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Posts Tagged ‘alexander’

Grant Cardone: Sales Training: All Oganizations Must Shift Focus Now

Marketing, advertising, organizing, planning will not get you through this business cycle; selling products and services is the critical make break point of every organization in today’s economy.

Artifacts From the Future: Online Dating Site

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Click on the thumbnails below for a closer look at an online dating site from 2020.

What do you think our world will look like in 10, 20, or 100 years? We need your help creating a new artifact from the future for every issue of Wired magazine. Each month, we’ll propose a scenario and ask for your prognostications. Sketch out your vision, then return here to upload your ideas, see other submissions, and vote for your favorites. Check out this month’s challenge.

The concept for this artifact came from Sally McGrane. Wired creative director Scott Dadich, design director Wyatt Mitchell, contributing designer Walter Baumann, deputy photo editor Anna Goldman Alexander, photo assistant Catherine Seriosa, senior editor Chris Baker, associate editor Catherine DiBenedetto, and production director Jeff Lysgaard helped create the image.

Photo: Catherine Seriosa; babies: Makemebabies.com by Luxand, Inc. Face Detection

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We’re predicting a spin-off of match.com that won’t involve any tedious questionnaires. Singles simply send in a saliva sample and let their DNA speak for itself. The service then hooks up members who are compatible at the genetic level.

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Research has already given scientists the ability to detect breast cancer markers and the so-called sprinters gene. Genetic behavioral traits and susceptibility to drugs like tobacco are next on the list.

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Based on his scent, Command3rKooL would be a great match for igotalotaluv. Studies suggest that a woman will prefer the aroma of a man whose major histocompatability complex — a series of genes involved in the immune system — is very different from her own. However, Command3rKooL’s biological clock is ticking dangerously close to useless as he pushes into the last 26 years of his life.

Scientists could be able to predict Schizophrenia and identify intelligence by the year 2020, as those traits have already been tentatively linked to specific regions of DNA. But the genetic cause of gaming fetishes has yet to be discovered.

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We used Makemebabies.com to get a glimpse of the offspring’s appearance. DNAmatch.com would calculate the possibilities for the tyke’s genetic profile by combining igotalotaluv’s alleles with Command3rKooL’s. This little boy could be quite smart, and possibly an alcoholic.

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The genes responsible for lactose intolerance and alcohol flush reaction are current subjects of research, but funding for studies on the genetic predisposition to Irish folk dancing is pending NIH approval.

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Dimples and widow’s peak are known dominant genetic traits. Scientists are still searching for the genes responsible for perfect pitch.

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Gene expression is harder to predict than the genes are to detect. Even if someone has the gene for a trait, that doesn’t necessarily mean the body will transcribe and translate it into a protein.

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This search tool allows igotalotaluv to exclude guys with the traits she just doesn’t like.

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Not everyone on dating sites is looking for the parent of their future children. Scroll past the paternal types to find a more short-term partner.

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There’s no easier way to fake your way out of bad date than by blaming Comcast for a bad holodeck connection.


Fading democracy

By David Loyn
BBC News, Attock, Pakistan

"Local government is there to solve the petty problems of the people"

Maj Tahir Sadik

Maj Tahir Sadik

Retired Pakistani army Maj Tahir Sadik will leave office as the elected "Nazim", mayor of Attock, with mixed feelings in October.

"Eight years is a hell of a long time," he told me as we drove around the town.

Remembering the thousands of small issues he had dealt with, the grievances heard, the arguments settled, he added rather quietly, "they even pray for us".

He could not stand again as he has served the maximum two terms. But he is now leading a national campaign to save the Nazim system, which is being allowed to fade away when the mandate of those elected across the country expires in October, with no fresh elections planned.

Attock marks the historic crossing point of the Indus River, where armies since Alexander the Great have come after crossing the deserts and mountains of Afghanistan with India to the east in their sights.

Scuffles

But history has passed the town by as nowadays a motorway bridge further north is the route to the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP), giving the ancient border town a forgotten air.

