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Saturday, December 7, 2013

U.S war veteran released by North Korea

North Korea has deported a United States veteran of the Korean War who had been detained in the country since October.
State news agency KCNA said Merrill Newman was expelled on “humanitarian grounds” after confessing to “crimes” in the 1950-53 war and “apologizing.”
BBC reports that Mr. Newman, 85, had been held on charges of “hostile acts” against the North, while visiting as a tourist.
The U.S State Department has welcomed the decision to free Mr. Newman, who has now arrived in Beijing.
“We are pleased that Mr. Merrill Newman has been allowed to depart the DPRK (North Korea) and re-join his family. We welcome the DPRK’s decision to release him,” said Marie Harf, a State Department spokeswoman.
“I’m very glad to be on my way home,” Mr. Newman told Japanese reporters after he arrived in the Chinese capital, Reuters news agency said.
“And I appreciate the tolerance the DPRK government has given to me to be on my way. I feel good, I feel good. I want to go home to see my wife.”
Last week, KCNA said Mr. Newman had ordered the deaths of North Korean soldiers and civilians in the Korean War.
Although Mr. Newman did serve during the Korean War, his family said he is the victim of mistaken identity.

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Ibori’s UK lawyer questioned over alleged police bribery

Alleged to have hired private eyes to buy information from London Police
One of the counsels to Chief James Ibori, the jailed former governor of Delta State, has been arrested in London for allegedly attempting to pervert the course of justice in the money-laundering case that got the politician sent to prison.
Ian Timlin, a former litigation partner at City Law Firm Speechly Bircham, was held by Met anti-corruption detectives investigating the alleged bribery of police officers. The senior lawyer was arrested at his home in Kent on suspicion of conspiracy to corrupt a police officer, perverting the course of justice and money-laundering offences concerning Ibori.
The former governor was jailed last year for embezzlement after admitting stealing almost £50m, although the true amount may have been many times greater.
The Independent of London reported that during a long-running Scotland Yard investigation into his business affairs, Mr Ibori hired the law firm, Speechly Bircham, which specialises in tax advice for non-domiciled people living in the UK. Mr Timlin, who until 2010 was a partner at Speechly Bircham, then hired RISC Management, a controversial private detective agency embroiled in the scandal that erupted after the murder of the former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko.
Leaked documents, according to the newspaper, suggest RISC, run by former Met Police officers, gained inside information into the ongoing investigation of Ibori and that the agency paid serving detectives £20,000 for intelligence that helped the convict’s defence lawyers. One £5,000 payment was allegedly made to a source for information relating to “forthcoming interviewing strategy to be deployed by police”.
Mr Timlin was arrested in April and it is understood police have retrieved internal documents from the law firm. Keith Hunter, the boss of RISC Management, has also been arrested as part of the investigation, which was triggered in May 2012 when newspapers revealed the Met had done nothing since a whistleblower passed police leaked documents revealing the alleged payments to officers many months before.
Like all current investigations into damaging allegations of police corruption, the long-running inquiry has inched its way tortuously forward, which prevents the media from reporting the full details. Both Mr Hunter and Mr Timlin deny the allegations and are on bail.
Mr Timlin qualified as a solicitor in 1991 and was a partner for 15 years in a number of London law firms before he left Speechly Bircham in 2010. He is now legal director of the Long Port Group, a property development company in the tax haven of Guernsey, and has been involved in the construction of a sports resort in Brazil.
RISC, which is also used by law firm Mischon de Reya, has links to Russian oligarchs in London. It was first established as ISC Global in October 2000 by a lawyer called Stephen Curtis. He died in a helicopter accident in 2004, a crash that his family claimed was highly suspicious.
In 2006, it emerged the former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko visited RISC’s central London offices shortly before he died of polonium poisoning, and traces of the radioactive substance were found at the premises.
A spokesperson for Speechly Bircham said: “Given an arrest was made some months ago and there has since been no charge, it would be inappropriate for us to comment. Suffice to say that we have assisted the police with their enquiries.”
Mr Hunter said: “RISC management does not need to pay serving police officers for confidential information as we pride ourselves on our ability to provide positive solutions and accurate information legitimately.” Mr Timlin and the Long Port Group did not respond to requests for comment.
At Ibori’s sentencing, prosecutor Sasha Wass said: “From the moment he was elected he set about enriching himself at the expense of some of the poorest people in the world.” She told the court he was “effectively a thief in government house.”

