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Verdict boosts standing of Casey Anthony lawyer Jose Baez

Wednesday 6 July 2011


Several months ago, one of José Baez's most articulate critics wondered whether he would have a "My Cousin Vinny" moment at trial.

The reference to the 1992 Joe Pesci movie was amusing but poignant, too: The comedy explored how a rookie defense lawyer from Brooklyn managed to learn his craft on the fly and spare two young murder suspects from being convicted in a Deep South courtroom.

With Casey Anthony acquitted of the most serious charges against her Tuesday, the pundits debated whether it was Baez's lawyering or the state's circumstantial case that cleared the woman. But one thing is certain: Baez's stock rose mightily with the outcome this trial.
And if America loves a Cinderella story, what better place to have it told than here in Orlando, in the shadow of a castle named for that long-shot winner?

"The best feeling that I have today is that I know I can go home and my daughter will ask me, 'What did you do today?' " Baez said, "and I can say, 'I saved a life.' "
His post-acquittal statement was somewhat tempered and restrained for a personality such as Baez, who has exuded bravado and confidence, despite bloggers dubbing him "Bozo." His self-assurance was more evident in a response he text-messaged to an Orlando Sentinel reporter late Tuesday: "I told you two years ago that I was going to shock the world."

Even those who challenge his abilities as a lawyer would have a hard time denying his fierce advocacy for this particular client.

"I think the story to take away from this is: He is a wonderful advocate for his client, a zealous advocate," said Fordham law Professor Deborah Denno. "I think he could have been viewed as a protector."

Exactly how the jurors viewed Baez is unknown because they refused to speak with reporters Tuesday. But Denno noted that Baez's critics were often other lawyers who pointed out the things he was doing wrong at trial but not suggesting better alternatives.

"What else was he going to do with this particular case?" Denno asked. "He came up with an alternative story. Even if you didn't fully buy that story, he did come up with another story. He took some big risks in his opening statement, but they paid off for him."

As for Baez's legal bumblings, improper questioning and apparent problems following the rules of criminal procedure, Denno noted that these are things legal professionals notice, but maybe not jurors.

The law professor and others agreed that Baez danced on the line of what is proper for a defense lawyer and perhaps went over that line a few times, placing his career at risk to some extent for his client.

He tried to introduce expert testimony not previously disclosed to the state — and may still face sanctions for that behavior.

He repeatedly attempted to have witnesses talk about documents not in evidence. He called out the prosecution — especially retiring Assistant State Attorney Jeff Ashton — a few times in open court. He delivered a startling opening statement accusing Casey Anthony's father, George, of molesting his daughter and covering up his granddaughter's death.

It's a statement that will not be soon forgotten — especially because so much of what was claimed was not proved during the trial. But in the end, it did not matter. As he noted in his closing, Baez didn't have the burden of proof — the state did.

Chosen by chance

Baez's entry into the international spotlight as Casey Anthony's attorney was a fluke.

An inmate at the Orange County Jail simply recommended Baez to Casey Anthony. Aside from a murder case that gained him some attention in Lake County, Baez was a relative unknown.

But Casey Anthony's case enabled him to rise from obscurity in Central Florida's legal community to a household name.

Brian Pafundi is a recent University of Florida Law School graduate who conducted extensive research on the availability of criminal-discovery records in the Casey Anthony case and what implication that might have on the trial. On Tuesday, he called Baez "an inspiration."

"What criminal-defense attorneys do and, more specifically, what Mr. Baez did, they represent the underdog," Pafundi said. "They represent public enemy No. 1. They are the ones who the general public dislike and sometimes even hate solely because they are fulfilling a constitutional duty."

That Baez, 42, could withstand the vitriol and aspersions cast at him and still put on a strong case and "advocate so vigorously on behalf of his client" was even more impressive, Pafundi said.

"Not only did he not let the public sentiment impact his advocacy, but he also didn't let the gravity of the situation overwhelm him," Pafundi said.

Toward the end of the trial — but before the verdict — even the local television legal analysts who were among Baez's harshest critics were starting to say some complimentary things about him.

Several days before the verdicts came, WFTV-Channel 9 legal analyst Bill Sheaffer said Baez had the makings of a "good trial lawyer." His personable demeanor, emotional intelligence and toughness helped him, Sheaffer said.

"He takes a licking and keeps on ticking," Sheaffer said. "There's no quit in this guy."

He likened Baez to a football player just out of college and thrust into the Super Bowl. He has "good instincts" but a lack of experience that had not allowed him to hone his skills, Sheaffer said.

Before the verdicts, WESH-Channel 2 legal analyst Richard Hornsby said that, despite Baez's courtroom problems, he knew the forensics and the evidence in the case as well as anyone. On Tuesday, after the verdicts, Hornsby praised Baez's closing argument and said it "closed the deal."

"He was able to sell to that jury the common-sense explanation of the forensics," Hornsby said. "It appealed to an ordinary, common person, not a scientist."

Prickly with media

Though Baez's relationships with legal colleagues in Central Florida may have suffered during the past three years, his relationship with the media became even more tortured.

Always more comfortable asking questions than answering them, Baez was quick to cut off reporters who he decided were not helping him or his client. When confronted with legal problems in court and questions about his ability to handle a case of this magnitude early this year, Baez asked one reporter, "Who are you?" before hanging up. Then he called back to say his statements were off the record.

On Tuesday, Baez refused to take questions and only made statements with his defense team standing behind him and the cameras in front. He opined on how this case proves why the death-penalty system is wrong. And he saw it challenging both the criminal-justice system and the media.

"You cannot convict someone until they've had their day in court," he said.

Baez also praised the prosecutors with whom he had battled all these years, saying the three of them "serve the state of Florida very well."

But for all of Baez's graciousness Tuesday, the man who was looking for a "My Cousin Vinny" moment back at the start of the year, said Baez didn't show him a sudden understanding of what it takes to be a quality criminal-defense lawyer.

"Jose Baez never had that moment," said Bob Jarvis, a law professor at Nova Southeastern University. "What we saw today is: It is better to be lucky than to be good. He won this case because the state lost the case. He really is the luckiest man in America."

Luck may be an apt descriptor for Baez. He was admitted to The Florida Bar in late September 2005 and was not even qualified to handle a death-penalty case without the help of a more experienced lawyer.

He is still awaiting the outcome of a Bar complaint that surfaced at the start of this year. He has been cleared in several other Bar complaints involving his ethics and professionalism.

Good, bad, mediocre, lucky — even Jarvis acknowledges that it doesn't matter what category of lawyer Baez falls into at this point. He will be remembered for saving Casey Anthony's life.

"I think his practice soars. Everybody in America will say, 'Get me José Baez,' " Jarvis said. "There's going to be an afterglow, and we'll see what José Baez will do with it. The American people love miracles."

Group Five warns of large earnings drop, says market conditions to blame

Group Five on Tuesday warned of a significant change in fortunes for the JSE-listed construction company.
The group told shareholders that, for the year ended June 30, it expected fully diluted headline earnings a share to be between 45% and 55% lower – reaching 253c a share to 309c a share – compared with the 561c a share recorded in the 2010 financial year.
Headline earnings a share were to be between 45% and 55% lower.

Fully diluted earnings a share were expected to be between 195% and 205% lower – reaching a loss of between 243c a share and 269c a share – compared with the 256c a share in the 2010 financial year.

Earnings a share were to be between 190% and 200% lower than the 280c a share achieved in the previous financial year.
Group Five said in a statement that the slowdown within the construction and construction material sectors in the last two years was largely to blame for the sharp drop in earnings.
“This had negatively impacted performance in the current year as the group still benefited in the 2010 financial year from the majority of large public sector contracts awarded ahead of the World Cup.”
The company said an impairment of its long-term assets held by the construction materials cluster had been recorded, owing to the severity of the materials market deterioration, as well as weaker market forecasts.
This impairment remained the material difference between earnings a share and headline earnings a share.

In addition, in the second half of the financial year under review, the group had incurred a number of once-off costs which had affected headline earnings a share negatively.
These costs include planned restructuring and rationalisation costs within the construction materials cluster, as well as holding costs in the Middle East following the market downturn.

However, with the exception of the Middle East, Group Five said its largest segment, construction, had been holding up well, based on “good contract execution” and the benefit of a number of longer term and some African contracts, secured previously.
That said, though, the company noted that the South African construction and engineering market had seen further contract-award delays and limited work flow into an industry it described as already carrying “significant over-capacity”.
“The tender work that is taking place is heavily contested by large and small contractors with extremely aggressive pricing. Emphasis on a larger geographical footprint for more of the group’s business units and achieving early wins in the re-emergence of the mining and energy markets in Africa remains the strategy to reduce the reliance on weak domestic markets.”
Short-term conditions were worse than expected, added Group Five.
This weakness was expected to continue for longer, with a slow rate of a broader market recovery materialising from the second half of the 2012 financial year.
Group Five’s audited results for the year ended June 30 were expected to be released on August 15.

Charlie Sheen signs on for 'Comedy Central Roast'


In what could be the worst idea in a history of bad ideas, Charlie Sheen has signed up for a Comedy Central Roast and told the network absolutely nothing is off limits.
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For the kind of skewering that's more recently been saved for the likes of Donald Trump, Joan Rivers and David Hasselhoff, Charlie Sheen is officially set to be the next roastee in a new special, the network announced Tuesday.
"The Comedy Central Roast of Charlie Sheen," taping on Saturday, Sept. 10, in Los Angeles, will feature the nation's top comedians taking aim at the major headline-making star.
"You could say I've been providing kindling for this Roast for a while," said Charlie Sheen. "It's time to light it up. It's going to be epic."
"Charlie has assured us that nothing will be off limits in this Roast... which scares even us," said Comedy Central original programming head Kent Alterman.
The only thing scarier would have been if they tried to pass off his "Violent Torpedo of Truth" as a stand-up comedy special.
"The Comedy Central Roast of Charlie Sheen" will air on Monday, Sept. 19, at 10 p.m. ET/PT.

