Saturday, June 30, 2012

Placing the OFFER TO PURCHASE a Property in South Florida ...

June 29th, 2012 Posted in Florida Real Estate Moving into your New Home

Enjoy moving into your new home

Homebuyers have had the advantage for six years, especially in hard-hit real estate markets. Buyers in the South Florida real estate market have enjoyed sweeping through cities like Fort Lauderdale, Wilton Manors, Plantation, Hillsboro Shores and Miami Beach, purchasing properties in some instances twenty-five cents on the peak market price. Now that the sellers? market is recovering, some buyers don?t realize or can?t accept the fact that the market has changed. As a result, some buyers in our area of Broward County, Palm Beach County and Miami-Dade County aren?t getting the homes they want. Here are common errors that realtors of the Henri Frank Group at REMAX, national real estate agents and real estate experts say buyers are making:

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Low offers:

Ridiculously low offers were the norm during the housing bust, but buyers can?t get away with them anymore. The
mistake some buyers make is going so low that seller will not even consider their offer. Sellers think they are being lowballed on offers less than 90 percent of their asking prices. While some buyers say bids of 80 percent to 85 percent of the list price are reasonable, the seller may consider this an insult. This could cause the bid to be rejected and the buyer could lose their dream home.

Taking too long to submit an offer:

Agents who tell buyers not to take a long time thinking of an offer are often accused of being self-serving. With so few houses available for sale, agents say buyers don?t understand how the market has changed. Not all homes sell quickly because some sellers are asking for higher than market value. But properties priced appropriately in desirable neighborhoods tend to go under contract within days, weeks ? or sometimes hours. If the house is priced right you don?t want to mess around or you?ll end up without the house you want.

Littering the contract with contingencies:

The standard real estate contract includes stipulations, but some buyers also insist on unnecessarily long inspection periods or they want the sale to be contingent on a family member touring the property. You have to have a clean contract if you want to purchase your new home in a timely manner.

Failing to make a personal impression on the seller:

With some homes getting two or more bids, it?s not enough to offer a competitive price. Owners will look at other factors to decide which offer to take. It?s not just about the money, some sellers are emotionally attached to their homes and they want to take certain items with them when they leave. A seller may have two offers on their home but they will usually take the one in which the buyer agreed to pay cash and allowed the seller to take the washer and dryer or stove and refrigerator. Take the time to meet the seller?s agent. It is the seller?s call on which offer to select, but the listing agent will have input and it doesn?t hurt if the agent likes the potential buyer. Consider submitting a personal letter with the contract, describing features you like about the home and why buying it is important to you.

Choosing the right Real Estate Agent in South FLorida is #1 Important:

For professional guidance purchasing a single family home in Fort Lauderdale, a single family home in Wilton Manors, single family home in Miami or Miami Beach, single family home in Plantation, single family home in Oakland Park or anywhere in the South FLorida region, contact the expert South Florida Realtors of the Henri Frank Group powered by Remax Preferred in Fort Lauderdale, Wilton Manors, Plantation and Hillsboro Shores. Buying South FLorida real estate requires knowledgeable Realtors. ?We will be sure you as a buyer in 2012, you won?t make these common mistakes when placing an offer for a single family home or condominium in South Florida,? Frank Vigliotti, Co-Founder of the Henri Frank Group. ?If you continue to be misled and cannot seem to purchase a property here in Wilton Manors, Fort Lauderdale, Oakland Park, Miami Beach or anywhere in South Florida, you must call us,? Vigliotti added. The Henri Frank Group is conveniently located with offices in Fort Lauderdale, Plantation, Hillsboro Shores and Wilton Manors, Florida.

USA Families Enjoy Homeownership

Freedom from Renting: Pride of Homeownership

Source: http://henrifrank.com/real-estate-news/mistakes-buyers-make-when-placing-an-offer-to-purchase

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SeanDonahoe: Twitter tweets spike after Obama health care ruling http://t.co/GusllFYQ

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Friday, June 29, 2012

LisaHorne: @mattjmobile Why don't you ask them? But they don't refer to ANY Div 1 football team as an NCAA champion. It's AP, UPI, BCS etc...

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Chicago Mayor Emanuel Chastises Gangs for Child's Murder

Scott Olson/Getty Images(CHICAGO) -- The latest number signifying how bad Chicago?s violence has become is a small one: 7.

That?s how old Heaven Sutton was when she died Wednesday night of a gunshot to the back.? She was selling candy at a stand in front of her house when someone down the street opened fire. A stray bullet struck her as she ran to the safety of her home.

?She loved to sing, dance and crack jokes.? And she always smiled,? her mother, Ashake Banks, told ABC News.? Banks had opened the stand to keep a closer watch on and protect children in her violent neighborhood on Chicago?s west side.? ?There was already shooting in the neighborhood,? she said. ?So I figured that if I set up a big tent and a candy store, it would keep the kids in the middle of the block instead of going down to the [corners] where all the activity was.?

Banks believes the shooter was a gang member targeting someone else in the crowd near the stand. She had hoped the gangs would stay away from a place meant for kids.? ?But they really didn?t even care. ...They killed my baby.?

Heaven?s death is the latest of 253 murders so far this year in what has become a numbing drumbeat of violence.? But her killing may be a crescendo.? It prompted an angry Mayor Rahm Emanuel to lecture the gangs driving this staggering 38 percent increase in Chicago homicides.

Asked about this shooting at an economic development event, the mayor said, ?This is not about crime. This is about values. Take your gang conflict away from a 7-year-old. Who raised you? You have a 7-year-old selling lemonade. You?re a member of a gang coming to get lemonade and another gang member is driving by. Where were you raised and who raised you?? His voice rising and pointing his finger, he continued sternly, ?Stay away from the kids!?

This emotional and personal approach is new for the mayor, who has focused on announcing various police and community tactics in previous comments on the spike in murders and shootings here.

Another different approach came earlier this week when police gave the details of a $1 million partnership with CeaseFire, an organization that relies on ex-gang members to mediate conflicts and prevent violence.? The controversial deal will put 40 "interrupters," as the group calls them, on the streets in two of the city?s most violent neighborhoods.

Ashake Banks welcomes any kind of help ?to stop the shooting.?

She and Heaven were planning a trip to Disney World next month, a reward for the girl?s good grades this year.? Instead, Ashake now plans a march with neighbors to send a message and a challenge: ?They cannot get away with just killing my baby.? They shot her in the back and she was just seven years old.?

Copyright 2012 ABC News Radio

Source: http://abcnewsradioonline.com/national-news/chicago-mayor-emanuel-chastises-gangs-for-childs-murder.html

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Veep Beat: No VP Offer Yet for Christie

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Fox reporter makes false Pulitzer claim

Fox Business News

Charles Gasparino of Fox Business Network. His claim to be a Pulitzer Prize nominee appeared in his Fox bio, on his agent's website, in his publishing bio, and in a CNBC video.

