13201144 エントリを集積

本システムについて
本技術について



updatenews @ hr.sub.jp
TOP PAGE











newsplus summarization

Amazon レビュー summarization

価格.com summarization

アットコスメ summarization

食べログ summarization

楽天レビュー summarization

TSUTAYA レビュー 要約

じゃらん レビュー 要約



Splog Filter



最新 24時間         急減少ワード         cyclic        
  インターネット ( 651 )     ニュース ( 2876 )     アニメ ( 2209 )     コンビニ小売 ( 477 )     スポーツ ( 2821 )     映画 ( 1746 )     ゲーム ( 1649 )     芸能 エンタメ ( 1207 )     政治 国際 ( 2240 )     飲食 ( 1328 )     音楽 ( 3516 )     ドラマ ( 1679 )     ハードウェア ( 496 )     ソフトウェア ( 212 )     医療 健康 ( 707 )     時季 ( 1104 )     テクノロジー ( 460 )     自動車 ( 428 )     ビジネス 経済 ( 1300 )     ファッション ( 460 )     書籍 ( 938 )     漫画 ( 1267 )     番組 ( 737 )     料理 ( 847 )     家電 ( 154 )     レジャー ( 1161 )     学術 科学 ( 469 )     地域 ( 1444 )     フレーズ ( 277 )     コスメティック ( 212 )     自然 ( 1161 )     ファンシー ( 157 )     お笑い ( 463 )     趣味 ( 234 )     学校 ( 402 )     ギャンブル ( 1081 )     アート 芸術 ( 188 )     生活 ( 266 )  



    NEEDLESS

    アニメ 漫画 関連語 さよなら絶望先生 とある科学の超電磁砲 うみねこのなく頃に 狼と香辛料 化物語 青い花 けんぷファー かなめも
    • Amazon cedes to publisher in pricing dispute
      Amazon.com all but surrendered in a dispute with publisher Macmillan that could lead to the online retailer raising prices on some of its e-books. "Ultimately ... we will have to capitulate and accept Macmillan's terms because Macmillan has a monopoly over their own titles, and we will want to offer them to you even at prices we believe are needlessly high for e-books," Amazon said in a message to customers on its website. Amazon.com以外のすべての出版社マクミランとの論争では、オンライン小売業者に、いくつかの電子書籍の価格の引き上げを招く可能性を放棄した

    • It's not just Goldman and Bank of America in the toilet.
      In 2007 the financial stocks gave us the clues we needed to protect ourselves for what was coming. The theme at the time was ‘global growth’ and we weren’t supposed to care that major financial stocks like Wells Fargo (WFC), Bank of America (BAC) or Citigroup © were breaking multi-year trends to the downside. Nope, we were supposed to buy into the commodity theme hand over fist and forget about the real heart of our market, or any market for that matter. Today we’re seeing a similar theme with financials close to lows while the market is only off about 4% from recent highs. Goldman Sachs (GS) has been the most troublesome of all now off over 20% trading just a few handles shy of its July 2010 low. While some will speculate about a pending LBO or privatizing of the company, you don’t have to go far within the sector to find other troubled names. Bank of America (BAC) is off 25% from its January high, with Citigroup © seeing a 21% clip, Wells Fargo (WFC) coming in at 19% and Morgan Stanly (MS) taking center stage next to BAC seeing a 24% haircut. Needless to say, the financials are flashing warning signs that even the most bullish must respect. Should these stocks continue to slide, the general market would inevitably follow suit. 2007年には金融株は、私たちが来ていた何のために自分自身を保護するために必要な手がかりを与えた

    • Former Irish President says Family Planning Saves Women’s Lives
      Mary Robinson says many in poor countries die needlessly from pregnancy complications メアリーロビンソンは、貧しい国々の多くは、妊娠の合併症から不必要に死ぬだ

    • Little Known Natural Gas Play Attracts Fresh Investor Attention
      One of the few laggards in the currently forceful market advance is the natural gas sector, which isn't surprising because of the languishing and dispirited price of natural gas. Needless to say, some oil-patch bulls have been bargain hunting--snapping up shares of some producers, confident the natural gas industry's fortunes will have to turn around. null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40

