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Showing posts with label 21st August 2012. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 21st August 2012. Show all posts

Tuesday, 21 August 2012

Todd Akin Apologises (Video)



Rep. Todd Akin offers Missouri voters his apology and asks for their forgiveness in a new television ad released two days after an interview aired in which Akin said that “legitimate rape” rarely causes pregnancy.
“Rape is an evil act,” Akin says in the 30-second spot in which he looks directly into the camera. “I used the wrong words in the wrong way and for that I apologize.” Akin adds that he has “a compassionate heart for the victims of sexual assault” and acknoledges that “rape can lead to pregnancy.”



Akin apologized for his comment in Monday media interviews and has repeatedly vowed to stay in the race, despite widespread calls from within his own party to step aside. Akin has until 5 p.m. today to do so voluntarily or until Sept. 25th to petition the courts to have his name removed from the ballot. If he does not withdraw from the race by the 25th, he will appear on the ballot.
Akin closes the spot by noting that “the mistake I made was in the words I said, not in the heart I hold. I ask for your forgiveness.”
In the ad, Akin sounds like a candidate hoping to put the controversial interview behind him, not one that appears ready to end his campaign, which is what most Republicans would prefer to see right now.

Tags: World News     Romney     Paul Ryan     Obama    Todd Akin   Jillian Manus  
    White House     Medicare     U.S


Edited By Cen Fox Post Team

Coalgate Scam Could Lead To Prime Minister's Resignation


New Delhi, (IANS) A combative opposition Tuesday demanded Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's resignation over the Comptroller and Auditor General's (CAG) report on coal block allocation, leading to the Lok Sabha and Rajya Sabha being adjourned for the day.
The first adjournments till noon took place soon after proceedings began in both the houses with the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-led opposition seeking to raise the matter.
In the Lok Sabha, trouble over the issue did not die down when the house met after the short adjournment with the opposition rushing towards Speaker Meira Kumar's podium.
The government said the opposition should let the house function and have a discussion on the issue. The government offered a discussion in the house with Home Minister and Leader of the House Sushilkumar Shinde saying: "We can discuss the issue. We have no objection."
The speaker asked the opposition if it agreed to the discussion but the slogans and shouting continued, forcing her to adjourn the house for the day.
There were similar scenes in the Rajya Sabha, forcing chairperson Hamid Ansari to adjourn the house till noon.
When the house met, things were quiet for a while during which Congress member P.J. Kurien was unanimously elected deputy chairman.
Members across party lines complimented Kurien for his election to the post.
However, soon after Kurien was invited by the chair to conduct proceedings in his new role,opposition members again raised the issue of the CAG report on coal block allocation.
As the opposition raised a din, Minister of State for Parliamentary Affairs Rajiv Shukla said the government was ready for a discussion. Shukla then said the BJP was running away from a discussion and that their chief ministers were involved in corruption.
As the opposition members continued raising slogans, Kurien adjourned the house for the day.
"It is the demand of the nation as people are shocked to see the way the UPA (United Progressive Alliance) regime is looting the country," said BJP leader Prakash Javadekar.
Parliamentary Affairs Minister Pawan Kumar Bansal blamed the opposition for disrupting proceedings.
"It is unfortunate that they stalled the house and didn't let anyone speak. We are prepared for a detailed discussion and then we will see what happens. They (BJP) want to create a situation of crisis but people should know the truth and what is their (BJP) role in coal allocation scam," said Bansal adding that demands for the prime minister's resignation were "baseless".
The audit report does not directly indict the prime minister or his office. But during the time these mining blocks in question were allotted, the coal portfolio was held by him -- between July 2004 and May 2009.

Tags:  World News     India      Scams      Pak     Indian President     Mumbai     Assam     
              26/11 Riots


Edited By Cen Fox Post Team

Romney's Cash Advantage May Beat Obama In Elections


U.S. Republican presidential candidate and former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney accepts a bumper sticker reading: ''Obama's Right We Do Need Change'' from a young audience member at a town hall meeting campaign stop in Manchester, New Hampshire August 20, 2012. REUTERS/Brian Snyder

