• Welcome to ZNAK SAGITE — više od fantastike — edicija, časopis, knjižara....

World today (Ni Srbija ni zemlje u okruženju)

Started by Loni, 25-06-2010, 14:43:08

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 3 Guests are viewing this topic.



Aco Popara Zver

Ја? Никад, то су ваше новине
šta će mi bogatstvo i svecka slava sva kada mora umreti lepa Nirdala

Usul

God created Arrakis to train the faithful.


Aco Popara Zver

Спале маске са "мировних напора" САД

Георгиј Филимонов


http://www.nspm.rs/savremeni-svet/spale-maske-sa-mirovnih-napora-sad.html
šta će mi bogatstvo i svecka slava sva kada mora umreti lepa Nirdala

Ugly MF

Bato, to se u nas kaže 'na zapadu ništa novo'...

Aco Popara Zver

И нас ће да укопа ово.
šta će mi bogatstvo i svecka slava sva kada mora umreti lepa Nirdala


Meho Krljic

Kao neko ko većinu svojih igara naručuje u britanskim firmama, sunovrat funte posle Bregzita pozdravljam gromkim aplauzom. Seriously, tvrdi se da je funta pala na nivo iz 1985. godine i očekuje se da će još da pada. Gud tajmz!!!!!!!!!!!

Pound sinks to 1985 low, is likely 'going to go down the tubes'

Aco Popara Zver

This time next year we'll be millionaires!!!
šta će mi bogatstvo i svecka slava sva kada mora umreti lepa Nirdala

Meho Krljic

Indian police arrest 70 for targeting Americans in tax scam  

Quote
NEW DELHI (AP) — Indian police have arrested 70 people and are questioning hundreds more after uncovering a massive scam to cheat thousands of Americans out of millions of dollars by posing as U.S. tax authorities and demanding unpaid taxes, a police officer said Thursday.
According to police in Mumbai, the yearlong scam involved running fake call centers which sent voice mail messages telling U.S. nationals to call back because they owed back taxes.
Those who called back and believed the threats would fork out thousands of dollars to "settle" their case, Mumbai police officer Parag Marere said Thursday.
  The scam brought in more than $150,000 a day, Marere said without giving a total sum. If the scam netted that amount daily, it would have made almost $55 million in one year.
    Some victims were also told to buy gift vouchers from various companies, and hand over the voucher ID numbers which the impostors then used to make purchases, Marere said.
Police said they are likely to file charges against many of the 600 or more people still being questioned on suspicion of running the fake call centers, housed on several stories of a Mumbai office building.
Those arrested so far include several of the alleged ringleaders, as well as people accused of providing equipment and setting up the fake call centers. The criminal charges filed against the suspects include extortion, impersonation and violations of India's information technology laws.
"We are questioning those who were involved in the fraud, including those posing as tax investigators," Marere said.
Police raided the offices this week and seized hundreds of hard disks, hard disks, high-end servers and other electronic equipment.
Indian media reports said 70 percent of the scam's proceeds were retained by the suspects in India, while the rest was paid to collaborators in the U.S.
Indian news broadcaster NDTV reported that one U.S.-based company allegedly collected the victims' personal information and passed it to the fake call centers.



