irie, mon: Rastafarian faith gaining more adherents in Jamaica

BULL BAY, Jamaica - The robed Rastafarian priest looked out over the turquoise sea off Jamaica's southeast coast and fervently described his belief that deliverance is at hand.

Around him at the sprawling Bobo Ashanti commune on an isolated hilltop, a few women and about 200 dreadlocked men with flowing robes and tightly wrapped turbans prayed, fasted, and fashioned handmade brooms ? smoking marijuana only as a ceremonial ritual.

"Rasta church is rising," declared Priest Morant, who wore a vestment stitched with the words "The Black Christ." ''There's nothing that can turn it back."

The Rastafarian faith is indeed rising in Jamaica, where new census figures show a roughly 20 per cent increase in the number of adherents over a decade, to more than 29,000. While still a tiny sliver of the mostly Christian country's 2.7 million people, Jalani Niaah, an expert in the Rastafari movement, says the number is more like 8 to 10 per cent of the population, since many Rastas disdain nearly all government initiatives and not all would have spoken to census takers.

"Its contemporary appeal is particularly fascinating to young men, especially in the absence of alternative sources for their development," said Niaah, a lecturer at the University of the West Indies.

Founded 80 years ago by descendants of African slaves, the Rasta movement's growing appeal is attributable to its rejection of Western materialism, the scarcity of opportunities for young men in Jamaica and an increasing acceptance of it.

For the black nationalist Bobo Ashanti commune, the Rastafarian faith is a transforming way of life, where Rastas strive to live a frugal existence uncomplicated by binding relationships to "Babylon" ? the unflattering term for the Western world. They share a deep alienation from modern life and Jamaica is perceived as a temporary harbour until prophecy is fulfilled and they journey to the promised land of Africa on big ships.

Life is highly regimented at the isolated retreat, cut off from most of the comforts of modern society. But it has a strong appeal for some, among them 27-year-old Adrian Dunkley, who joined the strict sect two months ago after years of questioning his Christian upbringing and struggling to find work as an upholsterer.

"This place is helping me a whole heap. I'm learning every day, and things are starting to make sense," the new recruit known as Prince Adrian said in the shade of one of dozens of scrap-board buildings painted in the bright Rastafarian colours of red, green and gold.

Other Rastafari adherents follow a more secular lifestyle, marked by a passion for social justice, the natural world, reggae music and the ritualistic use of pot to bring them closer to the divine.

A melding of Old Testament teachings and Pan-Africanism, Rastafarianism emerged in colonial-era Jamaica in the 1930s out of anger over the oppression of blacks. Its message was spread by the reggae songs created by musical icons Bob Marley, Peter Tosh, Burning Spear and others in the 1970s, and the movement has attracted a following among reggae-loving Americans, Europeans and Asians. Academics believe at least 1 million people practice it worldwide.

In the United States, the population of Rastafarians appears to be steadily growing due in part to jailhouse conversions, said Charles Price, associate professor of anthropology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the author of "Becoming Rasta: Origins of Rastafari Identity in Jamaica."

"I regularly get letters from inmates seeking information," Price said. "I also get regular invitations to talk to prisoners at local North Carolina juvenile facilities, often from chaplains trying to figure out what to do."

Besides the well-known ritual use of marijuana, Rastas endeavour to reject materialist values and practice a strict oneness with nature, eating only unprocessed foods and leaving their hair to grow, uncombed, into dreadlocks.

Most of its many sects worship the late Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie, even though he was widely considered a despot in his native land and paid little heed to his adulation by faraway Caribbean people whose ancestry tended to be West African and not Ethiopian.

The worship of Selassie is rooted in Jamaican black nationalist leader Marcus Garvey's 1920s prediction that a "black king shall be crowned" in Africa, ushering in a "day of deliverance." When an Ethiopian prince named Ras Tafari, who took the name Haile Selassie I, became emperor in 1930, the descendants of slaves in Jamaica took it as proof that Garvey's prophecy was being fulfilled. When Selassie came to Jamaica in 1966, he was mobbed by cheering crowds, and many Rastafarians insisted miracles and other mystical happenings occurred during his visit.

Adherents were long treated as second-class citizens in Jamaica and other Caribbean islands, looked down on for their dreadlocks and use of marijuana. But discrimination never stopped businessmen from cashing in on the faith, whose red, green and gold clothing and accessories earn millions in sales of T-shirts, crocheted caps and other items. Marley's music and the faith's pot-laced mysticism has also been used to promote Jamaica as a tourist destination

Rastafarian and veteran reggae luminary Tony Rebel said discrimination against Rastas has faded considerably in recent years in Jamaica.

"That discriminatory vibe has relaxed. But even so, we still we don't see a person with locks working in a bank these days, we don't see a person with locks in the police force as we would see in America or other places," Rebel said.