The Obama and Romney campaigns are vying to become the most successful fundraising operations in U.S. history, with help from their national parties. In July, Romney raised $101 million for his campaign and the party, outpacing Obama for the third month in a row. Obama and the Democrats hauled in $75 million.
Romney, the Republican National Committee and the Victory Fund they use jointly said they had $186 million left in cash on hand at the end of July. Disclosures filed on Monday showed Obama, the Democratic National Committee and their own joint funds having a total of $127 million left in cash on hand.
That money is an important gauge of firepower saved up for future advertising or investments in hiring, offices and events.
It has prompted a flurry of fundraising emails from Obama -whose campaign spends at a faster clip than Romney to maintain its vast network of staff and field offices - urging donors to give because they expect Romney to far outraise the president.
But those grand totals may be too broad of a measure to foretell a candidate's future financial advantage, experts say.
"Romney is ahead when you combine it all together but some of his money is going to be less efficient," said Michael Malbin, who runs the non-partisan Campaign Finance Institute. "Obama is way ahead in the most flexible pile."
The most flexible cash belongs to campaigns, analysts said, because it allows for spur-of-the-moment investments, for example to instantly rebut the opponent's latest attack.
Parties, while vowing to spend every dime on their presidential candidate, do provide key support when it comes to mobilizing voters and grassroots outreach but this year they have a $21.7 million cap on how much they can coordinate with campaigns. That limits, most importantly, their capacity for advertising, Malbin said, a crucial way to reach voters.
The RNC has been outraising the DNC. It said it brought in $37.7 million in July, compared to DNC's reported $5.8 million. At the end of the month, the RNC said it had $88.7 million left in cash on hand and the DNC had $15.4 million, according to its Monday's filing with the Federal Election Commission.
But the scale tips when comparing campaigns head-to-head.
Romney emerged at the end of July with $30.2 million in cash on hand, while Obama had $87.7 million - nearly triple Romney's amount - in the bank, FEC filings showed on Monday.
In fact, Obama at the end of last month had more than the cash on hand he enjoyed at the end of July in 2008, the year of his historically successful election bid. He had $66.4 million.
"The broad picture, the stepback is that the Obama campaign has a stronger financial position than the Romney campaign," Malbin said.
THE SPENDING CONCERN
Obama, who raised a record $750 million for the 2008 campaign that put him in the White House, had a cushy advantage over Romney early in the 2012 campaign season because he had no challenger from his party, while the Republican until May battled several opponents in a bitter primary competition.
"The way to think of it is Obama started running a marathon in April 2011, while Romney was in the hurdle race to run through a primary and now he's running a sprint, he has to raise much more money," said Bill Allison of the nonpartisan Sunlight Foundation, which tracks campaign spending and fundraising as part of its effort to increase government transparency.
Where Obama got left behind in the money game is when he started spending more than he raised.
In July, continuing several months of the trend, Obama's campaign spent $58.5 million, roughly two-thirds of it on advertising. Romney's campaign last month spent a total of $32.3 million, with half going toward ad production and placement.
"It's not as if that money is wasted," Allison said of Obama's high burn rate in run-up to the November 6 election. "The only thing that matters (this close to the election) is spending it all. ... Candidates don't want to leave anything on the table."
When Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry lost a close race to George W. Bush in 2004, he was criticized for having $16.8 million left over in campaign coffers after outraising the Republican throughout the campaign.
OUTSIDE GROUPS
That year, Kerry was also heavily aided by liberal outside spending groups, predominantly non-profit advocacy organizations that poured in $121.3 million, according to the Center for Responsive Politics. Conservative outside groups spent $68.4 million on the 2004 election, according to CRP.
But, legally prohibited from coordinating with campaigns, outside groups have trouble rebutting personal attacks against their candidate. That year, liberal groups failed to effectively respond to allegations against Kerry, including an attack on his Vietnam War record by group Swift Boat Veterans for Truth. Similarly, this year Romney is receiving help from conservative non-profits and "super" political action committees, which can raise and spend unlimited funds and have been outdoing their Democratic rivals.
The Super PAC devoted to Romney's election, Restore Our Future, in July raised $7.5 million, Monday's filing showed. Of that, $2 million came from Bob Perry, a Houston homebuilder who was a major donor behind Swift Boat.
The pro-Obama Super PAC, Priorities USA Action, on Monday reported raising $4.8 million in July. The group has been under fire recently for its latest ad that links Romney to the death of a woman whose steelworker husband lost his job after Romney's company, Bain Capital, closed the plant where he worked.
Tags: World News     Romney     Paul Ryan     Obama     White House     Medicare     U.S