Meho Krljic

 Why we need to plan for a future without jobs



Quote
The future of work in America is uncertain. What we know is that things are going to change. Technology will upend countless careers, workers across fields will be displaced, and it's not entirely clear how many jobs will be replaced.
When driverless trucks are manufactured at scale, which will happen far sooner than many realize (as soon as five years), America's 3.5 million truck drivers will be dispensable. That doesn't mean the profession of truck driving will disappear overnight, but it will shrink considerably.
According to Morgan Stanley, autonomous technology will save the freight industry $168 billion annually, nearly half of which will come from staff reductions.
What is true of the freight industry will be true of many others. We will enter what the Atlantic's Derek Thompson called "an era of technological unemployment," in which machines render human labor useless and inefficient.
     Andy Stern is the former president of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), which today represents close to 2 million workers in the United States and Canada. He resigned his post in 2010 and accepted a position as a senior fellow at Columbia University's Richard Paul Richman Center for Business, Law and Public Policy.
For the last year or so, Stern has argued that a universal basic income (UBI) is the best response to the social and economic disruption caused by technological change.
UBI is a form of social security in which citizens receive an unconditional wage from the government. In his new book, Raising the Floor, Stern says a UBI will become essential as automation wreaks havoc on the labor market.
     I met Stern last month at the Vox Conversations conference, where he discussed the challenges ahead for workers.
I spoke with Stern at greater length last week about some of the issues he raised in that discussion. I asked him about UBI, the collapse of unions, and the future of work in America.
Our conversation, edited for length and clarity, follows.
Sean Illing You spent your entire career working for the SEIU. Why did you resign in 2010?
Andy Stern I was proud and really privileged to have worked most of my life trying to change other people's lives. I considered the union movement the best job creation and antipoverty and health care and pension program we had in the 20th century. But it wasn't working as well in the 21st century.
I've watched the labor movement go from one in three workers when I began to one in 16 when I finally left. And it just seemed like if I wanted to change workers' lives, I needed to find another way to do so.
There seemed to be something going on in terms of the way work was organized, the way the market was working, and the way that technology was about to accelerate these changes. I wasn't entirely sure how to navigate this, and that made it very difficult to lead.
Sean Illing Can the labor movement, such as it is, adapt and become a significant force moving forward?
Andy Stern Well, I think it'll always have a somewhat boutique role in representing individual employees. To be sure, influencing government policy needs to be a point of emphasis. Whether it's the fight for a $15 minimum wage or it's the effort to win paid family leave or scheduling reform — people are turning to the government to resolve issues for workers that unions won't do.
The goal, ultimately, is to get people to change their business practices. If the labor movement can find an economic model that doesn't solely rely on members' dues, I think you'll see them play a much larger role in labor market policies, in social policy, in benefit policy, and those benefits will redound to all workers — not just union members.
Sean Illing Does the collapse of unions mean the death of the American dream?
Andy Stern I think that if people don't intervene right now, it will. Fifty percent of Americans say they don't believe in the American dream, and they're justified in believing that. People with college degrees are not making anywhere near the kind of progress that their parents made, and that's not their fault.
The possibility that you can end up with job security and retirement attached to it is statistically diminishing over time. The American dream doesn't have to be dead, but it is dying. All the resources and assets are available to make it real. It's just that we have a huge distribution problem.
Unions and the government used to play an important part at the top of the market, but this is less true today. The market completely distributes toward those at the top. Unions simply aren't as effective in terms of their impact on the economy, and government has been somewhat on the sidelines in recent years.
Sean Illing Let's pivot from unions to universal basic income, which is a cardinal issue for you these days. In your book, Raising the Floor, you conclude that a UBI will eventually be necessary. Can you say, first, what UBI means and, second, why you think we need it?
Andy Stern A universal basic income is essentially giving every single working-age American a check every month, much like we do with social security for elderly people. It's an unconditional stipend, as it were.
The reason it's necessary is we're now learning through lots of reputable research that technological change is accelerating, and that this process will continue to displace workers and terminate careers. A significant number of tasks now performed by humans will be performed by machines and artificial intelligence. We could very well see 5 million jobs eliminated by the end of the decade because of technology.
We've already seen Uber-deployed driverless cars in Pittsburgh, and driverless trucks will be deployed in the next five to six years — we've already seen them across Europe. The largest job in 29 states is driving a truck. There are 3 and a half million people who operate trucks and 5 million more who support them in various ways.
So there's a tsunami of change on its way, and the question is twofold. One is how does America go through a transition to what will be I think an economy with far fewer jobs — particularly middle-class jobs? What policies will guide us through this transition? And second, what do we want this to look like on the other end?
I believe a UBI is a way to ease the transition, and it's also a way to provide a floor for people — not necessarily a substitute for work, but a supplement to work that allows them to have a sense of economic security, have consumer buying power. We want to allow people to be entrepreneurs, to take risks and raise kids and do other things without turning the world into the Hunger Games.