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When cometh our own Mandela


In this age and time, I cannot think of any other person, from any part of the world, white or black, who has as much name recognition as Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela. He is my hero. He is known, cherished and recognised the world over. No Head of State or Government visits South Africa without seeking audience with the humanist.

The words that he uttered at different times continue to ring in my memory. I cannot afford to put them away. At his famous trial in 1962, he defined where he stood in the ideological debate. He told humanity what life meant to him and why he had decided to fight for egalitarianism. His words: “During my lifetime I have dedicated myself to the struggle of the African people. I have fought against white domination, and I have fought against black domination. I have cherished the ideal of a democratic and free society in which all persons live together in harmony and with equal opportunities. It is an ideal which I hope to live for and to achieve. But if need be, it is an ideal for which I am prepared to die.”
At the time, it appeared far-fetched that he could one day become the President of a multi-racial South Africa. Yet, he committed (nay, condemned) himself to fighting for a free and just society. He pledged solemnly to stand by the ordinary people; he was determined to live only in a free environment. For being so steadfast, Mandela was to spend the next 27 years of his life in Jail. The next time he would breathe free air was in 1990. He was 71.
From that point, he began to receive the reward for taking the side of the people in their just struggle against oppression. He was the only one found worthy of steering the ship of the delicate new state. He handled the negotiations and only reluctantly and humbly accepted to assume office as president.
When called upon to take up the mantle of leadership, he defined his stand on the most important issues of the time, once again. He said: “Today, all of us do, by our presence here, and by our celebrations in other parts of our country and the world, confer glory and hope to newborn liberty. Out of the experience of an extraordinary human disaster that lasted too long, must be born a society of which all humanity will be proud. Our daily deeds as ordinary South Africans must produce an actual South African reality that will reinforce humanity’s belief in justice, strengthen its confidence in the nobility of the human soul and sustain all our hopes for a glorious life for all. All this we owe both to ourselves and to the peoples of the world who are so well represented here today.”
As soon as he was convinced that the ship of state was relatively stable on the high sea, he opted to decline nomination for a second term. He was in office from 1994 to 1995.Ironically, the period during which Mandela ruled, Nigeria got the winner of the freest and fairest election in her history, the late Bashorun Moshood Abiola, was arrested. He was still in power when Abiola was killed in detention.
He was in charge, laying the foundation for a new South Africa throughout the Abacha reign. Mandela was in charge of his country when General Abdulsalami Abubakar took charge of Nigeria. As South Africa progressed, Nigeria declined. Economically, politically, socially, the gap between the two countries widened. The whole world today salutes Mandela.
Why am I writing about Mandela today? It is neither his birthday, nor is it the anniversary of his assumption of power. It is however, the anniversary of his release from power on February 11, 1990. That date falls within the week.
But, I am not really writing to commemorate his release. I was led into pouring out my heart on Mandela to call attention to the opportunities that we have missed. So far, we have never had a statesman in power in our country. The person who had the best opportunity to replicate the Mandela persona in Nigeria is General Olusegun Obasanjo. He achieved some form of international recognition when he handed power to civilians in 1979. Promptly, he was brought on board the Eminent Persons Group set up by the Commonwealth of Nations to facilitate peaceful end to apartheid. He became (or was thought) the conscience of the nation when the military toppled the Shagari regime. At intervals, Obasanjo sought to whip the military men to line.
But, he is not Mandela. He could not lace the shoes of Mandela. Whereas Mandela voluntarily declined nomination for a second term, Obasanjo would do anything to subvert the constitution of his country to gain access to power a third time.
It is time to elect our leaders at different levels again. Agreed, there is no Mandela here. But, we can insist that men be judged by how close they come to the legendary African hero, Mandela.
This column was orginally published in 2011. It is today a tribute to the memory of the man that President Jacob Zuma as described as |the greatest son of South Africa”. Adieu Madiba.