    • Ending world hunger is possible – so why hasn't it been done? | Duncan Green
      Some 850 million people go to bed hungry. If the right decisions are made now, we can feed the world and address inequalitySave the Children is to be applauded for reminding us all of one of the most extraordinary and humiliating aspects of living in the modern world: child hunger. Drawing a parallel with the fight to abolish slavery, the Ghanaian philosopher Kwame Anthony Appiah recently asked what future generations will condemn us for. One sure candidate is the needless human carnage wrought by hunger. Some 850 million people (one in eight of the world's population) go to bed hungry every night. Many of them are children, for whom early hunger leaves a lifelong legacy of cognitive and physical impairment. The human and economic waste is horrifying.Such hunger is not due to a shortage of food – globally there is enough to go round and if (a big if) we make the right decisions now, we can continue to feed the world despite population growth and climate change. By some estimates, stopping the waste of food after harvest due to poor storage or transport infrastructure, and then in our own kitchens, could free up half of all food grown. The number of overweight and obese people in the world, suffering their own health problems, including a sharp rise in heart disease and diabetes, is roughly equal to the number of hungry people. That highlights one of the underlying causes of hunger – extreme levels of inequality, both within and between countries.Ending hunger is entirely feasible (indeed, once achieved, the only question will be why it took us so long). It requires action at several different levels. At a national level, progressive governments in Brazil and Ghana have shown how to cut hunger sharply, through cash transfers to poor people, raising the minimum wage and i null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40

    • Glencore was the World Food Programme's most viable option | Felicity Lawrence
      When the WFP has to get food aid into a famine-stricken region fast, it is the big grain traders who deliverHow £50m in UN food aid went to buy wheat from GlencoreMy colleague Rupert Neate has been looking at who gets the money from the UN World Food Programme's purchase of emergency food. He reported on Tuesday that Glencore International, the FTSE 100 grain trader in the spotlight over an expected merger with mining group Xstrata, sold WFP more than £50m (around $79m) round of wheat over the last eight months, despite a UN pledge to buy from poor farmers when it can.It is hard, in fact, to see what else WFP could have done. A big purchase of $22.5m was made from Glencore in July, which is when famine was declared in the Horn of Africa.Save the Children and Oxfam have recorded how there was a dangerous delay in responding to the early warning signs of crisis in the Horn that led to needless starvation and death. But WFP has to wait for funding from donor countries before it can make most of its purchases, and that tends only to come once a crisis is full blown. By July it needed to get food in fast and that will nearly always mean turning to one of the big grain traders and, moreover, buying from them just as the prices are highest because famine has emerged out of shortage.WFP humanitarian aid in July came mostly from the Black Sea countries and Brazil, but of the $1.23bn-worth of food it purchased in 2011, nearly one-third was sourced in least-developed and low-income countries (LDCs). In 2010, more than half of WFP purchases were form LDCs. One of the reasons for the fall from year to year was precisely because there had been drought in the Horn where WFP would normally hope to buy grain.The problem is that humanitarian aid is typically hand to mouth and last minute null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40

    • Drugs taken needlessly
      More than a quarter of people in the United States who take antidepressants have never been diagnosed with any of the conditions the drugs are typically used to treat. As a result, millions could be exposed to side effects from the... _NULL_

    • The counterproductive catch-all of supposed sex offenders | Sadhbh Walshe
      Misplaced anxiety about child protection makes judicial policy on sex offenders a blunt instrument that needlessly blights livesAround two years ago, six ICE agents entered the home of a 20-year-old man named Adam while he was sleeping. They put a gun to his head and informed him they had a warrant to search his premises for child pornography.Adam is a musician and was a frequent user of the peer-to-peer file-sharing website Limewire, which he used to download and share music videos.  The search of his computer hard drive yielded 2,331 videos, most of which were music and a small portion of which were adult porn. Two suspect child porn videos featuring girls aged 16-17, and another video apparently featuring a three year-old, had been downloaded and deleted.Adam claims that the downloads were accidental, and that although he occasionally indulged in adult porn (like many men his age), he has no interest in child pornography (CP), never sought it out and deleted the downloaded items as soon as he realized what they were. The fact that the forensic evidence showed that the items were never viewed and that there was no record of any keyword searches that would indicate he was looking for CP would seem to back up that claim.But it didn't matter: Adam was charged with possession of child pornography, and was warned by the prosecutor that if he did not plead guilty, the charge would be upgraded to distribution (as a file-sharing site, Limewire is an automatic distribution tool), so he would then be looking at 15-25 years in a federal penitentiary. Seeing no way out, he took a guilty plea, was sentenced to 30 months in prison, 15 years of probation and a lifetime on the sex offender registry.As a native of the state of Florida, when Adam is eventually released from prison, he null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40