Sean Illing Obviously you're an advocate for a UBI, but I'd like to hear what you think is the most compelling counterargument against UBI.
Andy Stern Certainly our concept of work is problematic. This is a country in which people have not figured out what to do if they don't work for money. I think there are many other ways that people potentially can work but, psychologically, the Protestant work ethic is embedded in the psyche of our country. The idea that someone would get something for nothing is anathema here. People that work feel like those who don't shouldn't be rewarded. It's just an alien concept.
Sean Illing The politics of this is fraught with landmines. Conservatives in particular will reject UBI as inherently un-American or an extension of the welfare state. And the whole notion of work is tied to a philosophy of self-reliance in this country, which is almost a religion.
But there is a deeply conservative argument in defense of UBI. Once the economic realities become impossible to ignore, this will appear more pragmatic and less radical every day.
Andy Stern Absolutely. Some of the biggest intellectuals in the conservative movement have been supporters of UBI, people like Friedrich Hayek, Milton Friedman, and Charles Murray. They all argued that the current welfare system eliminates people's liberty and that if we want to get people more freedom and more opportunity and end poverty, we should just get people cash and get the state out of the business of managing an overwrought welfare system.
Charles Murray, the conservative scholar, is probably the leading proponent of universal basic income, and he now argues that technology will create a tsunami of labor market destruction of jobs and that UBI is a program that meets the philosophical tenets of conservatism.
Sean Illing In that view, UBI is an alternative to the welfare state, not an extension of it?   
Andy Stern Some people would say we should eliminate all the welfare programs, including social security and Medicare. I think it's more about blending UBI with a different kind of system. But certainly we could modify things because a lot of the programs — food stamps, housing, unemployment — are just ways of giving people money, and if we're going to just do it unilaterally we shouldn't run two systems side by side, and we probably can't afford two systems side by side in any case.
So the debate's going to be which of the current welfare programs do we cash out, and how do we blend this with the existing social safety net and make it affordable for the country.
Sean Illing What sort of cultural impact would you expect a UBI to have on the country?
Andy Stern I would say we're experiencing the cultural change right now. Many people would argue that the anger on the left and the right, from Sanders supporters and from Trump supporters, is a manifestation of these changes. The economy isn't working for people, and we all know it.
So I think we're going through the cultural change without a willingness to admit that a lot of the uneasiness and unhappiness and anxiety in the country is caused by the lack of good and stable jobs. I think we have to admit that something big is going on, and that we're at the front of the storm, but this is only the beginning of the disruption.
The question is, will we admit this and try to figure out how to ameliorate it or will we bury our heads in the sand and ignore it?
Sean Illing Against the backdrop of these populist waves on the left and the right, do you see UBI as an idea with any traction in Washington?
Andy Stern I don't see it now because I think no one wants to admit what's happening. No one wants to admit that our half-measures aren't working and won't work. I think people completely underestimate the speed at which these changes are occurring.
Sean Illing If we don't implement something like a UBI, what does work and the middle class look like in 30 years?   
Andy Stern It looks like the Hunger Games. It's more of what we're beginning to see now: an enclave of extremely successful people at the center and then everyone else on the margins. There will be fewer opportunities in a hollowed out and increasingly zero-sum economy.
If capital trumps labor, the people who own will keep getting wealthier and the people who supply labor will become less necessary. And this is exactly what AI and robotics and software are now doing: substituting capital for labor.
Sean Illing There are a lot of people, technological optimists in particular, who acknowledge that workers will be displaced in this emergent economy, but seem convinced that those workers will be absorbed or re-employed.
Are they too optimistic?
Andy Stern I don't think they're too optimistic. I think that's just one scenario. There are other, far scarier scenarios, and I don't understand why we wouldn't want to prepare for those.
Sean Illing Work has always been tethered to identity in this country. Do we have to completely rethink the concept of work in this new world?
Andy Stern Women have always worked historically raising families, which everyone sees as a great value, but it was not paid work. UBI will solve this problem.
People have always taken care of their parents, which in some cases is a paid job and in other cases it's not paid work. The same thing is true about tutoring your child, or volunteering at a hospital or as a Little League coach or with any other service organization.
We need to decide that creative activity, such as learning a language, painting, writing plays or books, is work. Or that trying to build a business or solve a problem or learn new skills is work, even if you're not being compensated.
We're also going to need to appreciate that there are many other things that people can do to self-actualize, which may be the most important adventure that people can travel to make life fulfilling, and it may not be what we now call work.






džin tonik

Drei Haupttatverdächtige wieder frei : Sexueller Übergriff von 17 Männern auf zwei Frauen in Freiburg

sazeto prevedeno, dvije nijemice u dobi 21 i 29 godina u srcu frajburga opkolilo 17 azilanata iz gambije i seksualno zlostavljalo.
trojica uhicena, obradjena, pustena, vec poznata policiji, osobe koje usle u njemacku izmedju 11/15 i 02/16, jednom zahtijev za azil u obradi, dvojici odbijen, ceka se da postave novi. :mrgreen:

mac

Ti su verovatno procenili na će im zahtevi biti odbijeni, pa traže najzanimljiviji način da budu otpraćeni iz države o trošku države.

džin tonik

drustvo je spram njih bilo jako nepravedno, pamuk vise nije na cijeni pa ne zna sta bi s njima.
realno, kojoj budali ovo treba. :roll:
mislim, ne da mi sad nijemci nisu smijesni, kao i pola europe. :mrgreen:

Meho Krljic

Komon sens privejls:


Uber loses right to classify UK drivers as self-employed  

Quote
Uber drivers are not self-employed and should be paid the "national living wage", a UK employment court has ruled in a landmark case which could affect tens of thousands of workers in the gig economy.
The ride-hailing app could now be open to claims from all of its 40,000 drivers in the UK, who are currently not entitled to holiday pay, pensions or other workers' rights. Uber immediately said it would appeal against the ruling. Employment experts said other firms with large self-employed workforces could now face scrutiny of their working practices and the UK's biggest union, Unite, announced it was setting up a new unit to pursue cases of bogus self-employment.
Research by Citizens Advice has suggested that as many as 460,000 people could be falsely classified as self-employed, costing up to £314m a year in lost tax and employer national insurance contributions. Four courier firms are already facing legal action from cyclists who want similar recognition as staff employees and the rights that go with that status, while delivery firm Hermes is under investigation by HM Revenue & Customs.
The Uber ruling could force a rethink of the gig economy business model, where companies use apps and the internet to match customers with workers. The firms do not employ the workers, but take commission from their earnings, and many have become huge global enterprises. Uber now operates around the world, with the company valued at more than £50bn.


