Thursday, January 31, 2013

Green Building Brooklyn Wedding

As teenagers, Matt and Amy listened to Louis Armstrong?s ?A Kiss to Build a Dream On? as they shared their very own first kiss. Years later, just as if it were a movie, the couple shared their first dance to the same song in front of their family and friends in Brooklyn?s The Green Building. Luckily for us, Paper Antler was there to capture their wedding day to sheer perfection!

vintage bride and groom

From the bride, Amy: Both Matt and I have design backgrounds, so right away we knew that we wanted to personalize as much of our wedding as possible. We also love things to be quirky and fun, mixing things that don?t traditionally go together. We envisioned an urban vintage feel; set in a warehouse with farm tables and vintage china, but also with neon accents, tongue in cheek handmade signs, and food trucks complete with milkshakes.


loose wedding bun

vivienne westwood shoes

romantic wedding at sunset

groomsmen in pink socks

classic wedding car

soft bridal beauty
gray bridesmaid dresses
flower girl dresses

bride and bridesmaids

modern romantic ballgown

pink groomsmen socks

medal boutonniere

We did not have a color scheme, much to our families? dismay at matching things for us. We started with a palate of four colors for our invitations- grey, yellow, deep red, and slate blue, but soon we were overtaken with sparkly silver, neon pink, and an amazing peach satin flowergirl dress that ended up determining the flower colors. It had been made by my mother for a cousin?s wedding in the 80s, and had many fond memories attached to it from my childhood. I was thrilled that it could be a part of my wedding day, and it influenced the grey of the bridesmaids dresses (as a contrast) and the peach and white ombre of the flower bouquets.


medal boutonniere

newlyweds recessional

rose wedding centepieces

escort card tables

timeless wedding photos

herb place settings

photobooth wedding

indoor wedding receptions

vintage china at wedding

The groomsmen wore neon pink socks, a color which found its way into random decorations throughout. I added a sparkly silver ribbon belt to the bridesmaid dresses, which in turn ended up deciding the confetti choices. Since we designed the invitation suite ourselves, the ever changing palate made its way through as neon pink reply cards (which we then recycled as confetti for the table tops) and silver and gold ink addressing grey envelopes for our pale blue invitations. Some of the DIYs that we did included the bridesmaid and groomsmen gifts, the various signs at the reception, the chocolate mustache favors, and the invitation suite. All of the plates were antique china collected by family and friends throughout the year.


vintage china at wedding

groomsmen with monocles

frame table backdrop

wedding cake tables

vintage suitcase as card holder

holographic wedding signs

silhouette wedding cake

Any advice for brides planning their weddings now? Remember to step back and really enjoy the process. It gets very stressful, especially if you are trying to balance time for DIY projects and vendor coordination, but don?t let yourself get lost in the details. I found that my best decisions were the quickest ones- the more I agonized over something and changed my mind, the less likely I was to like it later. Also, I think the best decision we made was to hire a day of event coordinator. She took all of our projects and put them together for us into the beautiful, cohesive reception that I had dreamed of (but was never sure was going to happen). I was able to focus completely on my family and my new husband because I felt secure in that she was taking care of everything. Also, despite creating/making the decisions on every decoration, plate, and morsel of food that went into our reception, it still felt like a wonderful surprise when we saw it all together for the first time.


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punched wedding confetti

chalkboard seating chart

wedding cake tables

candles as wedding decor

unique wedding signs

Wedding Music:
I was thrilled to be able to use the ?Wedding March? by Wagner for my walk down the aisle- it is used in many movies and is the tune used to sing ?here comes the bride,? but it is not typically allowed in a Catholic ceremony. The 5 year girl in me was so happy that our priest had no problems with it. The recessional was ?Wedding March? by Mendelssohn, another widely popular wedding choice that I couldn?t resist. Matt and my first dance was to Louis Armstrong singing ?A Kiss To Build A Dream On.? This has been our song since we were 18, soon after we first met. We were listening to music while hanging out, before we had ever kissed. ?A kiss to build a dream on? came on and both of us just looked at each other and then we kissed for the first time. For the cake cutting we played ?You and I? by Ingrid Michaelson, such a fun quirky love song.


milk and cookies wedding treats

holographic wedding signs

Green Building wedding


View all images from this wedding in the gallery

Wedding Location: Brooklyn, NY / Wedding Photographer: Paper Antler / Ceremony Venue: St. Agnes / Reception Venue: The Green Building / Day-Of Coordination: Ruth of The Event Shop Ltd / Wedding Flowers: Kimberly of Rose Red and Lavender / Wedding Dress: Pronovias / Wedding Shoes: Vivienne Westwood ?Melissa? / Hair: Krista of Foxy Salon / Makeup: Anni of NYC Faces / Bridesmaids? Dresses: Bari Jay / Groom?s Suit: Zara / DJ: DJ K Ross of Scratch Weddings / Food Trucks: The Milk Truck and Cooking With Fire / Wedding Cake: Marisa of Sugar Coated Bakery / Edible Butterflies: Sugar Robot / Cake Topper: Simply Silhouettes / Wedding Invitations: designed by bride and groom / Wedding Paper and Printing: Paper Presentation


We love reading your comments! Remember that the couples who chose to share their weddings with us are real people, so please be respectful and mindful of that. We love promoting engaged couples? unique tastes, so sometimes their style may not be the same as yours. Ruffled reserves the right to remove comments that we find inflammatory, offensive, and self-promoting. We will respond to any questions regarding the feature above in this thread, so everyone can benefit from the answer. Thank you!

Source: http://ruffledblog.com/quirky-brooklyn-wedding/

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What we know about BlackBerry 10

Despite -- or rather thanks to -- major delays in releasing BlackBerry 10, RIM has let quite a bit slip about its upcoming operating system and related BB10 devices. We've had more than a year to absorb leaks, rumors and official information, after all, so it's no surprise that we have a very good idea of what to expect when Waterloo pulls back the curtain on January 30th. That doesn't mean things are as plain as day, though; the deluge of blurrycam shots and carrier screens have provided an almost indigestible amount of information about BB10, and we don't blame you if you can't keep the story straight. We're here to parse the madness, though, so read on to find out what to expect at tomorrow's launch event.

Software

Touch keyboard with predictive input


The first BB10 handset likely won't sport a physical keyboard, but that doesn't mean you should expect a subpar typing experience. RIM's on-screen layout will boast quite a few enhancements to compete with SwiftKey and other similar input options. For instance, the company has demoed predictive typing; press on a letter, and a selection of likely words will hover over the corresponding character ("hey" when you hit H, for example). To pick one of the predicted words, you simply swipe up on it. The keyboard will learn and adapt to your linguistic habits, so you can expect more accurate suggestions over time. In addition to predictive input, the on-screen layout features intuitive gestures such as swiping to the left to delete text and swiping from the lower left to minimize the keyboard. Other gestures include swiping from the bottom to reveal numbers and special characters.

Timeline lens, camera filters

At BlackBerry World 2012, RIM showed us its take on fancy camera software: the "timeline lens," which uses Scalado's Rewind technology to capture frames even before you hit the shutter. This means you can cycle back through the shooter's cache if you miss an image by a second or two.

If The Gadget Masters website, which posted a hands-on video with a "pre-production Z10," is to be believed, we can also expect photo-editing software courtesy of Scalado, including Instagram-style filters and options such as transform, brightness / white balance adjustment, rotate and aspect ratio customization.

User interface with Peek, flow gestures

One of the most anticipated aspects of BlackBerry 10 is the user interface's focus on multitasking. The aptly named Peek feature, showcased at BlackBerry Jam last September, lets users view apps running in the background by simply swiping from the left or right. From there, users can either return to their previous task or swipe back to go into previously launched programs. At least in theory, this is meant to provide a more fluid app-switching experience than the task list à la webOS and Android.