    • The story of Silvio Berlusconi: coming to a cinema near you?
      What would a biopic of Italy's former prime minister look like? Surely there's only one man who can play the leadIt had all the makings of the greatest film ever made; one part Citizen Kane to three parts Girls Gone Wild on Tour. That's right: the Silvio Berlusconi biopic. Needless to say, the Berlusconi story is dripping with blockbuster potential – there's money, power, sex, corruption, sex, cruise ship singing, more sex and a bit where our hero gets smacked around the head with a little metal church. In the right hands, a Berlusconi biopic could be a genuinely compelling watch.Tragically, though, it may never happen. Depsite reports in the Italian and US press that Berlusconi was planning to produce his own film, his spokesman has denied it to our man in Rome. But there's no way we can ignore the thought of what might materialise if Berlusconi did actually mark the 18-year anniversary of his political career with a film.First and foremost, it means anyone expecting a diorama of scandal, stupidity and sex – basically a remake of Nanni Moretti's vicious Il Caimano – would be better off looking elsewhere. But if it's a one-sided, self-congratulatory ode to the heroism of a self-made man you're after – a filmed version of An Italian Life, the hefty biography that Berlusconi backed and gave away for free six years ago – then it looks as though your dreams might come true.You could expect to weep as Mamma Berlusconi (played by a leggy supermodel in a bikini), looks down at her newborn baby, all muscly and sporting a thick mane of hair, and praises God himself for gifting her with such a powerful and charismatic child. And then weep again when Berlusconi discovers that the AC Milan anthem he wrote is the most emotionally profound piece of music ever created. And then weep a null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40

    • When government is broken | Carne Ross
      In the US and Europe, disillusion with politics is feeding the far right. We need a radical response that returns power to peopleThe recent debacle in Washington, where wrangling over the debt limit has triggered a downgrading of American debt, has underlined the deep incompetence of the US political system. Thanks to needless brinkmanship, particularly by the Republicans, confidence in US debt has been undermined, thereby likely increasing the cost of borrowing – a price that will eventually be paid by all Americans.The story in Europe is not much better. Here, too, decision-makers have been unable to come up with a response to the debt crisis sufficient to reassure the markets. As a result, larger economies, like Italy and Spain, are joining Greece in facing a severe debt crisis, and equally severe austerity as a likely consequence. As in America, the political system has been shown to be inadequate to manage the economic system.The origins of both failures are different, but similar. In the US, bi-annual congressional elections have placed politicians in almost permanent campaign mode, giving them little incentive to compromise – or, more specifically, to be seen to compromise. The division of power between the executive and legislature is a further hindrance to coherent policymaking.In th EU, the intergovernmental structures designed to manage the eurozone economy are not sufficiently integrated to deal with the threats to that economy. It has become increasingly clear that the only way to manage a single currency area is to unite fiscal policy – that is, for tax and expenditure to be decided in common, rather than on a national basis, as it is now. Greece would no longer be able to overspend, running up huge debts – and thus risk.But the reforms necessary to improv _NULL_