Police talk man out of suicide attempt on overpass

Abilene police officers spent a tense 40 minutes Tuesday night trying to talk a man out of jumping off a highway overpass.
Lt. Mike Collins said someone called 911 around 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, saying a 23-year-old Hispanic man had threatened to "take his phone and go kill himself."
Officers responded to the caller at the intersection of North First Street and Pioneer Drive, where they received a description of the man, who had left the scene.
At 8:59 p.m., an officer spotted the man sitting on the edge of the Winters Freeway overpass. Traffic was quickly blocked on the freeway and on North First Street below the bridge. An ambulance and fire engine were dispatched and staged nearby.
Collins said Officer Damien Hutchinson was the first on the scene. "He did a real good job keeping him calm, and convincing him not to jump until our negotiator could get there," Collins said.
Sgt. Ken Robinson, a trained hostage negotiator, happened to be on duty Tuesday evening. Collins said Robinson and other APD officers talked with the man, trying to convince him not to jump.
Finally, at 9:38 p.m., the man swung his legs over the railing and walked toward officers.
Collins said the man was taken to the Taylor County Law Enforcement Center for psychiatric evaluation.

ESPN bounces NBC to score Wimbledon

NBC lost its 43-year grip on Wimbledon, considered the most prestigious tournament in tennis, after cable sports kingpin ESPN outbid it for the live TV rights.
The power serve was a 12-year, $400 million offer that was too heavy for cable giant Comcast, the Peacock Network's new parent.
"They [Comcast] were just outbid and apparently didn't have enough left over to keep Wimbledon," said analyst Darren Marshall of sports marketing firm rEvolution.
ESPN has had the cable rights to the British-based event since 2003, but NBC had all of the semifinals and finals. NBC's deals expired with the tournament's end on Sunday.
Along with added cash, Disney's ESPN and its sister network, ABC, won over the Wimbledon tournament owners -- the All England Lawn Tennis & Croquet Club -- with an unprecedented arrangement to cover the two-week event live from start to finish.
Tournament owners disliked the way NBC reverted to tape delays in order to accommodate other money-making programming, as it did last week with its "Today" show, analysts said.
"With NBC, Wimbledon was always at the mercy of its programming -- God forbid, 'if we lose an hour of the 'Today' show," said Marshall.
ESPN had done live partial coverage of preliminary matches for nine years, with the final showdowns of superstars going to NBC and its tape-delay coverage.
Insiders said some tennis fans may miss their easy-to-find NBC coverage.
"All the suburban moms who love tennis will now have to spend time searching for it," said Kevin Adler, president of sports marketing firm Engage Marketing.
One thing will remain: NBC's Wimbledon commentator, ex-tennis champ John McEnroe, is said to be in talks to move over to the ESPN coverage team.

Government still won’t commit to digital radio switchover date

The Government has refrained from committing to a digital radio switchover date, originally tabled for 2015, saying the decision to move away from FM is still two years away.
Ed Vaizey, the shadow arts minister

Ed Vaizey, the Minister for Culture, Communications and the Creative Industries, has refused to commit to a digital radio switchover date, saying that the decision will not be made until 2013.
Talking in London at the annual Intellect technology conference, the event where Vaizey first announced the digital radio switchover action plan a year ago, he said: “We will make the decision [about digital radio switchover] in 2013 whether we will go ahead in 2015 or delay.
“I don’t think it [the date] affects the consumer because obviously the consumer is free now to buy digital radios, and also all digital radios have FM capabilities as well.”
Digital radio switchover will see all major radio stations transfer away from FM to DAB only. The FM signal will not be switched off but used by smaller stations and community radio groups.
Vaizey denied that switchover, which is greatly hampered by the need to have digital radios fitted in all vehicles, both old and new, was behind schedule, but stopped short of committing the Government to pressing ahead with it in 2015, the switchover date set by the Brown administration.We want to get into the position where we can be certain about the date for switchover. We have said that 2013 is the right time to take that decision to give you [the radio industry] time if you [the radio industry] do go for a 2015 switchover to make that happen.”
Currently 26.5 per cent of all radio listening is conducted digitally through mix of the web, DAB and digital TV. However, DAB, which the Government has prioritised as the next generation platform in the Digital Economy Act, only accounts for around 16 per cent of total radio listening.
The Government has said that 50 per cent of all listening must be conducted digitally before switchover can begin to happen.
James Cridland, senior radio consultant and former BBC Radio digital executive, thinks the Government will have to announce a clear update soon.
“I think realistically Ed Vaizey will have to have to come out soon and say that the Government may not hit the 2013 target of getting digital listening to 50 per cent. The question is when does it become politically sensible to admit the industry may fall short of its targets? Digital radio switchover will happen but there is a consensus [among the radio industry] that it’s going to be a real stretch to hit the Government’s deadline.”
Experts and radio industry executives think it could take as long as 20 years for full digital radio switchover to occur.
Owen Watters, the sales and marketing director of Roberts Radio, issued an attack on the feasibility of the Government’s current digital radio switchover timetable earlier this year.
He told The Telegraph: “Digital is no doubt the future of radio and we support this fully and completely, but we still strongly feel, as we have from the beginning, that we should not try to force the issue onto the consumer and that we should look at ways of getting our industry into a ‘digital ready state’, responsibly and honestly, regardless of how long it takes.
“We would do well to remember that following the launch of FM, it took over 20 years to become the mainstream format that we know and love today.”
Vaizey said that there had been some progress is moving towards the digital radio switchover, with 14 per cent of new cars now having a DAB radio installed as standard.
He also praised the BBC and commercial radio sector for having launched Radioplayer, a new web player which offers listeners more than 300 UK radio stations in one place earlier this year. He said that digital only content had been improved by the BBC’s rebranding of Radio 7 to Radio 4 Extra and the addition of new digital only station, such as Absolute 90s.
However, he said although the changes represented good progress, the moves were “not yet transformational”.
A funding agreement has yet to be reached between the broadcasters and the radio multiplex operators as to how DAB can be built out to the current FM coverage standards. Nor has a timetable for the extended coverage build-out been drawn up.
“I think we have achieved a lot against our ambitions for radio but obviously there is still a lot more to do,” Vaizey said.
“We are still on course for a decision on switchover in 2013…Hopefully [by then] every radio sold by major retailers will have digital radio capability and the content proposition will continue to improve.”

Jose Baez, Casey Anthony’s lawyer: “Luckiest man in America”

Jose Baez, a lawyer who came out of no where, was snickered at, laughed at, smeared, attacked and rebuked by the judge. In the end, the 42-year-old attorney who grew up in South Florida, came out on top.
A former bikini salesman, high school dropout and deadbeat dad who barely made it into the Florida bar pulled off what some are calling one of the most stunning court victories in history.
Jose Angel Baez, a 42-year-old lawyer who grew up in the Bronx and South Florida, had been practicing law for only three years when Casey Anthony, 25, hired him to defend her against felony murder charges.
Anthony, who professed her innocence, found out about Baez from an inmate while in jail awaiting trial on charges that she killed her 2-year-old daughter, Caylee and dumped her body in the woods near her Orlando home.
At the time, Anthony’s father was skeptical, saying in a taped jail interview that “I hope he’s not making a reputation for himself.’’
On Tuesday, that’s exactly what Baez did.
His client was found not guilty on three of the major felony charges against her - first-degree murder, aggravated child abuse and aggravated manslaughter on a child.
Day in and day out, Anthony had been all but convicted on national TV. On Tuesday, jurors deliberated less than 11 hours.
When the verdict was announced, a gasp was heard in the Orlando courtroom of Circuit Judge Belvin Perry and Baez went from seemingly bumbling rookie to top of the legal heap. He smiled after the verdict and hugged his sobbing client hard.
“He is the luckiest man in America,’’ said Robert Jarvis, a lawyer and law professor at Nova Southeastern University in Davie. He won, Jarvis said, not because of a brilliant legal mind, but because the prosecution couldn’t prove its case, which was solely circumstantial.
The internet was already buzzing Tuesday about Baez’s superstardom: perhaps getting his own national show, a book deal and maybe even a movie. People may hate him, or love him, but they will likely watch him, experts say.
“America is very schizophrenic. They say they hate pit bull lawyers, but when they want to hire a lawyer, they hire a pit bull lawyer,’’ Jarvis said.
Baez, who grew up in the Bronx, moved to South Florida and eventually earned his GED after dropping out of Homestead High School, was uncharacteristically subdued after the verdict was announced just before 2:30 p.m.
“This case has brought on new challenges of all of us,’’ he said. “Challenges in the criminal justice system, challenges in the media, and I think we should all take this as an opportunity to learn and to realize that you cannot convict someone until they’ve had their day in court.”
Jarvis, who has followed the case closely, said Baez threw out so many red herrings on how Caylee died that jurors’ heads were probably spinning. He dropped bombshell after bombshell, telling jurors that Caylee had drowned and that Casey Anthony had been sexually abused by her father. He referred to his own client in his closing statement as a “slut,’’ a big no-no, Jarvis said.
“He worked very hard to lose this case,’’ said Jarvis. “But, sometimes you snatch victory from the jaws of defeat. And, in this case, the victory was handed to him from the prosecution.”
Those who have worked with Baez say he worked very hard on the case and proved wrong those who expected him to fail.
Terry Lenamon, a former member of Anthony’s defense team, said Baez could be an example of what lawyers call the “Columbo factor,’’ referring to the popular 1970s crime series featuring Peter Falk as a naïve, clumsy detective who was underestimated by colleagues and others because of his irritating questions and shaggy demeanor. In the end, however, he always got the bad guy.
Lenamon said that while he questioned Baez’s strategy and motives at times, the attorney deserves credit for the acquittal.
“The guy is very tenacious; he stuck to his guns and he won,’’ Lenamon said.
Before Anthony hired him, few people had ever heard of Baez.
Born in Puerto Rico in 1969, Baez was raised by a single mother who moved to South Florida. After dropping out of Homestead High, according to the Orlando Sentinel, he married at 17, became a father, earned a GED diploma and joined the Navy in 1986. The newspaper said he was assigned to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization in Norfolk, Va., where he trained as an intelligence analyst with what he called “Cosmic top Secret” security clearance.
After leaving the Navy, he attended Miami-Dade Community College, graduated from Florida State University and earned his law degree from St. Thomas’ University School of Law in 1997. He then joined the Miami-Dade Public Defender’s Office, where he worked as a paralegal for a short time, while struggling to be accepted into the Florida bar.
Early in the case, the Orlando Sentinel detailed Baez’s inability to enter the bar because of numerous “misrepresentations” he made to the Board of Bar Examiners.
Indeed, for the next eight years, the Florida Supreme Court continued to turn him down because of “character” issues, including massive financial problems that bordered on fraud. The Court wrote that Baez showed “a total lack of respect for the legal system,” citing his inability to meet his debts, pay child support and failure to pay his student loans.
In an effort to support himself, he started four companies, two of them bikini businesses, Bon Bon Bikinis and Brazilian Bikinis.com, both of which failed, the newspaper reported. He also created a non-profit group, the Miami Domestic Violence Project, but that faltered as well.
Initially, Baez’s office in Kissimmee was wary of the media.
But as the story grew into nightly gavel-to-gavel reporting, he began to embrace it. He appeared on TV, with Nancy Grace who appeared to have made the Caylee Anthony case her personal crusade. She wasted no time dressing him down on national TV. He handled the pressure well. .
“For every Casey Anthony who is acquitted, there are another 100 people who are just convicted because they hire young lawyers who think the best strategy is to just get on Nancy Grace every night,’’ said Richard Hornsby, former president of the Central Florida Criminal Defense Lawyers Association.
Grace, who snidely referred to Anthony as “tot mom,’’ was obviously distraught about the verdict. She directed her anger at Baez and the defense after they went across the street from the Orange County courthouse for a celebration.
“As the defense sits by and has their champagne toast after that not guilty verdict, somewhere out there, the devil is dancing tonight,” she said .

