Food Blogger Camp 2011
1 day ago
As I've said before the internet has proved to be a great place for photography. It has allowed photographers to meet, exchange views and ideas as well as allowing instant access to pictures from the other side of the world.
Whether you are a professional or keen amateur photographer you can now share your work with others and engage with those who have a passion for the same subjects or styles of photography. Digital photography has opened up many new avenues of contact and expression.
However, there is nothing quite like seeing your own work in print. To hold in your hand a single picture, or indeed a book of pictures remains very satisfying.
One group that has gone from the virtual to the real is a collection of photographers in Malta who met on Flickr where they are known as Flickristi.
The group has just published its first book, Malta Seascapes, which includes the work of more than 30 photographers and focuses on the coastline of Malta. The launch was accompanied by an exhibition which was hosted at the Malta Maritime Museum.Lots more photos via the link above. Read More......
Each photographer has a number of pictures included in the book, each showing off their particular style, from dramatic colour landscapes to thunderous black and white rolling clouds.
Um…did that really happen? And on Fox? Last night’s episode featured a “unique” story line where character Chris Griffin was dating a girl with Down’s Syndrome. A dangerous territory for comedy to be sure, that turned ugly, when Ellen (the character with Down’s Syndrome) revealed that her mother was the former governor of Alaska. Cue deserved outrage…now!As ThinkProgress notes, Palin's outrage is selective. Read More......
Bayh is an anomaly of sorts; he really grew to dislike the influence of liberal activists on his Senate colleagues. To him, these activists increased the cost of doing business. Reaching out to the other side became more risky than rallying around an ideological pole, even though that rallying around contributed to stasis. When it became clear to Bayh that the White House wasn't going to play his game -- wasn't going to sell out liberals at every turn -- Bayh decided he had had enough.I'm with Atrios:
If Ambinder knows what he was talking about, Bayh wanted Obama to support a Senate coalition of Republicans and centrist Democrats. You know, the same thing we had for the past several really awesome years of policymaking. You also get the sense that, as is usually the case, there isn't really much policy substance here, it's all about the joys of hippie punching.CNN:
"He hates the Senate, hates the left bloggers," a friend and longtime adviser to Bayh said. "They are getting their wish, pure Democrats in the minority."Actually, the reason Democrats are in the quagmire they are today is because they and the White House moved too far to the right, not because they embraced the blogs. None of them have embraced the blogs, even though much of what we espouse polls well with the majority of the American public, and, ironically, was included in candidate Obama's platform. The problems arose not when the President and Congress did too much of what the blogs wanted, it's when they refused to do what they already promised the American people, and thus came off weak and ineffective.
Just when I thought I was out of the Transportation Security Administration business for a few columns, they pull me back in.Read More......
Did you hear about the Camden cop whose disabled son wasn't allowed to pass through airport security unless he took off his leg braces?
Unfortunately, it's no joke. This happened to Bob Thomas, a 53-year-old officer in Camden's emergency crime suppression team, who was flying to Orlando in March with his wife, Leona, and their son, Ryan.
Ryan was taking his first flight, to Walt Disney World, for his fourth birthday.
With national Dems scrambling to figure out a way forward in the wake of Evan Bayh’s announced retirement, Dem party strategists are quietly beginning to ask a key question:Read More......
What will Bayh do with the $13 million in campaign cash he still has on hand? Will he turn all or some of it over to the Dem party committees, to help the eventual Dem candidate in Indiana and blunt the negative impact his retirement will have on the party’s fortunes?
A spokesman for Bayh tells me he’s made no decision what to do with the money. And it’s likely that he will come under pressure to turn that cash over to the party.
Bayh does have the option to do this. According to Judith Ingram, a spokesperson for the Federal Election Commission, Bayh can turn over unlimited amounts to the DSCC, the most likely recipient, or even to other national party committees, such as the DNC and the DCCC.
He can only turn over limited amounts to the eventual candidate, but cash given to the DSCC would blunt the damage to Dems. The DSCC would have to come up with less money to spend on the Indiana race and would conceivably have more resources to spend elsewhere.
Oh brother. It's been a whole year and still Beltway deep thinkers in the press remain committed to unique narrative that it's Obama's job -- and his alone --- to create bipartisanship. Forget that the definition of bipartisanship is two sides working together. From the day Obama was sworn into office, the press has made it quite clear that Democrats, and Democrats only, will be blamed for the lack of political cooperation.