CNBC

In a video for CNBC in 2008, Gasparino declared: "I am: a writer, son of an ironworker, son of New York, Golden Gloves prospect, a Pulitzer Prize nominee..." Click on the photo to watch the video.

NEW YORK ? If you're keeping a list of journalists who have claimed for years to be Pulitzer Prize nominees without the inconvenience of actually being nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, add one more name: Charles Gasparino, the pugnacious senior Wall Street correspondent for Fox Business Network.

After the outing in this space of non-nominees Jonah Goldberg (conservative columnist,?Pulitzer nomination claimed on the book jacket) and Betty Liu (Bloomberg Television morning anchor,?Pulitzer nomination claimed in ads on commuter trains), a reader wrote to ask, when exactly was Charlie Gasparino a Pulitzer nominee?

Let's see. Until Tuesday afternoon, Gasparino's bio from Fox Business said he was "nominated for the Pulitzer Prize in beat reporting" in 1992, when he was?a reporter for The Wall Street Journal. The same claim is made by his agents at the?HarperCollins Speakers Bureau, and on the website of his publisher,?Simon and Schuster.?In a promotional video in 2008 for CNBC, his former employer,?Gasparino declares, "I am: a writer, son of an ironworker, son of New York, Golden Gloves prospect, a Pulitzer Prize nominee..." (CNBC is owned by NBCUniversal, which is a partner with Microsoft in msnbc.com.)

Next step: Checking the official list of Pulitzer winners and nominated finalists for 1992. Though there are only three nominees, known as nominated finalists, in each Pulitzer category each year, there are more than 2,000 submissions. The winner in beat reporting in 1992 was Gretchen Morgenson, one of Gasparino's competitors on the Wall Street beat for The New York Times. The two other nominees were Patrick Healy of The Boston Globe for education reporting, and Jack Kelley of USA Today for reporting on terrorism. (Kelley turned out to have made up information in his articles, but that's a topic for another day.) No Gasparino.

Fox retracts the claim
When asked on Tuesday in which year he was nominated, former boxer Gasparino jabbed back in a one-line email: "I was nominated by the wsj sir."

But the news organizations don't choose the Pulitzer nominees, any more than the record studios choose Grammy nominees. By Gasparino's reckoning, thousands of journalists each year could sell books and earn speaking fees by calling themselves "Pulitzer nominees."

Later Tuesday, Fox changed its online bio of Gasparino, keeping the P word but dropping any claim to a nomination, saying instead that his work "was submitted for the Pulitzer."

A Fox spokeswoman also sent over a statement:

"The Wall Street Journal submitted Charlie Gasparino's reporting of Wall Street research scandals to the Pulitzer Board in 2002," said the statement from Kevin Magee, executive vice president of Fox Business Network. "While Fox Business never claimed he was a finalist for the award, we've clarified his bio to reflect the submission as opposed to a nomination."

Neither Fox nor Gasparino would answer the question: Why include a "submission" in a bio at all if it didn't make the finals?

Pulitzers "discourage" such puffery
It's not uncommon for Pulitzer entrants to make false claims to be nominees. If all Pulitzer entrants could be called nominees, any publisher could give all its authors and journalists that honorific by submitting an entry form and a check for $50. (And some publishers do seem to play that game.)

As the Pulitzer board's online list of frequently asked questions explains politely, the finalists and the nominees are the same three people in each category: "Work that has been submitted for Prize consideration but not chosen as either a nominated finalist or a winner is termed an entry or submission. ... We discourage someone saying he or she was 'nominated' for a Pulitzer simply because an entry was sent to us."

Caveat emptor
The old journalism motto was, If you're mother says she loves you, check it out.

The new motto: If a journalist or author uses the words "Pulitzer nominee" or "nominated for a Pulitzer Prize," check it out.?The searchable list of winners and nominees is on the Pulitzer site at Columbia University.

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Thursday, June 28, 2012

professional outdoor power equipment - Using Professional Outdoor ...











Maintaining a golf course can be a rewarding experience but also a challenging one. During the off-season, it is common to have storm damage and overgrowth occur which requires extra effort with professional outdoor power equipment. It is important to survey the golf course grounds to determine which areas need the most attention and exactly how each hazard area should be handled. In some cases, tree stumps and overgrown brush can add interesting hazards to a hole. On the other hand, they can also create areas of risk and injury to golfers who hit balls into the rough. Professional groundskeepers can walk the course to determine if any damage and overgrowth will prevent a clear pathway to the next hole or hamper efforts to play through.

Chainsaws Severe storms can create heavy golf course damage. For snowy winters, tree branches can become laden with ice and snow and crack or break open. Dangling branches can be quickly and easily cut using professional grade chainsaws. Rather than taking down the whole tree, groundskeepers can remove any dangling or hazardous branches. These can be cut into smaller chunks and put into a compost pile or added to a chipper for mulch. For trees that have been severely damaged by tornadoes, ice, wind and fire, cutting them down with chainsaws is the best option. Workers with experience should do the job with heavy-duty chainsaws to control the fall and level the stump as low as possible without damaging the surrounding grass and vegetation. Where stumps are a safety hazard, a stump grinder can be used to bring it to ground level or below.

Powerbrooms and Blowers Keeping walkways and golf cart pathways clean is done more easily with outdoor power equipment than by hand. A professional powerbroom or leaf blower removes dust, debris, grass clippings, fallen leaves from walkways where golfers will be travelling from hole to hole or to and from the clubhouse or parking lots. This type of maintenance is especially important for the front areas of the property where there is the most foot traffic.

Bruschcutters Use a professional bruschcutter to maintain large areas of taller grass. This allows for an even cut near water hazards, sloped terrain and overgrown brush. Using a hand-held commercial bruschcutter with anti-vibration features makes cutting back tall grasses around fallen or stumped trees easier to do.

When a golf course is gearing up for spring or recovering from hard rains and summer storms, it is best to use professional outdoor power equipment to remedy the problems as soon as possible. Not only will the premises look nicer, it will be a safer environment for members, guests and employees.