No escape from Brett Favre comeback talk

The first time we saw today’s talk that Brett Favre wants to play in 2011, our first instinct was to ignore it.
By about the tenth time we saw it, we figured we at least had to mention it. So here goes.
On an NFL.com live chat today, Gil Brandt wrote that he thinks Favre would have an interest in playing in the NFL this season, but that there probably isn’t a team out there that shares Favre’s interest.
“I do think Favre would be interested in talking to a team about returning,” Brandt wrote. “But I don’t see a team out there right now that would bring him back as a starter.”
Everyone is sick of Favre comeback chatter, and everyone has been sick of Favre comeback chatter since about three Favre comebacks ago. But that doesn’t mean the chatter is going away, at least not until the regular season starts without a Favre comeback.
Which is one more reason to hope the regular season starts on time.

Apple 'orders 15m iPhone 5s for September'

iPhone 5 rumours have been intensifying for weeks now and, like this latest one, most seem to suggest an Apple launch some time in the next couple of months.
DigiTimes, which is the main source of most of the recent reports, says that Taiwanese manufacturer Pegatron Technology has just taken an order for 15 million iPhone 5s, to begin shipping in September. It attributes the story to “sources from upstream component makers”.
The report also says that the iPhone 5 “does not have any major update from iPhone 4”. If that’s correct it would suggest that the new phone will be simply a slightly improved iPhone 4, just as the 3GS was a slight improvement on the iPhone 3G, and not a completely overhauled device.
Based on the rumours so far, it’s expected that the new iPhone will contain the same A5 processor that is in the iPad 2 and a better camera, possibly an 8-megapixel sensor rather than the 5-megapixels of the iPhone 4. The new handset will apparently look similar to the iPhone 4. However, some rumours have suggested that Apple will release two iPhone models this year, including a cheaper version of the handset.
Apple does not comment on rumours and is yet to confirm any events for August or September, though it typically holds an iPod-related event every September.

Mac Miller Challenges Drake on Twitter

Tuesday 5 July 2011

If you ask your friends who two of the biggest names in the rap industry are right now, most likely you will get these two names in your answer: Mac Miller and Drake.

Now why are these guys relavent to today and now? Because just a little while ago both were tweeting about Birthright Israel and going to Tel Aviv to perform a show. I am not sure how serious both of them were in regards to going to Tel Aviv to have a "Sound clash" as Drake quoted in his tweet, but they are both open about being Jewish.

Both have been heard speaking about their Judaism. Mac Miller has said that he celebrates the high holidays, had a Bar Mitzvah, and he said in an interview with Shalom Life that Judaism is his culture, and his family.


Drake has also been interviewed about his Judaism and speaks about reading his Torah portion and wearing his kippah during his Bar Mitzvah. Drake also celebrates his Judaism and has talked about how he practices the holidays of Yom Kippur and Rosh Hashana.

Recently however, Mac Miller tweeted at Drake saying "@drakkardnoir im the best jewish rapper not you!!! (evil villain laugh)"
Drake then responded by saying "@MacMiller Haaaaaa...s*&@ like this can only be settled in Tel Aviv. Birthright sound clash.
Finally, Mac Miller ended the conversation with "@drakkardnoir i never took advantage of birthright... Tel Aviv here i come"
These two sure did stir up some fun and got people talking if they were really going to be performing in Tel Aviv after there has been talk that each person would like to work with one another.
Drake and Mac Miller at Mega Event T.O.? Hopeful Dreaming.

Sony PlayStation 4 rumours met with scepticism

DigiTimes reports that Sony plans to start production on a PlayStation 4 at the end of this year, with a planned release some time in 2012. The news site, which has frequently been first to report Apple rumours that turn out to be true, said that Sony would include “body movement-based control like Kinect” in the PS4.
However, video games experts have greeted the report with scepticism.
Eurogamer’s Digital Foundry blog wrote: “The basic notion of a true next-gen PlayStation releasing within 18 months is ludicrous. PlayStation 3 has only become profitable for Sony relatively recently and the platform holder will be hoping for a substantial period of time in which to recoup the enormous losses they have incurred this console generation. In the here and now, PlayStation 3 has yet to dip below £199, where we would expect sales volumes to increase significantly. Closing this window of opportunity prematurely doesn't really make sense from any kind of commercial perspective."
Eurogamer also noted that no rumours of a PlayStation 4 had surfaced anywhere within the “notoriously indiscreet” video games industry.
Games blog 1Up.com repeated comments from Sony CEO Howard Stringer last month, in which he said: “I wouldn't look for any discussion of a next generation PlayStation for quite some time."As well as the desire to keep selling the PS3 for a bit longer, Sony also has the launch of the PlayStation Vita to deal with. The successor to the PlayStation Portable should begin going on sale late this year, with a European release expected around spring 2012. It’s unlikely that Sony would want to divert attention away from that and on to a new home console.
Nevertheless, the fact remains that DigiTimes has been a reliable source of rumours about upcoming products for some time now. As Eurogamer says, “it is difficult to readily discount anything from ‘manufacturing sources’ so quickly”. It’s worth keeping an eye on this particular rumour.

Facebook's awesome product announcement 'could be video chat'

Facebook’s product announcement happening today could be the launch of the highly-anticipated video chat feature.
Several technology websites have been making the prediction that a Skype-style service will finally launch on Facebooklater today.
Pundits are divided at to whether Facebook has indeed partnered with Skype, which has recently been acquire by Microsoft, or built its own product in-house.
Last week, Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook’s founder and chief teased journalists on a tour of the company’s Seattle office, that the site’s engineers were going to launch “something awesome" this week.
He declined to give more details of the coming release but speculation has been mounting in technology circles for the last few days.
The other suggestions doing the rounds are that Facebook's long-awaited app for Apple's iPad could be finally ready to launch or that the social network will unveil a dedicated photo-sharing app for smartphones. The 40-strong Facebook Seattle office is the only offshoot away from the company’s Palo Alto headquarters where any engineering or product development for the site happens. The Seattle satellite team have been largely responsible for the company’s mobile site.
A Facebook spokesman declined to comment.
A live stream of the one hour-long launch can be watched hereand will begin at 6pm UK time from Facebook’s HQ.
So far more than 70,000 Facebook users have signed up to view the feed

Sony plans to redesign PlayStation Network

Sony is planning a redesign of its online gaming network, the PlayStation Network (PSN), following a hacking attack that brought the network down for nearly a month, according to reports.
The original layout for the PSN and the PlayStation store was heavy in text and had a lot of information on the screen. The new look is more streamlined, with bigger images and more accessible information, according to the report. It will be similar to the streamlined design of Microsoft’s online gaming network, Xbox Live.
Sony’s online network is a critical service that competes with Microsoft’s Xbox Live online gaming service among others. There are also 948 games now available in the PlayStation Network store, as well as 4,000 pieces of add-on content for games.
Sony’s PSN was offline for 24 days in the United States, and longer in other countries. The company took the PSN down after hackers were able to break in and steal sensitive information about more than 100 million customers. Sony laid indirect blame for the PSN’s downtime on hacktivist group Anonymous, which typically rallies a group of loosely connected hackers under moral or political banners.
PlayStation 3 and PlayStation Portable owners were unable to download new content for their games and play online with other players. The downtime came at a critical time for two major releases — Portal 2 and Mortal Kombat, both of which prominently featured online play and had received a good deal of critical acclaim.
Sony offered PSN users free games and a whole batch of other welcome-back goodies — like free subscriptions to the company’s premium PlayStation Plus version of the PSN — to entice players to continue using the PSN. The packages will probably appease a large number of console and handheld gaming device owners. But a lot of gamers — myself included — already own those Triple-A titles, and find they aren’t really worth as much as they used to be.

iPhone app to map and plot Taliban positions

Captain Jonathan Springer has invested £20,000 in perfecting the system, called Tactical Nav which can be downloaded from iTunes for £3.49.
He says he came up with the idea after two of his comrades were killed in a Taliban rocket strike last year.
He perfected the tool, which is also being marketed to walkers in less hostile environments, during a 12-month tour in Afghanistan that ended in May.
"As a fire support officer, I take into battle a compass, binoculars, a map, a protractor, a GPS device – a secondary GPS device in case one fails –and batteries," he said in an interview after returning home to Indiana, in the US "What this does is, it combines all these components, and throws it into just the one app." The app is one of several smart phone technologies being used in war zones.
American soldiers are also testing a translation app for the Android operation system, as militaries around the world weigh up the benefits of issuing smartphones to servicemen.Others help snipers aim their rifles or fly mini drones – sadly not available on iTunes.