Edited By Cen Fox Post Team

Political Firestorm Rages Around Akin's Pregnancy Controversy


 PDT SAN FRANCISCO -- Jillian Manus Salzman, a powerhouse donor to Mitt Romney's presidential campaign and a proud pro-choice Republican, said she screamed when she heard Rep. Todd Akin of Missouri, a GOP candidate for the U.S. Senate, say that victims of "legitimate" rape don't get pregnant.
"I was so appalled, so angry - I can't tell you," said the Atherton literary agent and philanthropist who has co-hosted major Romney fundraisers in the Bay Area. "His opinion is not just hurtful to others. It's dangerous."
Salzman is among scores of Republican women, pro-choice and antiabortion alike, who were revulsed by Akin's eye-popping comments, which were broadcast Sunday on a St. Louis television station and set off a political firestorm Monday.
GOP officials called for Akin's resignation, with Romney calling the comments "deeply offensive." At the same time, the National Republican Senatorial Committee pledged to withhold funding for his campaign.
California Republican U.S. Senate candidate Elizabeth Emken, who is antiabortion and the challenger to incumbent Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein, was horrified by Akin's remarks, which she called "outrageous and indefensible." As the mother of two daughters, "I condemn his offensive statements in the strongest possible language," she said in a statement issued Monday.

Comments broadcast

Until this week, Akin had been mounting a strong challenge to incumbent Democratic U.S. Sen. Claire McCaskill. His troubles began when he was asked in a TV interview whether he could support abortion in the case of rape.
Akin, a member of the House Science, Space and Technology Committee, said: "From what I understand from doctors, that's really rare. If it's a legitimate rape, the female body has ways to try and shut that whole thing down."
He added that the rapist should be punished, but there should be no thought of "attacking the child" if conception occurred. A 1996 study by the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology estimated the U.S. rape-related pregnancy rate to be 5 percent among victims from 12 to 45 years old.
After an avalanche of scorn over Akin's use of the term "legitimate" to describe rape and his apparent ignorance of female reproductive basics, Akin said Monday he "misspoke" and apologized. But he did not suspend his campaign.
"I am in this race to win," he tweeted Monday. Tuesday is the deadline in Missouri for nominees to pull their names from the ballot in time for their parties to select replacements.

Ammo for Democrats

The firestorm, which comes little more than a week before Republicans gather for their national nominating convention in Tampa, Fla., handed Democrats a timely opportunity to reprise their "Republican war on women" theme on reproductive rights issues from contraception to abortion.
The strategy has helped give President Obama a 54 to 39 percent "gender gap" lead over Romney among women voters, according to an NBC/Wall Street Journal poll released Monday.
At the same time, fallout from Akin's comments allowed Democrats to suggest parallels between the reproductive-rights positions of Akin and Romney's running mate, Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan, who is devoutly Catholic and opposed to abortion, even in the case of rape.
Romney's campaign acknowledged Ryan's antiabortion views this week, but campaign spokeswoman Andrea Saul told the Los Angeles Times that "a Romney-Ryan administration would not oppose abortion in instances of rape."
California Sen. Barbara Boxer, a Democrat, called Akin's comments "beyond outrageous" and "another chapter in the war on women that is increasingly dangerous for women's health and lives."

Party embarrassment

San Francisco attorney Harmeet Dhillon, head of the city's Republican Party and a candidate for state Senate, said she was appalled by Akin's comments and "embarrassed for my party that we have a candidate like that."
Dhillon, who is challenging Sen. Mark Leno, the incumbent Democrat, said there is a difference between a person whose religion teaches that life begins at conception - and who may oppose abortion in all cases - and Akin's indefensible comments regarding "legitimate" rape.
Romney donor Salzman called for the GOP presidential ticket to "step up and start to talk to women in a positive way" about the Republican agenda on women's issues.
Romney and Ryan, she said, must use the opportunity to "get out there and create a true message for women" that includes addressing the concerns of pro-choice, moderate women like herself who are concerned about reproductive rights, education and immigration reform.
The presumed GOP ticket should say, " 'We're not marginalizing you. We're not waging war on you. Here's what we value,' " she said. In the November election, Salzman added, "the deciding vote is the women's vote."
Tags: World News     Romney     Paul Ryan     Obama     White House     Medicare     U.S