Back in May, RIM officially previewed the BB10 home screen, which will include an app grid that displays all currently running programs. From here, swiping to the right will bring up the full launcher, and gesturing to the left will bring you to the unified inbox. Here as well, you can use Peek to view recent notifications and any currently running applications, and then swipe to backtrack to the main hub. Users can also minimize a given window to see new notifications. We also got a hands-on look at the UI in action when we met with RIM Principal Architect Gary Klassen last June -- check out our video.

Security features, BYOD


Historically, RIM's handsets have been almost synonymous with the BYOD (bring your own device) movement, so it's no surprise that BB10 devices will come with corporate-minded features on board. First off, the OS has FIP 140-2 certification, meaning it meets the security and encryption requirements of government agencies and enterprises.

BB10 devices will also have BlackBerry Balance, which partitions RIM's phones into separate work and personal profiles. To toggle between these two modes, you simply pull down from the app icon grid. You'll see different applications listed depending on which profile you're in, and you can run applications simultaneously in both profiles. For instance, you can have the browser open on the corporate side, and it will adhere to your IT desk's policies, and on the personal side it will run without these restrictions.

Apps

One of many tidbits we've gleaned from the leaked BB10 training manual is that RIM is promising some 70,000 QNX apps in the BlackBerry World store at launch. And indeed, Waterloo has been aggressively courting developers, offering a $10,000 guarantee for approved apps that make less than 10k in the first year. The company also held "Portathon" events to drum up app submissions with a cash incentive. One such contest netted 15,000 entries in less than 38 hours.

In addition to seeking new applications, RIM has invested time and money into securing the top names for its platform. Rest assured that a native Facebook app will be on board at launch, as will Foursquare. We also have good reason to believe that Google Talk and Twitter will be integrated into the unified inbox.

The devices

The all-touch BlackBerry Z10


Back in November, CEO Thorsten Heins told us that a full-touch device will be RIM's way of gaining back market share, as the company's smartphone success to date has been in the QWERTY category. Hence, the first BB10 device will feature an on-screen rather than a physical keyboard.

All signs point to the first flagship device being the full-touch BlackBerry Z10, a phone in the higher-end L-Series line. We've seen that model name come up repeatedly, in RIM marketing materials and most recently in a screen cap from Verizon's website.

Leaked specs for the Z10 match up quite closely with the BlackBerry 10 Dev Alpha we first saw last May. Unveiled at BlackBerry World, the device sported a 4.2-inch, 1,280 x 768 display with 16GB of internal storage. Rumors and leaks about the Z10 have echoed that same set of specifications -- save for 2GB rather than 1GB of RAM -- and we now hear it will run a 1.5GHz ARM Cortex-A9 processor under the hood. Whether that CPU spec turns out to be true or not, it's safe to assume the phone will pack a dual-core chip.

Lower-end and QWERTY models coming soon

From the beginning, Heins has made it clear that RIM's BB10 strategy is to target the more "premium" end of the market first, though "at least six" handsets in total will debut in 2013. We can expect mid-range and lower-end devices in this batch; Heins said a physical keyboard model will be released soon after the first BB10 touch device, and this QWERTY model should fall under the N-Series. Physical keyboards have arguably been RIM's bread and butter, and while the company clearly finessed its on-screen input for the all-touch Z10, it's unclear whether QWERTY models will receive a keyboard revamp as well.

We'd be remiss to move on without mentioning the PlayBook. Though we don't know if any new models are on the horizon, RIM has confirmed that existing versions of its biz-focused tablet will receive the upgrade to BlackBerry 10. Of course, this is possible because the PlayBook is a QNX-based device.

Carrier support

Unsurprisingly, most of the major carriers will be on board when BlackBerry 10 hits the market. AT&T, T-Mobile and Verizon have all confirmed that they'll be carrying BB10 devices at launch, and Sprint recently spoke up to reassure customers that it will be on board by "later this year." UK carriers, including Three, O2 and EE, also confirmed that they'll offer BB10 products in early 2013. Additionally, in our interview with Heins, he confirmed that BB10 devices, including the QWERTY handset, will support 4G LTE.

Wrap-up

Clearly, we won't be walking blindly into the BlackBerry 10 launch event, as both RIM itself and countless leaks have furnished us with plenty of details about what devices and software features to expect. Still, nothing is for certain until Waterloo announces it on stage, so you'll want to tune into our liveblog when the action goes down tomorrow.

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/01/29/what-we-know-about-blackberry-10/

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Women driving demand for rental apartments

8 hrs.

The housing market is supposedly roaring back. Home prices are seeing their biggest annual gains since 2006.

Renters must be rushing back to buy, right?

Not exactly.

In fact, even as housing and the greater economy improve, a shift in demographic trends will likely favor the rental apartment market for the foreseeable future. It is all about women.

"I rent in an apartment building because it gives me a certain amount of freedom: I'm not positive that I want to stay in D.C. long term, so I could leave at year's end if I wanted to," says 25-year-old Caitlin Huey-Burns, a journalist. "My building has nice, built-in amenities, and it's in the location I want, but where I know I wouldn't be able to afford to buy."

Most of Huey-Burns' single, female friends, some in their thirties, who live in major cities also rent in apartment buildings. Just one owns, and she lives in Canton, Ohio.

"What drives demand for single family homes is, 'Oh honey, I'm pregnant,'?" says Buck Horne, a housing analyst at Raymond James.

Read More:?America's Most Expensive Rentals 2013

But those words are being uttered less and less. Horne claims the shift in female education, marriage and fertility rates will drive rental apartment demand going forward. He points to a growing educational imbalance -- 3.1 million more women enrolled in college than men and 4 million more college-educated women in the workforce than men.

"That creates a structural imbalance in the number of suitable partners. Women leave college with good income prospects and are not finding suitable husbands and fathers," says Horne.

Consequently, the millennial generation is delaying marriage and motherhood, and birth and fertility rates are dropping. The female fertility rate is at its lowest level in recorded U.S. history, according to the Centers for Disease Control/Raymond James research. About?41 percent of children are born out of wedlock. Horne's research finds single mothers prefer living closer in to cities and staying in full-amenity apartment rentals. This all points to more structural, long-term demand for rental housing.

Read More:?Home Builders Turn to Rental Apartments

But, again, shouldn't that rebound in home prices and growing confidence in housing still push more renters to buy, despite the female argument? Investors certainly think so. While stocks of the nation's homebuilders are up over 60 percent from a year ago on the?PHLX Housing Sector Index,?multi-family REIT's actually under-performed and inversely correlated to home builders. Investors were concerned about the single-family home recovery stealing renters. But should they be?

No, according to a recent Raymond James report:

Renter household formation remains at the strongest level in decades. Roughly 1.32 million new renter households were formed in the past year (including owner conversions), while the number of owner-occupied households declined by 175,000. Resident turnover and move-outs to homeownership remain near historic lows for most operators. Incoming leasing traffic is more than offsetting move-outs while paying higher rates.

The home-ownership rate declined yet again in the fourth quarter of 2012, according to a new report from the U.S. Census. It now stands at 65.4 percent, down from 66 percent a year ago and from a high of 69.2 percent in 2004. If you include the 5.3 million borrowers who are delinquent on their mortgages or in the foreclosure process, per Lender Processing Services, the real home-ownership rate is even lower.

"The fact that the housing recovery is being driven principally by investor demand means that the slight decline in the homeownership rate in the fourth quarter is unlikely to be the last," notes Paul Diggle of Capital Economics.

Read More:?World's Most Expensive City to Rent Is...

There is also a tremendous amount of pent-up demand for the rental market, as nearly 23 million young adults, male and female, under age 35 (31 percent of the cohort) are currently classified as "living at home"?with parents, according to Raymond James' analysis. As job growth improves, they will move to rental apartments; the homeownership rate for this group is only 34 percent.

Investors are also concerned about a 49 percent jump in multi-family construction permits from a year ago, but those permits are still running well below normal levels, and every year about 150,000 units are removed from housing stock for various reasons, like age and damage.