    • Manuel Valle execution carried out amid fight over 'cruel' injection
      Florida goes ahead with death sentence despite protests that pentobarbital brings excruciating death• 'Substantial risk of needless pain and suffering' [PDF] – a Harvard anaesthetist on the use of pentobarbital in executionsA Cuban man who spent 33 years on death row has been executed in Florida in a case that campaigners say highlights the cruelty of America's system of capital punishment.Manuel Valle, 61, was killed with three drugs including an anaesthetic that has not been tested for executions and that medical experts have said could cause extreme suffering. The manufacturer of pentobarbital, the Danish firm Lundbeck, has written to the governor of Florida, Rick Scott, to protest about the misuse of its product.Valle was pronounced dead at 7.14pm local time after scenes of chaos and confusion at the Florida state prison that houses death row. Earlier in the evening the Miami Herald had prematurely reported his death. The US supreme court ordered a delay while it considered an appeal and Valle lived an extra three hours.Valle was put on death row in 1978 for the murder of police officer Louis Pena. Though severe doubts did not surround his guilt, as they did for Troy Davis who was executed by the state of Georgia last week, there were deep apprehensions around his treatment.Campaigners have condemned his three decades in solitary confinement on death row as a form of torture, and criticised the bureaucratic slip-ups that deprived him of a final plea for clemency.Florida is unusual in that the governor has almost total discretion over deciding who is executed and when, unlike other states where the courts play a much greater role.It was the use of pentobarbital, or Nembutal as it is brand-named, that caused most controversy. In an execution in June, Roy Blankenship w 死刑囚監房に33年間過ごしたexecutionsAキューバ人のペントバルビタールの利用に関するハーバード大学の麻酔医で実行されている - フロリダでは、ペントバルビタールは耐え難いほどの死•。。u0026quot;不必要な痛みと苦しみの実質的なリスクは。。u0026quot;[PDF]をもたらすという抗議にもかかわらず、死刑判決を強行すれフロリダは、運動家がハイライト資本punishment.Manuelヴァッレ、61のアメリカのシステムの残酷さが、処刑とその医療専門家のためにテストされていない麻酔を含む3つの薬で殺されたと言っている場合には極端な苦痛を引き起こす可能性があると述べている

    • Yorkshire rallies to its threatened beetle
      Students and lecturers are making an 'ark' of foodplants to protect the UK's last, isolated colony of the vivid green Tansy BeetleThe Tansy is a nicely-named plant and in Yorkshire it is also home to a very fine beetle; but only just.The UK population of the irridescent Tansy Beetle is confined to a 26-mile stretch beside the river Ouse, the river which occasionally turns parts of the centre of York into a lake.Luckily, the same stretch includes Askham Bryan, one of the UK's leading countryside, farming, forestry and horticultural colleges.Lecturers, students and beetles have got together in a project called the Tansy Ark, which is doing a Noah-style rescue of the little creature's surviving population. The idea is that by growing tansy at the college, which is up on a hill above the Leeds-York A64 (the UK's earliest dual carriageway as I've already mentioned once before today), beetles will be both encouraged and safe from regular flooding of their habitats closer to the river.The initiative is being helped by the Tansy Beetle Action Group – and isn't it a real tribute to the UK way of life that such an organisation exists (and has its own Facebook page, needless to say, as per the link) Members have been concerned for a while at the Tansy plant's struggles with grazing livestock, shading willows and the more dominant Himalayan balsam (the one whose seedpods pop like grenades, as my parents discovered when they did their courting along the banks of the river Aire in Leeds).Dr Deirdre Rooney of Askham Bryan, who took the intimate photos which enhance this post, says:We are delighted to be involved and have created a plot on campus of Tansy plants which is the beetle's sole food source. The plan is to introduce beetles to our Ark next spring. The beetles are currentl null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40

    • Tsunami erodes Japanese 'superiority'
      Plaudits for Tokyo's earthquake preparations after the March disaster propagate a Japanese superiority complex in Asia, but this ignores the thousands who likely died needlessly due to a tragically ineffective tsunami evacuation strategy. Though the areas worst impacted had been struck by killer waves in the past, many perished in official shelters situated too low above sea level, and thousands remain officially missing. - Christopher Johnson (Jul 14, '11) 月の災害後の東京の地震の準備のための称賛は、アジアにおける日本の優越感を伝播しませんが、これはおそらく必要以上に悲劇的に効果のない津波の避難の戦略に起因する死亡数千人を無視します