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Monday, December 2, 2013

10 Secrets A Flight Attendant Will Never Tell You



You probably sense there’s some hidden bureaucracy happening on an airplane — that just a few well-kept secrets stand between you and a much better in-flight experience. You’re right! Here’s what your flight attendant won’t tell you.


They throw out the extra wine
The plane isn’t allowed to have opened, unfinished bottles of wine when they land, so they pour out all extra wine. If you mention you know this, it could be hard for your attendant to deny you a couple extra free glasses.


They delay dinner on purpose

If you’re asleep, your flight attendant is supposed to leave you alone and that means less workFor this reason, the crew will often delay dinner as long as possible on night flights, so that half the plane is asleep and they don’t have to serve that half.


You can have first class’s leftovers

After everyone in first class has been served their meal, a flight attendant could technically give you one of those sought-after leftover meals. It’s worth asking.


Nice clothes can get you to first class
You actually can be upgraded for free to business or first class once the cabin doors have been closed. But here’s a secret: the crew isn’t going to put a slob in stained sweatpants up there, so dressing nice could be your ticket to first class service at economy prices.


They’re not on the clock until the doors are closed
If the crew doesn’t seem to care about you until the doors are closed, that’s because they’re not being paid to. They don’t make a dollar until those doors are shut which is also why they rush you to put your bags away and sit down.




They’re the law

They may look unassuming in their pencil skirts and cardigans, but it’s against the law to disobey crew members’ commands. Simply refusing to put your seat up when it’s time could mean a meeting with police when the plane lands.
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You only think you know turbulence
Flight attendants laugh when they hear passengers swap stories of “the worst turbulence ever” and “dangerously bumpy flights.” Out of the over 2 million people who fly yearly, there have only been three fatalities due to turbulence in over 30 years, and two of those individuals were not wearing their seatbelts.

Joining the mile high club is not illegal
That’s right! If you can get away with it, you didn't do anything wrong. That being said, flight attendants almost always know when this is happening, and will ask you to exit the lavatory.

They’re sneaking you decaf coffee
Why would they give you regular if that just means you’ll be awake for hours, wanting snacks, wanting drinks, and asking pointless questions?

They’ll intentionally delay flights
If a flight is delayed, the crew often gets paid overtime. But this only kicks in after a certain amount of delay, so sometimes the crew (after the doors have closed and they are in fact on the clock) will delay take off intentionally.

Friday, September 27, 2013

Natural Remedies For Hormonal Health Problems


Boost Libido With Banana Bread

Monthly ups and downs in sex hormones -- and the estrogen shortfalls that strike after menopause -- can stall blood flow to the genitals, leading to disappointing lulls in arousal and vaginal lubrication, explains Mary Jane Minkin, M.D. and professor of gynecology at Yale University. But studies show smelling banana bread increases pelvic blood flow as much as 40 percent in 10 minutes (whether or not you eat the bread!). Researchers aren’t sure yet why, but studies have shown that this enticing smell actually switches on the arousal center in the brain, explains Alan Hirsch, M.D., neurological director of Chicago’s Smell and Taste Treatment and Research Foundation.



Lighten Heavy Periods With Beef

It’s a vicious cycle: Heavy periods can flush out the body’s stores of iron, resulting in anemia -- and this condition can make uterine blood vessels more fragile, triggering even heavier periods, say researchers at Harvard Medical School. The good news? Up to 55 percent of women can break this cycle and lighten their periods within three months, just by restocking their body’s depleted iron stores, say UCLA researchers. So, enjoy 4 ounces of iron-rich beef, pork or chicken daily -- or if you prefer vegetarian fare, pair your cereals, breads and other grains with acidic foods, like citrus or berries. The iron found in grains is tougher to absorb, but Tufts researchers say ramping up the acidity in your tummy will double your ability to soak up this type of iron.




