Religious Influence In U.S. Seen As Decreasing, But Most Americans Want More: Survey

A majority of Americans believe that religion’s influence in the nation is waning, yet also think society would be better off if more Americans were religious, according to a new survey.

The results, released Wednesday by Gallup, represent some of the lowest ratings Americans have given to religious influence in the United States since the organization first began asking about the subject more than 40 years ago.

About 77 percent of Americans said religion is “losing its influence” on American life, while only 20 percent said religion has gained in influence.

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Loaded Gun Found On Disney World Ride By Woman With Her Grandson

LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. — A Walt Disney World patron on a ride with her grandson found a loaded gun on her seat.

Officials said Wednesday that the woman found the automatic gun on the Dinosaur ride at Animal Kingdom. The woman gave the loaded gun to a park attendant who then contacted her manager and authorities.

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Sergei Guriev, Anti-Putin Economist, Flees Russia After Being Questioned In Yukos Probe

By Douglas Busvine

MOSCOW, May 29 (Reuters) – A prominent economist and government adviser has fled Russia after being questioned by state investigators, amid a growing clamp-down on groups and individuals critical or independent of President Vladimir Putin.

Sergei Guriev, an English-speaking economist well known to Western investors, had been questioned as a witness in an investigation into the defunct Yukos oil company, whose founder Mikhail Khodorkovsky was jailed in 2005 for fraud.

His real transgression, supporters and commentators say, was to support Alexei Navalny, an anti-corruption campaigner who led protests against Putin’s return to the presidency which the Kremlin has been trying gradually to snuff out.

“He (Guriev) defended Khodorkovsky and said that the case was fabricated. An enemy? Of course,” Boris Nemtsov, a protest and opposition leader, said ironically. “He fights corruption? That betrays our fundamental ideals!”

Since Putin’s return to the Kremlin after four years as prime minister, the authorities have moved across a broad front to silence critics, with Navalny now on trial on fraud charges which he says are trumped up and politically motivated.

Non-governmental organisations such as rights groups, independent vote monitors and opinion pollsters that receive foreign funding have been told to register as “foreign agents”, a term with overtones of the Cold War and treason.

Guriev, the 41-year-old rector of Moscow’s New Economic School, has advised Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, served on the board of state bank Sberbank and is a leading commentator in the local and international press.

The flight of the liberal economist, a former visiting professor at the U.S. university of Princeton, was confirmed when Sberbank issued a statement saying he had declined to seek re-election to its board.

Sources familiar with the situation said he left Moscow in early May to join his family and was now in France. He had tendered his resignation as head of the NES, a post he has held since 2004, but his resignation has not yet been accepted.

Guriev, reached by Reuters, said his decision was personal, that he was “on vacation” and that he would not comment further.

“This is a very bad signal, definitely,” said Sergei Aleksashenko, another leading Moscow economist.

“He was the economist who was most affiliated to the government. The signal I read is that Medvedev is not willing, or able, to defend his supporters.”

Erik Berglof, chief economist at the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, said Guriev – a personal friend – had made a huge contribution to the policy debate in Russia as a speechwriter for Medvedev and an advocate of economic reform.

“LET HIM LEAVE”

The Kremlin denies cracking down on opponents or using the judiciary for political ends. Putin has laughed off accusations that he is tightening the screws on opponents.

“If he wants to leave, let him leave. If he wants to return, let him return. It’s his personal affair,” Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said.

Another official who declined to be named said there would be no impact on the investment climate – growth in investment has halted amid high capital outflows – but “another small log will be thrown on the furnace of anti-Russian hysteria”.

Putin critics saw Guriev’s flight as another sign of pressure on economic reformers, who are being marginalised.

The Investigative Committee, Russia’s most powerful law enforcement agency, said it had questioned Guriev in an unspecified investigation into Yukos, the oil firm that was bankrupted, broken up and sold off, mainly into state hands.

Guriev had previously given a critical expert opinion, said a source familiar with the matter, adding that he believed a new case was being prepared against Khodorkovsky.

Critics say the Investigative Committee is being used by a powerful faction of ‘siloviki’, or men of power who share Putin’s background in the security services, to remove liberals from positions of power or influence.

BACKING NAVALNY

It was Guriev’s institute that provided a stage for Barack Obama to deliver a keynote address during the U.S. president’s visit to Moscow in 2009 at the height of a ‘reset’ in relations.

Ties have since been blighted by rows over issues including Syria, human rights and a ban on the adoption of orphaned Russian children by American families.

Guriev had announced in a blog post last May – a week after Putin was sworn in – that he had donated 10,000 roubles ($320) to an anti-corruption project set up by Navalny. Navalny fears he will be jailed for 10 years but says protests, although they have now dwindled, will continue against Putin.

Guriev told Reuters last September that Putin could fall “overnight” if he fails to stamp out corruption and wean Russia off its economic dependency on oil and had questioned the fairness of recent elections.

“We all lived through the Soviet Union, which was forever until it was no more,” he said.

Guriev joins other independently minded public figures, including the founder of Russia’s largest online social network VKontakte, Pavel Durov, in leaving Russia under duress.

Some commentators said the departures could mark the start of a wave of emigration by Russia’s best and brightest, like those in the 1970s and after the 1917 Bolshevik revolution.