Nancy Grace on Casey Anthony

According to the Huffington Post, Nancy Grace of the Nancy Grace Show on CNN is personally appalled at the verdict in the Casey Anthony trial.
It seems to me that an appropriate response to a headline like this is profound indifference. Who cares what Nancy Grace thinks about the Casey Anthony case?
Of course, lots of people do care. I know because when I was combing through the day's news items, “nancy grace casey anthony” was the number one trending search on Google this morning.
Before we get into the nuts and bolts of Nancy Grace’s opinions, however, and why they matter to people, let’s run through the Cliff’s Notes of the Casey Anthony trial--just in case you haven’t been following it.
Anthony, 25, was accused of knocking out her 2-year-old daughter, Caylee, with chloroform, suffocating her with duct tape, stashing her in the trunk of her car, then dumping her in the woods.
The defense claimed that Casey Anthony, who lied about several details regarding the disappearance of Caylee, came from an abusive family and that her father covered up Caylee’s accidental drowning in the family pool by dumping her body in the woods.
On Tuesday Casey Anthony was found not guilty of all charges except lying to the police.
Nothing about this case is clear. There are no good guys. The grandparents are clearly as bent and narcissistic as their female offspring. All of them do their best impersonation of human beings, but end up looking little better than mirror-gazing monkeys miming outrage and remorse.
Something is clearly missing in that family.
In a just universe Casey Anthony would have been genetically incapable of reproduction.
If conscience was truly universal, or even better, God-given, then she and her family would never sleep peacefully again.
Unfortunately, it’s not a just universe, and nothing is God-given save what we give God.
Enter Nancy Grace.
Pundits like Ms. Grace are designed to stand in for your average Jane Q. Mom. Everything about Ms. Grace, from her sensible post 40s hairdo to her judgmental but vaguely righteous gaze, shows she is a surrogate for the modern day white middle-class mother.
Of course, in order for her to be a proper representation of the ideal American mom, she has to be imbued with the right amount of institutional authority. No problem, not only is Ms. Grace a snap judge of character mixed with a dollop of moral outrage, she is a bona fide lawyer.
Mother knows best plays best with a J.D. following your name.
There’s no particular problem with this sort of substitution, I suppose, but it’s important to realize its limitations.
Our justice system is finely tuned to avoid snap judgments and unjust prosecutions. It fails at that sometimes, and sometimes it swings too far in the other direction, as it may have done in this case.
I want someone to pay for Caylee Anthony’s heinous murder too. But we have juries to protect against emotional judgments. Neither mothers, fathers or victims get to decide who is guilty. If they did, a lot more innocent people would fall at the end of a rope.
Bad judgments just come with the territory.
What do you think of the Caylee Anthony verdict? Does Nancy Grace have a right to be angry?Tell us in the comments.

Top tablets: reviews

A quick look at each of the top eight tablets currently available, in no particular order
 Apple iPad 2
Score: 4.5 /5
Pre-eminent and still the best tablet currently on the market, the iPad 2 is light, slim and a delight to use. But it’s not just the fact that you can read books, check your emails, browse the webs or watch videos that mean Apple, for now, own this market: the iPad has spawned a library of Apps that is continuing to grow rapidly and that has changed how many consumers think of media.
That means that there are countless, excellent games as well as apps that reinvent magazines and serve purposes that were impossible on other devices. Even cab drivers collecting passengers at airports are using iPads for the name of the person they’re picking up.
Operating System: Apple iOS 4
Dimensions (WxDxH): 18.6 cm x 0.9 cm x 24.1 cm
Weight: 601 g
Display: 9.7" IPS TFT - LED backlight - 1024 x 768 ( 132 ppi ) - Multi-Touch
Processor: Apple A5 1 GHz ( Dual-Core )
Memory: 16 GB integrated
Digital Camera: Rear + VGA front
HD Video Recording: 720p

Asus Transformer
Score: 4/5
Asus’s Transformer is a departure for tablets: it combines an excellent Google Android tablet with a fully-fledged keyboard. The result is both a decent netbook and tablet that does everything an Android tablet currently can. That means web browsing, movies, a range of apps and scores of other uses are all possible, but so too is the longer-form work that demands a keyboard.
The Tranformer may not be the lightest or the most elegant of the forthcoming Android tablets, but it is certainly the first to really tackle the problems of typing on a touchscreen. An added bonus is that they keyboard effectively acts as a battery pack for the tablet and so can extend life to up to 16 hours.
Specifications:
Operating System: Android 3.0 (Honeycomb) Platform
Display: 10.1-inch WSVGA IPS capacitive multi touch display
Chipset: NVIDIA® Tegra™ 2 Mobile Processor
Memory: 1GB DDR2
Storage: 16GB eMMC Flash
Camera: 1.2 megapixel (Front); 5.0 Megapixel (Rear)
Dimensions: 10.67” x 6.89” x 0.47” –inches (W x D x H)
Weight: 1.5lbs

BlackBerry PlayBook
Score: 3/5
At 7”, the PlayBook is more portable than the best rival tablets, all of which are currently around 10”. It is as well built as the iPad or the Samsung Galaxy Tab and its screen makes for a bright, sharp viewing experience whether you’re playing games or watching movies. So it looks and feels like a really professional-grade device. You could justify paying £399 for it.
As has been much reported, the PlayBook also lacks the thing for which makers Research in Motion are so famed: email. If you tether your phone to your BlackBerry handset, software called Bridge means your email and calendar appear properly. Without a handset, you are left simply to access email via the web, as you could on any other device.
The logic behind this is that it’s more secure to keep your email on just one device, and simply use the PlayBook as a larger screen. This may be the way to the heart of a corporate IT manager, but users deserve better. Confronted with a security problem, BlackBerry have bodged a workaround rather than provided a solution. That's a real pity, because the operating software itself is slick, whether its editing documents or playing music.
When it comes to apps, the secret to the iPad’s success, there simply aren’t enough for the PlayBook. Yet.
Critics, however, would be foolish to write off the PlayBook. Corporate apps, from RBS to many others, are already impressive because the company has capitalised on rich relationships in those sort of markets. Accessory makers, too, are excited by the PlayBook because its users are likely to be well-heeled. Proper email is coming soon as well. RIM are playing a longer game here.
Specifications:
Operating System: BlackBerry Tablet OS
Dimensions (WxDxH): 19.4 cm x 1 cm x 13 cm
Weight: 425 g
Display: 7" TFT - 1024 x 600 - Multi-Touch
Processor: 1 GHz ( Dual-Core )
RAM: 1 GB
Memory: 16 GB integrated
Wireless: 802.11 a/b/g/n, Bluetooth 2.1
Digital Camera: 5 Mp rear + 3 Mp front; 1080p video record

Samsung Galaxy Tab 2
Score: 4.5 /5
The Galaxy Tab 2 is the only Android tablet to rival the iPad 2 for style. It’s light, slim, powerful and elegant. At 10.1”, the screen is big enough while the surprisingly light weight means it’s genuinely portable too. The only real downside is that the Tab 2 isn’t out yet. Using one extensively before release, however, indicates that at launch it will only be the availability of apps and the ease of use that differentiates the Tab 2 from the iPad.
That’s a double-edged compliment, however: the Tab 2 has a single dock port, rather than any bells and whistles that might let you connect HDMI cables etc. In due course, however, wireless technologies may render that complaint irrelevant.
Specifications:
OS: Android 3.0 (Honeycomb)
Display: 10.1” WXGA 1280x800
Processor: 1GHz Dual Core application processor
Camera: Rear: 3.0mp with LED Flash; front : 2.0mp
Playback : 1080p Full HD Video @ 30fps
Recording : 720p HD Video
Memory: 16G / 32G / 64G, microSD (up to 32GB)
Size: 256.6 x 172.9 x 8.6 mm, 595g

Motorola Xoom
Score: 4/5
Motorola’s Xoom, in both the US and the UK, was the first tablet to come to the market using Google’s Android operating system. It remains an impressive device: a decent 10” screen, a powerful processor and the real faults at launch were simply down to the lack of apps for Honeycomb, the codename for the tablet version of Android.
Although critics suggested that the placing of the on button on the back, for instance, was a design flaw, in fact it was simply different from the iPad: the Xoom remains a viable alternative because most users of tablets will be focused on web browsing, email and ereading. With that in mind, it’s as good an Android tablet as is currently available in the UK.
Specifications:
Android Platform: Android 3.0 (Honeycomb)
Camera: front-facing 2MP webcam; rear 5MP Camera with LED flash, digital zoom; HD recording; playback in 720p HD
Screen: 10.1-inch
1280 x 800 pixel resolution, at 150p per inch
Processor: dual-core processor
Memory: 1GB
Size: 9.8 inches, 6.6 inches, 0.5 inches (LWH)
Weight: 1.61 pounds