The decision of the employment tribunal comes amid mounting concern within government about the growing trend towards self-employed workforces. The government has recently announced a six-month review of modern working practices and HMRC is setting up a new unit, the employment status and intermediaries team, to investigate firms.
MPs launched an inquiry last week into pay and working conditions in the UK which will look at the status and rights of agency and casual workers and the self-employed for the purposes of tax, benefits and employment law, and how to protect them.
Friday's ruling by a London employment tribunal involves a case taken by two drivers, James Farrar and Yaseen Aslam, on behalf of a group 19 Uber workers who argued that they were employed by the San Francisco-based firm, rather than working for themselves.
At a hearing in July, Farrar told how he was put under "tremendous pressure" to work long hours and accept jobs and said that there were "repercussions" from the company if he cancelled a pickup. He said some months he earned as little as £5 an hour – far below the £7.20 that employers are obliged to pay workers aged over 25.
Uber argued that it was a technology firm not a transport business and that its drivers were independent self-employed contractors who could choose where and when they worked.
The judges were scathing about Uber's arguments, however, accusing the firm of "resorting in its documentation to fictions, twisted language and even brand new terminology" and even quoting Hamlet to suggest that the group's UK boss was protesting too much about its position.
"The notion that Uber in London is a mosaic of 30,000 small businesses linked by a common 'platform' is to our minds faintly ridiculous," the judges said. "Drivers do not and cannot negotiate with passengers ... They are offered and accept trips strictly on Uber's terms."
Nigel Mackay from the employment team at law firm Leigh Day, which represented the drivers, said: "We are pleased that the employment tribunal has agreed with our arguments that drivers are entitled to the most basic workers' rights, including to be paid the [national living wage] and to receive paid holiday, which were previously denied to them.
"This is a ground-breaking decision. It will impact not just on the thousands of Uber drivers working in this country, but on all workers in the so-called gig economy whose employers wrongly classify them as self-employed and deny them the rights to which they are entitled."
The GMB union, which took up the case for the drivers, said that it was a "monumental victory" which would have an impact on thousands of workers in other industries "where bogus self-employment is rife".
Maria Ludkin, GMB's legal director, said: "Uber drivers and thousands of others caught in the bogus self-employment trap will now enjoy the same rights as employees. This outcome will be good for passengers, too. Properly rewarded drivers are the same side of the coin as drivers who are properly licensed and driving well-maintained and insured vehicles."
Farrar said he was thrilled with the "emphatic" ruling. He said his industry had seen the deterioration in workers' rights since Uber entered the market. "We've brought that to a halt," he said.
Employment experts said that other firms with large self-employed workforces could now face similar action. "This judgment is likely to have massive implications, as we see an increasing number of start-up businesses effectively adopting Uber's model," said Tim Goodwin of law firm Winckworth Sherwood. "The effect of this judgment is that those kinds of business may owe a lot more to their workers, such as paid holiday and minimum wage, than they had bargained for."
The ruling should be regarded as " a salutary lesson by businesses who try to arbitrarily 'classify' workers as contractors to avoid affording them their full rights as workers," Goodwin said.
The GMB's Ludkin said employers should be "on notice" that it was reviewing similar contracts. "This is old-fashioned exploitation under new-fangled jargon, but the law will force you to pay GMB members what they are rightfully due," she said.
There were calls for more clarity over employment status, with Citizens Advice pointing out that many people were locked out of employment tribunals by fees of up to £1,200.
"The fact it takes an employment tribunal to decide whether these drivers are self-employed shows that proving employment status is an extremely complicated and costly process," said its chief executive, Gillian Guy. "For many people struggling at the sharp end of insecure work, such as in false self-employment, taking such a case is simply not an option."
The ruling is not the end of the process for Uber. The firm will take the case to the employment appeal tribunal, and following its decision there could be further hearings in the court of appeal and then the supreme court. Any payments due to drivers will not be calculated until that process is over.


Other drivers with the firm will not automatically receive payouts but, if the firm accepts the ruling, it will have to change its contracts to avoid more cases being taken by drivers. Lawyers say that its terms and conditions are similar for all of its UK employees.
Jo Bertram, the regional general manager of Uber in the UK, said many of the firm's drivers did not want to be classified as workers: "Tens of thousands of people in London drive with Uber precisely because they want to be self-employed and their own boss.
"The overwhelming majority of drivers who use the Uber app want to keep the freedom and flexibility of being able to drive when and where they want."


Uber in numbers


40,000 The number of Uber drivers in the UK
£5 The hourly wage received in some months by one of the drivers who took the case.
$62.5bn Uber's valuation based on its last round of funding.
Seven The years that Uber has been in operation.
460,000 The number of people who could be falsely classified as self-employed in the UK
£314m The yearly estimated cost in lost tax and employer national insurance contributions from falsely classified employees, according to Citizens Advice

Meho Krljic

Funta se malko oporavila nakon što je britanski sud naložio da se parlament izjasni o Bregzitu. Kao da to uvek i nije bilo neophodno uzevši u obzir da je referendum bio samo konsultativni... Al dobro, to je berza, reaguje intuitivno...