Bridge in Attock

Maj Tahir says that the Nazim system offers voters unique access to the levers of power that they do not have when their political rulers are far away in the Punjabi power centre of Lahore, or the national capital Islamabad.

"Local government is there to solve the petty problems of the people, small problems, scuffles between people, and development issues, where a road goes, where a school should be built," he says.

In the eight years that he has been in power a public park has been built along with hospitals and sports facilities, rural bridges, eight dams and 375 school upgrades.

The system provides direct elections for village representatives, who come together with neighbouring villages to discuss issues, and vote for the district nazim, the post held in Attock by Maj Tahir. One third of the seats are reserved for women.

In a nation that has struggled to settle its constitution, veering between periods of military rule and unstable democratic control, ironically it has been military rulers who have done most for rural democracy.

The nazim system was introduced in 2001 by Gen Musharraf. Earlier attempts to introduce local voting were made in two other periods of military rule, under Ayub Khan in the late 1950s and Zia al-Haq in the 1980s.

Maj Tahir claims that since democracy was restored after the military dictatorship ended at the beginning of last year, not a single school has been upgraded in Attock as the provincial government has starved the nazims of funds ahead of suspending local government.

Taliban threat

The local government minister, retired Justice Abdul Razak Thahim, insists that local democracy is not being abolished for good.

He says that elections will be held after a period, but hinted that with elections already for the president, parliament, and assemblies for the four Pakistani provinces, that was enough democracy for now.

Polling in Pakistan

Justice Thahim says that it would be too difficult to hold elections now while the country is facing a threat from the Taliban.

This would make voting hazardous not just in NWFP, where Pakistani forces are fighting an intense campaign for control.

"How could elections be held in the provinces, when terrorists are so busy" he asked. "All the provinces are in the grip of terrorists and we are taking action against them."

After the terms of the nazims expire in October, local power will return to non-elected officials controlled from the centre.

It is easy to be cynical about what lies behind any political move in Pakistan, where the restoration of national democracy in 2008 has not reduced corruption.

Unprecedented

And Maj Tahir is tied by marriage to a powerful Punjabi political dynasty, the Chaudharys of Gujarat, political opponents of both of the major national ruling parties.

Map

But he says that the place to settle this is in the voting booth, not by scrapping polls.

And the fact remains that the suspension of polls will centralise power, and reduce local accountability.

It seems there will be little public agitation to preserve the system as people are more worried about the threat of terrorism and how to get through the long hot summer faced by power cuts on an unprecedented scale.

A leading political analyst, Rasul Baksh Rais, from the Lahore University of Management Sciences, says that the abolition of local voting is a backward step, and blames all political parties for failing to provide a platform for public arguments on policy.

"The centralised decision-making within the political parties will hurt the cause of democracy. People will think that instead of Pervez Musharraf who wore a military uniform, now we have civilian dictators," he said. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Fading democracy

By David Loyn
BBC News, Attock, Pakistan

"Local government is there to solve the petty problems of the people"

Maj Tahir Sadik

Maj Tahir Sadik

Retired Pakistani army Maj Tahir Sadik will leave office as the elected "Nazim", mayor of Attock, with mixed feelings in October.

"Eight years is a hell of a long time," he told me as we drove around the town.

Remembering the thousands of small issues he had dealt with, the grievances heard, the arguments settled, he added rather quietly, "they even pray for us".

He could not stand again as he has served the maximum two terms. But he is now leading a national campaign to save the Nazim system, which is being allowed to fade away when the mandate of those elected across the country expires in October, with no fresh elections planned.

Attock marks the historic crossing point of the Indus River, where armies since Alexander the Great have come after crossing the deserts and mountains of Afghanistan with India to the east in their sights.

Scuffles

But history has passed the town by as nowadays a motorway bridge further north is the route to the North-West Frontier Province (NWFP), giving the ancient border town a forgotten air.

Bridge in Attock

Maj Tahir says that the Nazim system offers voters unique access to the levers of power that they do not have when their political rulers are far away in the Punjabi power centre of Lahore, or the national capital Islamabad.