Edited By Cen Fox Post Team

5 Things You should Know About West Nile Virus



As of last Tuesday, 693 cases of West Nile virus have been reported from 43 states to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The disease is hitting the country early this year, with the CDC reporting the highest number of cases in the second week of August since the virus was first detected in 1999. Experts say a mild winter and rainy spring, followed by prolonged high temperatures and dry weather have contributed to the spike, by giving mosquitoes ample time to breed and ideal conditions to thrive.
Subsequently, the balmy South is seeing the majority of West Nile deaths and cases this year — an epidemic in Texas led Dallas County to declare a state of emergency and authorize the first aerial spraying of insecticide in nearly 50 years — but the disease is a nationwide problem, with the most recent deaths coming from Michigan and Illinois.
Here’s what you should know about the disease and how to stay protected.
1. What is West Nile virus?
West Nile virus is a disease that infects birds and is then spread by mosquitoes to humans. People can also become infected through blood transfusions and organ transplants. Human cases of the disease typically rise at the end of summer and fall. Most people who contract the virus won’t experience any symptoms at all, but others may develop mild symptoms of West Nile fever or, rarely, the more severe symptoms of neuroinvasive West Nile, including inflammation of the brain and surrounding tissues — the most severe form of the disease. Most of the cases reported to the CDC so far have been neuroinvasive disease: 406 cases versus 287 cases of non-neuroinvasive disease.
Other viruses in the West Nile family of viruses are responsible for dengue, yellow fever and Japanese encephalitis.
2. What are the symptoms of West Nile?
According to the CDC, about 80% of people infected with West Nile virus will get off scot free, with no symptoms. About 20% of infected people will come down with mild symptoms of West Nile fever, including fever, headache, fatigue, body pain, skin rash and swollen lymph glands. These symptoms can last anywhere from a couple of days to a few weeks.
Only about 1 in 150 people will develop the most severe form of West Nile disease, which can include West Nile encephalitis or meningitis. Severe symptoms can include high fever, headache, stiffness, disorientation, coma, tremors, convulsions, muscle weakness, vision loss, numbness and paralysis. These can last several weeks, and neurological effects — while very rare— can cause permanent damage.
People at the highest risk for severe illness are those over 50 or with serious medical conditions like cancer, diabetes, high blood pressure, kidney disease and organ transplants.
3. How can I prevent infection?
Avoiding mosquito bites is the best way to stay disease-free. The CDC recommends taking measures to protect yourself and your family and to secure your environment. Here are some tips:
  • Apply insect repellent to exposed skin when going outdoors. Make sure repellents will last for the full time you plan to remain outside; products with more active ingredients will last longer. Don’t let kids handle repellent on their own, and don’t let them get it on their hands. 
  • Since mosquitoes can bite through thin clothing, it’s a good idea to spray your clothes (and shoes, bed nets and camping gear) with insect repellents that contain permethrin or another EPA-registered repellent. But don’t apply permethrin directly to your skin or under your clothes.
  • Wear long-sleeved shirts and long pants outdoors.
  • Put mosquito netting over infant carriers when going outside.
  • Install or repair window and door screens to keep mosquitoes out.
  • Try to stay inside at dawn, dusk and early evening, which are peak mosquito times.
  • Drain any standing pools of water where mosquitoes can lay eggs and breed. Empty stagnant water from flower pots, pet food and water dishes, birdbaths, swimming pool covers, buckets, barrels, old tires and cans. Check for clogged gutters and any other hidden containers or areas where water might pool around your home.
  • Don’t rely on “ultrasonic” devices or vitamin B to protect yourself from bites — they don’t work.
4. How is West Nile infection treated?
There is currently no treatment or vaccine or prevent West Nile. In most mild cases, symptoms go away on their own. For severe cases, some individuals may need to be hospitalized to treat their symptoms. Anyone who thinks they may be infected with West Nile virus should contact their doctor.
5. Which regions are hardest hit? 
The CDC says that more than 80% of West Nile cases are clustered in Texas, Mississippi, Louisiana, Oklahoma, South Dakota and California — and almost half of those cases are in Texas, with 552 cases and 21 deaths reported in the state so far this year. Dallas County has plans to spray insecticide aerially over the most infected regions, but planes have been grounded by rainy weather.
Tags: World News     Health     West Nile Virus