The apartment sector and the multi-family REITs will likely see a surprise to the upside in 2013. Rents will still rise, despite housing affordability and growth in the single-family market.

Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/business/women-driving-demand-rental-apartments-1B8166178

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Mottola stands by 'obsessive' Mariah mentoring

By Randee Dawn, TODAY contributor

There are many elements that go into the making of a superstar, and with a talent like Mariah Carey's, some special handling is often needed. In the case of Tommy Mottola, the former Sony Music Entertainment executive ?who mentored the current "American Idol" judge as she rose up the charts, that included marrying her.

Their five-year union was rocky, and she's since been quoted as calling him "controlling" and "a Svengali."?But Mottola, who joined TODAY's Matt Lauer Tuesday to discuss his new book "Hitmaker: The Man and His Music," was not exactly apologetic about his behavior, because it got results.

"I think anybody that's successful becomes obsessive about what they're trying to succeed at," he said. "I have nothing but the greatest respect for her in the world.... I feel great about all the things she's achieved as a result of all the work that we did."

That said, he does regret getting personally involved with Carey, who at 23 was 20 years his junior when they wed. "You can never control sometimes what happens in your personal life, as we all know," he said. "The good thing that came out of all of this is that she became one of the most successful superstars in the world."

Mottola also worked with other stars who had diva tendencies, including Michael Jackson -- who he called "the most talented artist that I've probably ever worked with," but "there were too many people who didn't tell him the things that probably would have helped him."

And because he's been associated with such great names throughout the music business, Lauer naturally wanted to get Mottola's opinion on the Beyonce lip-syncing pseudo-scandal. For her, Mottola was unequivocal: "Beyonce is one of the greatest singers in the world, and my feeling is, any time that she wants to get up and sing, she can sing as well if not better than anyone, and everyone should just leave Beyonce alone!"

More in TODAY Entertainment:

Source: http://todayentertainment.today.com/_news/2013/01/29/16753582-tommy-mottola-unapologetic-about-obsessive-mentoring-of-mariah-carey?lite

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Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Gulf Finance Launches Gulf Finance Medical Leasing ? World ...

Gulf Finance Medical Leasing is the first business of its type in the GCC to offer this service and will target the UAE healthcare sector initially before addressing other significant market opportunities across the region. The global market for the lease of medical equipment is growing rapidly and will be valued at AED 205 billion by 2017 with leasing being the preferred method to finance medical equipment in Europe and the United States where 40 per cent of all medical equipment is leased.

HH Sheikh Maktoum bin Hasher Al Maktoum, Executive Chairman of SHUAA, and Chairman of the Board of Gulf Finance said, ?SMEs typically account for more than 95 per cent of all businesses in a country, and Gulf Finance is committed to contributing to the growth of the UAE?s SMEs by aiming to provide for more than 10 per cent of the SME credit requirement in 2013. The healthcare industry ? which is one of the fastest growing SME sectors ? is booming, backed by rising incidence of chronic diseases and a growing need for medical procedures, products, and services. However, with rapid advancements in technologies, and surging prices for medical equipment; hospitals, healthcare practitioners, physicians and clinics find it difficult to maintain their budget. Medical equipment leasing comes to the rescue in this scenario and Gulf Finance Medical Leasing is the first business to ever address this market need in our region.?

The UAE and Saudi Arabia?s medical equipment markets alone are valued at AED 5 billion per annum with the wider Middle East and African markets valued at approximately AED 15 billion per annum. Key drivers to this growth are an increasing older population, the rising prevalence of lifestyle diseases such as obesity, diabetes, and hypertension; as well as the speed of new medical technologies coming to the market.

Medical equipment leasing has multiple benefits for health professionals. The latest equipment can be leased on a monthly fee basis usually for three years at which juncture it can be returned, purchased or upgraded for new state of the art equipment. There is no need for major capital expenditure for equipment with cash flows subsequently improved for businesses.

Within the monthly fee, all installation, maintenance and upgrade costs are included. The fee begins once the equipment is delivered. No down payment is required with a quick and simple application process bypassing the complexities and personal guarantees required by bank loans.

Gulf Finance Medical Leasing is headed by Kai Trompeter, an international healthcare professional who helped set it up and is the Managing Partner for the division. In the last decade Trompeter has held several CEO and board positions mostly in the healthcare sector, including Germany, China, Ukraine, USA, Mexico and the United Arab Emirates. In the recent past, Trompeter has advised investors and government organisations on developing healthcare projects. As a Board member of a Mexican healthcare management company, with almost 200 hospitals under contract in a Public-Private-Partnership, he was responsible for the global supply chain management. He is supported by a team of medical experts from a range of healthcare specialities including diagnostic imaging and endoscopy, amongst others.

Steve Williams, Group Chief Executive Officer, Gulf Finance said, ?Gulf Finance Medical Leasing represents a first for the GCC market and once again confirms Gulf Finance? position as a pioneering financial institution in the region. The healthcare sector both here in the UAE and across the region is growing rapidly and is one of our major focus SME sectors as most of these hospitals and clinics that we will cater for are small or medium sized enterprises. Our leasing option is a cost effective way for healthcare businesses to retain their state of the art service offering without being weighed down by ownership of equipment, which is often surpassed by new technologies very quickly.

?We believe that Healthcare in the Gulf due to demographic changes and massive investments is changing quickly with medical equipment leasing becoming a key component of this growth. Our new Medical Leasing division is uniquely positioned to capitalise on this demand.?

Kai Trompeter said, ?Gulf Finance Medical Leasing offers a unique product and service to the region?s healthcare sector which is poised for significant growth in the years ahead. Our solution provides flexibility and supersedes the need for healthcare businesses to make significant capital investment upfront for equipment that quickly becomes obsolete with the evolution of new technologies. All members of our management team have a valuable wealth of medical expertise in medical technology, hospital management and the healthcare supply chain, which means we understand the business requirements for the healthcare sector and can promise to fulfil their professional needs and even exceed expectations.

We also pride ourselves on being supplier and brand independent; which allows us to offer the widest possible selection of medical equipment. Our monthly fee model is transparent and represents an all-inclusive cost which ensures there are no hidden charges or surprises. Healthcare businesses and professionals can therefore continue to invest in their businesses while managing their cash flows and on-going success.?

SOURCE:?http://www.cpifinancial.net/news/post/18259/gulf-finance-launches-gulf-finance-medical-leasing

Source: http://www.worldleasingnews.com/news/gulf-finance-launches-gulf-finance-medical-leasing/

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Gas leak proves fatal at Samsung chip plant in Korea

Gas leaks proves fatal at Samsung chip plant in Korea

A maintenance contractor called out to fix a hydrofluoric acid leak at a Samsung plant has died in hospital, according to Korean media. Four others were injured by the lethal gas but have reportedly been discharged. The factory in question is located within South Korea, which isn't known for the sort of lax safety standards that plague workers in China, but AsiaE reports that the accident will nevertheless be investigated to find out if any laws were breached in the way the leak was handled, and if the killed contractor was wearing the right protective gear. For the sake of context, it's worth remembering that even state-of-the-art installations can be prone to accidents -- in 2011, for example, seven American workers were injured in an explosion at Intel's semiconductor fab in Arizona.

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Via: The Verge, The Next Web

Source: AsiaE, Yonhap News, CriEnglish

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/01/28/samsung-gas-leak/

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Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Epic Drives: Cheating Death Valley in a Ford ... - Automotive Blogs

For those of us that live in Los Angeles, the madness and crush of the city, the sensory overload of any city, can be too much. On the latest episode of Epic Drives, the crew escape the city to the wild and desolate Mojave Dessert. But the question remains, what vehicle is suited to tackle such a feral environment? The Ford F-150 SVT Raptor, of course. With off-road capability as extensive as its name, the Raptor extracts power from its massive 6.2-liter V-8 engine, good for 411 horsepower.

The crew encounters snow, sand dunes, mountains, elevation changes and desolate landscape. From old mining country, to old native American trails and lands, this is one truly Epic Drive. ?You can catch all the action and the beautiful scenery in the video below.