Pound soars as court demands parliament vote on Brexit

QuoteThe pound jumped against the dollar and euro Thursday after the High Court in London ruled that parliament must approve the start of Britain's withdrawal from the European Union.
Sterling -- which has tumbled to multi-year low points against its main rivals since Britain voted June 23 for Brexit -- surged above $1.24.
However the pound's big jump weighed on London's benchmark FTSE 100 index which has won strong support since the referendum outcome as the weak currency benefitted exporters. It stood down 0.5 percent in afternoon trade, while Frankfurt added 0.07 percent and Paris climbed 0.5 percent.
The court ruling has "made triggering Brexit a lot trickier and has given sterling a massive shot in the arm", said Neil Wilson, markets analyst at ETX Capital.
"The news sent the pound roaring through $1.24 before gains were pared as markets digest the news -- the fact is no one really knows what the implications of this decision are yet."
Downing Street said it was "disappointed" at the decision and would appeal, with the case now likely to go to the Supreme Court before the end of the year.
Meanwhile, the Bank of England on Thursday hiked its economic growth forecast for next year, as it froze its key interest rate at a record-low 0.25 percent and left stimulus unchanged.
The BoE raised its prediction for 2017 GDP expansion to 1.4 percent from 0.8 percent as early fears of a sharp slump due to the shock of the June Brexit vote failed to materialise.
Ahead of the decision, a closely-watched survey Thursday showed output in Britain's key services sector rose last month despite costs rising at the fastest rate in more than five years.
The Markit/CIPS services purchasing managers' index (PMI) hit 54.5 in October, up from 52.6 in September and above analyst expectations of 52.5. A reading above 50 indicates growth.
- US election in view -
Elsewhere Thursday, eurozone stock markets rose. But Asian equities struggled again, with uncertainty over next week's presidential election sending investors rushing for the sidelines, pushing safe havens such as the yen and gold higher.
With (Other OTC: WWTH - news) just days to go until the November 8 poll, maverick tycoon Donald Trump has narrowed the gap with market-favourite Hillary Clinton, whose lead had once been considered unassailable, upending early confidence.
The former secretary of state is considered by most investors to be a safer, more stable bet than Trump, who is seen as a loose cannon.
"The move to take risk off the table continues," said IG (Frankfurt: A0EARV - news) analyst Chris Weston in Melbourne.
"We have reached a point where there is a buyers' strike, where money managers have reduced their risk."
The rush for safety saw gold prices climb back above $1,300 an ounce Wednesday for the first time since the start of October.
Fears of a Trump presidency has led to speculation the Fed could hold off a December rate increase -- which has been largely priced into markets -- owing to fears about his impact on the economy.
Wall Street edged higher in opening trade on Thursday after four straight days of losses on election anxieties, with the Dow gaining 0.1 percent.

Aco Popara Zver

šta će mi bogatstvo i svecka slava sva kada mora umreti lepa Nirdala

Ugly MF


Meho Krljic

O, bre, stvarno treba da čitaš neke novine koje bar malo ozbiljnije shvataju koncept izveštavanja.

Prvo, nacionalni zakon ne može da poništi konvenciju UN ako je taj isti parlament nju usvojio i ratifikovao, tako da, čak i u slučaju da je nemački parlament glasao ovako kako pišu, to ne znači da voda po nemačkom zakonu "više ne spada u osnovna ljudska prava".

Drugo, nemački parlament ima 630 poslanika pa 299 nije potrebna natpolovična većina. Tu cifru od 299 je autor teksta (koji sasvim sigurno nije prepisan iz nekakvih fantomskih "Vijesti") verovatno izvukao iz dupeta jer je ovo broj poslanika koji se u nemačkom parlamentu biraju sa lokala.

Treće, ovo glasanje se nije dogodilo, bar ne u formi i sa temom kako to prenosi ovaj izveštaj. Naprosto, nije se dogodilo, vest je izmišljena.

Četvrto, u nemačkoj je voda (dakle njeno rafiniranje i distribucija) delimično privatizovana pre više od jedne decenije prodajom dela berlinskog vodovoda i vodovoda još nekoliko gradova privatnim kompanijama i rezultati su bili da je cena porasla i reakcija javnosti je dovela do toga da su gradovi otkupili svoje deonice pa su vodovodi u tih devet gradova ponovo javna preduzeća.

Seriously. Čitanje Telegrafa je možda dobra zabava ali ovakve očigledne izmišljotine ne treba konzumirati preterano ozbiljno.

Ugly MF

Ti ne kapiras da ovo nije daleko?
Ako udjemo u EU, ja necu smeti kad mi cefne da krknem prasence u dvoristu ili opecem kazan rakije,
a da ne trazim skupe dozvole od drzave.
Ili da resim da ne primim pedera da radi u mojoj firmi ako necu.
Ili da ucim dete da je evolucija lagarija i da ne mora da postuje nijedan drzavni zakon ako je protiv njegove religije.
I da je politicka korektnost najnepotrebnija stvar na svetu.

Aco Popara Zver

Чек бре Агли, ти се понашаш као да је Трамп већ изгубио, дај мало оптимизма!
šta će mi bogatstvo i svecka slava sva kada mora umreti lepa Nirdala

Ugly MF

The Art of War, brateeee, Zun Cu!
Tramp je prevara!
Disepshn!
Izbori su namesteni i bice, dok je demokratije i jezuita i masona i iluminata i ostalih slicnih antihrista.

