Michele Bachmann Is Ready To Leave Congress — But Not Politics

WASHINGTON (AP) — An audacious conservative, Rep. Michele Bachmann stood out from the moment she was first elected to Congress in 2006. Democrats were ascendant and Bachmann was a stridently Republican new arrival with a homespun Minnesota twang.

Four terms later, Bachmann is leaving just as Republicans take control of Congress for the first time since she was first elected. After a turbulent career dotted by fights with the left and her own party, and a fast-rising and fast-fading presidential campaign, Bachmann said she is ready to leave, her work in Congress complete. “I didn’t get sucked into the system of Washington,” she said in an interview with The Associated Press. “I didn’t become a politician. I was a constitutional conservative.”

That role Bachmann carved for herself often placed her in the spotlight during her eight years in office. She provided a consistently conservative voice on television on issues ranging from health care to immigration, and even delivered a “tea party response” to President Barack Obama’s State of the Union address in 2011 that overlapped with her party’s official rebuttal.

Speaking on MSNBC in 2008, she said that Obama “may have anti-American views.” The comment led to a flood of donations to her opponent and a narrow, three-point victory in one of Minnesota’s most conservative congressional districts. In recent years, she has said Obama’s policies put America on a path to “Marxism.”

Bachmann has rarely walked anything back. “I don’t have a lot of regrets from my time here,” she said.

Democrats alternated between derision and anger at her outlandish comments, which even some former members of her staff say stretched the truth or were outright false. “Who cares?” Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi once responded, when asked about Bachmann’s response to a Supreme Court ruling that allowed gay marriages to go forward in many states.

Bachmann began her career as a tax attorney. She lost her first election, a bid for a school board seat, in 1999, but the next year her devout following of cultural conservatives first lifted her to victory in a competitive state Senate primary and again, when the 5th Congressional District seat opened, put her ahead of three other candidates at a nominating convention in 2006. No one challenged her in the primary that year. She successfully campaigned on conservative values and talked proudly of raising five children and 23 foster children.

“I think her major innovation was in politics,” said Larry Jacobs, a professor at the University of Minnesota. “I don’t think she leaves behind a traditional legacy in terms of monuments and buildings — I think she showed again and again her ability to mobilize new forces in politics.”

Jacobs said Bachmann talked about issues that ardent conservatives wanted addressed.

Listing her own career highlights, Bachmann offers a mix of local projects and conservative flashpoints. Among her proudest moments, she said, were opposing her own party during the 2008 financial bailout and leading the House opposition to Obama’s health care overhaul. One of her most vivid memories, she said, is thousands of opponents of the health care law coming to Washington and marching near the Capitol waving signs and flags.

But she’s equally quick to draw attention to her district in the Twin Cities suburbs. Bachmann said would have run again if Congress had not approved a $700 million bridge over the St. Croix River linking Stillwater, Minnesota with Houlton, Wisconsin. She is also proud of her work on adoption and foster care issues. One of her last official trips as a member of Congress, over the Thanksgiving holiday, was to an orphanage in Haiti.

As she wrapped up her congressional business this past week, Bachmann said she is determined to play a role in the next presidential election. The possibility of Democrats nominating Hillary Rodham Clinton will make the voices of Republican women more important than ever, she said.

“I occupy a very unique space,” she said. “I am the only woman who has been in presidential debates on the Republican ticket.”

Her own presidential bid began in June 2011 and peaked with a win in a key Iowa straw poll, but she never found traction with voters as real ballots were cast. While she has “no intention right now of running for president,” she also won’t rule it out.

“I think it will develop as we go what my level of involvement will be,” she said.

This Fabric Permanently Smells Like Whisky

I don’t know about you, but I have always dreamed of being able to smell like whiskey 24/7. Today is the day when dreams come true. The Heriot Watt University’s School of Textiles and Design teamed up with Harris Tweed and Johnny Walker (who else?) to develop a fabric that permanently smells like Johnny Walker Black scotch whisky.

harris tweedzoom in

This should go over really well in traffic stops, parent/teacher meetings, conference rooms at work, etc.

The tweed carries aromas of rich malt, golden vanilla, red fruit and dark chocolate tones and has been designed to reflect the colors of the whisky ingredients. The scent is layered into the fabric throughout the finishing process and is permanently imbued in the tweed that will not go off even after dry cleaning.

This is all part of their plan to make sure that thrift stores smell like booze by the year 2040 isn’t it?

harris tweed1zoom in

That second image is just weird. The guy looks like he’s channeling the woman from Outlander. Apparently he’s just ripped the kilt off some other dude and he’s just kinda having a victory drink. Whatever floats your whisky soaked boat, I guess.

