SiliconValley.com – Internet radio companies, NPR appeal new music royalty rates

 

NEW YORK – National Public Radio is teaming up with online radio broadcasters to appeal new music royalties that they say would put smaller operators out of business and force others to sharply scale back their online music offerings.

NPR filed a notice with the U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington Wednesday signaling that it would challenge the ruling by a panel of copyright judges that would sharply raise the amount of royalties that NPR stations and others have to pay record companies for streaming music over the Internet.

NPR also said it was filing a request with the same court on Thursday along with other Webcasters for an emergency stay blocking the adoption of the new rates, which are set to go into effect July 15.

Source: SiliconValley.com – Internet radio companies, NPR appeal new music royalty rates

Why Do Some People Resist Science?

It is no secret that many American adults reject some scientific ideas. In a 2005 Pew Trust poll, for instance, 42% of respondents said that they believed that humans and other animals have existed in their present form since the beginning of time. A substantial minority of Americans, then, deny that evolution has even taken place, making them more radical than “Intelligent Design” theorists, who deny only that natural selection can explain complex design. But evolution is not the only domain in which people reject science: Many believe in the efficacy of unproven medical interventions, the mystical nature of out-of-body experiences, the existence of supernatural entities such as ghosts and fairies, and the legitimacy of astrology, ESP, and divination. 

There are two common assumptions about the nature of this resistance. First, it is often assumed to be a particularly American problem, explained in terms of the strong religious beliefs of many American citizens and the anti-science leanings of the dominant political party. Second, the problem is often characterized as the result of insufficient exposure to the relevant scientific facts, and hence is best addressed with improved science education.

We believe that these assumptions, while not completely false, reflect a misunderstanding of the nature of this phenomenon.  … http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge211.html#bloom2

Oral Dissents Give Ginsburg a New Voice on Court – New York Times

WASHINGTON, May 30 – Whatever else may be said about the Supreme Court’s current term, which ends in about a month, it will be remembered as the time when Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg found her voice, and used it.

Both in the abortion case the court decided last month and the discrimination ruling it issued on Tuesday, Justice Ginsburg read forceful dissents from the bench. In each case, she spoke not only for herself but also for three other dissenting colleagues, Justices John Paul Stevens, David H. Souter and Stephen G. Breyer. …

Source: Oral Dissents Give Ginsburg a New Voice on Court – New York Times

World Food Programme Suspends Uganda Aid After Driver Killed

KAMPALA, Uganda, May 30, 2007 (ENS) – Gunmen ambushed a convoy of trucks delivering food for the UN World Food Programme in the Karamoja region of northeastern Uganda on Monday, killing a driver. The world’s largest food aid agency says because of the killing it will suspend operations in support of 500,000 drought affected people in the region.

 World Food Programme, WFP, Country Director Tesema Negash said the agency “has no choice but to temporarily suspend our activities in Karamoja until security is improved.” …

…Malnutrition is the leading cause of death in the semi-arid region, which consists of five districts and suffers from the highest rates of severe and moderate malnutrition in the country.

[The convoy was being escorted by Kenyan National Police, who drove off the attackers.]

Source: World Food Programme Suspends Uganda Aid After Driver Killed

More News About the Environment:

  • Florida Lake Drops to Record Low Level
  • One-Third of ExxonMobil Shareholders Back Climate Resolution
  • Public Blames High Gas Prices on Oil Company Greed
  • California Senators Propose Bay Area Water Recycling
  • Montana Governor Signs Clean Energy Bills
  • New Montana Power Plant Permit Appealed
  • Student Filmmakers Win With Environmental Focus
  • Amnesty International Report 2007 – China (4) « Status of Chinese People

     

    –Tibetans in the Tibet Autonomous Region and other areas experienced severe restrictions on their rights to freedom of religious belief, expression and association, and discrimination in employment. Many were detained or imprisoned for observing their religion or expressing opinions, including Tibetan Buddhist monks and nuns. Excessive use of force against Tibetans seeking to flee repression in Tibet continued. In September witnesses saw Chinese border patrol guards shooting at a group of Tibetans attempting to reach Nepal. At least one child was confirmed killed.

    –Woeser, a leading Tibetan intellectual, had her weblog shut down several times after she raised questions about China’s role in Tibet.

    –Sonam Gyalpo, a former monk, was sentenced to 12 years’ imprisonment in mid-2006 for “endangering state security” after the authorities found videos of the Dalai Lama and other “incriminating materials” in his house. His family learned of his trial and sentencing when they tried to visit him in detention. …

    Source: Amnesty International Report 2007 – China (4) « Status of Chinese People

    Tibetan Abbot Forced To Step Down

    WASHINGTON – The head of a large Buddhist monastery in Chinese-run Tibet was forced to step down after he refused to sign documents condemning the Dalai Lama, the monk and a local official told Radio Free Asia (RFA).

    “I spoke out loudly and refused to sign. I declared that I will not sign even at the cost my life, or risk of imprisonment, [or] death in a court,” Khenpo Tsanor, 70, the head of Dungkyab monastery in Gade county [in Chinese, Gande] in Golog Tibetan Prefecture, Qinghai province, told RFA’s Tibetan service. He said he officially stepped down in mid-May.

    Source: Tibetan Abbot Forced To Step Down

    Falwell and Savage Christians: A Legacy of Hate and Violence

     

    A Pew poll indicated that a small number of American Muslims, a minority of only 8 percent, considered suicide bombing acceptable under certain circumstances. The vast majority, 78 percent, said suicide bombing against civilian targets was never acceptable.

    The selective outrage was immediate, but few commentators pointed out what Christians tell pollsters about their urge to maim and kill. Most Christians, 65 percent of Protestants and 72 percent of Catholics, believe that torture is justifiable under certain circumstances. Nearly half of Americans, 46 percent, believe that it may be acceptable to deliberately target civilian populations in war time. An average of 75 percent of Muslims in Egypt, Pakistan, Indonesia and Morocco believe that such attacks are never acceptable.

    Source: AlterNet: Rights and Liberties: Falwell and Savage Christians: A Legacy of Hate and Violence

    The Mounting Failure of Abstinence Education

     

    Last month’s resignation of Wade Horn, former assistant secretary at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and point man for conservative social policy, came just as support was crumbling and mistrust mounting for a costly and, many would argue, unsuccessful initiative — abstinence education.

    Source: AlterNet: Rights and Liberties: The Mounting Failure of Abstinence Education

    Buddhism, Peace and Development in Sri Lanka

    New York, USA — The teachings of the Buddha, the Dhamma, is inherently committed to peace and positive human development. Non-violence, respect for the lives of all living beings, is the first Buddhist precept. Buddhism’s commitment to peace goes beyond the call against the use of physical violence.

    It advocates non-violence in thought and speech … http://www.tysonwilliams.com/archives/buddhism_peace_and_development_in_sri_lanka.html

    Bush knows it when he sees it…

    - QUOTATION OF THE DAY -
    “If you want to scare the American people, what you say is the bill’s an amnesty bill. That’s empty political rhetoric trying to frighten our citizens.”
    - PRESIDENT BUSH, on the proposed immigration bill.
    http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/30/washington/30immig.html?th&emc=th

    Take a good look at that bill.  If Little George is for it, someone on the bottom is getting screwed.