Prevent Pelvic Pain With Mineral Water

One in five women struggle with throbbing pelvic pain during their periods -- and one of the top triggers is a magnesium deficiency, explains nutrition researcher Carolyn Dean, M.D., author of Hormone Balance. “Magnesium is essential for relaxing muscles, reducing inflammation, soothing the nervous system and preventing pain flare-ups during menstruation -- yet the magnesium content of a particular food can vary wildly, depending upon the type of soil it’s grown in,” explains Dr. Dean. Fortunately, studies at Duke University and elsewhere suggest that the magnesium found naturally in mineral water is so quickly and easily absorbed, just sipping two 12 ounce glasses daily can help correct this mineral shortfall, easing pelvic aches in as little as two months.




Make Menstrual Migraines a Memory With Veggies

The likelihood of a headache skyrockets 71 percent during menstruation (blame a sudden dip in estrogen, which kick-starts inflammation inside brain nerves and blood vessels). Worse still, menstrual migraines are often three times more severe than the ones that flare at other times of the month, say Yale researchers. But add two heaping cups of veggies (any kind) to your daily diet, and your migraine attacks could end up being 66 percent shorter and less painful within three months, say doctors at California’s Loma Linda University. That’s because these healthy, filling picks are packed with the nutrients needed to help brain nerves and blood vessels function properly, even as hormone levels fluctuate wildly, explains Neal Barnard, M.D., president of the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine in Washington, D.C. “Plus they’re naturally low in fat, a proven migraine trigger.”




Prevent Irritability With Baked Potatoes

Period-triggered hormone surges wreak havoc on the functioning of brain cells, dampening their ability to produce the mood-boosting hormone serotonin -- and that can double your risk of irritability and anxiety at a time when what you’re craving is some zen-like calm! The tasty Rx: Enjoy one medium baked potato daily during your high-risk time of the month. This filling treat will soothe your jangled nerves within 10 minutes --and help you feel calmer for up to six hours straight, according to researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. These experts credit the compund tryptophan, found natually in potatoes. This amino acid is the key building block needed to produce serotonin in the brain.



Cool Hot Flashes With Flax

If it’s been a while since you had monthly periods, you’re not off the hook. Drought-like lows in estrogen can tamper with your brain’s temperature regulating system, kick-starting a seemingly endless series of hot flashes and night sweats. The cooling news: Eating 1/4 cup of ground flax daily significantly reduced hot flashes and night sweats for 66 percent of women in one Mayo Clinic study. Bonus: It helps ease vaginal dryness within three months, and it can cut your risk of mood swings and depression in half. Flax’s secret: It’s rich in mild, natural plant estrogens that fill in when a woman’s hormone levels dip too low, say UCLA researchers. Flaxseeds are available whole or pre-ground in health food stores. Just sprinkle them on cereal, yogurt, soups and salads, or add to your favorite smoothie or bread recipes.



Beat Blue Moods With Whole Grains

There are lots of low-carb diets floating around out there, but Georgetown University studies suggest that for women prone to monthly bouts of the blues, these protein-heavy plans can make their emotional turmoil even worse. The problem, say the study authors: Whole grains are packed with the B vitamins, minerals and complex carbs that your brain needs to fire up production of mood-lifting hormones, such as dopamine, endorphins and oxytocin. So slogging along on a low-carb plan means that when your moods start to nose-dive premenstrually, your brain can’t produce the hormones it needs to chase away the blues and help you feel upbeat, says Dr. Barnard. But enjoy three servings of 100 percent whole grain breads or other carbs daily, and you could cut your risk of blue moods by as much as half.