I say, if you want to smell like booze all the time, just drink it.

[via Luxury Launches via Geekologie]

German Chancellor voices support for fast lane internet, opposing net neutrality

German Chancellor voices support for fast lane internet, opposing net neutralityGerman leader Angela Merkel made comments earlier in the week on the topic of net neutrality, an important issue being discussed by a number of European governments, not to mention the U.S. Unfortunately for those in support of an internet with speeds unregulated by telecommunications companies, Chancellor Merkel doesn’t feel the same, arguing instead for the controversial “two-lane” setup that … Continue reading

Dolby Wants Its IMAX Competitor to Be The Future of Cinema

Dolby Wants Its IMAX Competitor to Be The Future of Cinema

The advent of the internet, torrenting, and legally dubious streaming sites have threatened theaters for years, but cinemas are still big business and Dolby is investing in its future with Dolby Cinema.

Read more…



Inhabitat's Week in Green: stain-proof shirts, eco-friendly gifts and the top six uses for urine

Each week our friends at Inhabitat recap the week’s most interesting green developments and clean tech news for us — it’s the Week in Green.

For many, the holidays are a time to spend lots of money on things that aren’t so great for the environme…

Uber Driver In India Arrested For Allegedly Raping Female Passenger

* Accused to appear in court Monday – police

* No driver background checks, no GPS in car

* Police plan legal action against Uber for violations (Adds arrest, police quotes, company statement)

By Malini Menon

NEW DELHI, Dec 7 (Reuters) – Indian police on Sunday arrested an Uber cab driver suspected of raping a female passenger and said they would take legal action against the U.S. online taxi service for failing to run background checks on him.

The suspect was held in his home town in Uttar Pradesh where his car was earlier found abandoned. He will be brought before a New Delhi court on Monday, said Madhur Verma, deputy commissioner with the Delhi police.

Police opened a rape investigation after the 26-year-old woman reported that she had been sexually assaulted and beaten after hailing a ride home with the Uber driver from a social event late Friday in south Delhi.

Verma said the police would take legal action against Uber for violations including a failure to check whether the driver, named as Shiv Kumar Yadav, had a clean police record and the lack of a satellite location device in his car.

“Every violation by Uber will be evaluated and we will go for legal recourse,” said Verma, saying police would take legal advice before opting to press a criminal or civil case.

Uber has faced critical news coverage over its driver screening in the United States, and has apologized for comments by an executive who suggested “digging up dirt” on journalists investigating the firm.

That has not stopped the San Francisco-based firm from raising investment that values it at $40 billion, reflecting the perceived potential of its expansion into high-growth markets like India.

The 32-year-old driver dropped the woman home after attacking her and warned her not to inform the authorities. She managed to note down the driver’s number and take a photograph of his car, police said.

Delhi recorded the highest number of rapes in India in 2013, according to the latest National Crime Records Bureau data, earning the dubious distinction of being India’s “rape capital.”

Police attribute the rise in reports to more women coming forward due to greater public awareness following the high profile gang rape and murder of a 23-year-old woman on a bus in December 2012.

Uber said in a statement on Sunday that it had suspended the driver following the allegations, in line with company policy, and have provided the authorities with “all relevant details,” such as driver, vehicle and trip information.

“Safety is Uber’s highest priority and in India, we work with licensed driver-partners to provide a safe transportation option,” Uber spokeswoman Evelyn Tay said on the company’s blog. (Editing by Douglas Busvine and Raissa Kasolowsky)

Jane Seymour's Secrets To Feeling Young After 50

SPECIAL FROM Grandparents.com

Actress and host of the new PBS series Feel Grand for people 50+, Jane Seymour (above middle, with her daughters and two grandchildren), talks about aging, plastic surgery, and how she gets the most out of life.

“When I look at my actual chronological age, I’m in shock. I don’t feel like someone in my mid-60s,” says actress, artist and author Jane Seymour, 63, who is the host of the new health series Feel Grand on American Public Television. “I don’t behave like my parents did.” Seymour, a mother of six and grandmother of four, looks decades younger than her age, and makes it clear that how she looks has nothing to do with plastic surgery. “I don’t do Botox or Restylane. I’ve just decided to accept the aging process, and be as happy and healthy as I can for as long as I have the privilege of being here,” she says.

So what exactly does Seymour do to keep herself feeling great physically and emotionally?