Keywords: professional outdoor power equipment, professional bruschcutter, commercial bruschcutter, professional powerbroom

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Decorative Ceramic Tile Mural | The Contrarian Blog

Employ This Guidance To Accentuate Your HomeNearly everyone has at least one thing that they would like to see changed about their home.? Fortunately, many home improvements are projects that even a novice homeowner can tackle.? You can, with a little planning, easily accomplish projects like cabinet refacing, adding decorative molding to walls, windows, doors, or outdoor projects like improving your gutter system.? Some things, however, are best left to the pros, especially if they involve electricity or plumbing.? This article will help you decide if your home improvement project can be done by yourself, or if you need to call in expert help. If you are looking for a good house design, i suggest you can check it out using the latest kindle fire review. Improve the efficiency of your tank-style water heater by wrapping it with a special water heater blanket. These blankets help to trap some of the heat typically lost to the surrounding air, which can reduce the amount of energy it takes to heat the water in the water heater?s tank. Home improvements can large projects or small weekend tasks.? Start in the kitchen or bathroom.? One of the easiest ways to update those rooms are to replace the door knobs, drawer pulls, and hinges.? Either choose a style that goes along with your existing theme or use the new hardware as inspiration to redesign the whole kitchen or bathroom. One of the best home improvements for your house is a wood deck addition. Not only is it a wonderful place to enjoy the outdoors, it also offer a great return on your investment when you re-sell your home.? Most homeowners recoup 81 percent of the money that they spent on this home improvement. Just remember to do proper maintenance each year to the deck to optimize it?s return potential. To really spruce up your kitchen, you should change the knobs that are on your cabinets. Many people do not realize what a difference the right set of knobs can really make. There are a great selection now available and you can get them to match your unique style. This is an affordable way to change the look of your kitchen. It is important to cover the floor when you are painting a room. If paint drips onto a hard wood floor, tile or carpet it can be very difficult to clean the area. To avoid accidents from happening you can lay old sheets, blankets or drop cloths on the floor so that the paint drips on them rather than the floor. Be creative with your home improvement ideas, coming up with things that are new and exciting. You don?t have to follow the book when it comes to home improvement, as

Decorative Ceramic Tile Mural

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Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Medi home health - HEALTH, BEAUTY & FITNESS

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Birth mom: I raised questions about Jerry Sandusky

In this June 20, 2012 file photo, Matt Sandusky, adopted son of Jerry Sandusky, right, leaves the Centre County Courthouse in Bellefonte, Pa. Just a few hours into deliberations, Thursday, June 22, 2012, Matt Sandusky, came forward for the first time to say in a statement that his father had abused him. The statement didn't detail the abuse allegation. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File)

In this June 20, 2012 file photo, Matt Sandusky, adopted son of Jerry Sandusky, right, leaves the Centre County Courthouse in Bellefonte, Pa. Just a few hours into deliberations, Thursday, June 22, 2012, Matt Sandusky, came forward for the first time to say in a statement that his father had abused him. The statement didn't detail the abuse allegation. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar, File)

In a Friday, June 22, 2012 photo, Jerry Sandusky is escored from the Centre County courthousein Bellefonte, Pa., after being found guilty on child molestation charges. Jurors announced the verdict Friday night after weighing 48 charges accusing him of abusing 10 boys over a 15-year period. (AP Photo/The Patriot-News, Sean Simmers)

Nearly two decades before Matt Sandusky's blockbuster allegation that he was sexually abused by his adoptive father, his biological mother raised questions about their relationship.

Debra Long fought the court system over her son's placement in the home of the famed Penn State assistant football coach, who was convicted Friday of sexually abusing 10 boys.

Her objections, which she discussed in a December interview with The Associated Press, add a new dimension to the grim trial testimony that illustrated how Sandusky wooed the victims he culled from his charity for at-risk youth.

Prosecutors said Sandusky used gifts, trips and access to Penn State's vaunted football program to attract and abuse vulnerable boys he met through the charity, The Second Mile.

"If they'd have listened, these boys didn't have to be abused," Long said. "They would have found the problem back then, and a whole lot of kids wouldn't be victims now."

Instead, she said, "we couldn't get anything done. It was Jerry Sandusky. He started The Second Mile home. He could've done nothing wrong."

Matt Sandusky said that Jerry Sandusky, once Hall of Fame coach Joe Paterno's heir apparent, began sexually abusing him in the late 1980s, when he was 8 years old, and continued until he was 15, according to a police interview recording that NBC aired Tuesday.

He was placed in foster care with the Sandusky family in January 1995, about a month after he set fire to a barn and several months after Long tried to cut him off from Sandusky and The Second Mile.

Matt Sandusky, who was adopted after he turned 18, described for investigators showering with the ex-coach and trying to avoid being groped in bed, according to the police recording. He said he was undergoing therapy, that his memories of abuse were only now surfacing and that he was coming forward so his family would know what happened.

His attorneys confirmed the recording's authenticity to the AP, but declined to comment beyond a statement.

"Although the tape was released without Matt's knowledge or permission, it illustrates that he made the difficult decision to come forward and tell the painful truth to investigators despite extraordinary pressure to support his father," the lawyers, Justine Andronici and Andrew Shubin, wrote in the statement.

Jerry Sandusky hasn't been charged with abusing his son. Unless Matt Sandusky alleges rape, which he didn't do in the police recording, the ex-coach cannot be charged criminally based on his son's accusations, because of the statute of limitations.

In the December interview with the AP, Long said that Sandusky was pushy, was controlling and estranged Matt from his birth family ? but that Centre County's court system ignored her concerns because of Sandusky's stature.

Long did not return several messages left for her on Monday and Tuesday.

Records provided to AP by Long in December show that after Matt Sandusky attempted suicide in 1996, his probation officer wrote, "The probation department has some serious concerns about the juvenile's safety and his current progress in placement with the Sandusky family."

Despite those concerns, probation and child welfare officials recommended continued placement with the Sandusky family, and the judge overseeing his case agreed.

Centre County President Judge Thomas Kistler, who joined the bench in 1997 and was not involved in Matt Sandusky's juvenile case, said he saw "legitimate questions" about the decision to keep Long's son in the Sandusky home, but "I can't shed any light on them."

Speaking generally, he said nearly every birth parent objects when the state decides to remove a child from the home.

"These kinds of decisions made by judges and social workers are very emotionally charged. I don't think the parents have ever agreed with me on any of the cases where I've taken the kids," he said.

In the early years of his relationship with Jerry Sandusky, Matt would hide behind a bedroom door and beg his mother to tell the coach he wasn't home when he spotted Sandusky pulling in the driveway, Long said.

Her son never said why.

"Nobody could ever get that out of him. But then again, Matt was afraid of Jerry," she said.

Long said Matt was a good kid but began acting out after Sandusky entered the picture, and his behavior got progressively worse. She became alarmed by Sandusky's controlling behavior and tried to stop visitation in the fall of 1994.

But Sandusky continued taking Matt out of school, without her knowledge or consent, she said.

"I didn't like his treatment of Matt," she said. "I thought he was a little too possessive, and it was my son, not his son."

In early December 1994, Matt set fire to a barn. He spent his 16th birthday, on Dec. 26, in juvenile detention. On Jan. 6, 1995, records show, he was placed in foster care ? with the Sandusky family.

Long said she knew Matt would be placed in a Second Mile foster home but didn't think it would be with the Sandusky family. Of all the foster families in Centre County, "he had to end up with that one," she said. It struck her as odd.

"Jerry told Matt that he had a judge ready to sign the order and nobody could stop it," she said. "He told Matt before we ever went to court that I wouldn't win against him. Matt came right to me and told me, he said, 'Mom, Jerry said you wouldn't win against him.'"

Long was initially limited to a half-day a month with her son. Her lawyer repeatedly petitioned the judge for greater access.