Edited By Cen Fox Post Team

Facebook Shares Melt To Half Price



WASHINGTON — If you bought Facebook shares in the May IPO and held onto them, by Monday morning you would have lost more than half your investment -- and not see any encouraging signs of making your money back.
Although the stock bounced back to close at $20.01, IPO investors were still holding huge losses with, analysts said, not much hope of a quick reversal.
Some key investors were still cashing out -- on Thursday and Friday, billionaire Peter Thiel, who invested in Facebook first in 2004, sold off nearly 80 percent of his huge holding, according to a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission Monday.
Thiel's average price for 20.6 million shares was $19.73 -- still a handsome profit for such an early backer of the website, but not a demonstration of confidence in the company's potential to rebound.
Facebook raised $16 billion when it went public on May 18, giving it a nominal market value of a stunning $104 billion and raising hopes of a new dotcom boom on US markets.
The company's business promise was huge: marketing access to the 900 million users of the world's leading social network and data about them that marketers prize.
But analysts said that the large number of shares sold, the high IPO price, and the overall skittishness of investors in a soft overall economy, have undermined market support for the company.
"They just put way too many stocks out at once... before the market was ready to absorb so many shares," said Michael Pachter of Wedbush Securities.
The price struggled around the $30 range in the weeks after the issue, with the underwriters undergoing a beating and lawsuits for allegedly having privately lowered their earnings forecasts for the company days before the IPO.
The shares then fell to the low-$20s range at the end of July when Facebook issued an uninspiring quarterly earnings report.
And last Thursday the price plummeted when a ban on pre-IPO investors such as Thiel selling their shares was lifted -- many apparently sold.
That lockup applied only to 270 million shares. Another 1.2 billion shares, those controlled by Facebook employees, will be freed from lockup on November 14.
While undoubtedly Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and other top figures will hold on to most of their shares, anything added to market liquidity is, at this point, downward pressure on the price.
Analysts are debating whether the stock is now a bargain based on Facebook's earnings potential.
"Over the long term, the trade is about the fundamentals of the business, and the fundamentals remain very positive," Pachter told AFP. He called the problem of a share oversupply "just noise".
Social media expert Lou Kerner also downplayed the selling pressure.
"We remain very positive," he said. "Facebook will figure how to monetize mobile, the dollars will find their way."
New York University finance professsor Aswath Damodaran was more skeptical. After Facebook's quarterly earnings report, he cut his original $27 a share "intrinsic value" estimate to below $24.
"The earnings report was a disappointment to markets, revealing less revenue growth than anticipated and an operating loss."
But at $19, he still is not sure of the investment's merit, given the potential overhang of sellers.
"Facebook remains a company with vast potential (their user base has not shrunk), no clear business plan (is it going to be advertising, product sales or something else) and poor corporate governance," he wrote on his blog Musings on Markets.
"Eventually, the 'intrinsic' truths will emerge, but it may be a long time coming."
Another longtime bear on the stock, Trip Chowdhry of Global Equities Research, retains deep doubts even at $19 a share.
"Facebook doesn't have the technology to monetize social actions," he said. "With what we know right now, the price should be in the low teens."
Tags:  World News      Business     Facebook     Twitter     Yahoo     Google     Google Glasses
           Blackberry     Samsung     Steve Jobs     Apple


Edited By Cen Fox Post Team

'Apple', The Most Valuable Company


Shares in Apple, which is listed on New York’s Nasdaq stock exchange, rose past $660 in early trading today taking its stock to a new height and its market capitalisation to more than $619bn (£394bn).
Apple is now worth around $200bn more than the world’s second biggest company, Exxon Mobil. The oil major is worth a mere $405bn.
The record for the most valuable company had been held by Microsoft whose market capitalisation hit €616.3bn at the height of the dot.com bubble in December 1999, according to Howard Silverblatt, an S&P index analyst in America. Now Apple’s iPhone revenues generate more than Microsoft itself, according to analysts. Apple is worth more than Microsoft combined with Google.
Some time back as reported by Century Fox Post Apple stated that Samsung had abused its monopoly powers.
Apple’s market value does not account for inflation. With inflation in account, IBM remains the historic winner with a 1967 value of $1.3 trillion, according to technology website Techcrunch.
The recent rise in Apple’s shareprice has been fuelled by expectation that a new version of the iPad will be launched in September.
Tags:  World News      Business     Facebook     Twitter     Yahoo     Google     Google Glasses
           Blackberry     Samsung     Steve Jobs     Apple