1. Make up your mind. “I’ve come to the conclusion that aging is a mindset,” says Seymour. “Of course, the older you get, the more you have to do to stay healthy and well—like exercising a little bit every day and maybe dying your hair, but most important is making the decision to be as healthy and mobile and serene and appreciative as you can.”

How to do it: Set aside a quiet time each day, even if it’s just for a few minutes, to think about yourself, how you feel, your goals and take time to appreciate for what you have.

2. Surround yourself with younger friends. “I enjoy collaborating on projects with much younger people,” says Seymour. “They look at things differently than I do.” She also spends time with her children and grandchildren. “Spending time with them, I don’t feel cut off from what’s going on in the world, I actually feel very much a part of it,” she says.

How to do it: Make a standing date to spend time with grandchildren, doing an activity of their choosing, whether it be baking cookies, playing video games or having them teach you something important to them.

3. Keep your core strong. Seymour swears by Pilates and Gyrotonics, which are low-impact strengthening workouts. “However, just recently I tweaked my back and got a sudden reality check,” she says. “At this age, I listen to my body. It’s a mistake for me to do kickboxing or jog, which can hurt my knees and my joints, so I don’t do them and do other things instead.”

How to do it: Get yourself back in the swing of exercising by walking with a friend. “There’s nothing like taking a one hour walk with someone you like to have a conversation with,” she says. “It clears the head and gets everything moving. Fast walking is even better. And swimming is the best.”

4. Eat dessert. “I’ve always felt that moderation in everything works well,” says Seymour. She eats fresh organic produce that she grows in her yard. She’s also not adverse to having a glass of wine in the evening and coffee to start the day. “When I turned 30, I thought, ‘It’s ok, Jane, you can relax now and enjoy things.’ If I want a cookie or ice cream, I eat it,” she says.

How to do it: Don’t deprive yourself, but do section out snacks or treats, so you only have one or two, not the whole bag.

5. Forgive yourself and move forward. “Huge changes have happened in my life just recently and I’ve worked hard on accepting how things are and have tried to let go,” says Seymour. “Shame and regret don’t get you anywhere and can age you.” She compares life to a wave. “Things rise up—you’re born, grow up, have lots of accomplishments, but then things crash, too, with disappointments and obstacles, but everything always keeps moving. The wave skims the bottom, then rises up again.”

How to do it: Seymour uses centered meditation to try to be in the present moment. “When it comes down to it, the healthiest thing you can do is be present every day, connect with other people, and share your love with family and friends.”

6. Take care of your skin. ”Every night I take off my makeup really well,” Seymour says. “And I nourish my skin with a really good moisturizer, which doesn’t have to be expensive—sometimes the best products are the cheapest.”

How to do it: Seymour believes drinking water is key. “I’m not against plastic surgery, but at the end of the day, I believe good skin comes form drinking water and moisturizing.” She also says there’s nothing like cold water andd ice cubes to tighten skin.

7. Get creative. “Being creative is key to aging well,” she says. “Look at President Bush, who paints all the time. Winston Churchill painted, too.” Being creative allows you to express yourself in many different ways—which makes you feel good. “Sit down and write, try a musical instrument, take a ballroom dancing class,” she says. “What a lovely thing to do, expressing yourself while moving with another person.”

How to do it: If you don’t know which activity to try, start with this: Use your smartphone to take one photo a day of the world around you. “You have your own unique view of the world around you, so document it!” she says.

8. Do not isolate yourself. “Don’t feel that you have to be alone as you get older,’ says Seymour. “Crate your own community. “

How to do it: Feel like you have a purpose and help. Volunteer with a charity or organization, or get involved with other people who share your hobbies.

Read more from Grandparents.com:
11 ways not to feel old
5 health benefits of aging
6 harmless habits that age you

Old Dog, New Tricks: Three Strategies For Retirement Bliss

2014-12-01-Bodegabayme.jpg
I found my bliss leading bicycle tours.

I pedaled up the hill and emerged on a bluff overlooking the Pacific Ocean. Rugged cliffs plunged a hundred feet into the foaming surf. The climb had been exhilarating and I took a deep breath; the air was like scentless perfume. I watched the seabirds swoop and dive; their white forms were etched against a cloudless sky. Farther out fishing boats — appearing as toys from this distance — rolled lazily on giant swells. One of my guests rode up and gave me a hug. “Fantastic,” Alice said, a wide grin spreading across her tanned face, “thank you so much for bringing me here!”

It was Alice’s first taste of the California coast. It was my fourth time leading the tour but I shared her elation. No matter how often I experience the ride it never fails to blow me away. I feel so lucky to have discovered this place and time; to be living my own personal retirement bliss.