Matt attempted suicide in March 1996, swallowing 80 to 100 pills, according to the probation department report.

He referred to it in the recent police interview.

"I know that I really wanted to die at that point in time," he said.

But he nevertheless indicated he wanted to remain in the Sandusky home.

"I would like to be placed back with the Sandusky's, I feel that they have supported me even when I have messed up," Matt Sandusky wrote shortly after the suicide attempt. "They are a loving caring group of people."

Long said she once called the Sandusky house when Matt's biological brother, Ronald, was in an accident. She said Sandusky's wife, Dottie, answered the phone and said, "What are you calling him for? It's no longer his brother."

"I said, 'I'm sorry, but the same blood courses through his veins (that) courses through his brother's veins. They're not separated by a name change,'" Long recalled. "She was downright rude."

The AP was unable to contact Dottie Sandusky.

Jerry and Dottie Sandusky couldn't conceive children, according to his autobiography, and adopted six children. None of the other five has commented on their father's legal case or Matt Sandusky's allegations. Messages left for them were not returned.

Matt Sandusky said, according to the NBC recording, that he decided to come forward after publicly standing by his dad, for his family, "so that they can really have closure and see what the truth actually is. And just to right the wrong, honestly, of going to the grand jury and lying."

Associated Press

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Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Stockton, Calif., could go bankrupt

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Two Iraq bombings kill 12 people

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Facebook changed the email address on your profile, here's how to fix it

2 hrs.

You may have heard (or read) that Facebook just changed your email address without even asking you?? and in a way it did?? but the whole thing's not quite as scary or dramatic as it might sound. And you can easily fix things with a few clicks.

Kashmir Hill of Forbes' Not-So Private Parts blog was among the first?to report on the change.?She labeled the whole thing as "Facebook's lame attempt to force its email service on you."

This all sounds scary! What happened?
You see, what happened is that the email address?? or in some cases, addresses?? displayed on your Facebook profile was changed?from whatever it was to your?Facebook email address. (Your Facebook email address consists of whatever is at the end of your Facebook URL slapped in front of @facebook.com. For example: My Facebook URL is http://facebook.com/rosa, so my Facebook email address is rosa@facebook.com.)

For most people, this is pretty darn annoying as all the mail they receive at the Facebook email address winds up in their regular Facebook inbox. Based on a quick survey of friends and colleagues, it seems that this is inconvenient to a majority, as they prefer to receive their email in?... you know, their actual email inboxes.

Now that you understand the somewhat bad news better, here are two good pieces of news:?Facebook didn't alter the default address on your account, meaning that the social network's whacky system only altered what is visible on your profile. And you can change your profile back to normal pretty easily.

Whew! So how do I fix this?
All you have to do is open up your profile page (hit the "About" button under your personal info), scroll down to the "Contact Info" box, and hit the "Edit" button. There you can toggle who can see which email address and whether it is displayed on your Timeline or not.?

If you're not a fan of receiving your email in your Facebook inbox, I suggest hiding that address and simply making the one you favor visible.

Why did this all happen?
We reached out to Facebook in an attempt to figure out what happened and why the email addresses on people's profiles were suddenly changed. A spokesperson for the social network offered the following response:

As we announced back in April, we?ve been updating addresses on Facebook to make them consistent across our site.

In addition to everyone receiving an address, we?re also rolling out a new setting that gives people the choice to decide which addresses they want to show on their timelines.

Ever since the launch of timeline, people have had the ability to control what posts they want to show or hide on their own timelines, and today we?re extending that to other information they post, starting with the Facebook address.

The spokesperson did not explain why users did not receive any sort of notice when their profiles started displaying a different email address, even though we made sure to ask about that.

Want more tech news, silly puns, or amusing links? You'll get plenty of all three if you keep up with Rosa Golijan, the writer of this post, by following her on?Twitter, subscribing to her?Facebook?posts,?or circling her?on?Google+.

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3DS Mod - The Power of Philanthropy

?Its harder to provide money it is to make it inside the first place.? ~Andrew Carnegie

While his premise is arguable, Andrew Carnegies point is indisputable. He understood the power of planned giving. Tax exempt companies are the fastest growing marketplace inside the United States Of America. Today there are almost 2 million nonprofit companies, and 50,000 brand-new ones are born annually. The competition for the donations is intense. Yet almost all of us give more thought to purchasing couple of shoes than to the philanthropy.

Philanthropy is normally the minimum thought out, most disorganized piece your financial escapades. We know charitable efforts conserve us taxes. Whatever we provide is the fact that much less we give to the IRS. But the query we seldom ask is: How will I improve not only my tax advantages nevertheless the power that philanthropy gives me?

Philanthropy is a very effective tool. Through thoughtfully planned giving, we can:

o Change the world inside regions you think strongest about
o Pass in your wisdom and values to your young ones and those you like
o Leave the imprint found on the globe, a durable legacy that usually affect the community for ages to come

The more thought and planning we give to the charitable donations, the more?so to speak?bang we get from the buck-financially, socially, emotionally. This is incredibly important for females. Why? Call it the Bake Sale attitude.

Women give regularly than males, nevertheless they give inside much smaller amounts to two times as several companies. Giving a small amount willy nilly considerably erodes the reassurance we might obtain from giving, when it dilutes the impact we might have found on the globe.

Studies show how people give differently.

The top 3 reasons males give:
1. have a building named following them
2. stress from workplace or friends
3. receive a seat about a deck of directors

The top 3 reasons women give:
1. matter
2. pass on family custom
3 Daniel Chavez Moran . give to community

Philanthropy is a discovered talent. None of us were born with all the gene, though the familys impact is truly important.

Principles of Powerful Philanthropy

1. Educate yourself financially. The amount one reason women dont give more is absence of knowledge. No matter how much money a girl has, if shes afraid, insecure, and/or ignorant about money, shell be restrained inside her giving . A Prudential study shows that when 73% of women think passing money to kids and causes is important, merely 14% with them have conducted detailed financial planning to ensure an effective wealth transfer.

2.Get the financial home inside purchase. Overview the finances regularly with the partner. Smart money administration follows four rules:

a. Spend less
b. Save more
c. Invest smartly
d. Give generously

These rules should be followed inside this purchase. Most women have the giving generously down pat, nevertheless giving without following a initial 3 rules is an act of self sabotage. Not merely do we risk the future safety, however you diminish the impact you are able to make with finances.

3. See yourself as a philanthropist inside your appropriate. This is important. Too several women think its their husbands money, so giving it away is their husbands responsibility. However women usually outlive their partners and may ultimately be inside charge of your family estate. Another reason women dont engage inside planned giving is because, if theyre not a Carnegie or Rockefeller, they dont think they have sufficient to worry about. But inside my experience, the most effective philanthropists are not the ones with all the highest internet worth. Theyre the ones that are financially informed, secure and passionate about a cause.