Edited By Cen Fox Post Team

New Mars Mission Planned For 2016


This image provided by NASA shows an artist rendition of the proposed InSight Lander.
The space agency decided Monday to launch a relatively low-cost robotic lander in 2016 to check out what makes the Martian core so different from Earth's.
NASA's Discovery program picked a project called Insight over missions to a Saturn moon and a comet, drawing complaints from scientists who study other places in our solar system that NASA is too focused on Mars.
All three proposed missions were good, but the Mars one showed the best chance of making it within budget and on schedule, said NASA sciences chief John Grunsfeld. The missions cost no more than $425 million.
The Insight mission includes two instruments, one French and one German, that would examine the geology of Mars in depth. It would explore the core's size, composition, temperature and wobble.
The interior of Mars is a mystery. It has no magnetic field, and scientists aren't sure if the core is solid or liquid or even has frequent quakes like Earth.
"What kind of Mars quakes are there? How big is the core of Mars? Does it have remnants of a molten core like the Earth does?" asked Discovery program chief Lindley Johnson.
Geologists have been asking for this type of crucial information for decades, said H. Jay Melosh of Purdue University, who said it was about time a project like this was approved.
The mission will be run by NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab. The California lab is basking in the success of the $2.5 billion Mars Curiosity rover, which is starting to explore the planet's surface after a daring landing this month. Earlier this year, NASA pulled out of two Mars missions with the European Space Agency because it didn't have the $1.4 billion for the proposed 2016 and 2018 mission.
NASA is still working on another possible Mars mission to replace the canceled ones with a decision later this month.
That's just "too much emphasis on Mars in our current plans for planetary exploration," said Carolyn Porco, a prominent scientist who studies Saturn and its moons. "Most of the solar system resides beyond the orbits of the asteroids. There is more to learn there about general planetary processes than on Mars … Why more Mars?"
Mars beat out missions to explore Saturn's moon Titan and its odd methane oceans and a mission to land on a comet as it nears the sun. Opponents of more Mars msissions say that NASA hasn't approved missions to the other outer planets or a comet since a Pluto mission was picked in 2001.

Tags:  World News     NASA     Curiosity     Mars     Sun     Scientists     


Edited By Cen Fox Post Team

Clues Found In Tony Scott's Death



Director Ridley Scott was seen boarding a plane from London to Los Angeles after receiving the news his younger brother, Tony Scott, director of such Hollywood hits as "Top Gun," "Days of Thunder" and "Beverly Hills Cop II," had died Sunday after jumping from a Los Angeles County bridge.

The 68-year-old Scott's death was being investigated as a suicide as a report emerged on Monday that he may have been battling terminal brain cancer.
However, the director's family has insisted to investigators the report is false, TMZ reported Monday. The director's wife reportedly told investigators rumors of her husband having brain cancer are "absolutely false," and that Scott did not have any other severe medical issues that would have caused him to take his own life.

An autopsy was performed on the British-born director's body Monday. Coroner's officials say it will be a month or more before they determine an official cause of death. 

Several people called 911 around 12:35 p.m. to report that someone had jumped from the Vincent Thomas Bridge spanning San Pedro and Terminal Island in Los Angeles Harbor, according to Los Angeles police Lt. Tim Nordquist.
"No more Tony Scott movies. Tragic day"
- Ron Howard
A dive team with Los Angeles Port Police pulled the body from the murky water several hours later, Nordquist said. Scott's body was taken to a dock in Wilmington and turned over to the county coroner's office.

One lane of the eastbound side of the bridge was closed to traffic during the investigation. Cargo vessels moved at reduced speeds through the east side of the port's main channel during the search, said Los Angeles Fire Department spokesman Brian Humphrey.
Investigators found a note in Scott's black Toyota Prius, which was parked on the bridge, according to the Los Angeles Times. That note listed contact information. A suicide note was later found at his office.

Scott's films shared distinct visual styles with his brother Ridley's. Ridley Scott mastered the creation of entire worlds with such films as "Gladiator," "Blade Runner," "Alien" and this year's "Prometheus," Tony Scott was known for hyper-kinetic action and editing on such films as his most recent, the runaway train thriller "Unstoppable," starring regular collaborator Denzel Washington.
Scott was a thrill-seeker himself in his personal life, an avid rock climber who also liked driving fast cars and motorcycles. Still, filmmaking was his real thrill.
"The biggest edge I live on is directing. That's the most scary, dangerous thing you can do in your life," Scott said in an interview for his 1995 naval adventure "Crimson Tide." "The scariest thing in my life is the first morning of production on all my movies. 
It's the fear of failing, the loss of face and a sense of guilt that everybody puts their faith in you and not coming through."
Tony was the first of the Scott brothers to enjoy blockbuster success with "Top Gun," starring Tom Cruise, the top-grossing film of 1986 at $176 million. Scott teamed with Cruise again four years later on the hit "Days of Thunder." He also had a sequel to "Top Gun" in development.