Pa i da pobedi Tramp kao sto nece, misliiiim,,,, elektronsko glasanje!
EEEj, BRE!
Koga zaebavamo sas tom demonkracijom?
....mene ne....

džin tonik

"na zalost", ta vijest u neku ruku i nije potpuna fantazija, dok istovremeno to i je.
ima veze sa rubnim grupacijama i nacinom na koji smaraju.
politicke rubne grupacije spram kojih postoji nepisano pravilo da se s njima ne ulazi u frakcije, koalicije, ljevica su i desnica.
slicno vazi za amandmane koje postavljaju kad udju u kakav sabor. to se, nategnuto, odbija bez rasprave.
uglavnom smaraju i traze povod za galamu, postave kakav zahtijev, uz ozbiljan topic ubace kakvu potpunu budalastinu i onda maltretiraju po rezultatu.
tako je lijevica i u ovom slucaju starom skoro cetiri godine ubacila na glasanje nesto sasvim razumljivo, usmjereno protiv nekakve europske norme u naznaci (istu pogresno interpretirajuci), u biti nista posebno, standardni politicki palamud i natezanje, ali problematiku u amandmanu poistovjetila sa osnovnim ljudskim pravom.
pa kad odbijeno, galama, eto, gaze se osnovna ljudska prava. jednstavno tako postave retoriku da dobiju "senzaciju". ozbiljno ih ne shvaca nitko, i to je, osim u ljevicarsim i desnicarskim glasilima, vijest iz rubrike sharenilo; koju nitko ne dozivljava van saljivog konteksta.
Wasser ist Menschenrecht – Privatisierung verhindern

Ugly MF

I gej -parada u Beogradu je bila sajnsfikshn dok Vucic,,,khm,,,,evi finansijeri nisu dosli na vlas' ....
Uskoro ce i u Hrvatskoj najgore biti Ustasa ili Katolik....

džin tonik

ma to nama ustasama prirodno okruzenje, nista posebno, bah. prst u uho i sve cool. :mrgreen:

Meho Krljic

Repriza u Fukušimi nije nezamisliva:

Powerful quake hits Japan, Fukushima residents urged to flee tsunami

Quote* Magnitude 7.3 quake strikes near Japan coast early Tuesday
* Japan Meteorological Agency warns of tsunami up to 3 metres
* Cooling system for spent fuel briefly halted at nuclear plant
* Waves of up to 1 metre observed at Fukushima
* Region affected is the same devastated by 2011 quake, tsunami (Adds detail nuclear cooling system)
By Yuka Obayashi and William Mallard
TOKYO, Nov 22 (Reuters) - A powerful earthquake rocked northern Japan on Tuesday, the Japan Meteorological Agency said, generating a tsunami that hit the same northern Pacific coast devastated by a massive quake, tsunami and nuclear disaster in 2011.
The earthquake, which was felt in Tokyo, had a preliminary magnitude of 7.3 and was centred off the coast of Fukushima prefecture at a depth of about 10 km (6 miles), the agency said.
A tsunami of up to 1 metre (3 feet) had been observed around Fukushima following the quake which struck at 5:59 a.m. (2059 GMT), public broadcaster NHK said, after warning of waves of up to 3 metres (10 feet) has been issued.
All nuclear plants on the coast threatened by the tsunami are shutdown in the wake of the March 2011 disaster, which knocked out Tokyo Electric Power Co's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, spilling radiation into the air and sea.
A spokeswoman for Tokyo Electric Power, known as Tepco, said the cooling system for a storage pool for spent nuclear fuel at reactor at its Fukushima Daini Plant had been halted, but a spokesman said the cooling system had restarted soon after.
No other damage from the quake has been confirmed at any of its power plants, although there have been blackouts in some areas, the spokeswoman added.
Only two reactors are operating in Japan, both in the southwest of the country. Even when in shutdown nuclear plants need cooling systems operating to keep spent fuel cool.
Tohoku Electric Power Co said there was no damage to its Onagawa nuclear plant, while the Kyodo news agency reported there was no irregularities at the Tokai Daini nuclear plant in Ibaraki Prefecture.
Television footage showed ships moving out to sea from Fukushima harbours as tsunami warning signals wailed.
One woman suffered cuts to her head from falling dishes, Kyodo news agency reported, citing fire department officials.
Earthquakes are common in Japan, one of the world's most seismically active areas. Japan accounts for about 20 percent of the world's earthquakes of magnitude 6 or greater.
The March 11, 2011, quake was magnitude 9, the strongest quake in Japan on record. The massive tsunami it triggered caused world's worst nuclear crisis since Chernobyl a quarter of a century earlier.
The U.S. Geological Survey measured Tuesday's quake at magnitude 6.9, down from an initial 7.3.
An Iwaki city fire dept official said there was smoke or fire at Kureha's research centre in a petrochemical complex in Iwaki city at 6:17 a.m., but it was extinguished at 6:40 a.m. Other details were not clear, he said, adding that no other major damage in the city has been reported at the moment.
One hotel in Ofunato, badly hit by the 2011 quake, initially told guests to stay in the facility, but later bussed them to higher ground.