4. Give severe thought to the legacy you need to leave. I once saw a poster that posed this question: Will it matter that I was? Ask yourself: Just how do I want folks to keep in mind me? What changes might I like to find inside the world. What do I value most? Does my giving mirror my values?

5. Work with professionals. Figuring away how much can be done and advantageous to give is a complex problem. Dont consider to do this inside a vacuum; it should be a team effort. Find a reputable estate planner, lawyer, financial consultant or accountant. Studies display, still, 9 from ten folks dont mention charities inside their will. So if your specialist we consult doesnt bring it upwards, be sure its in your schedule.

6. Make it a family affair. Utilize philanthropy as a way to train kids about values, money administration and life objectives.

The power of philanthropy originates from thoughtful concentrated giving inside regions you think passionate about. When enough women come together, give deliberately inside regions we feel passionate about, well have the signifies to literally change the world, heal this world. And everything starts with every one of us.

This entry was posted on Sunday, June 24th, 2012 and is filed under Uncategorized. You can follow any responses to this entry through RSS 2.0. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

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FDA probes safety issues with metal hip implants

WASHINGTON (AP) ? Metal hip replacements implanted in a half-million Americans may be failing earlier than expected, but it could be years before U.S. health regulators have a clear picture of the scope of the problem.

The Food and Drug Administration holds a two-day meeting starting Wednesday to scrutinize the safety of metal-on-metal hip implants, following years of patient reports of pain and swelling that sometimes requires removal of the devices. It is a challenging, but familiar, predicament for the FDA: reviewing the safety of a device that was expected to be superior, but which may actually be more dangerous than what came before.

For decades nearly all orthopedic implants were made from plastic or ceramic. But in the last 10 years some surgeons began to favor implants made with metal stems and sockets. Laboratory tests suggested the devices would be more resistant to wear and reduce the chances of dislocation.

But recent data gathered by surgeons in the U.K. appears to show just the opposite.

In March, British experts at the world's largest artificial joint registry told doctors to stop using metal-on-metal hip replacements, citing an analysis showing they have to be replaced more often than other implants. Hip replacements are supposed to last between 10 to 15 years, but more than 6 percent of patients with metal hips needed them replaced after less than five years. That compared with just 2 percent of people who had ceramic or plastic joints. Both types of devices are prescribed for people suffering hip pain and limited movement due to arthritis or injury.

British regulators now recommend that people who have the implants get yearly blood tests to make sure no dangerous metals are seeping into their bodies as the components rub against each other.

U.S. regulators have not made any similar recommendations for the estimated 500,000 American patients who have received the devices.

FDA scientists say they want to consider all available information before making their recommendations ? not just the data from the U.K.

"Why look at a single registry when there's data from around the world?" said Dr. William Maisel, FDA's chief scientist for medical devices, in an interview with the Associated Press. "This is an opportunity for us to look at all the available information so that we can have a thoughtful conversation about what clinical recommendations can be made."

Maisel said the FDA is working to combine data from foreign countries and the U.S. to determine which groups of patients and implants are most problematic. On Wednesday and Thursday the FDA will ask a panel of experts to recommend the best practices for monitoring patients with the devices. Panelists will consider blood tests, medical imaging and laboratory tests.

But some U.S. orthopedic specialists say they have already reached their own conclusions about metal hips.

"In my personal opinion there is very little room, if any, for metal-on-metal implants because the alternatives we have on the market are likely safer and as effective," said Dr. Art Sedrakyan, professor of public health at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York.

The FDA's deliberative approach to tackling the hip implant issue is in some ways a necessity. Unlike other countries, the U.S. has no national registry to track the performance of implants over time.

The FDA has received 16,800 event reports about metal hips between 2000 and 2011, but regulators stress that number is not very useful. Many doctors do not report problems to the FDA, and the volume of reports is influenced by news reports on safety issues.

A registry set up by Minnesota's HealthEast Care System recorded four times as many replacement surgeries for patients with metal-on-metal hips as those with other implant types. However, a similar registry set up by health care provider Kaiser Permanente found no difference between the two groups.

With little definitive data on U.S. hip implants, the agency has asked manufacturers like Johnson & Johnson, Zimmer Holdings Inc. and Biomet Inc. to conduct long-term, follow-up studies of more than 100 metal-on-metal hips on the U.S. market.

FDA scientists say the studies will help "fill in the blanks" on a number of scientific questions, including the effects of metal particles that often seep into the bloodstream as the implants wear down.

But Sedrakyan and others say it could be a decade or more before that information is available. In a commentary published last week in the New England Journal of Medicine, Sedrakyan and two co-authors pointed out those studies must run at least eight years to return the information FDA is seeking. Based on the authors' analysis of FDA records, the FDA has reached agreements on the design of less than 25 percent of the studies, and it's unclear whether any of the studies have actually begun. The FDA notified the companies last May.

The prospect of safety findings arriving in eight or 10 years is little comfort to patients like Mary Weaver, 48, who had both hips replaced with a metal implant from Johnson & Johnson in 2007 and 2008. J&J recalled the ASR hip replacement in 2010, after reports that it was failing in some patients after only a few years after implantation.

Due to increasing pain and elevated metal levels in her blood, Weaver had both implants removed in 2011. She was let go from her job due to the time needed to undergo both surgeries, and is currently unemployed.

"I hope that no one has to go through this ? it's frustrating, it's emotionally draining," said Weaver, who lives in Mt. Jackson, Va. "It's not just hard on you, it's hard on your whole family because your quality of life is not what it used to be."

Like 90 percent of medical devices sold in the U.S., most metal-on-metal hips were approved via the FDA's fast track program for medical devices. Under the so-called 510k system, the agency waives clinical testing requirements for devices which appear similar to others already in use. Since plastic and ceramic hip replacements had been on the market since the 1950s, most metal hip replacements were approved without new clinical testing.

"I am so furious they would use my wife as a lab rat, along with the other 500,000 people who don't have a clue what is happening," said Dwight Schrag, 69, of Bellevue, Wash. Schrag's wife Mary received J&J's ASR hip in 2006 and had it removed due to pain and other side effects in 2010. Schrag is one of a number of public speakers who have signed up to speak at the FDA meeting.

It's not the first time the FDA's fast-track program for clearing devices has come under fire.

Last summer the Institute of Medicine said in a report that the FDA should abandon the 35-year-old system because it provides little assurance that the implants are actually safe. The Institute is composed of medical experts who advise the federal government.

Although the FDA itself requested the report from the Institute, agency officials rejected the group's conclusions, saying the 510k system works well for the vast majority of devices.

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Seeking The Micro, Scientists Find The Big Picture

Copyright ? 2012 National Public Radio?. For personal, noncommercial use only. See Terms of Use. For other uses, prior permission required.

NEAL CONAN, HOST:

This is TALK OF THE NATION. I'm Neal Conan from the Aspen Environment Forum. This gathering presents the opportunity to talk with two eminent scientists who have seen the world through very different lenses, E.O. Wilson and Sylvia Earle.