    • Data.gov in crisis: the open data movement is bigger than just one site | Nathan Yau
      Data.gov may close as part of slashed budget cuts hitting US government open data sites. Flowing Data's Nathan Yau explains how it will (and won't) affect open dataAbout two years ago, Data.gov launched as a big step towards government transparency and accountability. A few months later, New York and San Francisco released their own data sites for detailed, city-specific data, and Data.gov.uk launched not too long after. Needless to say, a movement for open government was building momentum, and the popularity of data itself in other sectors continues to rise.However, in the next few months, Data.gov, along with a number of other data-related sites of the government such as USAspending.gov and Apps.gov, are slated to be shut down due to budget cuts. The current annual budget of $37 million will be reduced to $2 million.This budget reduction is of course a huge deal to the data community, and if the sites actually do shut down in June and July of this year, it would be a huge shame. Readers of this blog understand the benefits of data and openness, and if you believe in open data, I highly encourage you to sign the petition penned by the Sunlight Foundation, an organization here in the US that is a big promoter of government transparency. Sir Tim Berners-Lee, creator of the Web and a leader in the development of Data.gov.uk, encourages you, too.That said, what would happen if the budget cut became reality? Outside the data community, most people wouldn't notice. Here's a snapshot of visitors to the Data.gov and USASpending.gov, according to Compete.Although I've found that Compete tends to underestimate visitor counts, it does give a rough idea of the interest. For a point of reference, here's the same comparison, including the Guardian site.In February 2011, there was ju Data.govは、米国政府が開いているデータのサイトを打つ削減予算削減の一環として、閉じることがあります

    • In praise of… Abdo Khal
      Acclaimed author shines a light on life at the bottom of the heap in Saudi Arabia's often forgotten villagesAs anyone who has picked up One Thousand and One Nights is aware, there is a venerable tradition of Arabian storytelling. Before sky-scrapers shot up in the Gulf, the heart of the culture was found in the tales shared around evening fires, and perhaps that is what organisers of this week's Book World Prague jamboree had in mind in making Saudi Arabia their guest of honour. Or, just perhaps, they grabbed the petro-dollars without stopping to think. Conditions in the kingdom are dismal ones for creating literature of any quality. With no cinemas, youngsters can grow up missing out on the great tales of the times, and there are ludicrous new strictures on literary clubs, even before we consider the heavy scrawl of the censor's black pen. The Prague delegation arrived with just one obscure writer, deliberately leaving behind novelists whose sheer gift has overcome all of the barriers to win international acclaim. Foremost among them is Abdo Khal, whose Spewing Sparks As Big As Castles won a $60,000 prize dubbed the Arab Booker. A modest man stemming from the Hijazi west, he shines a light on life at the bottom of the heap, in Saudi's often forgotten villages. His voice blends image-rich poetic classicism with contemporary patois, which makes for an unmistakably Arab mix, but it reliably sets to work on universal themes. Spewing Sparks casts an unflinching eye on those seduced by the glamour of palace politics. Needless to say, it is not easy to get hold of in Saudi Arabia.Saudi ArabiaMiddle Eastguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds 絶賛された著者は、一つは、千夜一夜物語は認識しており、アラビアストーリーテリングの由緒ある伝統がある取り上げているサウジアラビアの忘れられがちvillagesAsの誰でヒープの下部にある人生に光を照らす

    • Party politics, Australian rules | Martin Kettle
      The Labor party was ruthless in replacing Kevin Rudd. If only British Labour had such moxy and had dumped Gordon BrownTwenty seven years ago, the Australian Labor party acted with a ruthlessness that was remembered around the world for a generation to come, when it removed the lacklustre Bill Hayden as its leader and instated the more popular Bob Hawke on the very eve of a general election. Hawke won by a landslide and Labor became the dominant force in Australian politics for the next decade and more.The Hawke scenario was not lost on those in the British Labour party, which spent much of the years from 2008-10 hoping to remove Gordon Brown and install a more voter-friendly leader before the 2010 election in Britain. There was plenty of talk. And there was some action, too – the David Milliband semi-challenge of 2008, the James Purnell resignation in 2009 and the abortive Patricia Hewitt-Geoff Hoon call to arms at the start of this year.How long ago it all seems. Needless to say, the British Labour party preferred inaction to action. The least ruthless political party in Britain plodded doggedly to its inevitable defeat under its bad and unpopular leader.Now, the Australians have done it again. And with a cold-eyed, self-interested ruthlessness that puts the British Labour party utterly to shame. Kevin Rudd was many things that Gordon Brown was not. He was a big election winner, leading Labor to a landslide win in 2007 after the John Howard years. He was more popular with the voters than his party was – even at the start of this year, Rudd's ratings outdistanced Labor's.In the last six months, though, Labor has been on the wrong end of a political convulsion over carbon emissions trading. Both party and leader have slumped, leaving Rudd an unpopular leader liable to dr 労働党は、冷酷なケビンラッドを交換していた