Source: Epic Drives

Source: http://blogs.automotive.com/epic-drives-cheating-death-valley-in-a-ford-svt-raptor-125777.html

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Monday, January 28, 2013

Five Myths About Colorectal Cancer - Relay For Life of Polk County ...


Many times, colorectal cancer can be prevented. Still, it's one of the 5 most common cancers in men and women in the United States. Colorectal cancer is also one of the leading causes of cancer death in the United States. Don't let these 5 common myths stop you from getting the lifesaving tests you need, when you need them.

Myth: Colorectal cancer is a man?s disease.

Truth: Colorectal cancer is just as common among women as men. Each year, about 150,000 Americans are diagnosed with colorectal cancer, and about 50,000 die from the disease.

Myth: Colorectal cancer cannot be prevented.

Truth: In many cases colorectal cancer can be prevented. Colorectal cancer almost always starts with a small growth called a polyp. If the polyp is found early, doctors can remove it and stop colorectal cancer before it starts. These tests can find polyps: double contrast barium enema, flexible sigmoidoscopy, colonoscopy, or CT colonography (virtual colonoscopy).

To help lower your chances of getting colorectal cancer:

* Get to and stay at a healthy weight.
* Be physically active.
* Limit the amount of alcohol you drink.
* Eat a diet with a lot of fruits and vegetables, whole grains, and less red or processed meat.

Myth: African Americans are not at risk for colorectal cancer.

Truth: African-American men and women are diagnosed with and die from colorectal cancer at higher rates than men and women of any other US racial or ethnic group. The reason for this is not yet understood.

Myth: Age doesn?t matter when it comes to getting colorectal cancer.

Truth: More than 90% of colorectal cancer cases are in people age 50 and older. For this reason, the American Cancer Society recommends you start getting tested for the disease at age 50. People who are at a higher risk for colorectal cancer -- such as those who have colon or rectal cancer in their families -- may need to begin testing at a younger age. Talk to your doctor about when you should start getting tested.

Myth: It?s better not to get tested for colorectal cancer because it?s deadly anyway.

Truth: Colorectal cancer is often highly treatable. If it is found and treated early (while it is small and before it has spread), the 5-year survival rate is about 90%. But because many people are not getting tested, only about 4 out of 10 are diagnosed at this early stage when treatment is most likely to be successful.

Source: http://polkcountyrfl.blogspot.com/2013/01/five-myths-about-colorectal-cancer.html

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Traditional Western Medicine Compared to Holistic ... - Tips Health

Traditional Western Medicine Compared to Holistic Medicine
Reviewed by tipshealth on
Rating: 4.5

Holistic Medicine ? The Western medicine community recently asked the question: Will Alternative Healthcare, a.k.a. Holistic, Metaphysical, Energy or Mind, Body, Spirit healing and Western Medicine (WM) merge? This question implies there is certainly reason to wonder and/or we should take into account the benefits a merger might create. The reflection on merging Holistic, Metaphysical, Energy or Mind, Body, Spirit healing and Western Medicine is analogues to comparing apples to oranges. The one comparison between apples and oranges is they are generally fruit?though the comparison ends there. Holistic, Metaphysical, Energy or Mind, Body, Spirit Healing and Western Medicine is diametrically polar opposites without a penny in keeping, except the topic (you). I most certainly will explain.

So that you can understand the ideology of Western Medicine, it is advisable to examine the language utilised by doctors and researchers. Their phrasing reveals their belief systems plus the models they choose to be aware of how they think healing works. When observing the condition of Western Medicine as well as the unprecedented influence of pharmaceuticals and also over-the-counter (OTC) drugs, a motivating paradox arises. The drug companies declare that pharmaceuticals and OTC are able to do wonders if you are: reduce cholesterol, end depressive disorder, reverse osteoporosis, eliminate allergies, cure cancer, cure MS, calm children and a lot of other similar promises.

If prescription or OTC medicine is so excellent for individuals, where are common the healthy medicated customers? In reality, there aren?t, any. There?s nobody taking twelve prescriptions or OTC drugs having a clean bill of health. In point of fact, the harder prescriptions somebody takes, the worse their overall fitness. If you approach the healthiest people you?ll find and have what medications or OTC drugs they?re consuming order for being so healthy, they?ll provide confused look: Healthy people do not take prescription or OTC drugs!

This type of language is just not uncommon from researchers in Western Medicine. They perceive the skin to be a battleground on what wars are waged against invaders (viruses, transmissions and tumors). You start with the Victorian times, Western society has grown to be enslaved by quick fixes and results without effort. Western Medicine has occasionally provided this result. When Western Medicine doesn?t create a ?band aid? result the correct answer is: ?Sorry, it couldn?t be helped?the surgery was obviously a success, the individual died.? It truly is interesting to see the AMA reports a dismal recovery rate?approximately 250,000 people die every year on account of misdiagnosis and/or treatment does nothing reely to raise the individual?s health. Put simply these folks didn?t die on account of a health problem they died a result of the wrong treatment.

Western Medicine?s theory and doctrines forget to notice that diseases usually are not outside of the individual. In reality every disease might be better called a manifestation in the patient?s lifestyle, beliefs, and energies. Cancer isn?t a tumor, for example: this is a systemic disorder that may only truly be cured by assisting to offer the body, not by attacking it with chemical bombs or knives. The tumor is just one physical expression with the systemic disorder, and treatment of tumor does absolutely nothing to cure the condition. Your body was designed to heal itself?trained with contains the care?nutrition, herbs, spiritual and emotional well-being.

One?s body was created to heal itself provided it?s the best support to accomplish its job. Chinese medicine (TCM) is founded on a solid idea of balanced qi (pronounced ?chee?), or vital energy, that?s considered to flow through the entire body. Qi is proposed to manage ones spiritual, emotional, mental, and physical balance and also to be influenced with the opposing forces of yin (negative energy) and yang (positive energy). Disease is proposed to be a consequence of the flow of qi being disrupted and yin and yang becoming imbalanced. On the list of pieces of TCM are herbal and nutritional therapy, restorative physical exercises, meditation, acupuncture, and remedial massage.

Source: http://tipshealth.org/traditional-western-medicine-compared-to-holistic-medicine/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=traditional-western-medicine-compared-to-holistic-medicine

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Video: Don?t wing it game day: Possible shortages, price jumps for chicken wings

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Source: http://video.today.msnbc.msn.com/today/50597806/

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Saturday, January 26, 2013

Weather keeps search for Antarctica plane grounded

Lynn M. Arnold / National Science Foundation via AP

A De Havilland Twin Otter like the one missing since Wednesday lands at the National Science Foundation's Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station in 2003.

By John Newland, Staff Writer, NBC News

Bad weather continued to stop rescuers from searching for a Canadian airplane that went missing in Antarctica with three people on board, officials in New Zealand rescue team said Friday.?

Though winds, which had been blowing at over 100 mph, had calmed to just over 20 mph by 5 p.m. Friday New Zealand time (11 p.m. ET Thursday), conditions would not allow sighting of the downed twin-engine airplane.

?Visibility is down to (1,300 feet) and the snow is almost horizontal,? Kevin Branaghan, an official with Rescue Coordination Center New Zealand, said in a statement. ?The weather is expected to improve slightly after 12-24 hours.?

The plane, owned by Kenn Borek Air of Calgary, Alberta, was on its way from the U.S.-run Amundsen-Scott South Pole station to Italy?s Mario Zucchelli station while supporting an Italian research project, according to the National Science Foundation, which manages U.S. programs on the icy continent.

It took off at about 3 a.m. ET Wednesday and flew for an hour before its emergency locator beacon was detected in New Zealand, which is responsible for monitoring that section of Antarctica.

The beacon was tracked to a spot about 11,000 feet above sea level at the northern end of the Queen Alexandra Mountain range, some 400 miles from the aircraft?s departure point near the South Pole, rescue-team spokesman Michael Flyger said Thursday.