"Local government is there to solve the petty problems of the people, small problems, scuffles between people, and development issues, where a road goes, where a school should be built," he says.

In the eight years that he has been in power a public park has been built along with hospitals and sports facilities, rural bridges, eight dams and 375 school upgrades.

The system provides direct elections for village representatives, who come together with neighbouring villages to discuss issues, and vote for the district nazim, the post held in Attock by Maj Tahir. One third of the seats are reserved for women.

In a nation that has struggled to settle its constitution, veering between periods of military rule and unstable democratic control, ironically it has been military rulers who have done most for rural democracy.

The nazim system was introduced in 2001 by Gen Musharraf. Earlier attempts to introduce local voting were made in two other periods of military rule, under Ayub Khan in the late 1950s and Zia al-Haq in the 1980s.

Maj Tahir claims that since democracy was restored after the military dictatorship ended at the beginning of last year, not a single school has been upgraded in Attock as the provincial government has starved the nazims of funds ahead of suspending local government.

Taliban threat

The local government minister, retired Justice Abdul Razak Thahim, insists that local democracy is not being abolished for good.

He says that elections will be held after a period, but hinted that with elections already for the president, parliament, and assemblies for the four Pakistani provinces, that was enough democracy for now.

Polling in Pakistan

Justice Thahim says that it would be too difficult to hold elections now while the country is facing a threat from the Taliban.

This would make voting hazardous not just in NWFP, where Pakistani forces are fighting an intense campaign for control.

"How could elections be held in the provinces, when terrorists are so busy" he asked. "All the provinces are in the grip of terrorists and we are taking action against them."

After the terms of the nazims expire in October, local power will return to non-elected officials controlled from the centre.

It is easy to be cynical about what lies behind any political move in Pakistan, where the restoration of national democracy in 2008 has not reduced corruption.

Unprecedented

And Maj Tahir is tied by marriage to a powerful Punjabi political dynasty, the Chaudharys of Gujarat, political opponents of both of the major national ruling parties.

Map

But he says that the place to settle this is in the voting booth, not by scrapping polls.

And the fact remains that the suspension of polls will centralise power, and reduce local accountability.

It seems there will be little public agitation to preserve the system as people are more worried about the threat of terrorism and how to get through the long hot summer faced by power cuts on an unprecedented scale.

A leading political analyst, Rasul Baksh Rais, from the Lahore University of Management Sciences, says that the abolition of local voting is a backward step, and blames all political parties for failing to provide a platform for public arguments on policy.

"The centralised decision-making within the political parties will hurt the cause of democracy. People will think that instead of Pervez Musharraf who wore a military uniform, now we have civilian dictators," he said. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Elizabeth O’Neill: Huffpost Review: Evanston: A Rare Comedy

If you think all suburban communities are filled only with the inane, the dull and the quietly desperate, prepare to be rocked by Michael Yates Crowley’s new play.

Bill Chameides: On the Climate Bill Fence: What Sen. Alexander Is Thinking

For the second installment of our series on what senators on the fence are thinking about cap and trade, we turn to the senior senator…

Alexander Dresner: Intellectual Benefits, Emotional Costs: The Value Of Attending The World’s Best Universities

The London School of Economics is an inconspicuous series of academic lecture halls and classrooms that sit within a busy enclave in England’s capital city….

PM unveils monument to slain French FM

Prime Minister Mirko Cvetković last night unveiled a bust of former French Foreign Minister Louis Barthou to mark the French holiday of Bastille Day. Barthou was assassinated together with Serbian King Alexander in Marseilles in 1934.

Obama On Responsibility For Economy: “Give It To Me”

WARREN, Mich. — Conceding unemployment will get worse before it shrinks, President Barack Obama on Tuesday unveiled a $12 billion plan to help community colleges prepare millions of people for a new generation of jobs. Challenging critic…

David Fiderer: Lamar Alexander’s $750 Billion Flimflam Plan on Nuclear Energy

Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., has a “Low-cost Clean Energy Plan” being marketed to people with substandard reading skills. His press release claims his plan to…