Meho Krljic

  Islamic State gone, Mosul district residents adjust to new life 

Quote
GOGJALI, Iraq (Reuters) - Until three weeks ago, many of Abu Osama's customers were Islamic State militants who brought their wives and children to his pharmacy on the eastern edge of Mosul for injections and treatment.
Now, most of them are Iraqi security forces who recaptured the Gogjali neighborhood earlier this month and are pushing further into the city, which has been under Islamic State control for more than two years.
As the militants retreat, civilians are adjusting to a new reality in their wake and a clearer picture is emerging of what they did to survive the punishments and deprivation of Islamic State rule.
"Whether Daesh (Islamic State) or army: my door is open to everyone," said Abu Osama, taking the blood pressure of an Iraqi policeman. "If my worst enemy comes here, I must treat him."
Several Islamic State militants, both local and foreign, lived in Gogjali and it was mainly their families that visited the pharmacy because the militants themselves were often away, Abu Osama said.
The front of his shop and those next door are marked with the Arabic letter "z" for zakat, meaning alms, and beside it an identification number Islamic State bureaucrats assigned to record donations made at the shop for their self-proclaimed caliphate.
Advancing Iraqi forces have sprayed Shi'ite slogans over it.
The 40-year old opened the pharmacy after Mosul fell to Islamic State and the salary he received as an employee of the Iraqi health ministry was cut by the government as it sought to choke off funding to the militants, who were skimming the pay of public sector workers in areas they controlled.
The militants wanted Abu Osama to work for them in a hospital, but he refused because it would have meant pledging allegiance to the group, and he does not agree with their hardline ideology.
According to that ideology, the depiction of living creatures is un-Islamic because it can lead to idolatry. After a militant upbraided him for displaying a poster with an image of a baby on the wall of his pharmacy, Abu Osama blotted out its eyes with a black marker pen and then did the same to every label featuring a human being.
The 500 dinar note ($0.40), which bears an image of a statue, was banned for the same reason, according to several civilians.
CHINESE, INDIAN MEDICINE   
All medicine came from Syria -- Mosul's only outlet to the world as an array of forces slowly closed in on the city in Iraq. Syrian traders imported cheap Chinese and Indian medicine via Turkey and paid Islamic State a tax to bring it to market in Mosul, Abu Osama said.
By the time medicine reached his still sparsely stocked shelves, the price had tripled, and many of his customers could not afford to buy it, so he sold it to them on credit and is now owed 1.25 million Iraq dinars ($1,016).
Since women were obliged by Islamic State to veil their faces completely, Abu Osama cannot be sure who owes him what, he said.
Standing in the pharmacy, forty-three-year old Sohaib commented that if he became separated from his wife in a crowded marketplace, she would have to find him, as he could not distinguish her from all the other women shrouded from head to toe in black.       
Abu Osama could treat women only when they were accompanied by a male relative, and if a female patient lifted her veil before him and Islamic State's vice squad found out, he would be held accountable. It never happened to him, but the militants punish such infractions with fines and whipping.
Residents of Gogjali said Islamic State's laws were less strictly enforced there because it is far from the city center.
When Iraqi special forces took the neighborhood, two of the militants left their wives behind, locals said, identifying the women as Russian. The jihadi brides tried to flee Mosul among displaced civilians but were found out and detained by Iraqi security forces, according to a soldier sitting in the pharmacy.
"They were unbelievably beautiful," he said.
Several doors down, twenty-seven year old Ammar, who runs a grocery shop, said the militants were his best customers because they had more money than anyone else.
"They chatted with us and said we must fight jihad. Everyone preached to us, but each to their own," he said.
   All the goods he sold came from Syria, he said, but now that route is blocked too, and several traders from the nearby Kurdish region are taking advantage of the opening in the market.
Outside the grocery shop, a Kurdish trader unloaded goods from a van, including items banned by Islamic State such as cigarettes, biscuits made in Iran and Brazilian canned meat.
"It says halal on the tin, but they said it wasn't," Ammar said, shrugging.   
Occasionally, the sound of a mortar or a burst of gunfire sends people milling in the street scattering and diving for cover, but some, now accustomed to the sounds of war, barely flinch and continue as normal. 



lilit

zatvorena biračka mesta u austriji. reprezentativni uzorak za 10-ak minuta.
That's how it is with people. Nobody cares how it works as long as it works.

lilit

imamo već novog/starog predsednika, van der bellen! :)

fpö upravo priznao poraz, sve sa svojim srbinom u prvom redu.
That's how it is with people. Nobody cares how it works as long as it works.

Meho Krljic


Truman

Ja da valjam ne bih bio ovde.

džin tonik

ma vac sam se pomirio i pritajio jos prije izbora. bilo je jasno da prevara prolazi. izgubljen je onaj trenutak privremenog vrha migracione krize.

inace u nj gore spomenuti freiburg ne izlazi iz crne kronike. sad uhvatili sedamnaestgodisnjaka iz tog izbjeglickog vala koji nedavno napao, silovao i ubio studenticu.