Hours of flyovers by aircraft from the United States, Canada and New Zealand proved fruitless because of cloud cover and blowing snow, he said.

'Extremely cold'
Kenn Borek Air said in a Thursday statement that weather had kept another of its planes from landing at a makeshift airbase 35 miles from the site of the locator beacon.

The company has otherwise released little information, saying it is ?maintaining a respectful silence? until the fate of the plane is known.

If the plane has crashed, any survivors would have faced extreme conditions in the mountains, Rescue Coordination Center spokesman Flyger said Thursday.

?It?s a cold place to start with,? he said. ?The elevation is around 11,000 feet so ... combined with the wind and snow ... it?s going to be extremely cold.?

Flyger noted that the crew was carrying heavy-duty, cold-weather gear and a five-day supply of water.

"We are still operating with the expectation that we will find them alive," his colleague Branaghan said Friday.

The search-and-rescue team's website, however, referred to searching for a "crash site."

Related:

100 mph winds halt search for missing plane

Plane with 3 on board missing near South Pole

Source: http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/25/16695865-weather-keeps-antarctic-search-for-missing-canadian-plane-grounded?lite

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A 12-Step Program for the Republican Party

Step 1: Admit the Problem

The modern Republican Party has a disease.

It?s nothing to be ashamed of; everyone has a relative who has been afflicted with the same malady, loves someone who has gone through it. President Obama?s Democratic Party has an uncle, John Kerry?s Democratic Party, that had the sickness. And its uncle, Walter Mondale?s Democratic Party, might have had one of the worse cases anyone has ever seen.

Such a crippling condition is widely observed and freely diagnosed. There is no shortage of advice. But, ultimately, it?s up to the patient to accept and admit something is wrong. And after a decade in denial, the GOP seems to have finally reached that point.

Some addicts are confronted through an intervention. Others run to Oprah. In the case of a political party that appears to have lost the capacity to win national elections, redemption starts with establishing something called the Growth and Opportunity Project, a five-member group tasked with identifying the party?s foremost problems and solutions for moving forward. Consider it the Washington version of a cry for help.

One thing is already clear: Recovery won?t be quick, easy, or painless. There are no Band-Aids capable of closing the wounds opened by years of self-mutilating politics. The GOP faces complex problems that require comprehensive solutions. ?Our policy and our messaging go hand in hand,? says one of the panel?s members, Sally Bradshaw, who is a longtime Florida-based strategist. She argues that the Republicans are incapable of restoring their brand ?until both improve,? stressing: ?You can?t work on one without the other.?

Admitting the problem is always the first, and the most difficult, step in any rehabilitation process. Republicans, having suffered consecutive general-election defeats brought on by conditions capable of creating a permanent political minority, are at last stepping to the lectern and clearing their throats.

?We evolve, or we become extinct,? says Sen. Rand Paul, the Kentucky Republican whose inherited libertarian gene stands out in Washington but has proved more popular in the provinces. The postelection math demonstrates plainly that if the GOP cannot amplify its appeal to Hispanic, younger, and female voters, among others, it will be forced to resort to the type of redistricting chicanery that anchored its House majority last year to keep any measure of national power. ?If we can?t figure out how to grow and appeal to those other groups, we?ll become extinct. We already are essentially extinct on the West Coast and in New England,? Paul says.

The party needs to change, and if it can do so without committing what some will deem betrayal of its principles, all the better. But the demographic clock is ticking quickly, and not in Republicans? favor. In the 2012 presidential election, GOP pollster Glen Bolger notes, ?we held Democrats to 39 percent of the white vote? and still lost. ?I don?t know that you can push them much lower than that.?

Much of what?s necessary is already understood. The party needs dynamic and diverse candidates, and much ink has already been disgorged on how Sen. Marco Rubio or Govs. Susana Martinez or Bobby Jindal could resuscitate the Republican brand. The party needs to locate a coherent message and, ideally, pair it with policies that attract, rather than repel, voters, says Dave Carney, adviser to Rick Perry?s presidential campaign and a veteran of the George H.W. Bush White House. ?We absolutely need to get out of this mind-set that says we only need to campaign to people who think like we do.?

But, by definition, they need to do so without shedding any more of their core voters than they absolutely have to. Indeed, Republicans face a paradox that is equal parts political and mathematical: how to maximize their gains while minimizing their losses. Carney says, ?The idea that we need to change our beliefs and our values and our philosophy to appeal to new people means that we don?t respect the philosophy and values of the 65 million people who are already with us.... We didn?t lose because we?re conservative, and we?re not going to win by being more liberal. We?re not going to be the better liberals.?

The Growth and Opportunity panel knows the obvious, that the party?s stammering on immigration is destructive, that gay rights has overtaken the GOP in the minds of the electorate in many parts of the country, that diehard conservatives have not lionized their party?s nominee since Ronald Reagan. From a strategic standpoint, they know they?ve fallen dangerously behind the Democrats, whose organizational advantage in 2012 was unprecedented. These are symptoms of a devastating illness, one that can be cured only with a commitment to incremental improvement. Admitting the problem is the first step. And, after conversations with more than two dozen party officials, activists and strategists, here are 11 more.

Step 2: Go Outside Your Comfort Zone

When Mitt Romney told a crowd of wealthy donors last year that 47 percent of Americans would never vote for him, he unwittingly legitimized the long-held notion that Republicans view certain segments of the electorate as unworthy of engagement. African-Americans, union members, welfare recipients, the poor?these groups? unwillingness to vote Republican is predestined by the GOP?s unwillingness to ask for their votes in the first place. The 2012 election, in which Romney, appropriately, won 47 percent of the vote, starkly demonstrates that such an approach is ?dinosauric,? as Carney puts it.

The proof is in the pudding. On only a handful of occasions during the 2012 race did the Republican ticket venture into truly hostile, unfamiliar territory. These infrequent forays?Romney?s visit to a predominantly black school in Philadelphia, running mate Paul Ryan?s poverty speech in Cleveland, Romney?s address to the NAACP convention?were defined by two themes. First, they skipped safe, suburban stops targeting wealthy, white voters in favor of unscripted, urban events targeting low-income and minority voters. Second, they were essentially token gestures aimed at assuring the former audience of the party?s compassion rather than convincing the latter audience of its commitment to their cause.

?The Republican Party has always been very good at saying, ?We include everyone,? but they?ve never taken time to show it,? says South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley. Her point invites the fundamental question: Do Republicans ignore these communities because they don?t want to engage them, or because they don?t know how? ?It all starts with relationships,? says former Rep. J.C. Watts, R-Okla., an African-American who has long called on his party to reach out to new constituencies. ?We think that we can attract people to the party without having relationships with them. But we don?t know them. And they don?t know us. The black community doesn?t know the Republican Party. The Hispanic community doesn?t know the Republican Party.?

Indeed, Republicans have long espoused rhetorical aspirations of ?lifting up? the downtrodden and ?providing opportunity? for the poor, but when it comes to delivering such promises in person, the GOP has been AWOL. ?The messaging doesn?t matter if you?re not reaching out,? Haley says. ?It?s not what you say; it?s what you do.? Watts takes it a step further: ?In politics, outreach without relationships leads to rejection.?

Now that they?ve been roundly rejected in consecutive elections, Republicans finally sound willing to walk the walk. That means campaigning vigorously in urban areas and aggressively courting the minority vote?and knowing that those efforts won?t yield immediate dividends. ?Winning back these voters is not going to happen with an event, or a 5-point plan. It?s going to take hard work,? says Kevin Madden, a senior adviser to Romney?s presidential campaigns. ?The effort to win back some of these groups may seem fruitless, but a journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.?

It?s often said that in politics, demography is destiny. With white voters constituting a shrinking slice of the electorate, Republicans can no longer afford to ignore these ?nontraditional? voters. It?s perhaps the hardest, and most important, lesson learned from 2012. ?We can never, ever again adopt this mentality,? Madden says, his voice dripping with regret, ?that a large section of the American electorate is off-limits to Republicans.?