The first dreadlocked politician in Jamaica's Parliament was elected only last year.

Many Rastas advocate reparations for slavery and a return to Africa. The latter is a particularly fervent desire among those at Bobo Ashanti, who differ from other Rasta sects in the belief that their founder, King Emmanuel Charles Edwards, was the black incarnation of Jesus Christ.

Some Jamaicans dismiss the faith as bizarre.

"There is a whole part of the society that would still consider Rastafari to be delusional, and this is largely hinged on the claims made about Emperor Haile Selassie and also the consumption of (marijuana) and the idea of repatriation," Niaah said.

But for adherents like Prince Xavier, a 27-year-old Frenchman who moved to the Bobo Ashanti commune a couple of years after being introduced to Rastafarians in his native Paris, it's providing answers and a positive self-identity.

"I'm learning a lot about Rastafari and about our heritage," said the bearded Frenchman, clad in a red turban and black robe. "It is a matter of life and death."

___

David McFadden on Twitter: http://twitter.com/dmcfadd

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/80-years-founding-jamaica-rastafarianism-gaining-adherents-disdain-181022237.html

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Sen. Paul: Nation To Get "Big, Ugly" Debt Bag For Christmas

In what might loosely be described as the "spirit of the season," the Congress of the United States will likely put together a huge grab bag "with a lot of stuff in it," including tax- and debt-ceiling increases, and drop it down the nation's chimney before adjourning for its Christmas recess, Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) predicted Monday.?

"I think there will be something really big, some enormous, ugly bill with a lot of stuff in it, including raising the debt ceiling by a couple trillion dollars. They'll squish it into one bill. And sometime before Christmas, they'll pass it," Paul said in an interview?with Greta Van Susteren on Fox News Monday night. But they'll pass it over his opposition, said Paul, a favorite of Tea Party activists and a potential contender for the GOP presidential nomination in 2016.

"I made a pledge to the people of Kentucky that I'm not raising taxes," said Paul, an ophthalmologist who became Kentucky's junior senator by winning an open seat in 2010 in his first political campaign. "I took a pledge. I signed a statement, an oath that I wouldn't raise taxes, and I'm going adhere to it," he said in apparent reference to the anti-tax pledge promoted by Grover Norquist, president of Americans for Tax Reform. Some key Republicans who took that pledge have indicated on the Sunday talk shows and other venues a willingness to consider tax increases, along with spending cuts, in an effort to avoid the much-discussed "fiscal cliff" of across-the-board spending cuts mandated by the budget agreement of 2011, and the tax increases that will occur without another extension of the Bush-era tax cuts, due to expire on January 1. Norquist responding on CNN's Starting Point,?dismissed talk of flexibility by anti-tax Republicans as "discussions of impure thoughts on national television." Paul made it clear he was entertaining no such thoughts.?

"I'm all for reforming the tax code, but it would have to be at the very best revenue-neutral. I don't want to raise revenue through the taxes," he said. "The only way I'd raise revenue through taxes is get the economy to grow. You don't have to raise rates or even close loopholes. The reason we have a lack of revenue in Washington is too much spending and no economic growth," he told Van Susteren. "If the economy were growing at 4 percent right now, we'd have plenty of revenue." Raising taxes is not the way to promote economic growth, he said. "That's what they want to do now, and I think it's absolutely the wrong thing to do."

Paul, the son of two-time Republican presidential hopeful Ron Paul,?appears ready to continue his father's decades-long campaign to reduce spending and taxes and oppose programs and actions of the federal government for which there is no constitutional grant of federal power or authority. The elder Paul, a 12-term congressman from Texas and the 1988 presidential candidate of the Libertarian Party, is retiring at the end of this year, having chosen not to run for another term in the U.S. House, where he has served, off and on, for more than 24 years over the course of nearly four decades. In the farewell address?he delivered on the House floor on November 14, the 77-year-old retired obstetrician warned of both a political and moral crisis brought on by "the exponential growth of illegal government power."

The younger Paul has often issued similar warnings about the growth of government and, unlike many of his colleagues in Congress, is not alarmed over the prospect of across-the-board spending cuts, mandated by the sequester provision of the 2011 budget agreement.??

"The sequester? Well, I think cutting spending's a good idea," he told Van Susteren. "So, I don't think that's a bad idea at all, and I don't think it will lead to economic harm to cut spending. That's what we should be doing," Paul blamed the stalemate in efforts to reach an agreement on taxes and spending on what he said is the Democrats' desire to increase both.

"So you can see why we're at somewhat of an impasse," he said. "We have different philosophies about government. I think you should balance budgets, not spend more than comes in, and I think you should lower taxes, not raise taxes."