But Ridley Scott later managed more and bigger hits than his brother and earned a level of critical respect never achieved by Tony Scott. "Gladiator" won the best-picture Academy Award for 2000 and earned Ridley Scott one of his three best-director nominations; Tony Scott never was in the running for an Oscar, and critics often slammed his movies for emphasizing style over substance.
Even Scott admitted that it was a challenge to infuse drama into some of his scenarios -- for example, cars racing in circles in "Days of Thunder." In an interview for that 1990 summer hit, Scott was blunt about where some of the ideas came from.

"I went back and I stole from all race movies to date," Scott said. "I took the better elements, then tried to build on them. Really, the speed, the energy and the placement of the audience inside some of the cars came in the editing room. ...
"I'm always pushing for something new and fresh in the way things are shot, and the rest happens in the editing room. ... The real speed comes from the cutters and what they do with the celluloid."
While Ridley Scott had an auspicious start to his film career with 1977's acclaimed period drama "The Duellists" and 1979's "Alien," Tony Scott bombed with his debut, 1983's supernatural romance "The Hunger," with David Bowie and Catherine Deneuve.

He vaulted into Hollywood's top ranks the next time out, with "Top Gun," followed a year later by "Beverly Hills Cop II," both with producer Jerry Bruckheimer.
The two brothers ran Scott Free Productions and were working jointly on a film called "Killing Lincoln," based on the best seller by Bill O'Reilly. Along with countless commercials, their company produced the CBS dramas "NUMB3RS" and "The Good Wife" as well as a 2011 documentary about the Battle of Gettysburg for the History Channel.

Tony Scott said he gained perspective by mixing things up between film, TV and commercials.
"I like changing the pace of my life, changing my discipline. It gives me ideas for how to see the world differently," Scott said in a 2007 interview.
Besides "Unstoppable," Scott worked with Washington on four other movies: "Crimson Tide," "Man on Fire," Deja Vu" and "The Taking of Pelham 123."

In a tweet Sunday, director Ron Howard said, "No more Tony Scott movies. Tragic day."
Director Jon Favreau tweeted, "Such sad news about Tony Scott. Heartfelt condolences to his family and friends."
Other Scott films include "True Romance," written by Quentin Tarantino, "The Fan," with Robert De Niro, and "Enemy of the State," starring Will Smith.
Scott was married to actress Donna Scott, who appeared in several of her husband's films. They have twin sons.

Completed in 1963, the 6,060-foot Vincent Thomas Bridge links rises 185 feet at its highest point above the Los Angeles Harbor. Many have taken their lives by jumping from the span.
The bridge has been used in many Hollywood productions, among them "Charlie's Angels," "Gone in 60 Seconds" and "The Fast and the Furious.


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Pussy Riot And The Russian Militant