Step 3: Speak Their Language

The Republican Party must solve what Bolger calls a ?math problem? that?s straightforward and startling: Hispanics are the fastest-growing faction of the American electorate, and only 27 percent of them punched the GOP ticket in 2012. If demography is destiny, the party faces an existential crisis; unaddressed, it is capable of rendering Republicans uncompetitive in national elections for decades to come.

To their credit, Republicans seem to be viewing last year?s results as a blessing in disguise, an overdue wake-up call for the party to recalibrate its rhetoric on the issue that largely created this demographic disconnect: immigration. Republicans ?have become very doctrinaire on the issue of immigration,? says conservative activist and RedState editor Erick Erickson. Bolger says, ?We?ve been tending to give the middle finger to Hispanic voters.? Republicans have sounded ?harsh, strange, and impractical,? when speaking about immigration, concurs veteran GOP strategist Fred Malek. Almost across the board, Republican politicians, having stepped back to survey the damage, are reaching the same painful conclusion: Their harsh rhetoric synthesized with obstructionist attitudes to create a perfect political storm driving Hispanics straight into the Democratic camp.

Having belatedly identified the problem, GOP insiders now sound genuinely determined to fix it. In conversations with several dozen party leaders, a broad consensus emerged that their top priority should be tempering their message, starting with a fundamental acknowledgement that immigration is a human issue as much as it is an economic or security matter. ?We?re talking about people here, not just numbers,? says Jennifer Korn, executive director of the Hispanic Leadership Network, a conservative organization.

She blames the ethnic exodus to Democrats on callous GOP rhetoric that stereotyped Hispanics and addressed them as a monolith. ?When you start talking about immigration in terms of ?us versus them,? you?re turning off the Hispanic community, even the documented Hispanic community,? Korn says. ?It becomes an anti-Hispanic issue.?

But while Republicans universally accede to the urgency of fixing their message, such a consensus does not exist on the policy front. Amid renewed calls for pathways to citizenship, conservative hard-liners continue to question whether such concessions would reap any political dividends. Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, author of Arizona?s controversial anti-immigration law, recalls what happened after Ronald Reagan signed an amnesty package in 1986:

Republicans won a significantly smaller percentage of the Hispanic vote in 1988 (30 percent) than they had in 1980 (35 percent) or 1984 (37 percent). For that reason, among others, Kobach believes that the ?law and order? stance continues to be ?the most advantageous position? for the GOP. ?We can improve our outreach and expand and amplify our message ... without embracing amnesty,? he says. ?We don?t have to abandon our principles to improve our message.? Still, more and more Republicans are questioning what their ?principles? call for. For a party that stresses the value of family and community, prescribing ?self-deportation? as your primary policy solution seems disingenuous.

Moving forward, Republicans would do well to reject the false choice between being the ?pro-amnesty? party and the ?self-deportation? party. A middle ground exists, one with serious policy solutions complementing a softer tone and a more realistic message. Whether Republicans discover it could very well determine their party?s political prosperity for generations.

Step 4: Go Big On Education

If immigration is the most dangerous policy issue facing Republicans, education is viewed as the most politically advantageous. Recent polling shows public dissatisfaction with public-school performance at an all-time high, and with Democrats hamstrung by their allegiance to teachers unions?one of the country?s truly commanding special interests?Republicans are ideally positioned to lead on an issue with an unlimited political upside. Even though education policy is forged primarily at the state and local level, Republicans are confident that the issue transcends ideology and resonates across demographic divides, and they appear poised to orchestrate a long-overdue offensive aimed at pushing issues such as school choice and teacher accountability to the forefront of the national political dialogue.

Artur Davis, the former House member from Alabama who last year defected from the Democratic Party to the GOP, captures the sentiment of many when he says of education reform, ?No other issue even comes close in its potential for the Republican Party.? Across the board, party strategists are strikingly bullish on education, and mostly for the same two reasons. First, fighting for better schools reinforces the bedrock Republican principles of opportunity, competition, and family values; second, they believe Democrats are increasingly beholden to teachers unions and would never risk a conflict with that powerful constituency by spearheading serious reforms to union-patrolled school systems.

Buried beneath those strategic political layers, however, lies an abrasively populist argument about ?fairness.? Education-reform advocates argue that America?s public schools are failing to facilitate social mobility among those who need it most: low-income students (many of them minority) living in urban environments with lower funding and less parental involvement than children in suburban school districts enjoy. ?Education is the civil-rights issue of our era? was how Romney explained it on the campaign trail last year. That message resonates beyond the Republican base because it speaks to ?upward mobility,? says Henry Barbour, a member of the Republican National Committee and another of the five Growth and Opportunity Project panelists.

Davis acknowledges the political advantage of fighting for equality in education and says that school-reform efforts, especially those concentrated in urban areas, could provide ?a huge opening? for the GOP to make inroads with traditional Democratic constituencies. ?If we can help low-income kids have access to private schools ... and create more accountability in public education,? Davis predicts, ?it?s a winning message for Republicans all across the country.?

Step 5: Let the Libertarian Flag Fly

There?s been only one ?revolution? attached to the Republican Party in the quarter-century since Ronald Reagan vacated the White House, and it wasn?t inspired by Romney or John McCain but rather by their unlikeliest rival?Ron Paul. Although he twice failed to claim his party?s presidential nomination, the recently retired House member served notice to the GOP establishment in his 2008 and 2012 campaigns that a new era of Republicanism was stirring beneath the political surface: a youthful insurrection defined by less government intrusion and more personal freedom.

GOP strategist Karl Rove, the famed ?architect? of George W. Bush?s two presidential victories, says libertarianism ?has always been the most attractive gateway? for Republicans to seduce young voters. ?The difference this time around,? Rove adds, ?is that some of the libertarian appeal is driven by drugs,? a platform that he argued is incompatible with mainstream Republicanism. ?My sense is that economic libertarianism is the most durable part of the GOP platform,? he says.

The man who now carries Paul?s torch?his son Rand?agrees that fiscal conservatism is the linchpin of any libertarian movement, but he cautions against dismissing other issues viewed by establishment Republicans as ?outside the mainstream.? On topics from data privacy to Internet freedom to marijuana decriminalization, the younger Paul says Republicans can ?soften their image? and maximize the party?s appeal to young voters and independents by arguing for personal responsibility over government regulation. Ultimately, Paul says that he?s discovered ?the answer? to his party?s recent struggles: ?a more libertarian-themed Republican outlook? uniting broad factions with a low-tax, limited-government platform that steers clear of expensive, endless wars and de-emphasizes divisive fights over social issues.

Iowa Republican Party Chairman A.J. Spiker, who managed the elder Paul?s 2012 presidential campaign, says the GOP?s recent libertarian streak (several Paulites have won election to Congress since 2008) speaks to a desire among some Republicans for the party to ?return to its roots? of limited government that defends the little guy. Whether that means battling big government over monetary policy, big military over bottomless defense budgets or Big Brother over Internet privacy, a partial Republican embrace of libertarian ideology could signal an upheaval of party orthodoxy and a decided turn in the direction of a leaner, laissez-faire populism.

Step 6: Bring Back The Bootstraps

The Republican presidential primary battle lingered so long because of the party?s existential divide between its upscale, managerial wing and its downscale, populist wing, embodied in the durability of Rick Santorum?s candidacy. Nothing new there (see Rockefeller, Nelson). But the urgent threat of schism has Republicans conducting an invigorated examination of how to close the breach.

Many in the party believe that the GOP needs to divorce itself not just from big government but also from big everything: business, oil, military. ?They need to move toward simplifying life,? Erickson says. ?The tea-party movement and the Occupy Wall Street movement share a common strain, and they both think the deck is stacked against the entrepreneur, the average American, the little guy.?