And yes, Halperin this week repeats the same Beltway-approved talking points that pundits have been recycling for 12 months now. (I want that job!)
Halperin's painfully naive closing provides an unintended chuckle:Read More......Obama needs to conduct some sort of face-to-face intervention with amenable senior Republican legislators, to convince them that it is possible to make a deal in one or two important areas without agreeing on every issue or laying down their arms for the next election. He needs to remind his adversaries that the purpose of government, ultimately, is to improve the lives of the American people, that its leaders - whether in the majority or the minority - shouldn't want to be part of a system that inspires so little faith. And that, friends or not, the only way to build back the trust of the American people is to start to trust each other, if only a little bit.OMG, why didn't the White House think of this?! According to Halperin, all Obama has to do is ask some "amenable" GOP leaders for their cooperation. Obama just needs to appeal to their sense of duty and responsibility.
And voila! Problem solved.
Starr: 'Absolutely' Sorry Clinton / Lewinsky Scandal Happened "The law is the law." He told me this morning.Read More......
A 73-year-old Florida man who was arrested for robbing three banks -- unarmed and taking $600 in each heist -- said he needed the money to pay his home mortgage, police said on Friday.Read More......
James Bruce of Tampa was arrested on Thursday. He admitted robbing the banks but said he planned to pay back the money, Tampa Police spokeswoman Laura McElroy said.
"He called it a repayable loan," she added.
Why you can never trust Beltway narratives: national security is turning out to be this Dem White House's strengthMeanwhile, the tough battle for Marja continues with U.S. troops facing "Ambushes, sniper fire and a labyrinth of buried bombs."
Her no-show in Haiti helped to tip what was just a mild undercurrent of consternation into a torrent of hostility. Her argument that "disaster tourism" would detract from vital humanitarian efforts was left looking silly when another senior EU official, Development Commissioner Karel De Gucht, was dispatched to the scene of the disaster. French newspapers seized on her absence, with the left-leaning daily Libération expressing outrage that Lady Ashton had returned to Britain to visit her husband and children on the same day that US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton arrived in Port-au-Prince. "It smacks of amateurism, even incompetence," the paper wrote. France's Europe Minister Pierre Lellouche deplored the "current void" left by Ashton. "The world does not wait for us," he told French reporters. She also left herself open to further attacks over her decision to forgo an international aid conference for Haiti in Canada, leaving the media-savvy French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner to grab the limelight.Read More......
But supporters said criticism of what may have been an error of judgement is now degenerating into a personal character assassination. "The French seem to have it in for her. It is open to question how much of this is about her being British and a woman. And they have a huge guilt complex over Haiti anyway, which they might channelling through her. But it is becoming excessive," said one senior diplomat, referring to a recent French article that alleged that Lady Ashton "switches off her phone after 8pm" and makes off to London every weekend to visit her husband and school-going child, instead of travelling the globe.
The News of the World is believed to be planning to settle a court case which threatens to disclose further evidence of the involvement of its journalists in illegal information-gathering by private investigators.Read More......
According to one source at the paper, executives have devised a plan to block the case by offering money to the celebrity PR agent Max Clifford to persuade him to settle his legal action over the illegal interception of his voicemail messages.
The Clifford case is potentially important for Andy Coulson, media adviser to the Conservative leader David Cameron, who edited the News of the World at the time of the illegal interceptions. The paper's then royal correspondent, Clive Goodman, and a private investigator, Glenn Mulcaire, were jailed in January 2007 for intercepting the voicemail of a total of eight victims, including Max Clifford. Coulson and the paper said they knew nothing about the illegal activity by Goodman and Mulcaire. Coulson resigned on the grounds that he carried ultimate responsibility.
Since then it has emerged that other News of the World journalists were involved in handling illegally "hacked" voicemail messages and that there were numerous other victims.
The most powerful force against AIDS in Africa may be circumcision, a procedure that's easily done in the developed world. But it's a challenge on a continent where there are too few medical workers and a reluctance by men for cultural reasons and fear of pain.Read More......
Now there may be a new weapon in the arsenal — a ring-shaped device that is mostly painless and requires less time for health workers.
The Chinese-developed device, the ShangRing, has been tested in a small study in Kenya and a larger test is set for later this year. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation will invest about $4 million into studying the device.
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