Banish Menstrual Bloating With Nuts

Menstrual bloating affects about 60 percent of women every month, say Yale University researchers. The reason: Blame a troublesome group of hormones called inflammatory prostaglandins. Monthly ups and downs in estrogen fire up the immune system’s production of these compounds, which then circulate all through your body, signaling your tissues to soak up excess fluids instead of excreting them, says Dr. Minkin. However, enjoy half a cup of nuts (any type will do) daily, and you could cut your bloating by as much as half, say UCLA researchers. Nuts are packed with alpha-linolenic acid and vitamin E, potent, natural, anti-inflammatories that dial down the formation of prostaglandins, keeping fluid retention lower all month long.



Avoid Acne Flare-ups With Fortified Cereal

At least one in four women battle unsightly acne breakouts during their periods, say dermatologists at SUNY Downstate Medical Center in Brooklyn, NY. The trigger: Cyclical surges in testosterone, a hormone that ramps up oil production and fosters bacterial growth deep in pores. To prevent this problem, try switching to a fortified cereal like Total Raisin Bran or Total Corn Flakes, instead. Each serving contains 15 milligrams of zinc, a mineral that speeds the growth of healthy new skin cells, kills bacteria and helps normalize testosterone production. In fact, adding zinc-fortified foods to your daily diet can help heal breakouts, prevent future flare-ups, clearing skin in as little as three months, say Yale University researchers.



Cure Cramps With Yogurt

The average woman gets roughly 750 milligrams of calcium in her daily diet -- yet bumping that up to 1,200 milligrams daily could cut the intensity of your menstrual cramps in half within three months, say researchers at New York’s St. Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital. How? Inflammatory prostaglandins, the troublemakers that cause menstrual bloating, trigger these painful uterine spasms. But calcium acts as a powerful muscle soother, keeping pelvic muscles relaxed, even when prostaglandins are at their monthly peak, say the study authors. Luckily, a heaping cup of yogurt each day can make up for any shortfall -- it’s packed with 450 milligrams of this essential mineral!



Fight Severe PMS With Fish Oil

Eating eight ounces of fish three times weekly reduces even debilitating monthly mood swings and pain flare-ups (the kind caused by the most severe form of PMS, premenstrual dysphoric disorder) for up to 68 percent of women, according to researchers at Ohio’s Children’s Hospital. Bonus: Experts at the Inflammation Research Foundation in Marblehead, MA, say it can also cut the risk of menopause-triggered depression in half. The credit goes to fish’s omega-3 fatty acids. These anti-inflammatory fats dampen production of pain-triggering compounds called prostaglandins, plus they increase your brain levels of antidepressant hormones, so you can weather monthly hormone fluxes symptom-free, explains Barry Sears, M.D., president of the Inflammation Research Foundation. Don’t enjoy fish? Taking 2,000 milligrams of fish oil daily can provide the same symptom-soothing effect.



Prevent Spotting With Soy

Experience regular spotting between periods? According to researchers in the department of medicine at Canada’s University of British Columbia, one in 10 women do -- and it can make each month feel like an unending period. Thankfully, a study at Japan’s Gifu University School of Medicine suggests that for premenopausal women struggling with lots of spotting, noshing one ounce of soy nuts (or 1/2 cup edamame) daily can give them four more period-free days every month. The credit goes to soy’s isoflavones. These gentle plant estrogens not only help control the temperature-regulating center in the brain, they also latch onto cells in the reproductive tract, nourishing the uterine lining and keeping it intact until your period begins.


Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Jurors deliberate: Should Jodi Arias die?