Distancing itself from Wall Street would chill much of the party?s financing mechanism. But Romney was the most successful fundraiser in the party?s history, and he perished in the shadow of his own evident callousness toward the less affluent.

?We should be fighting over the poor,? says Arthur Brooks, president of the American Enterprise Institute. ?Right now, the Left triangulates the poor and the Right ignores the poor. It?s no good.? We should have a rumble about who?s more pro-poor, because it?s the decent thing to do.?

One place to start would be the big banks. The Wall Street bailout polled poorly across the political spectrum, and some party strategists believe that Romney?s disparagement of the ?47 percent? shaped an avenue for the party to break from that perception of snobbery and extend its appeal to the working and middle classes.

Former Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels, whose Harley-riding image and wonkish background helped inculcate early hopes that he could bridge the divide, puts it thusly: ?We do not believe in ?haves? and ?have-nots? in this country; it?s ?haves? and ?yet-to-haves.? ... You don?t have to change one thing; in fact, the superiority of free-market principles and pro-growth policies for people at the bottom should be our central point. And some folks in the Republican Party just aren?t very articulate in saying that.? I believe in agreeing to disagree on the social issues. I believe in looking for ways to be on the front foot about immigration, possibly conservation.... They?re important, yes, but in a way they?re additional indicia of saying that the policies and principles we are advocating are very specifically aimed at the yet-to-haves in America, that they are our first, second, and third concern.?

It would be, at its core, a restoration, a journey back to the party?s aspirational tradition. ?We?re the bootstraps guys!? Brooks says.

Step 7: Just Say Yes

Republicans on Capitol Hill have been rebranded since 2008 as the reliable obstructionists, a group known more for its reflexive opposition (bank regulation, climate change, gun control, etc.) than its proactive problem-solving. Yet, ironically, health care, an issue that has largely defined the GOP as the lamentable ?Party of No,? offers an opportunity for Republicans to act more affirmatively.

While fewer than 20 states have opted to operate the insurance exchanges prescribed in the Affordable Care Act, the states still have time to decide whether to expand Medicaid. The Health and Human Services Department has showed openness to a fair approximation of what Republican governors say they want: flexibility in using Medicaid funds and a willingness to allow states to attempt to structure their own cost-reduction efforts.

Poetically, in their eagerness to perform end runs around Obama on health care, Republicans have an opportunity to assert their innovation spirit. And the administration is so hopeful for buy-in on the health care law that it?s granting broad leeway to those willing to meet them partway. Earlier this month, Utah?s insurance exchange, dubbed ?Avenue H,? won federal approval despite Gov. Gary Herbert?s refusal to provide plans for individuals through the exchange until next year. Herbert told HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius that Avenue H was truer to ?Utah principles? and that he preferred to stick with its current incarnation. Sebe?-lius complied.

The health care law also gives the GOP a way to reclaim the reformist imprimatur. Republicans, says Davis, the former Democrat, ?can?t be afraid of the word ?reform.? ? For party leaders, that pertains not just to health care but also to education, ethics, and campaign finance. The GOP philosophy ?can?t simply be a negative philosophy that is opposed to particular programs,? he says. ?Conservatism has seemed to be, to too many people, a purely oppositional philosophy.?

Jim Merrill, a New Hampshire GOP activist and a senior adviser to the Romney campaign, concludes, ?We need to be more proactive; we need to stand for something.?

Step 8: Leave the Labs Alone

The Republican Party?s greatest policy achievements over the past decade can be traced not to the halls of Congress or the Oval Office but to state legislatures and governor?s mansions. While the national GOP was busy blowing a hole in the deficit, expanding entitlements, and further bloating the federal bureaucracy, Republican governors worked with their legislatures to balance budgets, restructure pension programs, and adopt sweeping education reforms.

When it comes to reinventing the Republican brand, then, shouldn?t Washington look to the states for leadership instead of the other way around? Gentry Collins, a former RNC political director and executive director of the Iowa Republican Party, says yes. ?Regardless of whether it?s our party or the Democratic Party,? he says, ?modern political history is full of examples of the party out of power, with the damaged brand, being led back to national prominence in part by what comes out of the states, particularly by the governors.?

?The rebuilding of the party has to begin out in the states,? agrees the D.C.-based Madden, whose assessment speaks to a certain self-loathing simmering within the GOP establishment after consecutive presidential defeats.

Meanwhile, as Madden faults the ?Washington political complex? for dictating to the states, Spiker, the Iowa GOP chairman, blames the Beltway?s ?professional political industry? for crowding out citizen activists. These conflicts?national party versus state party, and D.C. establishment versus grassroots?are moving on parallel tracks and are dividing a party in desperate need of restoring its unity. Watts, the former House member who recently contemplated a run for chairman of the Republican National Committee, captures the spirit of both struggles: ?People [are] sick and tired of Washington thinking it knows best.?

RNC member Terri Lynn Land of Michigan says the solution is a balanced approach?some call it a ?partnership??in which Washington provides a macro political structure that allows states to manage their own problems with increased autonomy. ?Each state is unique, and each candidate is unique,? Land says. ?What Washington needs to learn is that one size does not fit all.?

Republicans are fond of highlighting their federalist roots when lauding America?s ?50 laboratories of democracy,? and urging Washington to delegate more to, and learn more from, the states. Ironically, the GOP could defuse both of these budding internecine rivalries by heeding its own advice. On the tactical front, the Washington consultant class has much to learn from activists on the ground: how to recruit, organize, and build a hyper-local campaign infrastructure capable of competing with Obama?s Organizing for America machine. On the policy front, states have set examples?cost-cutting privatization efforts in Indiana; school-saving education reforms in Florida; budget-balancing entitlement changes in New Jersey?that national Republicans would be prudent to emulate rather than ignore.

Step 9: Let It Die!

For many Republicans, the nadir of the recent primary season came during a Tea Party Express debate in Tampa, Fla., when moderator Wolf Blitzer pressed Ron Paul about whether a 30-year-old male who refused to buy health insurance should receive government assistance if stricken with a fatal illness. ?Congressman, are you saying the society should just let him die?? Blitzer demanded. ?Yeah!? hollered multiple people in the audience.

The moment exposed more than just the base?s animus toward the Affordable Care Act; it also laid bare perhaps the party?s greatest vulnerability: The perception lurking on the parapets that it is unfeeling and unsympathetic toward anyone ?different.? In no sphere did this prove more damaging than the massive losses resulting from the party?s stance on social issues. The implosion went beyond the intemperate comments on rape and abortion from the mouths of Senate candidates Todd Akin in Missouri and Richard Mourdock in Indiana. In multiple policy areas from gay marriage to birth control, Republicans came across as the party attempting to stand athwart history, only to watch it whiz blithely by. The nation, says Malek, the former aide to Richard Nixon and Bush 41, is ?irreversibly moving toward an acceptance of gay marriage.?

For Republicans, it is not an irreversible political problem, although the GOP-led House?s willingness to allow the Violence Against Women Act to expire at year?s hints at a too-gradual learning curve. The 11-point gender gap in November?s presidential exit polls (2 percentage points less than 2008?s divide) won?t fix itself.

One answer from forward-looking Republicans on how to resolve tensions over social issues is, unsurprisingly, to get these decisions as far away from Washington as possible. ?Evangelical Christians in the South don?t need to give up on their traditional view of family; I don?t think that should happen. But they should be tolerant of people in their party who have a different viewpoint from them,? says Rand Paul. Davis adds, ?The party has to be open to the regional realities of politics.?

Another solution, which crops up repeatedly, is to seize back the pro-family mantle, a reshaped one that is not, for instance, ipso facto exclusive of families with two parents of the same gender. ?When Republicans say ?family,? it?s a code word for anti-abortion, anti-gay-rights,? says former Rep. James Kolbe of Arizona, who went public about his homosexuality in 1996 after voting for the Defense of Marriage Act. ?When you talk about families, it?s got to be about kids growing up safe, about kids getting their education, about trying to retire comfortably. I get nervous when I hear Republicans talk about ?family.? ?