HP TouchPad
Score: 3/5
Wireless charging. Audio from Dr Dre. An operating system unlike that made by either Apple or Google. HP’s new tablet, the TouchPad, ought to have a lot going for it. It’s even got a magazine to tell you all about the best apps to buy.
It feels solid, albeit slightly plasticky in the hand. At 740g, it’s slightly heavier than an Apple iPad or Samsung Galaxy Tab, although perfectly portable enough.
Perhaps it would be perfectly forgivable if WebOS, the operating system that HP bought from Palm, lived up to the hype. And indeed there is a lot to like. In many ways the TouchPad rewrites – reinscribes? – the tablet handbook. Gone is the homescreen with icons and widgets indicating programmes or services. Instead, there’s a desktop that is basically just a staging post each of the apps the TouchPad runs. So press the home button and each ‘card’ is arrayed in a line. Swipe up to close or tap to select. If you’re writing an email message, the message gets a new ‘card’ so you can also refer back to your inbox. This is progress, compared to other tablets.
But is it enough when the email app itself takes five seconds or so to grind into action every time you fire it up? When other apps take more like 10 seconds? This doesn’t sound like long, but other tablets don’t keep you hanging around. And is it enough when, inexplicably, the TouchPad decided to duplicate my inbox nine times, offering a range of different unread message counts? These may all be teething troubles. When the TouchPad works, it does work very well.
Specifications:
Screen: 9.7” (1024x768) Touch Screen Display
Weight: 740g, 14 mm thick
Operating system: HP webOS 3.0
Processor: Dual Core 1.2 GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon Processor
Memory: 1 GB RAM
Storage: 32GB Storage
Camera: 1.3 MP Front-facing Camera – video chatting capability

Acer Iconia Tab
Score: 4/5
Available in both 7” and 10” versions, the Acer Iconia is a reasonably priced (from £299) device that surpasses expectations. It has more ports and consequently can do more than most of its counterparts, and it’s also nicely put together. A Windows version is also available, making it plain that tablets really need to have proper tablet interfaces such as Honeycomb to be effective.
What the Iconia really reveals, however, is how different a 7” and a 10” tablet is: one device feels like there’s enough space for browsing the web and watching films in relative luxury. The other, however, is far better suited for portability. That means consumers should decide what’s most important to them and buy accordingly, rather than simply going for the 7” because it’s cheaper.
Specifications:
Dimensions:260 (L) x 177 (W) x 13,3 (H)
Weight:700g
Processor:nVidia Tegra 250 Dual cortex A9; 1GHz
OS:Android v3.0 Honeycomb
Memory: 1GB DDR2 RAM (1x1GB)
Screen:10.1" WXGA LED
Resolution:1280 x 800
Hard Drive:eMMC 32GB
Webcam:Front 2.0 MP & Back 5.0 MP with flash

HTC Flyer
Score: 3.5 /5
The HTC Flyer is one of a very few tablets that is distinctly different: featuring a pen, it might feel like this is a technological instalment of Back to the Future, but in fact the ‘stylus’ is used to write on the 7” device and take handwritten notes in a way that has genuinely not been easy before. Integration with Evernote and other applications means that it could replace a notepad and also record audio too.
Aside from the pen, the Flyer also offers a version of HTC Sense, the company’s own interface, that runs over an older version of Android. The result is a tablet that’s genuinely very different from the others, although not necessarily a rival to larger models.
Specifications:
Operating system: Android 2.3 with HTC Sense
Screen: 7 inch touch-sensitive screen with 1024 X 600 resolution
Weight: 420 grams (14.82 ounces) with battery
Processor: 1.5 GHz
Camera: 5 megapixel color camera with auto focus; 1.3 megapixel front camera
Internal storage: 32 GB
RAM: 1 GB

Boston Pops Gets Last Minute Replacement Singer

Monday 4 July 2011

The Boston Pops 4th of July celebration, which regularly draws half a million people, had to scramble to find a replacement singer when Lionel Richie dropped out last Thursday. Country Singer Martina McBride will perform in his place during the concert and fireworks spectacular.
Richie strained a vocal cord and was told by his doctors that he shouldn't perform.
"It was such an honor being asked to celebrate the Fourth of July with this legendary orchestra, and I hope to perform with them in the future," Richie said in a statement released by the Boston Pops.
McBride agreed to fill in at the last minute after a few hours notice.
Richie's departure left the Pops scrambling not just to find somebody who could perform, but also coming up with the music for the orchestra to play during the performance, called "charts."
"Basically, I got a phone call about this at, oh, midnight on Thursday," said Pops conductor Keith Lockhart, as reported by The Boston Globe. "So the first question was, who are we going to get to do the charts, and can they turn them around in 48 hours? Fortunately, we have people who can do that."
McBride will perform three songs, two of her own, and "America The Beautiful." McBride's first and only chance to rehearse the songs with the full orchestra came on July 3, during the public rehearsal that the Pops holds, which draws 75,000 people. "I was just glad I did not have plans on the Fourth of July this year," said McBride. "I guess everything happens for a reason." The concert also has a rendition of the "1812 Overture" by Tchaikowsky featuring actual church bells and cannons during the climax of the piece. This year, the cannons will be "played" by the 101st Field Artillery Regiment of the US Army, which returned this year from its deployment in Kabul, Afghanistan.McBride will perform three songs, two of her own, and "America The Beautiful." McBride's first and only chance to rehearse the songs with the full orchestra came on July 3, during the public rehearsal that the Pops holds, which draws 75,000 people. "I was just glad I did not have plans on the Fourth of July this year," said McBride. "I guess everything happens for a reason."
The concert also has a rendition of the "1812 Overture" by Tchaikowsky featuring actual church bells and cannons during the climax of the piece. This year, the cannons will be "played" by the 101st Field Artillery Regiment of the US Army, which returned this year from its deployment in Kabul, Afghanistan

Smartphone app hails taxis from comfort of home

Kabbee, a free iPhone app which was launched last week, has already signed up 4,000 licensed minicabs in the London area.
Kabbee is a free iPhone app
Kabbee is a free iPhone app
After registering with the service and linking their account to their credit card, users simply need to enter their destination to instantly obtain a range of quotes along with estimated waiting times.
The smartphone's in-built technology tells taxi firms precisely where the fare is, and the driver offering the best quote is immediately dispatched to pick them up.
Passengers can even use their iPhone to pay for their journey via their bank account if they find themselves short of change.
Similar versions for Android and BleckBerry phones are planned. Another free service, LDNtaxiApp, which also launched on the iPhone this summer, simply requires users to enter their destination to summon a taxi to them.
Their details are sent out to any registered driver within a mile radius, and the first to respond picks up the fare. The user can even watch the progress of their taxi as it makes its way to them via an interactive map.
Other apps offer similar services for members of car clubs and car sharing schemes.
Chas Ball, chief executive of the CarPlus charity, which supports such groups, said: "There is a generation that no longer thinks the car is a must-have but the iPhone is a must-have ... car clubs lend themselves to booking on the fly."
Car clubs are currently operating in cities across the country, with the number of members expected to reach 200,000 over the next year.
Using apps enables members to book cars while on the move by detecting the nearest free car to the member, reserving it and even unlocking it for them automatically on arrival.

MySpace founder ‘choked’ when Facebook realised his vision

The usually silent Anderson has spoken out about MySpace’s demise as a result of Facebook’s success, only a few days after the struggling social network was off-loaded by News Corporation for a fraction of the price it bought for in 2005.
“My original vision for [MySpace] was that everything got better when it was social — so I tried to build all the super popular things used on the web (blogs, music, classifieds, events, photos) on top of MySpace’s social layer… But quickly I saw that it’s really hard to layer in social to features after the fact. At MySpace we had the luxury of having social first, and building the products on top of that layer. Then I choked and Facebook realized that vision,” he wrote on his Google+ profile.
Last week News Corporation sold MySpace to advertising agency Specific Media and Justin Timberlake for $35 million, having paid $580 million to co-founders Anderson and Chris DeWolfe for the formerly most popular social network in 2005.
MySpace, which started as a site on which users could share their interest in pop and rock bands, has in the last three years been eclipsed by the explosive growth of competitor Facebook.
The struggling social has been bedevilled in recent years by confusion over its strategy and, according to analysts, failed to innovate at the pace required. Its user numbers peaked at 73.6 million in October 2008 and has since shrunk to 35 million according to the latest figures from ComScore, which tracks the market. Facebook on the other hand, is understood to have 600 million registered users. It was a busy time in the world of social networks last week as Google launched its own Facebook rival– Google+.
Anderson praised the new social product, despite saying it seemed “like a reaction to Twitter/Facebook”.
“Google already has top-notch products in key categories-photos, videos, office productivity, blogs, Chrome, Android, maps and search. Can you start to see/imagine what Google+ does for Gmail? Picasa? YouTube? Not to mention search? The +1 system that Google now has control of (unlike Facebook Likes) can really influence and change the nature of their search,” he wrote.
Google+ is still in beta and available to only a small number of invited people.

Timeline of recent hacks: from Sony to Sega to Fox News

Here is a timeline of recent hacks carried out by a variety of groups, including LulzSec and Anonymous.
April 29 Fox Broadcasting is hacked, with emails and passwords of hundreds of employees accessed.
May 29 PBS, the US public television station, has its website hacked into: LulzSec places a false story saying that the rapper Tupac Shakur, who was shot and killed in 1996, is alive on the PBS homepage.
June 2 The hackers break into Sony's intranet, accessing the private details of more than a million people and posting them online.
June 6 Nintendo becomes the latest victim of the group's hacking spree, although the group says: “We’re not targeting Nintendo. We like the N64 too much - we sincerely hope Nintendo plugs the gap.”
June 8 NHS patients face a potential security breach after the hackers gained access to health service passwords. LulzSec claims that it had accessed a system handling sensitive patient data. They say: “we mean you no harm and only want to help you fix your tech issues… we’re a somewhat known band of pirate-ninjas that go by LulzSec. Some time ago, we were traversing the internet for signs of enemy fleets. While you aren’t considered an enemy – your work is of course brilliant – we did stumble upon several of your admin passwords.”June 16 The public website of the US Central Intelligence Agency goes down after the hacker group said it had launched an attack. The CIA site initially could not be accessed from New York to San Francisco, and Bangalore to London.
The same day, it is accused of hacking Sega's website, but denies involvement. A Twitter message from LulzSec said: “We want to help you destroy the hackers that attacked you. We love the Dreamcast, these people are going down.”
June 20 LulzSec apparently brings down the Serious and Organised Crime Agency (Soca) website.
June 21 Claims that Lulzsec stole the entire 2011 census database are denied by the group. Ryan Cleary, an alleged member of the hacking group, is arrested in Essex by specialist cyber crime officers from Scotland Yard. However, they deny involvement, saying on Twitter: "Just saw the pastebin of the UK census hack. That wasn't us - don't believe fake LulzSec releases unless we put out a tweet first."
June 22 The official Brazilian government website and the Brazilian president's website are brought down. A Twitter message from the main LulzSec page says: "Our Brazilian unit is making progress. Well done @LulzSecBrazil, brothers!"
June 24 Travelodge's database of customers is used to send some clients a spam message offering them jobs.“The safety and security of your personal information is of the upmost importance to us and as a result we are currently conducting a comprehensive investigation into this issue”, the firm said.
July 4 Hackers took control of an official Fox News Twitter account and posted false updates claiming that President Barack Obama had been assassinated. The hackers who identified themselves as "The Script Kiddies" and said they shared the spirit of prominent hacking group Anonymous.