Yet Paul often finds himself at odds with fellow Republicans by opposing foreign military interventions and overgrown military budgets, two of his father's favorite targets. In an interview with ABC News?last week Paul suggested military spending might be an area in which Democrats, who want more money for social programs, and fiscally conservative Republicans can find common ground.

"Republicans who think military spending, myself [included], who think national defense is important, should compromise and say, you know what, not every dollar spent on the military's sacred, we can reduce the military spending, that's a compromise. Democrats should compromise also ? entitlements and welfare, the spending can come down." And unlike the many Republicans who are staunch supporters of the war on drugs, Paul believes states such as Washington and Colorado that voted this month to legalize marijuana for adults should be free to do,?despite federal law banning the substance.??

"States should be allowed to make a lot of these decisions," Paul said last week. "I want things to be decided more at a local basis, with more compassion. I think it would make us as Republicans different." He also believes less draconian penalties for marijuana possession and use would help Republicans with younger voters. "I think for example we should tell young people, 'I'm not in favor of you smoking pot, but if you get caught smoking pot, I don't want to put you in jail for 20 years,'"??said Paul, who also parts company with hardliners on the issue of immigration reform.

While he maintains border security is a top priority, he has also expressed an openness to offering a path to citizenship to people who have been living here illegally for a long time. The image of the Republican Party as hostile to immigrants has hurt the GOP at the polls, he said. "We're getting an ever dwindling percent of the Hispanic vote," Paul noted. "We have to let people know, Hispanics in particular, we're not putting you on a bus and shipping you home." Paul, 49, is among the Republicans talked about as a potential presidential contender and he is not closing the door on a possible run for the White House in 2016." I won't deny that I'm interested in maybe running for president," he said Monday night. "But it's way too early to really make a firm commitment on, you know, whether I would or wouldn't."

Source: http://www.thenewamerican.com/usnews/congress/item/13766-sen-paul-nation-to-get-big-ugly-debt-bag-for-christmas

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Thursday, November 29, 2012

ARMMONEY: Restaurant Performance Index Suggests Ongoing ...

From today's report from the National Restaurant Association:

"The outlook for the restaurant industry is positive for the coming months, as the National Restaurant Association?s Restaurant Performance Index (RPI) remained well above 100 in January. The RPI ? a monthly composite index that tracks the health of and outlook for the U.S. restaurant industry ? stood at 101.3 in January, down from December?s strong level of 102.2 (see red line in chart). Despite the decline, January represented the third consecutive month that the RPI stood above 100, which signifies expansion in the index of key industry indicators.

?Although the Restaurant Performance Index dipped somewhat from December?s nearly six-year high, it remained solidly in positive territory,? said Hudson Riehle, senior vice president of the Research and Knowledge Group for the Association. ?Restaurant operators reported positive same-store sales for the eighth consecutive month, and a majority of them expect business to continue to improve in the months ahead.?

Other highlights include:

1. Restaurant operators reported positive customer traffic results in January. Forty-six percent of restaurant operators reported higher customer traffic levels between January 2011 and January 2012, while 30 percent reported a traffic decline.

2. The Expectations Index, which measures restaurant operators? six-month outlook for four industry indicators (same-store sales, employees, capital expenditures and business conditions), stood at 102.1 in January ? essentially unchanged from December?s level of 102.3 (see blue line in chart). In addition, January marked the fifth consecutive month that the Expectations Index stood above 100, which represents an optimistic outlook among restaurant operators for business conditions in the months ahead.

3. Restaurant operators also remain generally optimistic about the direction of the overall economy. Thirty-seven percent of restaurant operators said they expect economic conditions to improve in six months, down slightly from 39 percent last month. In comparison, only 11 percent of operators said they expect economic conditions to worsen in the next six months, matching the proportion who reported similarly last month."

MP: The Restaurant Performance Index has remained above 101 for two consecutive months (in December and January) for the first time since late 2006.? In other positive news today, the AP reported today that:

"The U.S. economy started the year off well with busier factories, higher retail sales, more jobs and growth in home sales. The Federal Reserve said Wednesday that all 12 of its banking districts reported some level of growth in January and the first half of February. Manufacturing?output rose in all districts, and auto?manufacturing, steel makers and other metal producers all reported especially solid growth.

Home sales increased in at least half of the districts, a notable improvement from the Fed's last report in January. Sales are expected to climb further in four districts. And six districts reported rising construction of apartments."