It wasn’t easy getting here, though. I had to change the way I thought about such cornerstones as wealth, security, success, home and family. I made sacrifices but they were few and now, looking back, seem trivial. Change was hard but it was much better than the alternative — stagnation. I figured that just because I was an ‘old dog’ it didn’t mean I had to roll over and play dead.

And it all paid off. Life is good. I get to meet interesting people and share my enthusiasm for travel by bike. I make a positive impact on people’s lives and that gives me a sense of relevance, something I had missed since I retired as the head of a marketing firm a few years ago.

I began wrestling with the idea of retirement in my late 50s. Sure, I was looking forward to the freedom it would provide but with my kids grown and no job to go to I was worried about becoming isolated. Plus, how would I find meaning in the empty hours? I had fretted over those and a hundred other thorny questions to the point that I almost dreaded retirement.

My situation was not unique. Millions of baby boomers still struggle with a common dilemma every day; how do I stay relevant in a culture obsessed with youth? For me the answer was to reinvent myself. If you’re a baby boomer the concept is not new. Our generation has experienced many social upheavals; from the Vietnam War to the Internet and through each economic downturn and uptick, we’ve changed and adapted to keep from being left behind. And now our generation faces another unique challenge.

Many of us boomers are still strong, healthy and physically active far into our 60s and beyond. When we reach retirement age and either choose to leave — or are forced out of — the job market, we’re too often left with decades of potentially productive life and little or nothing to do.

So what do you do if you’re near or have reached retirement age and are unsure about how to navigate these new waters? You’re ready to cast off the old workaday world but you don’t want to trade it for the couch and TV. Here are three strategies that worked for me and I hope will help you adapt and remain relevant during your ‘retirement’ years.

1. If it’s not fun, why do it?
Before I decided to apply for a bicycle-guide position, I spent more than a year riding my bicycle around the world. I wanted to make sure it was really what I wanted to do. I imposed no limit on this research phase. I was prepared to spend as much time as necessary.

2. Don’t let your ego get in the way
My bicycle-guide mentor was half my age and at times I found it hard to defer. I just kept reminding myself that he really did know more about the activity than I did. I kept my eye on the prize and put any temporary loss of face in perspective.

3. Let go
Finding your retirement bliss will probably require that you get rid of some (or all?) of your stuff. This might be the hardest part but it opens you up to a whole new world of possibilities. Rule of Thumb: If you have more than two keys, you have too much stuff.

It’s important to recognize that retirement need not be the end of a relevant life. The possibilities really are endless; just focus on something you love, don’t let pride sabotage your chances for success and let go of the past. Embrace change and the odds are good that you too will find your own personal retirement bliss.

Darby Roach is a writer and professional bicycle-touring guide. He recently rode his bicycle around the world and has written two new books about the odyssey, Right Lane Ends and How To Ride A Bicycle ‘Round The World.

Earlier on Huff/Post50:

UK Closes Its Cairo Embassy Over Security Fears

LONDON (AP) — The British Embassy in Cairo has been closed because of security fears.

The Foreign Office says public services were suspended Sunday and people should not come to the embassy building in central Cairo. It gave no details of the threat and there was no word on when the embassy would reopen. On Saturday, the Australian government said travelers should reconsider their need to travel to Egypt, citing reports “that terrorists may be planning attacks against tourist sites, government ministries and embassies in Cairo.”

Egypt has seen a surge in bomb attacks blamed on Islamic militants fighting the government of President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi.

Israeli Druze Struggle For Equality Amid Rising Religious Tensions

ABU SNAN, Israel (RNS) Bullet holes pepper the front windows of the old city council office and paramilitary police in armored jeeps patrol the main street in this mixed Muslim and Druze village in the Galilee region.

Two weeks ago, more than 40 people were injured in a brawl between the two communities, most of them by a grenade thrown into a group of Muslim rioters.

Abu Snan, which is about half Muslim and a third Druze (the remainder Christians), has seen rising tension between Muslim Arab citizens of Israel and their Druze neighbors — adherents of a monotheistic and secretive religion whose roots lie in Islam, but today forms a distinct faith.

In 1956, the state of Israel passed a law mandating military service for the Druze, and ever since, they have served in the front lines of Israel’s wars. More than 83 percent of eligible Druze enlist in the Israeli army, higher than the 75 percent enlistment rate for Jews. Druze say they have a sense of duty to the state and they also want to maximize their job prospects and ensure themselves a better future.

