Showing posts with label gives. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gives. Show all posts

Saturday, 9 October 2010

watches Paul the Octopus' picks World Cup 2010 winner:Twitter, Internet gives props to Spain -PHOTOS

Paul the Octopus' picks World Cup 2010 winner:Twitter, Internet gives props to Spain -PHOTOS


July 11, 2010 - The World Cup Winner was picked by 'Paul the Octopus'. With a perfect record of choices, the octopus has more than 8 legs by some he has psychic powers. The octopus has been making choices for the FIFA games since the World Cup started and today, the world gets a chance to see the octopus was able to pick the actual winner of the final game.

When the World Cup was announced, one of the first things that happened online was the Internet and Twitter started going crazy about Paul. The Octopus has been so highly watched that many even wagered using the octopus decision as the sole reason.

Some of the tweets on Twitter brought an emotional interest to the simple sea creatures

'OMG Paul was right - Spain gets the Cup!'

'Paul vs Holland - they didn't have a chance against 8 legs.'

Spain wins - Cup goes to them - Thx Paul the Octopus.'

This closely watched octopus had many looking at the World Cup in a different way and even online people seem to be engaged about the unique predicting tool that has an underwater presence.
Coppied by http://www.examiner.com/celebrity-headlines-in-national/paul-the-octopus-picks-world-cup-2010-winner-twitter-internet-gives-props-to-spain-photos

Thursday, 26 August 2010

Watch Brazil government gives go-ahead for huge Amazon dam

Brazil government gives go-ahead for huge Amazon dam


The proposal to build a dam on the Xingu river has long been a source of controversy

Brazil's government has given the formal go-ahead for the building on a tributary of the Amazon of the world's third biggest hydroelectric dam.

After several failed legal challenges, President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva signed the contract for the Belo Monte dam with the Norte Energia consortium.

Critics say the project will damage the local ecosystem and make homeless 50,000 mainly indigenous people.

But the government says it is crucial for development and will create jobs.

Bidding for the project had to be halted three times before a final court appeal by the government allowed Norte Energia, led by the state-owned Companhia Hidro Eletrica do Sao Francisco, to be awarded the contract.

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We will persuade them that we took seriously into account the environmental and social issues”

Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva
Brazilian president
'Death warrant'
At the contract signing ceremony in Brasilia on Thursday, President Lula said he himself had criticised the dam before he learnt more about it.

"You cannot imagine how many times I spoke against Belo Monte without even knowing what it was about, and it is precisely during my government that Belo Monte is being unveiled," he said.

"I think this is a victory for Brazil's energy sector.

"We will persuade them that we took seriously into account the environmental and social issues," he added.

The proposal to build a hydro-electric dam on the Xingu river, a tributary of the Amazon in the northern state of Para, has long been a source of controversy.

The initial project was abandoned in the 1990s amid widespread protests both in Brazil and around the world.
Coppied by http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-11101842

Monday, 16 August 2010

we are know this Israel gives Obama reason to worry

enjoy Israel gives Obama reason to worry
WASHINGTON - Pro-Israeli journalist Jeffrey Goldberg's article in The Atlantic magazine [1] was evidently aimed at showing why the Barack Obama administration should worry that it risks an attack by the government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Iran in the coming months unless Washington takes a much more menacing line toward Iran's nuclear program.

But the article provides new evidence that senior figures in the Israeli intelligence and military leadership oppose such a strike against Iran and believe that Netanyahu's apocalyptic rhetoric about Iran as an "existential threat" is unnecessary and self-defeating.

Although not reported by Goldberg, Israeli military and intelligence figures began to express their opposition to such rhetoric on Iran

in the early 1990s, and Netanyahu acted to end such talk when he became prime minister in 1996.

The Goldberg article also reveals extreme Israeli sensitivity to any move by Obama to publicly demand that Israel desist from such a strike, reflecting the reality that the Israeli government could not go ahead with any strike without being assured of US direct involvement in the war with Iran.

Goldberg argues that a likely scenario some months in the future is that Israeli officials will call their US counterparts to inform them that Israeli planes are already on their way to bomb Iranian nuclear sites.

The Israelis would explain that they had "no choice", he writes, because "a nuclear Iran poses the gravest threat since [Adolf] Hitler to the physical survival of the Jewish people".

He claims the "consensus" among present and past Israeli leaders is that the chances are better than 50/50 that Israel "will launch a strike by next July", based on interviews with 40 such Israeli decision-makers.

Goldberg is best known for hewing to the neo-conservative line in his reporting on Iraq, particularly in his insistence that that Saddam Hussein had extensive ties with al-Qaeda.

Goldberg quotes an Israeli official familiar with Netanyahu's thinking as saying, "In World War II, the Jews had no power to stop Hitler from annihilating us. Six million were slaughtered. Today, six million Jews live in Israel, and someone is threatening them with annihilation."

In his interview with Goldberg for this article, however, Netanyahu does not argue that Iran might use nuclear weapons against Israel. Instead, he argues that Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza would be able to "fire rockets and engage in other terror activities while enjoying a nuclear umbrella".

But Israel relies on conventional forces - not nuclear deterrence - against Hezbollah and Hamas, making that argument entirely specious.
Coppied by http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/LH17Ak02.html