Thailand and Mass Politics

Sunday 3 July 2011

Thailand's Puea Thai Party won a solid parliamentary majority in yesterday's election, and Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva graciously conceded defeat. Thais are left to wonder whether the new government will grant former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra amnesty for corruption and allow him to return home, and whether the military will step in to prevent that from happening.

For now, however, one outcome of the election is clear enough. The changes in Thai society that made the rise of Mr. Thaksin possible and that he furthered in his five years in office until he was ousted by the military in 2006 are continuing.

The incumbent Democrat Party and the challenger Puea Thai fought this contest primarily on the basis of party platforms and the personal appeal of the candidates. That may sound unremarkable, but Thai politics used to be the province of bland characters who campaigned on their ability to bring benefits to their local constituencies.
Patronage and vote buying continue to play a part in Thai politics today. But it's striking that in the last few weeks both parties mobilized their supporters on the basis of their visions for the nation as a whole. The pro-Thaksin Puea Thai set the agenda of rural development and globalization, and the Democrats were forced to follow.

Both parties pledged more help for the poor, including measures that could be fairly described as populist. Their proposals for increases in the minimum wage and more government support for farmers differed only in the details. The many promises of government spending have prompted concerns that the next government could wreck Thailand's public finances.

A more positive sign was the way in which the two parties competed to show they would enhance Thailand's international competitiveness. Both proposed badly needed investments in infrastructure and education.

It's notable that during the campaign the Democrats dropped references to a "sufficiency economy." In the 1970s, King Bhumibol Adulyadej coined the term to discourage indebtedness caused by overinvestment and overconsumption in rural areas. Since then it has grown into a nationalist and sometimes autarkic philosophy. Following the 2006 coup, the military junta revived the idea and the Democrats continued to pay lip service to it after Prime Minister Abhisit took office in late 2008.

Most Thais realize that such romanticism is a relic of the past. Mr. Thaksin encouraged rural residents to start local industries and produce tradable goods. Rural incomes expanded, and many farmers have traveled abroad and understand that greater opportunities await if the government removes obstacles to growth.

Puea Thai benefited from Mr. Thaksin's proven track record of development. As the campaign wore on and the Democrat Party lost ground, Mr. Abhisit began to emphasize his opponents' links to the pro-Thaksin "red shirt" movement that occupied central Bangkok last year. That episode ended in violence, with government troops killing at least 91 protesters and the red shirts setting fire to buildings.

Thai society remains highly polarized by these events and the Thaksin period, in which the former prime minister sometimes used his power to silence critics. But after his overthrow, the military government and then the Democrats failed to continue the more popular and successful Thaksin policies. They also failed to strengthen the weak institutions of government that allowed Mr. Thaksin's abuses. Instead they gave Thais the impression that they wanted to turn back the clock to an era when elites divided power among themselves with little regard for the voters.

As this election showed, Thailand has irrevocably reached the stage where it will be governed by mass parties. Creating the checks and balances to manage that political competition has become the most urgent task. Some analysts, such as Thitinan Pongsudhirak writing on these pages last week, have urged that the two sides reach an informal deal to establish norms of behavior. That is essential in the short term, but the next government will need to embark on the process of revising the constitution to create robust and independent institutions to govern the political process. Without such reforms, political uncertainty will continue to hold back Thailand's development.

Djokovic wins Wimbledon ... Casey Anthony arguments ... Yellowstone River oil spill assessed

WIMBLEDON, England  — Novak Djokovic (NOH'-vak JOH'-kuh-vich) has won his first Wimbledon title. He beat defending champion Rafael Nadal, 6-4, 6-1, 1-6, 6-3. It was Djokovic's fifth straight victory over the Spaniard. He also takes over the No. 1 ranking from Nadal. Djokovic also won this year's Australian Open.

ORLANDO, Fla.  — Prosecutors have told a Florida jury that Casey Anthony killed her 2-year-old daughter Caylee because she wanted "to live the carefree life she had" before her daughter's birth. But the defense says there is no proof to show how Caylee died. In closing arguments today, defense attorney Jose Baez says there are more questions than answers and reasonable doubt that Anthony killed her daughter.

BEIRUT  — Some of Syrian President Bashar Assad's allies are urging him to institute political reforms and speak to demonstrators opposed to his rule. Opposition activists say it's too late for such efforts. Meanwhile, activists say Syrian forces have been making arrests in the western city of Hama, where massive protests were held on Friday.

LAUREL, Mont. — Teams of federal and state workers are fanning out along Montana's Yellowstone River to assess the environmental damage from a ruptured ExxonMobil pipeline. The pipe spewed an estimated 42,000 gallons of crude oil into the river. An official with the Environmental Protection Agency says fast flows are spreading the oil over a large area but could also reduce the damage to wildlife and crops.

HELENA, Mont. — The runoff from a record winter snowpack and spring flooding has created disappointing conditions for Montana's fly fishing industry. Guides and outfitters are reporting high cancellation rates with the state's prize trout streams running higher and dirtier than normal. The manager of the Madison River Fishing Company in Ennis says it's rough now, but he thinks the late season "is going to be really good."


NUGENT: Donating to Obama feeds Fedzilla

Saturday 2 July 2011

Internet sleuth Matt Drudge has a hyperlink on his website, drudgereport.com, to a story about President Obama raffling off dinner with him for a $5 donation to his re-election campaign.
There will be some mindless, bloodsucking liberal zombies who will donate five greenbacks in hopes of winning dinner with Mr. Obama, but that pool surely is shrinking. In this economy, even liberal moonbats ought to find a better way to spend five bucks than to take a chance on winning dinner with their favorite Marxist.
For instance, since Mr. Obama moved into 1600 Pennsylvania Ave., gas prices have doubled. Food prices are “necessarily skyrocketing.” So is unemployment. Faith that the president knows what he is doing as it pertains to the economy is in a nose dive.
Only private-sector capitalists understood that Mr. Obama’s “hope and change” message during his presidential campaign was a masterful stroke of deception that would lead to an economic catastrophe. Nothing Mr. Obama said during the campaign or during his presidency has sent tingles up our legs. Instead, we hung our heads in shame, knowing that Mr. Obama’s political values and economic policies would wreck America.
Donating five bucks or any other amount to Mr. Obama’s campaign is giving money to a campaign that will continue to put people out of work, drive down home values, cause retirement funds to slide south and increase the burden for future generations of Americans with trillions of dollars in debt.
Who would do this? Who could be so politically ignorant and terminally naive as to vote against his own self-interest as well as to damage America by giving five bucks to Mr. Obama, who, if he wins in 2012, will have four more years to move his socialist agenda forward while driving America into the traffic jam of the Greek economic freeway?
Economic train wrecks are caused by politicians who either intentionally implement kamikaze economic policies to gain more power or believe Fedzilla should have even more control over our lives, or a combination of the two. Either way, an economic train wreck is sure to occur. And so it has.
And the economic malaise will continue so long as naive liberals and avowed socialists believe that stabbing themselves in the eye will somehow lead to better eyesight.
What liberals need to do is keep their five bucks. Put it in the gas tank or spend it at the grocery store. You may not be able to buy as much as you did before Mr. Obama was elected, but your five bucks would best be used by your spending it in your own self-interest rather than giving it to a guy who will use it against you.
Economic prosperity will occur once again when Americans realize that Fedzilla and those who feed it are the problem, not the solution. I’ve got five bucks that says so.
Ted Nugent is an American rock ‘n’ roll, sporting and political activist icon. He is the author of “Ted, White and Blue: The Nugent Manifesto” and “God, Guns & Rock ‘N’ Roll” (Regnery Publishing).

Women with size five feet are most attractive to men

The formula for a perfect woman's foot is a size five, wearing three inch heels and red toe nail varnish, according to the study.
A study discovered men find size five feet, such as those belonging to Loren, Victoria Beckham, Kim Kardashian and Sophia Loren, are the most alluring.
Research by foot plaster company Compeed revealed nearly half of men will look at a woman's feet on a first date and a third will make a character judgement based on the state of them.
The poll of 2,000 adults found four out of ten women go to extreme lengths to cover their unkempt feet in the summer by hiding them in boots or shoes.
Six out of ten women admit to trying to hide their feet from other people because they are self-conscious.
One in five recalls feelings of embarrassment following a comment about their feet being unattractive.
The top foot related worry for women is cracked heels and dry skin, with 38 per cent, chipped nail varnish, 29 per cent, and blisters and corns, 14 per cent.
However, more than half of the UK top earning women, who make more than 71,000 pounds a year, spend nothing on caring for their feet.
Andrew Simmons, 30, an officer worker from London, said: "There's nothing worse than meeting a woman only to look down and see cracked skin or blisters.
"I prefer smaller feet and if a woman takes care of them then you can tell she looks after herself.
"I can tell when my girlfriend hasn't trimmed her nails because she wears shoes in the summer to make sure they're covered up."
Compeed spokesman Niamh Finan said: "While men and women are becoming more judgemental of others based on the state of their feet, we are a nation that still fails to care for our own.
"The common perception that caring and grooming of feet is an indulgence of the rich is also a fallacy, with over half of the UK's top earning women spending nothing on caring for their feet."
Beverley Ashdown, member of the Society of Chiropodists and Podiatrists, said "As a podiatrist, I come across some very neglected feet which suffer from blisters, corns and severely cracked heels."Moreover, at the first sign of summer, I begin to notice these painful conditions revealed in strappy sandals on people that have no idea that their feet are in desperate need of attention."