(CNN) -- A path of heartbreak, violence, lies and finally confessions has led Jodi Arias to where she is now -- at the mercy of jurors deciding whether or not she should live.
On Wednesday they convene again to consider the death sentence for the passionate crime of murdering of her former boyfriend. A day before, she pleaded with them to spare her life.
Earlier this month, the same jurors said Arias was "exceptionally cruel," when she stabbed Travis Alexander 29 times in 2008, slit his neck from ear to ear and shot him in the face.
They pronounced her guilty of first-degree murder on May 8. Arias' plea to jurors Tuesday to let her live was a stark reversal from two weeks ago, when she told a journalist she preferred death to life in prison.
"I believe death is the ultimate freedom, so I'd rather just have my freedom as soon as I can get it," she told CNN affiliate KSAZ after her conviction.
But her family implored her to change her mind, she told KSAZ late Tuesday. Now she wants to spare them further heartbreak, she said.
"One of my cousins really drove it home for me and told me how much it would affect them, if I did anything to myself," she said.
Her mother pleaded with her, she claimed. "Please don't give up; please don't give up," Arias said she told her.
Well-planned presentation
Her life seemed to pass before her, as she delivered a slideshow presentation -- mostly of family photos -- to the jury on Tuesday. It started off with toddler pictures of herself wearing pigtails and showed several images from holidays and vacations with family members.
She read a prepared statement for nearly 20 minutes, at times crying.
She told jurors that she had been a victim of abuse as an adult and as a child. She had claimed she killed Alexander in self-defense after he hurt her, something evidence failed to substantiate.
She called his murder "the worst mistake" she'd ever made, "the worst thing I've ever done." She couldn't have imagined herself capable of such a grisly crime she told the jury.
"But I know that I was," she said. "And for that I'm going to be sorry for the rest of my life -- probably longer."
Arias pledged to make herself useful to other prisoners and humanity by performing acts of charity from behind bars, if spared. She told jurors Tuesday that she could teach people to read in prison.
She told them she would suffer for what she did.
"I'm not going to become a mother because of my own terrible choices," she said. "I won't be at my sister's wedding, when she ties the knot next year."
Arias pledged to dedicate her life to good causes.
She noted she could bring "people together in a constructive and positive way" by participating in various programs, including prisoner literacy initiatives; by her "Survivor" T-shirts, which would benefit victims of domestic violence; and by donating her hair, so it could be used to make wigs for sick children.
She claimed she was a gentle person who caught spiders in cups and took them outside rather than kill them. And she showed the jurors several pieces of her artwork.
Beginning about 90 minutes later than scheduled, Arias, 32, said she never wanted the "graphic, mortifying, horrific details (of her and Alexander's relationship) paraded out into the public arena."
"It's never been an intention of mine to malign his name or character," she said.
She acknowledged that her plea stood in contradiction with her previous publicly expressed wish to die. "Each time I said that, though I meant it," she said, "I lacked perspective."
Attorneys argue life and death
Defense attorney Jennifer Willmott argued Tuesday that Arias' life should be spared.
"We're not talking about whether or not to convict. We're talking about whether or not to kill. And so when we talk about that, it matters that she was 27 years old and she had no criminal history," she said. "It matters that she hadn't done anything wrong in her life before that."
Prosecutor Juan Martinez said pointing to Arias' artwork as evidence that her life should be spared wasn't a valid defense.
"It's an entitlement road that they want you to travel when they talk to you about the fact that she's a good artist," he said. "It doesn't mean anything. All it means is: give her special or preferential treatment."
He argued that jurors should sentence Arias to death.
"You have a duty, and that duty really means that you actually do the honest, right thing, even though it may be difficult," he said.
For Arias to be sentenced to death, the jury's decision must be unanimous. In the case of a deadlock, a new jury would be chosen for this phase only.
If Arias is given a sentence of death, she would be the fourth woman on death row in the state of Arizona.
When Alexander died
Arias was living in Yreka, California, when she met Alexander at a business convention in Las Vegas in September 2006. That November, he baptized Arias into the Mormon faith, a ceremony Arias said was followed by anal sex.
Arias became his girlfriend two months later, she testified. They broke up in the summer of 2007, and Alexander began dating other women.
Alexander's naked body was found crammed in a stand-up shower in June 2008 after he missed two appointments, prompting friends to go to his house. He had been stabbed 29 times in the back and torso and shot in the head. His throat was slit from ear to ear.
After her arrest, Arias told an elaborate lie about masked intruders breaking into Alexander's house, killing him, before she narrowly escaped.
Relatives who spoke with police described her as mentally unstable.