“They have gone pretty far, shifting from manipulative means to repressive ones,” said Maria Lipman, an analyst at the Carnegie Moscow Center. “It used to be that politics was banned. Now we are experiencing a ban on autonomy in the public space. To use Putin’s metaphor – we will call the tune.” ($1 = 31.4850 Russian roubles) (Additional reporting by Alexei Anishchuk, Editing by Timothy Heritage and Giles Elgood)

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Jim Graves, Michele Bachmann 2014 Opponent, Caught ‘Off-Guard’ By Timing Of Announcement

WASHINGTON — When Jim Graves, the Democratic challenger against Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.), learned his opponent was no longer seeking reelection, he was more surprised by the timing than the decision.

“The timing of the announcement really caught us off-guard,” he told The Huffington Post in a phone interview Wednesday, adding that he thought Bachmann might have pulled out of the race down the road. “We thought she was going full-speed ahead.”

The Minnesota Republican announced she was not running for reelection in a YouTube video posted very early Wednesday morning. Bachmann herself was in Russia as part of a congressional delegation to investigate the Boston Marathon bombings when the video was posted. Like Graves, many were taken aback by the news — just over a week ago, Bachmann announced a new round of television advertising touting her bill to repeal Obamacare.

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BlackBerry Q10 Reportedly Selling Faster Than iPhone 5, Galaxy S4 And HTC One In France

According to a new report the BlackBerry Q10 is outselling major smartphones such as HTC One, Galaxy S4 and iPhone 5 on France’s second largest mobile network.

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How to Walk On Water With Google Maps

Like many others I depend on Google Maps for my travels. I also like to go places where even Google Maps are on unsteady ground. In fact some friends who have seen maps of my hikes have asked how I learned to walk on water.

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Richard Hickock, Perry Smith DNA Tested For Link To Walker Family Murder

TOPEKA, Kan. — DNA testing so far has been inconclusive on whether two men executed in Kansas for the 1959 killings that inspired the book “In Cold Blood” can also be linked to the unsolved slayings of a Florida family weeks later, a senior investigator said Wednesday.

Kansas Bureau of Investigation will continue testing material collected from the remains of convicted murderers Richard Hickock and Perry Smith, Deputy Director Kyle Smith said. Investigators believe the men fled to Florida after killing the Clutter family in a gruesome case later documented by Truman Capote in his genre-forming classic.

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GALAXY S 4 now one of seven AWS-capable devices on Verizon

Though it was reported earlier this week that the Samsung GALAXY S 4 would be the first device on the market with the ability to work with Verizon’s next-generation mobile data network via AWS, it’s become apparent that this device is not alone. Straight from Verizon this afternoon comes word that there are actually seven devices already on the market with the ability to work with their AWS band when it’s activated later this year.

IMG_8184-580x386

In addition to the Samsung GALAXY S 4, the Nokia Lumia 928 is able to work with Verizon’s AWS, and the BlackBerry Q10 (launching with Verizon soon) will work with AWS as well. Verizon’s quote includes word of some unnamed devices we can figure out based on their current in-store supply as well.

NOTE: We’ve also reached out to Verizon once again to clarify which specific devices are being referred to in this list.

“Seven 4G LTE devices with AWS-capability are being sold by Verizon Wireless today. They include two Samsung 10-inch tablets, two jetpacks, a USB, the Samsung Galaxy S4 and the Nokia 928 Lumia. They will utilize the AWS band when it is activated later this year. The BlackBerry Q10, which launches soon, will also be AWS-capable.

The first device with AWS capability was put on the market in November of last year. Most of our 4G LTE devices going forward will be AWS-capable. They will require an over the air upgrade that we will push out once 4G LTE service on AWS spectrum is activated later this year.” – Verizon Spokesperson

As AWS is activated later this year, Verizon will make clear which devices wont (very few, if any) and which devices will be able to work with it. Verizon has been picking up AWS for many months now, with plans to expand and strengthen their wireless network in large cities line New York City first and forward similar to their initial push for 4G LTE several years ago.


GALAXY S 4 now one of seven AWS-capable devices on Verizon is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
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Jessica Simpson Pregnant: Singer Shows Off Huge Baby Bump (PHOTO)

Second time’s a breeze for Jessica Simpson who showed off her swelling baby bump Saturday in Los Angeles while dining at Boccali’s restaurant with her family. The 32-year-old singer and television personality is expecting a second child — a baby boy — with fiancé Eric Johnson.

Simpson recently admitted she was treating her second pregnancy differently than her first, for now one-year-old daughter Maxwell.

“The first pregnancy, I like, let loose and I kind of ate everything that I wanted to eat and I just really enjoyed it,” Simpson told Ellen DeGeneres in March. “This time around I think because I was doing Weight Watchers and I felt super healthy. I’m not really craving as much and I know how hard it is to get off, so I’m trying to make healthier, wiser decisions.”

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Paul Ryan Admits GOP Can’t Govern Without A Hostage Crisis

Rep. Paul Ryan, the House GOP’s budgetary chieftain, gave a brief but remarkable interview to the Washington Examiner’s David Drucker in which he essentially conceded that Republicans will only negotiate with Democrats over the budget if they can hold the U.S. economy hostage to increase their leverage.

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