Freiburg: Verdächtiger ist erst 17 Jahre alt

džin tonik

EU-Kommission fordert schnellere Reaktionen der Internetkonzerne

eu-komisija u navali na net-koncerne tipa fb, tw i sl. pri zelji da adekvatno reagiraju na ludake i klinicke slucajeve razne tipa "vucic rekao a, pogledao ulijevo, trepnuo, ovaj ima dugu kosu, onaj kratku, a ja mislim da svi moraju biti celavi ili vidim nepravdu i osjecam se pozvan zavijati na mjesec" koji zive na netu.
provjera provodjenja dogovora da koncerni reagiraju u roku 24h pokazala da ne cine dovoljno, pa kao ide u pravcu da bi im uskoro mogli natovariti na vrat i koji zakon.

lilit

That's how it is with people. Nobody cares how it works as long as it works.

дејан

ма реци лепо - плачипичка :lol:
...barcode never lies
FLA

lilit

:lol:

jes da ne živimo u idealnom svetu, al sad kad je sve prošlo (posle bitke svi su generali! :lol:), negde ipak ne mogu da verujem da su se nadali ulasku u hofburg.
dragica i toma su zlato u odnosu na njih. retorika za jaslice a agresivna.
sad sam mirna 6 godina. lol
That's how it is with people. Nobody cares how it works as long as it works.

дејан

ево ти онда и тома и драгица...а кад смо код ње и злата - имао сам прилике да видим драгичине рукотворине, конкретно један златотиск из 14. или 15. века који је драга председниковица 'рестаурирала' (ако није познато, завршила је дописни курс из рестаурације те је кренула редом да рестаурира све што јој падне под руку) и несрећни златотиск је сад богатији за коју десетину рупа на себи... :(  - тврдим да аустријска председниковица у неуспешном покушају нема такве амбиције...(а кад си у канцеларији узми и екснавијача, екснационалисту, ексстудентагенерације, ексминистра, експпва, његовог брата и мила ђукановића)
...barcode never lies
FLA

scallop

A ti si, Dejane, ekspert za restauraciju?
Never argue with stupid people, they will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience. - Mark Twain.

дејан

ја фала богу нисам, али сам био са професионалним рестауратором (тј рестаураторком) у манастиру где су нам показани
...barcode never lies
FLA

scallop

Gledao, pa video? Izem ti kvalifikaciju. Ni dopisna preko interneta.
Never argue with stupid people, they will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience. - Mark Twain.

mac

Eksponati su pokazani uz komentare stručnjaka, koji su ovde prepričani. Je li moguće da stručnjak laže? Moguće je, ali dok se to ne dokaže ja bih im verovao za izjave za koje su stručni.

дејан

мени је жао што нам се културна баштина уништава индиректно кроз небригу државе, а одвратно ми је кад људи налазе за сходно да својом сујетом и директно учествују у њеном нестанку
такође немам намеру да са вама расправљам о професионалности мојих пријатеља, као што са њима не бих расправљао о вашој
...barcode never lies
FLA

scallop

Moguće je da stručnjak laže. Laž je dokument na dostupnim informacijama u skoro 90% slučajeva. Danas čitam i da je Attila the Hun rođen u Transdanubiji, oko 406 g. Netačno je da se zna gde je rođen, netačan je podatak o Transdanubiji, nepouzdan je Prisk kao izvor, jer je iza njega ostalo samo ono šta je Porfirogenit izmislio. Mnoštvo toga se gradi na netačnom i nepouzdanom. Postoji vest da u plastici gde se pakuje obična voda ima najviše dihidromonoksida. Ja napišem da je to voda i niko ništa. Još da sam pomenuo da apsolutna hermetičnost ne postoji i da pododam menem da postoji permeacija kao proces i gradijent koncentracije kao mera prožimanja kroz slojeve, neko bi napisao da sam blesav. Neznalašvo je savremeno dostignuće. Ko nije u stanju da bude kritičan, njemu i Ugly može da soli pamet sa ravnom Zemljom, iako su još radio talasi dokazili da je okrugla. Jednostavno, malo dumanja nije na odmet.
Never argue with stupid people, they will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience. - Mark Twain.

mac

Za procenu stručnosti i dobronamernosti Dejanovih poznanika stručnjaka ništa od navedenog nije od direktne koristi. Ne vredi da komentarišemo ono o čemu nemamo dovoljno podataka, jer se u suprotnom upravo pretvaramo u Uglyja, koji kaže "ne verujem" jer nema konkretnog znanja o tome u šta ne veruje. Bez adekvatnih informacija dumanje neće biti od velike koristi. Moramo da se oslonimo na one koji informacije imaju, sve dok se ne pokaže da lažu. Tako bar svet funkcioniše iz moje vizure.

Dakle stručnjak pokaže Dejanu rupe na artifaktu i kaže "to se pojavilo posle predsednikovicine restauracije". Šta tu ima da se ne veruje?