    • Eurozone GDP: what the economists say
      Germany reported an impressive 2.2% growth in the second quarter today, the strongest since the country was reunified two decades ago. France expanded by 0.6% and Spain by just 0.2%. Figures for the whole eurozone will be published later this morning. Here is what economists made of the data.Andreas Scheurle at DekaBankI can see 3% growth this year, even a bit more than 3%. The German economy is booming thanks to global demand.Carsten Brzeski at INGPlaying in a league of its own. Today's first estimate of German GDP growth in the second quarter confirmed an excellent growth performance. This is the strongest quarterly reading since German reunification. The decomposition of the GDP numbers will only be published in two weeks but recent monthly data indicate that growth was driven by exports and investments, while the drop in private consumption should at least have come to an end.The strong second-quarter performance of the German economy is impressive but not surprising. Structurally in a much better shape than many other industrialised countries, it was just a matter of time before the German economy would pick up further speed. In the second quarter, the German economy mainly benefited from two factors: a catching up in the construction sector after the harsh winter and strong foreign demand for German goods.Looking ahead, it is almost needless to say that the current growth momentum is hardly sustainable in the coming months. With the one-off impact from the construction sector and normalizing of export growth, German growth will return to more ordinary growth numbers. Nevertheless, despite an inevitable slowdown, all ingredients are there for the German economy to take the next step towards a self-sustained recovery. Confidence indicators are still at high levels, ドイツは今日、国は20年前に統一されて以来最強の第2四半期の印象的な2.2%の成長を報告した

    • Press freedom: The Singapore grip | Editorial
      The country presents itself as a modern liberal democracy yet has an autocratic political cultureSingapore is proud of its place near the top of many international rankings. Its school system is by some measures the world's best. The island state promotes itself as diverse, competitive and cultured – an exciting global hub. But there are two league tables which shame Singapore. The first, compiled by the campaigning group Reporters Without Borders, places the country 136th in the world for press freedom – below Iraq and Zimbabwe. The second is the rate at which Singapore executes convicted criminals: arguably higher, per capita, than any other country in the world.Singapore presents itself as a modern liberal democracy: it has a parliament, elections, courts, a constitutional right to free speech and the consumerist gloss of capitalism. Its citizens are free to become rich and to travel. Many do both. The country has by any measure succeeded since independence. But its autocratic political culture – overseen by the country's founding father and now official minister mentor Lee Kuan Yew – is highly and needlessly restrictive. The media is largely state-owned. Defamation and contempt laws threaten dissent. The latest victim of these is Alan Shadrake, a British-born writer sentenced yesterday to six weeks in prison and a large fine after being found guilty of contempt of court. His book Once a Jolly Hangman questioned the independence of Singapore's legal system, and its use of the death penalty.It is depressing that a country as successful as Singapore should feel the need for such restrictions on free speech. Singapore argues that, without them, the balance between the country's Chinese, Malay and Indian populations would be upset. But the reality is that other successfu 国は現代のリベラルな民主主義がまだ独裁政治cultureSingaporeは、多くの国際ランキングの上部にその場所を誇りに思っているているとしての地位を提示します