max talbot

This was Max Talbot after his fight with Daniel Carcillo during Game 6 of the 2009 Eastern Conference quarterfinal. His shushing of the Philadelphia crowd and Penguins comeback soon after that moment made him an even bigger "superstar" in Pittsburgh than he already was.
Those memories have quickly been erased at the news that Talbot inked a five-year, $9 million deal with the Philadelphia Flyers just hours after former Penguins legend Jaromir Jagr joined their hated cross-state rivals.
Talbot had rejected a three-year offer from Penguins GM Ray Shero earlier this week, which effectively ended his tenure in Pittsburgh. After rumors of his negotiating rights being on the market, the Flyers swooped in for a guy who brings versatility as someone who can play the wing or at center and can be a vital member of the penalty kill.
"It wasn't so much about money but finding the right fit for me," said Talbot during an interview on TSN where, like Jagr, he also said his heart was in Pittsburgh.
Talbot was a great presence in the Pittsburgh locker room becoming tight friends with Marc-Andre Fleury(notes) and Sidney Crosby, and will forever be known as the hero in Game 7 of the 2009 Stanley Cup Final for scoring both Penguins goals against the Detroit Red Wings.
"I never thought I would play for another team in my life [over] the last couple of years," said Talbot.
He wanted the term, but five years was much too long for Shero's liking and both sides needed to move on with Talbot having to come to terms that his Penguins career was over.

Confirmed: Salma Hayek's hubby is daddy to Linda Evangelista's son!

New York, July 1 (ANI): It has been confirmed that Salma Hayek's super-billionaire husband Francois-Henri Pinault is the father of supermodel Linda Evangelista's 4-year-old son.

Though Evangelista's representative denied of Pinault's paternity back in 2007, the Victoria's Secret stunner came to court with hopes of hashing out a support agreement with Pinault, the father of Augustin James.
According to New York Post, the Manhattan magistrate's court action also confirmed that the two-timing Pinault is not only the daddy of James but also has another daughter of the same age with Hayek.

James was so far unacknowledged by both the mogul and his actress wife, who has previously repeatedly insisted in interviews that Pinault has only three children - Valentina and two from his previous marriage to his first wife- and the father of her son was 'a New York architect'. (ANI)



Common bond for Salma Hayek, Linda Evangelista


Maria Shriver will not be back.
People.com reports that the former first lady of California, 55, filed for divorce Friday from Arnold Schwarzenegger, 63, two months after the couple announced their separation after 25 years of marriage.
The story soon unfolded that the former governor fathered a child with household staffer Mildred Baena. The child, Joseph, is 13 -- the same age as the couple's youngest son, Christopher.
Shriver cited irreconcilable differences in her petition. She's seeking spousal support and shared custody of Christopher and their other son, Patrick, 17. The couple also has two daughters: Katherine, 21, and Christina, 19.
There reportedly is no prenup, so under California law, the couple's assets will be split 50/50.
Pinault revealed as father
When Linda Evangelista had son Augustin (Augie) James four years ago, she refused to name the father. After the supermodel went to family court on Friday, the New York Post revealed a possible reason why Evangelista remained tight-lipped.
Papers filed name Francois-Henri Pinault -- a.k.a. Mr. Salma Hayek -- as Augie's father. The Post first made the claim in 2007 and a rep for Evangelista denied it.
But did Pinault pull an Arnold Schwarzenegger? Simple math says no. Hayek and Pinault met in May 2006, announced their engagement and her pregnancy in 2007, broke up in 2008, reconciled and were married on Valentine's Day 2009.
Evangelista gave birth in October 2006, meaning her baby was conceived before Hayek and Pinault ever met. Pinault is the CEO of a company that owns Gucci and Yves Saint Laurent. In addition to his daughter with Hayek, he has two children from a previous marriage. He has yet to publicly acknowledge Evangelista's son as his.

Springfield faces DUI charges

Rick Springfield was charged Friday with two counts of DUI stemming from an arrest in May. When Malibu police pulled over the rocker, he failed field sobriety tests and threatened to kill one of the arresting officers and his family if he touched the singer's 1963 Corvette Stingray. Springfield was not charged for threatening the officer. If convicted, Springfield faces up to six months in jail and up to a $1000 fine.
The '80s sensation is headlining the Stars & Stripes Festival in downtown Mt. Clemens this weekend. A rep for the festival confirmed Friday that his performance will go on as scheduled at 10:30 p.m. Sunday.

Artists call for Grammy boycott

A coalition of musicians upset with the Recording Academy's recent reduction in Grammy categories is calling for a boycott of CBS, the network that airs the award show every February.
According to the Associated Press, the coalition, led by Latin jazz musician Bobby Sanabria, plans to ask people to boycott the sponsors of the Grammys and has hired a lawyer to explore legal action. Sanabria believes the changes "unfairly target ethnic music." He also alleges that the academy made the changes without informing its members. The academy said in a statement that its decision "had everything to do with recognizing excellence in music and the integrity of our awards and nothing to do with ethnicity or race." CBS is remaining mum.

Charlene Wittstock marries Prince Albert in 'fairytale' wedding

Under clear blue skies, scores of residents and tourists lined the streets to watch the statuesque blonde's transformation from commoner into princess in the red silk damask-draped throne room where Hollywood icon Grace Kelly married Albert's father, Prince Rainier III, 55 years ago.
Scotching persistent rumours that she had sought to flee Monaco shortly before the wedding day after discovering Prince Albert allegedly had a third illegitimate child, the 33-year old Olympic swimmer was the first to say "I do" in a matching Chanel sky blue jacket and skirt.
Under huge chandeliers and with Albert's forebears looking on from portraits adorning the room, she exchanged restrained smiles with Prince Albert, 20 years her senior, in a dark suit and grey tie.
Only 80 family members, friends and dignitaries were gathered around the couple during the 20-minute ceremony. But the gates of the Italian Renaissance residence were thrown open to more than 5,000 Monegasques who followed the proceedings from the palace square, waving the red and white flags of Monaco and those of Charlene's native South Africa.
Many more viewed giant screens erected near the palace and down at Monaco's port, as the couple exchanged a kiss in the presence of Albert's two sisters Princesses Caroline and Stéphanie, who shed a tear.Minutes later, they appeared at the palace balcony for another kiss while Prince Albert blew a second one to the cheering crowd.
Philippe Narmino, president of Monaco's Council of State, who officiated, spoke of his "joy" about the union in both English and French – a language the new Princess can barely speak a word of.
Before the 5pm ceremony, Mr Narmino said: "It's the event of my life. As a magistrate who has dealt with hundreds of divorce dossiers during 27 years, I will be marrying a couple for the first time."
Monaco is hoping the "fairytale" wedding will lift the recently gloomy economic situation in the world's second smallest state after the Vatican, which is only one tenth the size of Disneyland Paris.
"Monaco is glamour, luxury, exception. It's in our DNA. This will help us project a more rounded image," said Michel Bouquier, Monaco's tourism chief.
But according to French press reports, the couple almost failed to tie the knot over claims Albert may have fathered a third illegitimate child.
A senior detective from Monaco told Le Figaro newspaper that "Charlene had her passport confiscated so that the Prince's entourage could persuade her to stay" after they stopped her at Nice airport last week with a one-way ticket to South Africa.
Albert's first two love children and their mothers stayed away from Friday's ceremony and are expected to be absent from the star-studded Catholic ceremony on Saturday to spare them "media exposure".
Guests are expected to include French President Nicolas Sarkozy, James Bond star Roger Moore, former supermodel Naomi Campbell, and fashion designers Karl Lagerfeld and Giorgio Armani, who designed the wedding dress for the Saturday's religious ceremony.
The £45 million celebrations surrounding the wedding included a concert by The Eagles on Thursday night and another by Jean-Michel Jarre on Friday night.
Multi-Michelin-starred superchef Alain Ducasse will provide a seafood and vegetable meal for 500 lucky guests at a gala at Monaco's opera house.
The French press has compared the event to Britain's Royal Wedding – lamenting the fact that the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge was forced to decline their invitation to Monte Carlo because they were on an official trip to Canada.
Princess Charlene met Albert at a swimming competition in Monaco in 2000.
Both share a love of sport, with Prince Albert competing in Monaco's Olympic bobsleigh team.
"I was 22 and focused on my sport. I wasn't in the emotional place for a relationship," Charlene said last year.
"But the moment I met Albert I felt a profound sense of destiny. I have been quoted as saying I felt weak at the knees. This is a slightly trite way of phrasing it, but it is true I knew he was 'The One'."

Chord Overstreet not returning to 'Glee' as series regular

Friday 1 July 2011

Ryan Murphy is making some cast changes on Fox’s Glee: Chord Overstreet will not be a series regular next season, sources confirm to EW. But Darren Criss and Harry Shum Jr. are getting promoted to full-time cast members. There’s a chance Overstreet could still occasionally appear on the show during next fall’s third season. Overstreet hinted at the news on Twitter earlier today: “well its been a good yr too bad its over, time for summer and starting fresh.”