Ed Wilson started with his eyes trained on the ground and followed ants as they led him to studies of biodiversity, evolution, civilization and human nature. Sylvia Earle dove into the Gulf of Mexico to focus first on aquatic plants and then to the profound relationship between degradation of the seas and life everywhere.

If you want to know more about what a lifetime of experience has taught E.O. Wilson and Sylvia Earle, give us a call, 800-989-8255 is the phone number. Our email address is talk@npr.org. You can also join the conversation on our website. That's at npr.org.

We're going to take questions, as well, from the audience here at the Paepke Auditorium in Aspen, and thanks, everybody, for coming in today.

(APPLAUSE)

CONAN: Later in the program, a giant of another sort, Stewart Brand joins us to talk about bringing back extinct species. But first E.O. Wilson and Sylvia Earle join us here at the Aspen Environment Forum, and it's really great to talk with you both again, nice to have you back.

DR. SYLVIA EARLE: Great to be here.

DR. E.O. WILSON: Thank you, Neal.

CONAN: And Ed, are you guys pals?

WILSON: Hmm?

CONAN: Are you guys pals?

WILSON: For years and years, all the way back to her graduate student days.

EARLE: It's almost 50 years.

CONAN: Almost 50 years.

(LAUGHTER)

CONAN: I wonder: Have you learned anything from each other?

WILSON: Well, I've learned an awful lot from her.

EARLE: And vice versa.

(LAUGHTER)

WILSON: She was the one who really kept on at seminars and talks that I gave reminding me that I was leaving out 70 percent of the Earth's surface.

(LAUGHTER)

CONAN: And he probably reminded you, Sylvia, that you were leaving out 70 percent of the species.

EARLE: The problem is there aren't any aquatic ants that I know about, right.

(LAUGHTER)

CONAN: E.O. Wilson, what is the most surprising thing you've learned about ants over all that time?

WILSON: Well, first of all I want to mention some breaking news that I've just been handed. I think it's relevant to this. Lonesome George, the last surviving member of his race, has died. And efforts to get him mated with a neighboring race, females of a neighboring race, failed.

I was with him a year ago, and we were all wondering how long this would take. Well, poor Lonesome George has died, and his race is gone forever.

CONAN: Lonesome George, a Galapagos tortoise.

WILSON: Yeah, now you better return that question and ask me that again.

CONAN: I was going to say: What is the most interesting or surprising thing you've learned about ants in all those years?

WILSON: Just about everything. When I started as a graduate student, we knew surprisingly little about these world-dominant insects. In many places of the world, they make up as much as one-third of the biomass, the total weight of all animals. And during my career, I've seen the - developments include the working out of the code of chemical communication that they use, how their caste systems have evolved and what are the determinants - what determines an individual to belong to one caste or another.

And we've begun to use ants very effectively in expanding our knowledge of the living terrestrial environment because they are everywhere and so abundant. And all of that body of knowledge has increased exponentially up to the point that we know an awful lot about ants today.

CONAN: And how do we get from ants to, well, your recent studies of human civilization?

WILSON: Well, let me just say, since we're very limited in time, I'm commenting on what we can learn from ants about our own behavior, our economies and our public policies. And the reason I bring that up right away because I can make a relatively brief answer: nothing.

(LAUGHTER)

WILSON: What we've learned, however, and I wish we had time to spin it out more, I've covered it in the book you just mentioned, "The Social Conquest of Earth," is why ants became dominant elements in the environment is through their social behavior, but why did their social behavior take so very long to appear, just as ours took an immensely long time, geologic time to make its appearance in the history of life on Earth.

And that entails deeper investigation into the nature of altruism, what it is, what effects it has on individuals, how it originates and how it can lead to superior competitiveness in the environment. So we've learned a lot from ants that way, by working out basic principles.

CONAN: Sylvia Earle, let me turn to you, and what is the most surprising thing that you've learned about aquatic plants in this time that you've studied them?

EARLE: The most surprising thing, well, I think their importance in the way the world works, and it's not just the conspicuous photosynthesizers that you can hold in your hand but the micro-beasts that generate most of the oxygen in the atmosphere and take up a lot of the carbon, as well, drive the way the world works.

You can call them plants if you will. If it photosynthesizes, I suppose it's on the edge. Although bacteria, which definitely are not plants as we think of them but do photosynthesize in the sea, are really important. And just the joy of getting to know something about life in the blue part of the planet during my lifetime, the first time that humans have had the kind of access that we now enjoy.

It really gives me more hope than not to realize that what we now know, not just about plants or ants or climate change or any of it, it's just that we are the luckiest people ever to come on the planet because we, for the first time, can see ourselves in context of all the rest of life on Earth and realize how special it is to be alive at all.

Again, dolphins may wonder, looking up at the stars and see those sparkly things, and elephants are pretty smart. A lot of creatures have great intelligence, including my dogs. But, you know, they don't know what we know, and we're just beginning to discover the limits to what we can get away with on this little blue speck in the universe.

CONAN: It was interesting that Ed Wilson says we now know a lot about ants. In your lifetime, we found enormous mountain ranges under the water that were unsuspected 50, 60 years ago. We found the true geology of the planet. We've discovered all kinds of things, and yet to paraphrase I think you, we don't know squat.

(LAUGHTER)

EARLE: Well, we've learned more since Ed Wilson and I first met on a beach at Dry Tortugas in the Florida Keys than during all preceding history, I think, it's safe to say. And at the same time, it's also safe to say that we've lost more of the natural world than during all preceding human history.

The point that gives me hope is that I see where we are now as the sweet spot in history, that is this is the first time that we have had the capacity to know what we know, the technology that has given us the ability to see ourselves in the context of all of the universe and to project the future.

Fifty years ago, it was too soon to know what we now know or to take action that we now know we can take to perhaps secure an enduring place for ourselves within the systems that keep us alive. And 50 years from now, if we don't do something right now, we will have lost the chance to do things that are now available to us.

CONAN: And what is it, given all the degradation of the oceans and the seas that you've also seen, what is that gives you that hope, the knowledge?

EARLE: Well, a number of things. I think the resilience of nature. It's not infinitely resilient from our standpoint, but if you take care, if you protect natural systems, I think it's the most important thing, should be at the top of our list, protect the systems that work on the land and in the sea, the fabric of life that provides the resilience that we have always taken for granted, but now it's at risk.

I mean, look at the plants and the photosynthesizers. Change the chemistry of the ocean, tweak it just a little bit, and it's being tweaked, we're seeing acidification at a level in the last 10 years that is new in all of history, human history as far as we can tell. And that doesn't bode well for the way the world works, the way the ocean works.

Is that going to affect the photosynthesizers? Stand by, we don't know. But I wouldn't want to risk taking a chance. We should protect, to the extent that we have the capacity of the natural world, and make peace with nature.

