Society's Child
For little Sayef, there will be no Arab Spring. He lies, just 14 months old, on a small red blanket cushioned by a cheap mattress on the floor, occasionally crying, his head twice the size it should be, blind and paralysed. Sayeffedin Abdulaziz Mohamed - his full name - has a kind face in his outsized head and they say he smiles when other children visit and when Iraqi families and neighbours come into the room.
But he will never know the history of the world around him, never enjoy the freedoms of a new Middle East. He can move only his hands and take only bottled milk because he cannot swallow. He is already almost too heavy for his father to carry. He lives in a prison whose doors will remain forever closed.
It's as difficult to write this kind of report as it is to understand the courage of his family. Many of the Fallujah families whose children have been born with what doctors call "congenital birth anomalies" prefer to keep their doors closed to strangers, regarding their children as a mark of personal shame rather than possible proof that something terrible took place here after the two great American battles against insurgents in the city in 2004, and another conflict in 2007.
After at first denying the use of phosphorous shells during the second battle of Fallujah, US forces later admitted that they had fired the munitions against buildings in the city. Independent reports have spoken of a birth-defect rate in Fallujah far higher than other areas of Iraq, let alone other Arab countries. No one, of course, can produce cast-iron evidence that American munitions have caused the tragedy of Fallujah's children.

Flowers, candles during a ceremony to commemorate the 97th anniversary of the 1915 mass killing of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire on Taksim Square in Istanbul, on April 24, 2012.
Thousands took part in an annual procession to a hilltop memorial in the Armenian capital Yerevan, carrying candles and flowers to lay at the eternal flame at the centre of the monument commemorating the mass killings in what was then the Ottoman Empire.
"Today we, just as many, many others all over the world, bow to the memory of the innocent victims of the Armenian genocide," President Serzh Sarkisian, who led officials laying wreaths at the monument, said in a statement.
"This day is one of those moments when the entire nation rallies around the unification of our homeland," he said.
Armenians say up to 1.5 million people were killed during World War I as the Ottoman Empire was falling apart, a claim supported by many historians and several other countries.
The airport director says the website manager is trying to trace the hackers, adding that they are seeking advice on whether to lodge a formal complaint.
For several hours, the site carried a message that a private jet with the President aboard had vanished from the radar screen after sending a distress signal near Bora Bora.
Doctors are seriously worried about a sick trend - teens drinking hand sanitizer.
Six young people recently landed in a Southern California emergency room with alcohol poisoning after chugging the antimicrobial gel.
Hand sanitizer contains a whopping 62% ethyl alcohol - making the foul liquid akin to a shot of hard liquor.
YouTube has seen an influx of videos of teens chugging the foul germ-killing goo.
Dr. Young-jin Sue, a pediatric toxicologist at Montefiore Medical Center in the Bronx, said that she hasn't seen any cases of teens coming into the ER after overdosing on the alcohol-rich gel.
"Teens don't have access to ethyl alcohol so they resort to crazy things," she said. "It's very concentrated, just a few ounces can make someone sick."
Teens have a long tradition of looking in the medicine cabinet in order get a cheap buzz.
US: Dewitt, New York - 28 protesters have been arrested after a demonstration against reaper drones Sunday afternoon outside Hancock Air National Guard base.
About 150 protesters gathered at the base, protesting without words to the beat of a drum.
The Onondaga County Sheriff's Office said the protesters needed a permit to march on the road. All 150 people were told they would not be arrested if they left quietly, 28 chose to stay put.
The Town of Dewitt local law requires that anyone wishing to protest have a town issued permit to do it.
Former minister Stephanie Simmons, who was arrested Monday, explained her actions shortly after her arrest: "I love democracy and my concern, among other things, is the outrageous salaries and bonuses the bank executives are making when there are people just hanging on by their fingernails."
Simmons lives in Guthrie Center, Iowa (population ca. 1,500). Her congregation of about 130 people supports twenty-seven families with food and other supplies every month.
"Our food banks have run short. Giving in the congregation is at an all-time low because people just don't have the money. Children are short of school supplies." Wells Fargo CEO John Stumpf needs to take a look, said Simmons. "Take a look at what you're doing. If you have a conscience at all, you need to take a look."