The Druze are a small sect almost entirely based in Lebanon, Syria and Israel. They range from 1 million to 2 million people, with several hundred thousand in Syria, the largest Druze community. In Israel the population numbered around 130,000 as of 2011, according to Israel’s Central Bureau of Statistics. Most are in northern Israel, including around 20,000 in four villages in the Golan Heights, which was annexed by Israel in 1981. More than 90 percent of the Golan Heights Druze have refused Israeli citizenship out of loyalty to Syria, where most have family ties.

The Druze broke off from the Shiite sect of Islam in 10th-century Egypt. Arab in culture and language, they are for the most part not considered Muslims by the wider Muslim world, and they do not follow the Five Pillars of Islam.

The sect prohibits intermarriage, though that didn’t stop Lebanese-British human rights lawyer Amal Ramzi Alamuddin from marrying actor George Clooney in September, an event that put the spotlight on the relatively unknown sect. Alamuddin herself is also the product of intermarriage, born to a Druze father and Sunni mother.

Druze service in the Israeli army has been a bone of contention among their Arab Muslim neighbors, who for the most part identify with the Palestinians and see the Druze as fellow Arabs.

Locals in the village were reluctant to speak on the record or acknowledge that there was rising tension between the two communities. Local Council Head Nuhad Mishlav, a Druze, said relations were fine and the brawl was simply a personal dispute between two local men — one Druze and one Muslim — that spiraled out of control after one stabbed the other at a local café. When asked about Druze-Muslim fights in the local high school, which have reportedly broken out for political reasons, he blamed Facebook and other social media, which he said students use to spread gossip and insults among their classmates.

“For generations we’ve had great relations with each other here, but this younger generation is violent,” he said. “There is real fear here and more so at night.”

The fear was palpable at the home of Bilal Taha, a Muslim man whose son Najib was badly wounded by shrapnel in his legs, groin and back after the grenade was thrown into the crowd of Muslims. Neither Bilal nor Najib admitted that there are frayed ties between Druze and Muslims. One of Bilal’s relatives was the Muslim man stabbed in the café fight that sparked the brawl and Bilal said he saw it as a personal dispute that spun out of control.

But he added that if police did not arrest the man who threw the grenade and if the Muslim man still hospitalized in critical condition dies, things would again become violent, possibly worse than before.

“Every day it calms down here more, but our great fear is that one person dies and it could all start up again,” he said.

Meanwhile, ongoing violence and “lone wolf” terror attacks have hit mainly in Jerusalem. In two of these attacks, one on the Jerusalem light rail and the other at a synagogue, Druze policemen were killed in action.

One of the Druze policemen, Zidan Saif, was first on the scene when two Palestinian terrorists with butcher knives and a pistol stormed a West Jerusalem synagogue, killing four worshippers. Saif was shot in the head by one of the terrorists as they exited the synagogue; he died later that night.

His heroism inspired Israelis across the country, but just a couple of days later the government led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu began pushing forward a law that would officially recognize Israel as the nation-state of the Jews, drawing the ire of non-Jewish Israelis, including the Druze.

Interviewed by Channel 10 this week, Murad Saif, Zidan’s brother, said: “I feel that now I have to encourage (Druze) youths not to enlist in the army. … Either way, they’re going to treat us as Arabs, so why enlist and fight?”

The spiritual leader of the Druze in Israel, Sheikh Muwaffak Tarif, said the Druze are proud to serve as long as they are assured equal rights.

“We love and respect the Jews and serve alongside them,” Tariff said. “We have a blood alliance with the Jews, but we also need an alliance in life. Our young people are angry and frustrated. We are giving a great deal to the state and we’re not getting it back. We’re neglected, there aren’t jobs, our young men can’t get building permits for a house.”

Amal Nasereldeen is a former member of the Israeli parliament who founded a memorial to the 405 Druze soldiers and police who have fallen in the service of the state of Israel. The complex also includes a military preparatory academy with 38 cadets and sits on a hill atop the Druze town of Daliyat al-Carmel.

Gunmen who infiltrated from Jordan in 1969 murdered one of Nasereldeen’s sons, Lufti; a second was kidnapped in the Palestinian city of Jenin in the 1990s and has never been found. A grandson, Lufti, was killed in 2008, in Israel Operation Cast Lead in the Gaza Strip.

Nasereldeen said he constantly fires off letters to the government about the unemployment, poverty and housing shortage facing discharged Druze soldiers, and he said he views the state’s treatment of the community as a failure.

“The Druze are an inseparable part of the country, but they want their rights and rightfully so,” he said. “The Jews don’t have any friends in the Middle East or the world like the Druze.”