CONAN: And Ed Wilson, I know that's been a subject of discussion here this week in Aspen, of what do you protect. Is the battle lost? And if so, what do you do about it? Do you have hope?

WILSON: You slow down the losses. We reckon, that is I think people who try to make rates of extinction and extend it into the future, that if nothing is done, I mean, if we continue at the rate, say, we have been causing of extinction in the past 10 to 20 years, by the end of the century we will have lost about half of the species of plants and animals on - in the - on the land and or else they would be extinct or else categorized as critically endangered.

CONAN: I know you've asked a question this week. Where do you plant the white flag?

WILSON: Repeat, please?

CONAN: Where do you plant the white flag?

WILSON: Well, I raised that metaphor with a fellow panelist because the conversation was going, in my opinion, the wrong way. The conversation was going in the direction of, well, we've messed up the planet so much now. We can't turn it back. There is no such thing as a really pristine environment. Therefore, we should adjust ourselves to much less in the way of biological diversity in natural areas, and let's start thinking about how to get adjusted.

That to me is defeatism in planting the white flag that we don't need to plant. We just need to take vigorous new efforts to create large protected, preserved areas and pay a great deal more attention on the totality of the surviving species of organisms on Earth, species by species, and learning how to hold on to them until humanity, well, comes to its senses.

EARLE: This isn't just for the ants, though, right? This is for all of us.

(LAUGHTER)

WILSON: Of course.

CONAN: We're talking with E.O. Wilson and Sylvia Earle. If you'd like to know more about what a lifetime of experience has taught them, give us a call, 800-989-8255. Email talk@npr.org. We'll also get questions from members of the audience here at the Paepke Auditorium at the Aspen Environment Forum. Stay with us. It's the TALK OF THE NATION. I'm Neal Conan in Aspen with NPR News.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

CONAN: This is TALK OF THE NATION from NPR News; I'm Neal Conan at the Aspen Environment Forum. Our guests are E.O. Wilson, the Pulitzer Prize-winning biologist; and oceanographer and National Geographic Explorer-in-Residence Sylvia Earle, two rock stars in their respective fields.

We're talking about what sparked their interest in science, what fuels that passion many years later, what they've learned along the way. If you'd like to know more about what a lifetime of experience has taught E.O. Wilson and Sylvia Earle, give us a call, 800-989-8255. Email us, talk@npr.org. We'll also take questions from the audience here at the Paepke Auditorium in Aspen, and, well, why don't we start there, go to the microphone.

CHIP: This is a question for Sylvia: Sylvia, what sparked your passion to dedicate your life to the oceans and oceanography?

EARLE: I got knocked over by a wave when I was three, and the ocean got my attention. But what has held my attention for lo these many years is the life in the sea; horseshoe crabs on the beaches of New Jersey. And then when my parents moved to Florida when I was 12, there were horseshoe crabs, again, these creatures that have a history going back at least 300 million years, and they're still with us.

And I think what has gripped my attention and really drives me right now is the recognition that on our watch, the fate of horseshoe crabs will be determined, perhaps, that we could lose them, or our actions might secure a future that includes them and us. The changes I've witnessed since I first splashed in the oceans, as I first went underwater in the Weeki Wachee River as a teenager and then off St. Marks River in the Gulf of Mexico with SCUBA for the first time, with two words of instruction: breathe naturally.

(LAUGHTER)

EARLE: And seeing the world where most people don't get to go. I've been as much as two and a half miles beneath the surface, and I long to go where Jim Cameron just returned from, the deepest part of the ocean. I mean, it's only seven miles, and people in this audience listening, you've been seven miles in the sky in airplanes, eating lunch and watching movies and things, taking naps.

But underwater, there are only three people who have made that descent successfully and come back. I mean, round trips count.

(LAUGHTER)

CONAN: Not lunch, mostly peanuts up there. Ed Wilson, let me ask you the same question that Sylvia just answered. Where did the passion come from?

WILSON: I think every child has a passion. You know, as Camus put it, all of a person's work is just that travel through the routes of art to those two or three great images in the presence of which his heart first opened. And mine included dreams, after reading - this was not preplanned promotion - reading the National Geographic.

And from that, I dreamed as a little boy of 9 to be an explorer in the green hell of the tropical jungles.

(LAUGHTER)

WILSON: I dreamed of doing it, exploring it, you know, seeing those marvelous creatures that were displayed in the National Geographic especially, but also that I saw in the museums and the park, the Rock Creek Park in Washington during a two-year period our family stayed there.

And I just transferred that at the earliest stages to going forth into whatever woods I could find, and I had beautiful woods in Alabama and Florida, armed with a fishing net, later with a snake snare and field guides and then finally, as soon as I could, as a new Ph.D. at Harvard I went to the green hell, and I've been living in that magnificent, dreamed-of environment, often, when I can, ever since.

CONAN: Chip, you're still at the microphone here, did you have another point?

CHIP: Yes, this is a follow-up for Sylvia. What - how much of the Earth's oxygen comes from the ocean, and how much CO2 does it sequester?

EARLE: That's a slippery question, and we're just beginning to get a grip on the significance of the blue part of the planet. But this is for sure: No blue, no green. Got to have water, and where there's water, there's likely to be life, as far as we know, and maybe elsewhere in the universe but certainly here.

Just a few decades ago, like 30 years ago, an MIT scientist, Penny Chisholm and her colleagues found a tiny organism in the sea that had previously gone undetected, Prochlorococcus. Now we know it generates about 20 percent of the oxygen in the atmosphere. It's a bacterium, a blue-green bacterium, and we didn't know that it existed until those clever oceanographers were able to detect its existence, and now we know abundant it is.

So you hear estimates, anything from half to 70 percent, but we're still discovering so much about how the world works. But generation of oxygen is principally an ocean issue, and the taking-up of carbon dioxide, similarly, it's photosynthesis, generating O2, bringing down the CO2 and producing food, producing oxygen, and all life from Earth somehow is dependent on that process plus the newly appreciated chemosynthesis in the deep sea that doesn't require sunlight and is much more abundant and occupies much of the planet.

Anyway, we really need to learn so much more before that straight question can be given a straight answer.

CONAN: Here's an email from Richard in Birmingham: It's just great to know that a native of Alabama and a University of Alabama alum has done so much to add to our scientific body of knowledge and has made such a contribution and continues to humanity. Thank you, Dr. Wilson. He adds: Roll Tide. I don't think that's a reference to Sylvia Earle's work.

And this from Brian(ph) in Colorado: As a student at the University of Colorado interested in this area and creating change, what kind of career can I pursue to help? Where do we need people now? Ed Wilson?

WILSON: Repeat that, please.

CONAN: Where do we need people now? What career would you advise a young person interested in following vaguely in your footsteps?

WILSON: Well, let me put it this way: We are right at the crest of the crisis, or I should say the nadir, the trough of the crisis facing the world with reference to environment, and the necessity to stabilize population and consumption and distribute and preserve our resources in a way that will make the human population and the rest of life sustainable.