Comment: That "if" is the key word in that sentence, and the sad truth is that most CEOs and Wall Street employees are psychopaths, and they do NOT posses a conscience.
Des Moines, Iowa, is the national headquarters of Wells Fargo's Home Mortgage division. "Wells Fargo's mortgage office here in Iowa is making billions in profits every year by kicking hardworking families out of their homes and they aren't even paying taxes on their ill-got wealth," said Kenn Bowen, a Vietnam veteran and retired communications worker from Winterset, Iowa, another arrestee. "That ain't right. Wells Fargo should be broken up into smaller, community banks that will put people before profits."
Google (GOOG), LinkedIn (LNKD), Zynga (ZNGA), and, coming soon, Facebook (FB): four companies among the "new breed," where shareholders have effectively no rights other than the chance to ride along with the founders. This model - taking shareholder money without actually surrendering any power - isn't new, but it's becoming more brazen.
In light of Facebook's S-1 (which explicitly states that Mark Zuckerberg has the right to bequeath his voting control to whomever he so chooses) and Google's recent stock split (which actually increased the controlling interests of its founders), it seems there's a growing trend of business founders have their company and selling it too.
"There's a generational shift, where a lot of innovation is coming from young people," says Michael Eisenberg of Benchmark Capital, pointing out that Zuckerberg was 19 years-old and the Google guys were in their early 20's when starting their companies. "They have a pace of innovation which is fundamentally different from most of the corporations we see in America or the world today."
The people with the ability to innovate have all the power. These entrepreneurs are exercising that power by issuing shares as a take-it-or-leave-it proposition. Investors have no obligation to buy shares, but if you do it's on the company's terms.

In this undated photo provided by the Utah County Sheriff's Department shows Benjamin Rutkowski, 19, of Orem, who was booked Saturday into the county jail for investigation of misdemeanor reckless endangerment. A Forest Service law enforcement officer with military experience discovered trip wires for booby traps at entrances of a crude shelter made of dead tree limbs in Provo Canyon, said Utah County Sheriff's Dept. Sgt. Spencer Cannon.
Another trap was designed to trip a passer-by into a bed of sharpened wooden stakes, authorities said.
Two men arrested over the weekend on suspicion of misdemeanor reckless endangerment told authorities the traps were intended for wildlife, but investigators didn't believe the story.
The suspects built a dead-wood shelter as a possible lure for hikers who could step inside only through the two booby-trapped entrances, Utah County sheriff's Sgt. Spencer Cannon said.
In a Facebook post that has since gone viral, Michelle Brademeyer describes the story of her family being detained as potential terrorists by the TSA on a flight out of Wichita, Kansas. The TSA is responsible for screening passengers as they board and disembark from planes.
Brademeyer was passing through security checks with her mother and her small daughter, Isabella. When the older lady triggered the metal detector, and was told to go for a pat-down, Isabella ran over to and briefly hugged her grandmother.
The TSA immediately said Isabella would now also have to undergo a pat-down, in case the grandmother passed contraband to her during the hug.
When the child shouted "I don't want to," the TSA declared Isabella a "high security threat," and said that they would close down the airport if she moved.
Researchers of the study, published Monday in the Archives of Internal Medicine, found wide variations in charges for medical procedures even among appendectomy patients treated at the same hospital.
One such procedure, performed on Augustin Hong, a then-34-year-old financial professional living in San Francisco, cost a staggering $60,000. Hong, who went to the ER with severe abdominal pain, was diagnosed with acute appendicitis, and subsequently had his appendix removed by doctors.
Hong had not worried too much about the cost of the procedure because he had health insurance. But that all changed when the bills started to arrive. "That's when I got nervous," said Hong, who is now 36.
In all, Hong was charged $59,283, including $5,264 for the doctors. According to the Healthcare Blue Book, that figure is six times the fair price for an appendectomy in Northern California ($8,309, which includes a four-day admission).
"My initial thought was, it was a good thing I had insurance," said Hong. But he soon realized the hospital was not in his insurance network. And while the insurer agreed to pay more than half of his bill, Hong was still left with a $23,000 bill.
The researchers, as well as other healthcare experts, said the results aren't unique to California and show the system is definitely broken.