It sounds like a scriptwriter's dream.
Here we have Russia, a vastly powerful country with a floundering democracy, facing the imminent threat of tyranny. That danger is personified by Vladimir Putin, a former KGB man who looks like, well, a former KGB man, as imagined by John Le Carre. Standing in his way is a gallant resistance movement symbolized by an all-female rock band, a group of punky young performance artists called Pussy Riot.
After playing for democracy in a daring public venue, they face a show trial that could send them to prison for years. Around the world, politicians and celebrities speak out, supporters organise solidarity demonstrations. The film is a natural: can we get Aubrey Plaza as the band's leader? Will Madonna do a cameo? This is too good to be true!
And indeed it is. Putin may be a thug, and Pussy Riot might be feminist warriors for human rights, but the particular act for which they faced trial is much more controversial than is commonly reported in the West.
A good case can be made that it was a grievous act of religious hate crime, of a kind that would be roundly condemned if it happened in a country that the West happened to like. (I'm also wondering why liberals are suddenly so fond of a band that claims inspiration from the "Oi!" music invented by far-right British skinheads).
Last March, three members of Pussy Riot staged an unauthorised "concert" in Moscow's Cathedral of Christ the Saviour. Standing before the altar, they sang a pseudo-hymn to the Virgin, urging her to remove Putin and condemning the Patriarch Kirill as his slavish disciple. They have now been convicted of what a judge termed "hooliganism driven by religious hatred".
Few Western commentators have taken that religious element too seriously, but it is central to what Hollywood might term the back-story.
Look, above all, at the site of the demonstration. Historically, Christ the Saviour was a central shrine both of the Orthodox faith and of Russian national pride, and for that reason, the Bolsheviks targeted it for destruction.
In 1931, in a notorious act of cultural vandalism, the Soviet government dynamited the old building, levelling it to the ground, and replacing it with a public swimming pool. Not until 1990 did a new regime permit a rebuilding, funded largely by ordinary believers, and the vast new structure was consecrated in 2000. The cathedral is thus a primary memorial to the restoration of Russia's Christianity after a savage persecution.
It's difficult, perhaps, for Westerners to realise how bloodthirsty that government assault was. Russia in 1917 was overwhelmingly Orthodox, and in fact was undergoing a widespread religious revival. Rooting out that faith demanded forceful action by the new Bolshevik government, which had no scruples about imposing its will on the wishes of a vast majority. 
Government leaders like Alexandra Kollontai - the self-proclaimed Female Antichrist - illegally seized historic churches and monasteries, and used soldiers to suppress the resulting demonstration. Hundreds were killed in those actions alone.
Through the 1920s, the Bolsheviks systematically wiped out the church's leaders. Metropolitan Vladimir of Kiev perished in 1918, shot outside the historic Monastery of the Caves, while Bishop Hermogenes of Tobolsk was drowned in a Siberian river. 
Archbishop Andronicus of Perm was killed the following year, followed by most of his clergy. In 1920, Bishop Joachim of Nizhni Novgorod was crucified upside down from the iconostasis in his cathedral. In 1922, a firing squad executed the powerful Benjamin, Metropolitan of Petrograd/St Petersburg. The repression was indiscriminate, paying no attention to the victims' records as critics of Tsarist injustice and anti-Semitism.
Persecution claimed many lives at lower levels of the church, among ordinary monks and priests. We hear of clergy shot in their hundreds, buried alive, mutilated, or fed to wild animals. Local Red officials hunted down priests as enthusiastically as their aristocratic predecessors had pursued wolves and wild boar. The number of clergy killed for their faith ran at least into the tens of thousands, with perhaps millions more lay believers.
The regime also rooted up the churches and monasteries that were the heart of Russian culture and spiritual life. Officials wandered the country, vandalising churches, desecrating saints' shrines and seizing church goods, and murdering those who protested the acts. Militant atheist groups used sacred objects to stage anti-religious skits and processions. Between 1927 and 1940, active Orthodox churches all but vanished from the Russian Republic, as their numbers fell from 30,000 to just 500.
In the process of dechristianisation, the crowning act came in 1931 with the obliteration of the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour. For the Bolsheviks, it was the ultimate proof of the Death of God. But, of course, Resurrection did come, so that a new cathedral would stand to mark a new century. The long nightmare was over.
Yet Russia's new religious freedom is a very tender shoot, and the prospect of future turmoil has to agonise those believers who recall bygone horrors. These fears are all the more pressing when modern-day activists seem to reproduce exactly the blasphemous deeds of the past, and even in the precise places.
When modern-day Orthodox look at Pussy Riot, they see the ghosts of Alexandra Kollontai and her militiamen, or the old Soviet League of Militant Godless. Are they wrong to do so?
I just offer an analogy. Imagine a dissident group opposed to the current governments of Poland or Hungary. In order to grab media attention, they take over one of those countries' recently restored synagogues, and frame their complaint in the form of a pseudo-Jewish prayer. Horrified, the authorities arrest them and threaten harsh criminal penalties. Not only would international media fully support the governments in those circumstances, but they would complain bitterly if police and courts showed any signs of leniency. However serious a group's grievances, there is absolutely no justification for expressing them with such mind-boggling historical insensitivity, and in such a place. Anywhere but there!
So no, I won't be giving to any Pussy Riot support groups.
Tags: World News     Russia     Punk Prayer      Madonna    Priest Chaplin


Edited By Cen Fox Post Team

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