So my advice to young people who are still searching is to find something in your career plans that has to do with environment, whether it's in law, whether it's in public health or coming close to the core of the issues, whether it's in the environmental science. I would like to suggest that almost any subject you take up in science - I'll excuse astrophysics and quantum mechanics - is going to have relevance in the deepening of the understanding that we must have in order to settle down on this planet for the centuries to come.

CONAN: Sylvia?

EARLE: I tell kids who ask me the question about the reasons for hope and all that that they are the luckiest to ever come along because for the first time, we know what we know, that a kid who's 10 years old with a cell phone has access to, you know, the Library of Congress, the history of life on Earth, so much that Charles Darwin would just be so thrilled to come and see what kids know today.

You who are coming along have the future very much in your hands, and you're armed with knowledge that none of our predecessors had. Use it. Just recognize that this is the moment, as never before and maybe as never again, to really make a difference for all that is ahead. You know, this is a turning point, and you're right there in the middle of it.

CONAN: Let's go next to - this is David, David with us from Charlotte.

DAVID: Yeah, I just had a question, and it's for either one of you or both of you, that it occurred to me that the number of species present at any given time on the planet might be a balance between the rates of extinction and the rates of new species evolving.

And while the former certainly is going to occur more rapidly than the latter, has anyone attempted to get a handle on the rate at which new species are evolving?

WILSON: Ed Wilson?

DAVID: And I'll take my answer off the air.

CONAN: Oh, thanks very much, David.

WILSON: Yeah, we've given extensive examination to that, made intensive examination, and here it in the rough figures: Before the coming of humanity, averaged out over long periods of time and then excluding the previous great extinction spasms that occurred on four occasions in the last 450 million years, the average extinction rate of species has been approximately one in a million per year, and the rate of origin of new species has been roughly the same, one per million species per year. We have now jacked the extinction rate up by some three orders of magnitude - a thousand and probably approaching 10,000 - at the same time that we are eliminating the birthplaces in which species occur.

WILSON: So we're driving up the death rate of species, we are driving down the birth rate, and the result will be a depopulization(ph) of Earth's surface in living species during the next several decades that has not been matched for some 65 million years.

CONAN: And, Sylvia Earle, so many of those cradles are wet.

EARLE: Oh, maybe most of them. When you think about where life on Earth occurs, it's where the water is. Well - but the one interesting dimension of living things are the microbes that don't obey the same or - they have a different lifestyle. They adapt more quickly. They reproduce much more quickly, for the most part. I mean, there are exceptions.

But, you know, the thing is we don't know what the microbes are doing in terms of how, in the great expanse of life, how they're faring. We're just beginning to discover that they're all around us in the air, like plankton, and in the sea, billions in a bucket of water, that we just - it's only on our watch that we've begun to appreciate their role. Change the chemistry of Earth even a little bit, you change that mix of microbes that both keep us alive, but they also could spell our doom.

CONAN: Sylvia Earle's most recent book is "The World is Blue." She's explorer-in-residence at National Graphic. Also with us, E.O. Wilson, author most recently of "The Social Conquest of the Earth," the Pulitzer Prize winner for "On Human Nature," university research professor emeritus at Harvard. From the Aspen Environment Forum, you're listening to TALK OF THE NATION, coming to you from NPR News.

And let's get to another question here at the Paepcke Auditorium.

UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN: Hi. So my question is so many of the native people in this country and the global indigenous people have solutions and knowledge and wisdom about our ecosystems and the, you know, habitats and managing them and, you know, wildlife and all of that. Why aren't we inviting these people more to the table? Why aren't we - why aren't scientists asking them questions and investigating the accuracy of their knowledge? Why aren't we doing this?

WILSON: We are doing it. I - having been on the board of directors and advisory boards of most of the major global conservation organizations in America, I have watched just what you ask about grow to very significantly higher levels. Nowadays, conservation projects in situ, you know, where these conservation professionals go to help set up reserves has, as one of the first orders of business, meeting the people, getting to know the people, finding out what they need, what they think and then, to the maximum extent possible, taking measures that increases their quality of life without changing it and engaging them, for example, in jobs that can be supportive of preserving the environment in which they have lived, as you're suggesting, for centuries.

CONAN: Let's go to a caller. This is Leslie(ph), Leslie calling us from Anchorage.

LESLIE: Hi. Thanks, Neal, for taking my call. This is so exciting to have both of you together because I teach marine biology and evolution. Sylvia, I've had the pleasure of meeting you, and, Professor Wilson, I hope I get to meet you one of these days. So, Professor Wilson, your new book just got a pretty interesting review from another one of my idols, Richard Dawkins.

And I was wondering, you know, as someone who teaches evolution and teaches biology in general from an evolutionary perspective, what are some of the conversations about, you know, whether selection acts on genes or individuals and how we can come to understand these mechanisms? You know, what are some of the new things that I should be telling my students?

WILSON: Professor Dawkins will get used to it.

(LAUGHTER)

WILSON: And actually, we now have inaugurated real new directions in the study of genetics and theory of advanced social evolution. Some of this, as I suggested earlier, has come from our knowledge of other species of animals that have achieved advanced social evolution.

The most advanced stage which humans have is called eusocial evolution, and it entails cooperation based upon altruistic behavior. And it is now, I think, inevitable that we turn in both the two dozen cases that have occurred in the history of life that we know of - only about two dozen cases - of species reaching that very high level. Many of them were social insects.

And we will - there is no way now that I can see putting all of that information together about how it happened, you know, and how the great destroyer, Homo sapiens, actually arose without putting heavy emphasis on group selection, group-to-group selection, and altering a lot about our previous beliefs concerning kinship in generating altruism during evolution.

This is the way it's going. There's been a game change, a paradigm shift, and it's already beginning to take off in terms of drawing in more scientists eager to perform - do more theory and design more experiments in it.

CONAN: Sylvia?

EARLE: Well, the question for me?

CONAN: Well, no. Let me just follow up with another question. We're almost out of time. You've been to so many places. You've followed the whales, starting from the Gulf of Mexico. Is there any place left you want to go?

EARLE: Oh, just most of the world. That's all.

(LAUGHTER)

EARLE: And, of course, I'd like to go to the deepest part of the ocean and all the places in between that are yet to be explored. And there's so much, like 95 percent is yet to be seen by anybody, let alone really understood and put on the balance sheet. But we still have, you know, half coral reefs in pretty good shape, maybe 10 percent of the sharks. We need to look at the ocean as the wild system that really governs the way the world works and creatures who live there as wildlife.

CONAN: Sylvia Earle and E.O. Wilson, thank you so much for being with us here in Aspen today. Thank you very much for your time.

When we come back, we're going to be talking about a new project to bring back the wooly mammoth and a lot of other extinct animals. What do you wish we could bring back from extinction? 800-989-8255. Stay with us. TALK OF THE NATION, NPR News.

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