Saturday, March 9, 2013

Two enemies discover a 'higher call' in battle




The pilot glanced outside his cockpit and froze. He blinked hard and looked again, hoping it was just a mirage. But his co-pilot stared at the same horrible vision.
"My God, this is a nightmare," the co-pilot said.
"He's going to destroy us," the pilot agreed.
The men were looking at a gray German Messerschmitt fighter hovering just three feet off their wingtip. It was five days before Christmas 1943, and the fighter had closed in on their crippled American B-17 bomber for the kill.
The B-17 pilot, Charles Brown, was a 21-year-old West Virginia farm boy on his first combat mission. His bomber had been shot to pieces by swarming fighters, and his plane was alone in the skies above Germany. Half his crew was wounded, and the tail gunner was dead, his blood frozen in icicles over the machine guns.
But when Brown and his co-pilot, Spencer "Pinky" Luke, looked at the fighter pilot again, something odd happened. The German didn't pull the trigger. He nodded at Brown instead. What happened next was one of the most remarkable acts of chivalry recorded during World War II. Years later, Brown would track down his would-be executioner for a reunion that reduced both men to tears.
Listen: A bond between enemies
Living by the code
People love to hear war stories about great generals or crack troops such as Seal Team 6, the Navy unit that killed Osama bin Laden. But there is another side of war that's seldom explored: Why do some soldiers risk their lives to save their enemies and, in some cases, develop a deep bond with them that outlives war?
And are such acts of chivalry obsolete in an age of drone strikes and terrorism?

Charles Brown was on his first combat mission during World War II when he met an enemy unlike any other.



Those are the kinds of questions Brown's story raises. His encounter with the German fighter pilot is beautifully told in a New York Times best-selling book, "A Higher Call." The book explains how that aerial encounter reverberated in both men's lives for more than 50 years.
"The war left them in turmoil," says Adam Makos, who wrote the book with Larry Alexander. "When they found each other, they found peace."
Their story is extraordinary, but it's not unique. Union and Confederate troops risked their lives to aid one another during the Civil War. British and German troops gathered for post-war reunions; some even vacationed together after World War II. One renowned American general traveled back to Vietnam to meet the man who almost wiped out his battalion, and the two men hugged and prayed together.
What is this bond that surfaces between enemies during and after battle?
It's called the warrior's code, say soldiers and military scholars. It's shaped cultures as diverse as the Vikings, the Samurai, the Romans and Native Americans, says Shannon E. French, author of "Code of the Warrior."
The code is designed to protect the victor, as well as the vanquished, French says.
"People think of the rules of war primarily as a way to protect innocent civilians from being victims of atrocities," she says. "In a much more profound sense, the rules are there to protect the people doing the actual fighting."
The code is designed to prevent soldiers from becoming monsters. Butchering civilians, torturing prisoners, desecrating the enemies' bodies -- are all battlefield behaviors that erode a soldier's humanity, French says.
The code is ancient as civilization itself. In Homer's epic poem, "The Iliad," the Greek hero Achilles breaks the code when his thirst for vengeance leads him to desecrate the body of his slain foe, the Trojan hero Hector.