    • Serving in Iraq killed my faith in God | Adnan Sarwar
      The destruction I saw made me question everything I had previously thought about religionLuke was a friend of mine. The last time we spoke for any length was in February 2003. Around three in the morning I woke hearing him struggling to stand and giggling. I saw him confused and braced against the wall. I called out, he turned and asked me why I was sleeping in the toilets. I told him it was my bedroom. He needlessly told me he was drunk.We were both soldiers in the Royal Engineers. He was what you might imagine your average squaddie to be: hard-drinking and full of life. I was not so much your average squaddie: a Pakistani immigrant who had joined the British Army looking for adventure. He sat on the end of my bed and told me he was worried. We had just been told we were going to Iraq.The lads had responded to this news by going out into the local town to drink the bars dry. Now, here was Luke, his behaviour the result of a heavy night numbing reality. I prepared myself to hear my friend talk about how he was worried about his family. But, he didn't want to talk to me about that. He told me he was worried about me.He asked me why I didn't drink or sleep with anybody. I told him it was my religion. He laughed and asked if I actually believed in all that. He told me how life was too short, how we were off to Iraq soon and how embarrassing it would be to die a virgin. Only a soldier could have put it so well.I found myself struggling to fault his logic. I had followed Islam for years, having grown up in an area of Burnley that was almost exclusively Asian. My street, a little Pakistan, had rows of terraced houses full of Muslims getting their halal meat from the cash and carry at one end and praying five times a day at the mosque at the other end. Now here, hundreds of mi 私は私が以前religionLukeについての私の友人と思っていたすべての疑問が見えた破壊

    • Michael Tomasky: Awesomest political ad
      Go to Rick Barber's website and watch in awe this completely insane and sorta scary but admittedly pretty brilliant ad.Barbar is a GOP candidate for the House of Representatives from Alabama's second congressional district. He finished second in the recent primary and forced a July 13 run-off. With advertising like this, he could win.Then he'd face a Democratic incumbent named Bobbie Bright. Bright has voted against anything Obama has come within miles of, needless to say, but a Democrat in Alabama is not exactly safe, so it seems possible that this man actually could end up in Congress.Someone needs to tell him that life in Congress isn't like life in the television commercials and there aren't going to be stentorian men in funny hats willing to follow him into battle. Just a lot of tedious hearings and getting familiar with things like agriculture policy, that is if he bothers, and then figuring out that it's likely to take him at least 10 years to have the remotest impact on anything, by which time he'll be either bored to tears or (from the looks of this ad) homicidal. Anyway it's massively entertaining.US midterm elections 2010AlabamaMichael Tomaskyguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds リック理容室のWebサイトや時計、この完全に正気とみかん怖いが確かにかなり素晴らしいad.Barbar畏敬の移動アラバマ州で2番目選挙区から下院の共和党候補である

    • France shows it can deal with death | Andrew Brown
      Britain would do well to follow the French example and pay people who take time off to look after a dying relative or partnerThe French state is not famous for sensitivity and tact, but this morning the parliament voted unanimously for a remarkably imaginative measure to make dying easier there. People who take time off to look after a relative or partner close to death will be entitled to an payment of €50 (£44) a day for 21 days. At a time when English politicians argue about a death tax, the French have got on and established a subsidy for the dying.It's not a huge sum of money. I don't think that's the point. There are incidental expenses and inconveniences when someone is dying but they are seldom immense. They matter far less than the grief and exhaustion which attend almost every deathbed. What the payment does is to register the state's belief that to tend a dying friend or relative is a worthwhile activity, which should be honoured and not needlessly impeded.This is a much more practical approach, and more compassionate, too, than grandstanding about principles and rights as we have been doing in this country for the last few weeks. Discussions about euthanasia in Britain are mostly conducted on the basis of individual hard cases, but the French law takes account of the fact that even a death that ends well can be hard and terrible for the people around. It is also work. To that extent a subsidy for the work done at the end of life is something the state – society – should pay just as it pays us around the time our children are born.Like funerals, the French arrangement recognises that death affects the living all around the dead person, and they require help and acknowledgement to carry on. That may sound cynical, but I think it is purely realistic. We no long 英国やフランスの例に倣う者とオフに死んで相対パスまたはpartnerTheフランス語状態の世話に時間がかかる人が支払うの感度とタクトは有名ではないが、かと今朝は、議会、全会一致で非常に想像力の測定を容易に死ぬことに賛成したそこに


最近みた言葉
関連語





    楽譜 共有     研究開発