Description: Restaurant Performance Index Suggests Ongoing Improvements As Does Fed's Beige Book Report Rating: 4.5 Reviewer: khae ItemReviewed: Restaurant Performance Index Suggests Ongoing Improvements As Does Fed's Beige Book Report

Source: http://armmoney.blogspot.com/2012/11/restaurant-performance-index-suggests.html

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BlackBerry maker RIM loses patent dispute with Nokia

HELSINKI (Reuters) - Canada's Research In Motion (RIM) has lost a contract dispute over the use of Nokia patents in a case which could halt sales of its BlackBerry phones if it does not reach a deal to pay royalties to the Finnish company.

Nokia said on Wednesday a Swedish arbitrator had ruled that "RIM was in breach of contract and is not entitled to manufacture or sell WLAN products without first agreeing royalties with Nokia."

Wireless local access network (WLAN) technologies, usually marketed under the WiFi brand, are used across BlackBerry devices and by most other smartphones.

Nokia, which is trying to boost its royalty income as its phone business slides, said it had filed cases in the United States, Britain and Canada to enforce the arbitrator's ruling.

"This could have a significant financial impact to RIM, as all BlackBerry devices support WLAN," IDC analyst Francisco Jeronimo said.

RIM declined to comment. At 6 a.m. EDT its Frankfurt-listed shares were down 5 percent at 8.245 euros. Nokia shares were down 1.6 percent at 2.526 euros.

"If a sales ban was imposed it would be a massive blow for RIM as it manages its transition to the new BlackBerry 10 software platform," said Canalys analyst Pete Cunningham.

However, analysts think it is much more likely that RIM will reach a royalty agreement with Nokia to avert such an outcome.

RIM, a smartphone pioneer, hopes new devices using BlackBerry 10 software, due early 2013, will rescue it from a prolonged slump in the face of competition from the likes of Apple and Samsung.

RIM promises its new devices will be faster than previous smartphones, and will have a large catalogue of applications, which are crucial to the success of any new line of smartphones.

CONTRACT ROW

Nokia said it signed a cross-license agreement with RIM covering standards-essential cellular patents in 2003, a deal that was amended in 2008.

RIM sought arbitration in March 2011 with the Stockholm Chamber of Commerce, arguing the license should be extended to cover WLAN patents.

The arbitration tribunal concluded a nine day hearing in September 2012 and it issued a decision on November 6, Nokia said in a U.S. court filing seeking to enforce the ruling.

During arbitration RIM did not contest it manufactures and sells products using WLAN technology in accordance with Nokia's WLAN products, Nokia said, quoting the tribunal decision.

Nokia, along with Ericsson and Qualcomm, is among the leading patent holders in the wireless industry. Patent royalties generate annual revenue of about 500 million euros ($646 million) for Nokia.

Based on a Nortel patent sale and Google's acquisition of Motorola Mobility, some investors and analysts say Nokia's patent portfolio alone merits its current share price of around 2.50 euros.

However, the patent market has cooled since those deals were made and industry experts say that fair value of patents in large portfolios is $100,000 to $200,000, pricing Nokia's portfolio at up to 0.50 euros per share.

(Editing by David Goodman and Mark Potter)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/nokia-says-wins-tribunal-ruling-versus-rim-over-083323905--finance.html

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Source: http://www.bestarticlepost.com/261079/instant-unsecured-loans-fill-form-instantly-to-borrow-money?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=instant-unsecured-loans-fill-form-instantly-to-borrow-money

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Wednesday, November 28, 2012

VW Golf VII Station Wagon: Will it look like this? Spy shots!

VW Golf VII Station Wagon

Nice rendering here of the next-generation VW Golf VII Station Wagon. Check the latest spy shots below!

Based on the redesigned hatchback, the estate will feature familiar styling but adopt a larger boot that will reportedly accommodate an additional 120 liters (4.2 cubic feet) of luggage. The model will also come with a roof rack for even more cargo carrying capability.

VW Golf VII Station Wagon

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheGermanCarBlog/~3/XSJwfMfdNuk/

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Facebook Copyright Law (For Idiots)

We already explained just how worthless that Facebook copyright privacy status update gobbledygook is. But just in case you or one of your friends needs it spoken outloud to you because word-things are too hard, College Humor breaks it down for you in plain English. More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/l3fKrX2Enwg/facebook-privacy-law-for-idiots

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Why Grover Still Matters (talking-points-memo)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/266746661?client_source=feed&format=rss

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PLU baseball program to host umpires camp

The inaugural Narrows Umpires Camp will take place at Pacific Lutheran University on Dec. 1 and Dec. 2. Tripp Gibson, who is an umpire at the Triple-A level in the Pacific Coast League of the minor leagues, will be the chief instructor for the camp.

The camp costs $100 per participant and the registration deadline is Nov. 26. For more information, call Harry Soete at 360-265-6488 or reach him by email at harrysoete@yahoo.com

Source: http://www.thenewstribune.com/2012/11/18/2372962/plu-baseball-program-to-host-umpires.html?storylink=rss

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