Not all Republicans will settle for moderation, though, pointing to a dangerous potential departure point for the party, an area where some moderates are willing to deal away the bedrock conservatives. Bob Vander Plaats, the Iowa Christian conservative leader, says, ?Mitt Romney called a truce on social issues? and points out that the nominee declined to participate in Chick-Fil-A day in support of the company CEO?s statements against gay marriage. ?At the same time, you had President Obama embracing social issues. The fact is, if you have one party or one campaign highlighting social issues and you?re not willing to debate them on a difference of viewpoint or worldview, then their worldview is going to win. The other side is not calling a truce; the other side is trying to reshape this culture on secular-progressive terms.? A truce, Vander Plaats says, is ?another term for surrender.?

To some extent the truce held; Romney shunned social issues, setting a precedent as the party?s standard-bearer. And, unlike in 2004, the GOP had no institutionalized efforts to leverage state ballot questions into up-ballot victories. That?s a template of intra-party tolerance that would work.

Step 10: Don't Go There

Just as Bill Clinton helped to repair his party?s fiscal-responsibility image with his New Democrat governing approach, Obama, in doggedly pursuing terrorists and in winding down the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, has reasserted his party?s ability to call itself aggressive on national security and foreign policy. Republicans have been left flailing, attempting to play gotcha over last year?s fatal attacks in Benghazi, Libya, rather than forming a coherent post-Bush foreign policy.

?Our country has become war-weary,? says Korn, a Bush White House veteran and a military spouse. Republicans ?had that issue probably until the last two years of the Bush presidency.?

Again, in the void lies opportunity. The GOP has a palpable isolationist strain, overshadowed by the hawkish wing represented by Sens. McCain and Lindsey Graham. Recall the House?s June 2011 rejection, fueled largely by antiwar Republican votes, of a measure to limit funding for the U.S. involvement in NATO?s intervention in Libya?s civil war.

Fortunately for Republicans, the political palatability of embracing its isolationist bloc dovetails with its current stated raison d??tre of cutting spending. Romney lost the election by 23 points among 18-to-29-year-old voters, who have watched their friends spend the past decade in war zones. Now the GOP has an opportunity to burnish its brand among these voters, whom Obama has owned. ?Traditionally, the peace candidate wins elections,? notes Spiker, who said that college students frequently approach him about bringing the troops home. ?We have done well as Republicans when we are the peace party. And I think Americans are ready to see us out of Afghanistan, and I think that?s something that the party, as it?s choosing candidates in the future, needs to look at.?

A changing of the guard on foreign policy won?t happen, however, without an internecine battle of epic proportions, considering the intensity with which neoconservatives loathe the party?s nascent libertarian wing. ?I don?t think ? the antiwar sentiment is durable. The Republican Party is not going to find itself in five or 10 years committed to neo-isolationsim,? Rove says confidently. ?It?s just not likely to happen.?

For now, the GOP?s most visible figures on foreign policy are graybeards McCain and Graham, interventionists both. But their third amigo, former Sen. Joe Lieberman, has been strategically replaced by Sen. Kelly Ayotte, the Republican from New Hampshire, who has the advantages of being female and young (44). This may signal an acknowledgment within the party that, at the very least, a generational shift on foreign policy might be prudent.

Step 11: Give Power to the People

Republicans are likely to win their first big confrontation with the Obama administration over energy policy, as most handicappers predict the Keystone XL pipeline will receive approval. Their second, much more consequential, battle will ensue over emissions rules on coal-fired power plants.

Republicans, and coal-state Democrats, are likely to treat this as the War on Coal?s Battle of the Bulge.

Obama?s reticence on energy and environmental issues, outrageous to the Left, has served as an impetus to those who see in the nation?s energy-generating potential a winning economic argument. Daniels, the newly installed president of Purdue University, cites energy as ?the single biggest break this economy?s gotten in decades? and calls for the ?absolute maximization? of energy exploration. Read: Party elders have no intention of backing away from ?drill, baby, drill.?

?Among those things that can be the most direct contributors to more opportunity in this country, there?s none bigger than the breakthrough in energy,? Daniels says, adding that anyone who stands in the way of aggressive resource cultivation ?will have a lot to explain to a country with enormous unemployment.?

Any explanation, of course, would flow from environmental, climate, and health concerns. But Daniels and others believe that voters, faced with choosing between conservation and spiking energy prices, will decide based on their wallets. ?You have to make it relatable to the guy filling up his tank for $80 or $90,? Merrill says.

Steph 12: Build It, and They Will Come

During Romney?s Massachusetts governorship, particularly in the early going before he spent much of his energy laying the groundwork for his 2008 White House bid, a signature initiative was an innovative approach to land-use policies. Marketed as ?smart growth,? the anti-sprawl efforts rewarded municipalities that pursued zoning reform to scale back lot-size minimums and to prioritize downtown transportation hubs around which mixed-use buildings could cluster; it was termed ?transit-oriented development.?

Its chief advocate, both within Romney?s Cabinet and publicly, was Doug Foy, a longtime environmentalist whose appointment as state development chief was viewed as an early demonstration of the governor?s willingness to cast broadly for a ?best and brightest? team. Foy framed smart growth as almost harking back to a more Rockwellian time. Towns prohibiting smaller lots and clustered real-estate development were, Foy says, ?literally creating a community where their children or their parents couldn?t live, because they couldn?t afford it.? Using his own daughter as an example, he points out that young people frequently couldn?t afford large suburban homes and thus had to live farther away from their families. ?It?s almost un-American to build communities that don?t have places for all the generations in a family,? he says.

Not only that, but providing the infrastructure for widely flung communities is more expensive: longer sewage pipes, electricity lines, routes for snowplows.

Romney shied from promoting his smart-growth past on the presidential campaign trail; if framed poorly, it can sound like the type of government ?overreach? not in vogue among the Republican base (?they?re going to tell me where I can and cannot build my house??). Indeed, Foy was increasingly sidelined as Romney?s gubernatorial term progressed, along with the administration?s pride in its smart-growth strategy. ?Early on, the political handlers got uncomfortable with the term ?smart growth,? because the talk-show crowd had decided smart growth was a bad idea,? Foy says.

But Republicans can devise a way to pursue and message smart growth?and, more broadly, infrastructure projects?that should appeal to budget hawks and business interests. In Michigan, Republican Gov. Rick Snyder continues to invest considerable political capital in building a second bridge between Detroit and Ontario, Canada, because he?s convinced it will create construction jobs in the short term and promote international commercial cooperation in the long term. The economically moribund Motor City badly needs such jolts, and Snyder stands to benefit politically if his infrastructure project delivers.

During last year?s transportation-bill grappling in Washington, House Republicans succeeded in stripping dedicated funding for mass transit from the final legislation, along with money for biking and pedestrian projects. That?s fine for a party eager to cater to rural voters who rely on highways to get around. But for one hoping to entice urban voters?not to mention voters who could be convinced of the cost-effectiveness of investments in transit?embracing such projects under the guise of thoughtful, long-term budgeting would likely reap dividends.

Under Romney?s long-since-abandoned development policy, smart growth was presented as an orderly strategy to combat sprawl, framed ?as an investment rather than spending.? Such a family-friendly approach to reining in local budgets should be recognizable to the GOP as any easy adjustment. And, like health care, it?s an area where states could take the lead role, without a massive federal mandate.

***

Maybe those are all the steps Republicans need to reposition themselves to regain power. Maybe none of them are. But the party has admitted its problem, and that?s the first and most promising one. Still, the GOP might benefit from a little help from above, perhaps through the intercession of Reagan, say, or Barry Goldwater or Robert Taft or Edmund Burke, as it seeks the serenity to accept the things it cannot change (demographic drift), the courage to change the things it can (voter outreach), and the wisdom to know the difference.

In the interim, expect plenty of meetings.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/12-step-program-republican-party-074305988--politics.html

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