Time is running out to claim $250G prize

The odds are stacked against you — 1 in 3.9 million, to be exact — of predicting the five winning numbers (minus the Mega Ball) in the Mega Millions lottery. Someone beat those odds, but has yet the claim the ticket.
On July 27, 2010, a Mega Millions ticket worth $250,000 was purchased at McAleavy’s Newsstand at 10 E. Main St. in Somerville.
The ticket has been unclaimed and, by New Jersey law, the holder of the ticket has until July 27 to claim the prize.
“The holder of this winning ticket should immediately sign the back of the ticket and call lottery headquarters or visit a local Lottery retailer to file their claim before the ticket expires,” New Jersey Lottery Executive Director Carole Hedinger said in a statement.
There were 15 winning tickets worth the $250,000 prize, including three from New Jersey. The other two in-state winners were Silvia Gailliard of Westampton and Pamela Kopp of Hasbrouck Heights. The tickets matched all the numbers but the Mega Ball.
The winning Mega Millions game numbers drawn on July 27, 2010, were: 2, 7, 10, 16 and 29 and the gold Mega Ball number was 8.
An annual average of $38.2 million has gone unclaimed over the past five years. It reached a peak in 2010 with $42.2 million unclaimed.
By law: “Unclaimed prize money for the prize on a winning ticket or share shall be retained by the director for the person entitled thereto for one year after the drawing in which the prize was won. If no claim is made for said money within such year, the prize money shall be allocated to State institutions and State aid for education in the same manner as lottery revenues are allocated for such purposes under this act.”
McAleavy’s Newsstand has been in business since 1989 and participating in the New Jersey Lottery since the state added Mega Millions in 1999.
“We sell to a lot of neighbors around the area and to businesses that start office pools,” said Jesal Amin, the store’s owner. “When the jackpot goes up, we usually sell to a lot more people.”
The holder of the ticket should contact lottery headquarters at 609-599-5875. A claim form can be printed from the website www.state.nj.us/lottery and mailed to P.O. Box 041, Trenton, NJ 08625-0041, Attn: Claims/Validations.

'No plans' for BBC 3D channel

On the day the Corporation will make its first 3D broadcasts with the Wimbledon finals, the BBC has confirmed it will conduct experiments with 3D but has no plans to launch a dedicated channel.
The BBC will conduct up to six experiments with 3D broadcasting each year, but has no plans for a dedicated 3D channel, the Corporation has said.
Speaking as the BBC prepares for its first live 3D broadcast with today’s Wimbledon final, Danielle Nagler said that “The technologies on which the BBC should focus are the technology that have greater relevance for viewers. If 3D becomes important to viewers, it’s something the BBC should do but if it’s a gimmick I’d question whether it’s the right thing for the BBC”.
Ms Nagler, the Corporation’s head of HD and 3D, said that science fiction and natural history could be ideal candidates for the new technology. But she added that 3D, which requires users to own a special TV set that currently costs significantly extra, was not yet in the mainstream. “We can lead the way in terms of making it accessible and others can decide if they want to follow,” she said.
John Lewis claimed a 38 per cent rise in 3DTV sales in the run-up to Wimbledon, but Ms Nagler said the latest figures suggested there were still fewer than 200,000 active viewers for the platform.
“HD is a technology which applies across television – it brings you more of the picture being filmed,” she said. “3D currently has more in common with CGI – it’s a very useful tool for people who are making programmes. In these times of austerity, I’d question whether putting money into 3D is an ideal use of licence fee-payers money.”Today’s Wimbledon broadcasts, via the BBC HD channel, are costing a negligible amount to the Corporation because of a partnership with Sony, she said.
The BBC will use the experiments to gauge viewer interest in 3D. “We should be very selective about what we try and either it should really add something or we should feel that it can really add to the audience enjoyment,” Ms Nagler said. “Personally I can’t see 3D becoming mainstream as a channel, it’s about appropriate content.”

Octo-Mom's Only Biggest Fan Rushes Her At Celebrity Boxing Match!

Okay, so this fan may have had a misguided way of showing his love for you, Octo-Mom…but at least you don't DISGUST him!
While Octo-Mom Nadya Suleman was participating in a Celebrity Boxing match on Wednesday evening in Bellmawr, New Jersey, a "crazed fan" jumped into the ring and rushed her, while proposing marriage.
Here's what the crazed fan said:
"Will you please marry me? Will you please marry me? …I'm a Paul Heyman guy! I'm a Paul Heyman guy!"
Fortunately Octo-Mom wasn't harmed and security took the fan away…but he DID manage to get his arms around her briefly before he was kicked out.
So tell us, Nadya, when the fan proposed marriage…did you say yes???
Ha!

A royal salute to the Commonwealth

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge attend a Canadian citizenship ceremony in Quebec.
There is no mistaking the overwhelming affection with which the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge have been greeted on their inaugural royal visit to Canada. That is, in part, because everything they are doing resonates with a shared history.
Take their first engagement: a visit to Canada's National War Memorial was a poignant reminder that Canadian troops had served alongside the British in the two great world wars of the last century. Government House, where the couple stayed in Ottawa, was visited by King Edward VII when he was Prince of Wales, in 1860. In 1951, Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip were entertained there, secretly bringing with them a draft proclamation in case George VI, already very ill, should die while they were away.
The crowds who have flocked to see William and Catherine are surely sensing this profound link between our two nations. Alexandra Anghel, who waited five hours, articulated it very clearly after meeting them: "William's lineage is amazing, he's walking history – I can't believe I saw walking history."
She was absolutely right. When the second in line to the throne travels to Canada, it is like visiting family rather than some foreign country – not least because his grandmother, the Queen, is head of state in Canada. Such is the invisible strength of the Commonwealth, the association of independent countries that emerged out of the wreckage of the British Empire at the end of the Second World War.
For many years it has been automatic in progressive circles to sneer at the Commonwealth as a meaningless relic of our imperial past. New Labour, with its hatred of British history, symbolised this attitude. Tony Blair, for example, never took the Commonwealth Conference – the remarkable biennial event attended by heads of government from all 54 Commonwealth countries – very seriously. This was because the Commonwealth never fitted into New Labour's relentless modernising vision. Blair regarded traditional British values and identities as xenophobic, if not racist. Indeed, the Commonwealth does not rate a single mention in his autobiography, whereas there are endless pages devoted to the United States and the European Union.
But I would argue that it is Tony Blair and Gordon Brown's poodle-like relationship with the United States, and the former's slavish worship of the European Union, that now looks out of date, while the Commonwealth is more relevant than ever.
Consider the facts: just under two billion people, approximately one third of the world's population, live in Commonwealth countries. More than half of them are under 25. They come from every continent and subscribe to every great world religion. The Commonwealth is cheap:the cost to Britain of our membership is barely 20p per head, and a fraction of the £50 per head swallowed by the European Union (and that's before the money spent by Britain bailing out bankrupt eurozone countries).
It is true that the Commonwealth lacks a heavyweight administrative machine, unlike the European Union, the United Nations or Nato, but in the 21st century this may well be an advantage. The nature of diplomacy is changing very fast. With the gradual fading of the United States, and the semi-collapse of the European Union, we are moving away from a world dominated by one, or at most two, great powers. Instead, we have entered an informal world of independent but nevertheless interrelated nation states. The Commonwealth is ideally suited to this new world, with its multitude of informal connections, many stretching back centuries.
Furthermore, the Commonwealth is devoted to the promotion of humane and democratic values. But unlike the neo-Conservatives, it does not try to promote these values through invasion. It uses quiet diplomacy and gentle pressure. Pakistan, for example, was quietly induced back into the Commonwealth after its membership was suspended following a military coup in 1999, something that, given current concerns about that nation, we should be very grateful for.
There is one urgent cause for concern, however. The central reason for the success of the Commonwealth has been the Queen. She is the talismanic figure at the heart of it all, and has been present at every Commonwealth Conference for the past 60 years. She knows most Commonwealth leaders personally, and many of them are now old friends. When she dies the Commonwealth will be thrown into crisis. Handled in the wrong way, the institution will swiftly collapse.
Certain things will have to change. There is no hard and fast rule that a British monarch should be head of the Commonwealth, as the Queen has been. Indeed, there is an argument for selecting the next head from among one of the other member states. Ten years ago that choice was obvious, and Nelson Mandela would have been chosen by acclaim.
There is also no reason why the Commonwealth should continue to be based in London, home of the Commonwealth Secretariat. Last year the Marquis of Lothian, a former Conservative Party chairman and shadow foreign secretary, made a radical proposal: "Britain should accept that centring the Commonwealth in London leaves it open to accusations of carrying the shades of empire. It should be re-based in India, which itself has the potential to become a powerful inner core of a living network of relations that cross continents and have unparalleled global reach."
Lord Lothian's suggestion opens up an alternative vision of a future British foreign policy. We would no longer be tied so closely into Washington and Brussels, two connections that have served us so badly over the past two decades. We could look instead to a wider world, and indeed a Commonwealth based in democratic Delhi could prove an important counterbalance to the stealthy rise of totalitarian China, as it seeks stealthily to build its regional influence in the Far East through the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation.
Over the past few decades Britain has been unlucky in its leaders. With only a few exceptions they have been hostile or blind to British history. The two greatest offenders were Edward Heath, who led us into the European Union, and Tony Blair, with his uncritical connection with the United States. Throughout this period our political class has turned its back on the traditional network of alliances, and the Commonwealth has only really been sustained thanks to the immense personal charisma of the monarch.
Fortunately, the Cameron government is starting to engage once more with the Commonwealth after more than two decades of neglect (even Margaret Thatcher fell out with the Queen over Thatcher's refusal to take the Commonwealth seriously). Amazing to relate, but during all the New Labour years not a single British foreign secretary visited Australia or New Zealand, two of our oldest and closest Commonwealth allies. William Hague travelled there earlier this year, the first foreign secretary in 17 years to do so. His prime purpose was to prepare for the forthcoming Commonwealth conference, to be held in Perth. Meanwhile, Mr Cameron sent out a welcome personal signal that he values the Commonwealth by making his first major foreign trip as prime minister last summer to India.
Not for the first time, the Queen has been wiser than her politicians. Although it is rooted deep in our history, the Commonwealth is in truth an organisation ideally suited to the 21st century. She has sustained an institution which retains great value.
It is important that other members of her family understand this. For while the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge's first choice of a foreign country to visit is welcome, their second is regrettable. They are travelling from Canada to the United States. They are guaranteed a warm reception, but for the wrong reasons. They will be fêted as celebrities, not welcomed as members of a family of nations with which we have common values. The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge are the most glamorous young couple in the world. They have the capacity to do great things, not just for the monarchy but also for Britain on their foreign trips and it is the Commonwealth countries that should be their priority in the years to come.