He's going to destroy us!
Charles Brown, B-17 bomber pilot

Most warrior cultures share one belief, French says:
"There is something worse than death, and one of those things is to completely lose your humanity."
The code is still needed today, French says.
Thousands of U.S. soldiers returning from wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are struggling with post-traumatic stress disorder. Some have seen, and have done, things that are unfathomable.
A study of Vietnam veterans showed that those who felt as if they had participated in dishonorable behavior during the war or saw the Vietnamese as subhuman experienced more post-traumatic stress disorder, French says.
Drone warfare represents a new threat to soldiers' humanity, French says.
The Pentagon recently announced it would award a new Distinguished Warfare Medal to soldiers who operate drones and launch cyberattacks. The medal would rank above the Bronze Star and Purple Heart, two medals earned in combat.
At least 17,000 people have signed an online petition protesting the medal. The petition says awarding medals to soldiers who wage war via remote control was an "injustice" to those who risked their lives in combat.
Outgoing Defense Secretary Leon Panetta defended the new medal at a February news conference.
"I've seen firsthand how modern tools, like remotely piloted platforms and cybersystems, have changed the way wars are fought," Panetta says. "And they've given our men and women the ability to engage the enemy and change the course of battle, even from afar."
Still, critics ask, is there any honor in killing an enemy by remote control?
French isn't so sure.
"If [I'm] in the field risking and taking a life, there's a sense that I'm putting skin in the game," she says. "I'm taking a risk so it feels more honorable. Someone who kills at a distance -- it can make them doubt. Am I truly honorable?"
The German pilot who took mercy
Revenge, not honor, is what drove 2nd Lt. Franz Stigler to jump into his fighter that chilly December day in 1943.
Stigler wasn't just any fighter pilot. He was an ace. One more kill and he would win The Knight's Cross, German's highest award for valor.
Yet Stigler was driven by something deeper than glory. His older brother, August, was a fellow Luftwaffe pilot who had been killed earlier in the war. American pilots had killed Stigler's comrades and were bombing his country's cities.
Stigler was standing near his fighter on a German airbase when he heard a bomber's engine. Looking up, he saw a B-17 flying so low it looked like it was going to land. As the bomber disappeared behind some trees, Stigler tossed his cigarette aside, saluted a ground crewman and took off in pursuit.
As Stigler's fighter rose to meet the bomber, he decided to attack it from behind. He climbed behind the sputtering bomber, squinted into his gun sight and placed his hand on the trigger. He was about to fire when he hesitated. Stigler was baffled. No one in the bomber fired at him.
He looked closer at the tail gunner. He was still, his white fleece collar soaked with blood. Stigler craned his neck to examine the rest of the bomber. Its skin had been peeled away by shells, its guns knocked out. He could see men huddled inside the plane tending the wounds of other crewmen.
Then he nudged his plane alongside the bomber's wings and locked eyes with the pilot whose eyes were wide with shock and horror.



‎"How to get rid of blackheads and whiteheads"


Thursday, February 7, 2013

Separated at Birth? Celebrities Who Look Alike



Steve Carell & Alice Cooper

When he's not decked out in scary black makeup, rocker Alice Cooper bears a striking resemblance to funnyman Steve Carell -- especially when they're both flashing those toothy grins!



Scarlett Johansson & Amber Heard

Sexy starlets Scarlett Johansson and Amber Heard take the term "blond bombshell" to the next level!



Nina Dobrev & Emmanuelle Chriqui

Ryan Gosling isn't the only hot Canadian! Vampire Diaries star Nina Dobrev and Entourage actress Emmanuelle Chriqui are both brown-eyed girls who grew up in Canada.



Zac Efron & Ian Somerhalder

With their smoldering stares and tousled hair, former High School Musical star Zac Efron and Vampire Diaries actor Ian Somerhalder both drive teen girls (and adult women!) wild.



Russell Crowe & Benjamin McKenzie

Actor Benjamin McKenzie (best known for his starring role on The O.C.) looks like a younger -- and slightly less talented -- version of Oscar winner Russell Crowe.




Seth MacFarlane & Christopher Knight

Is Family Guy creator Seth MacFarlane the missing member of The Brady Bunch? The scruffy-faced comedian looks an awful lot like Christopher Knight, the actor who played Peter Brady on the hit '70s sitcom.



Michelle Williams & Carey Mulligan

With their porcelain skin and blond pixie cuts, actresses Michelle Williams and Carey Mulligan sport strikingly similar looks (and equally excellent acting chops). The only thing that sets them apart is Carey's British accent!



Taylor Lautner & Kris Humphries

With their dark features and handsome faces, Twilight hunk Taylor Lautner and NBA player Kris Humphries share a surprising resemblance. And while Humphries is about a foot taller, Lautner definitely wins in the abs department!



Javier Bardem & Jeffrey Dean Morgan

Sexy Spaniard Javier Bardem looks so much like Jeffrey Dean Morgan (who played Denny Duquette on Grey's Anatomy) that even his wife Penelope Cruz might get confused!