Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Taiwan enters island fray, but China and Japan shrug

Boats from China and Japan chased each other around a set of disputed islets, setting off a diplomatic crisis. But when Taiwan entered the fray, neither side seemed to care.

By Ralph Jennings,?Correspondent / September 28, 2012

An aerial view shows a Japan Coast Guard patrol ship, fishing boats from Taiwan and Taiwan's Coast Guard vessel sailing side by side near Uotsuri island (top), a part of the disputed islands in the East China Sea, known as Senkaku in Japan, Diaoyu in China, and Tiaoyutai in Taiwan, in this September 25 photo.

Kyodo/Reuters

Enlarge

If it were another country, Taiwan would be in hot diplomatic water.

Skip to next paragraph

Recent posts

' + google_ads[0].line2 + '
' + google_ads[0].line3 + '

'; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { ad_unit += ''; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } var google_adnum = 0; google_ad_client = "pub-6743622525202572"; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '1'; google_feedback = "on"; google_ad_type = "text"; google_adtest = "on"; google_image_size = '230x105'; google_skip = '0'; // -->

The government in Taipei said last week it wanted to be a peacemaker in a sovereignty dispute involving a set of uninhabited islands in the East China Sea. Boats from China and Japan had chased each other around the islets they both claim, setting off mass protests in China that sent Sino-Japanese relations to a new low.

Then this week, Taiwan stopped talking about peace as 12 of its coast guard vessels escorted some 50 Taiwanese fishing boats to the islets, a sort passive-aggressive reminder of its own claim to islets that are 137 miles from Taiwan. Japan controls the islands, which it calls the Senkakus, and sprayed water cannons at Taiwan?s boats to keep them away.

But instead of setting off a diplomatic crisis, no one appears to be taking Taiwan too seriously ? at least not yet.

As far as China is concerned Taiwan is still part of China even though a Nationalist Party set up a rival government in Taipei after losing the Chinese civil war to the Communists in the 1940s. Beijing believes it will capture Taiwan someday even though the two sides are now self-ruled. By that logic any new territory Taiwan locks in would eventually go to China anyway.

At the same time, Japan and Taiwan can hardly live without each other. The former World War II colonizer is today one of Taiwan?s top five sources of tourism. Common Taiwanese take fashion, food, and shopping cues from peers in Tokyo while a strong contingent of conservative Japanese lawmakers who dislike communist China embraces Taiwan as a friendly fellow democracy.

?Japan is probably the only country in the world that attaches strategic importance to Taiwan,? says Bonnie Glaser, a senior fellow with the CSIS Freeman Chair in China Studies.

But Taiwan?s leadership neither expects to conquer the tiny islets nor broker a peace deal. President Ma Ying-jeou?s government is, instead, intent on using the issue to fulfill an often failed, 4-year-old domestic pledge: expand clout among major world nations through informal ties usually described as soft power.?

China forbids its 170-plus diplomatic allies from engaging Taiwan directly. But Taiwan may hope its idea to be a regional peacemaker?will stimulate scholarly debate in the United States, putting Taipei on the map of high-level academic conferences, says Alexander Huang, strategic studies professor with Tamkang University in Taiwan. ?Ma has taken at least an initiative and a moral high ground,? Mr. Huang says.

Taiwan has also avoided bashing China with heated language (letting Japan handle that) over the disputed islets, though they make separate claims. That puts the two sides in the same boat as seen from Beijing. ?It embraces the one-China concept in Beijing?s eyes,? Mr. Huang adds.

That edge will make China happier, and Taiwan wealthier, when the two sides bargain over trade tariffs or investment rules.?

Making good on that pledge to expand clout matters now as President Ma Ying-jeou sees approval ratings of just 15 to 25 percent this year so far because of domestic issues such as rising prices and stubborn wages. Term limits would stop Mr. Ma from seeking a new term in 2016, but his Nationalist Party could inherit any approval problems he leaves behind.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/csmonitor/globalnews/~3/q9u9Bv--utc/Taiwan-enters-island-fray-but-China-and-Japan-shrug

ed reed football schedule jo paterno dead south carolina tuskegee airmen mike james red tails

Playoff scramble: Chaos, confusion are kinda fun

Baltimore Orioles right fielder Nick Markakis, left, and manager Buck Showalter watch a baseball game between the Texas Rangers and Los Angeles Angels on a center field scoreboard after beating Boston Red Sox 6-3 in Baltimore, Sunday, Sept. 30, 2012. If the Angels had lost, Baltimore would have clinched its first playoff berth since 1997. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

Baltimore Orioles right fielder Nick Markakis, left, and manager Buck Showalter watch a baseball game between the Texas Rangers and Los Angeles Angels on a center field scoreboard after beating Boston Red Sox 6-3 in Baltimore, Sunday, Sept. 30, 2012. If the Angels had lost, Baltimore would have clinched its first playoff berth since 1997. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

Texas Rangers' Mike Napoli, right, celebrates his home run with Mitch Moreland (18) during the third inning of the second baseball game of a doubleheader against the Los Angeles Angels, Sunday, Sept. 30, 2012, in Arlington, Texas. (AP Photo/LM Otero)

Texas Rangers fans hold signs for relief pitcher Koji Uehara, of Japan, during the second baseball game of a doubleheader against the Los Angeles Angels, Sunday, Sept. 30, 2012, in Arlington, Texas. The Rangers won 8-7. (AP Photo/LM Otero)

The Texas Rangers are totally set for the playoffs, eager to break out the bats, balls and gloves for really big games.

Maybe they should log on to MapQuest, Hotels.com and Travelocity, too.

Because with three days left on the schedule, the postseason picture is still impossibly scrambled. An October free-for-fall, with not a single team yet certain of when, who and where it will play later this week.

"If you had asked me before the season started, I would have expected that something would have been settled," New York Yankees manager Joe Girardi said Sunday. "It's really hard to believe and I think it's what baseball was kind of looking for. They love to see these races. It's good for the game."

Not easy on the stomach, though.

Take the two-time American League champion Rangers. They could open Friday at Yankee Stadium in a one-game showdown of wild cards. Or Saturday at Detroit in the best-of-five division series. Or even Sunday at Baltimore.

Or perhaps play at home in this jumbled matrix.

"Listen, it's a logistical headache in some regards just because there's so many possibilities," Rangers general manager Jon Daniels said.

"It's not fun to be an advance scout or a traveling secretary right now," he said. "But from the standpoint of the game, and the fans, I think it's great theater and it's a lot of fun."

To Kevin Buck, that's fine. He is the Orioles' traveling secretary, and likes the idea of mapping out Baltimore's first playoff game since 1997.

"Right now it's just a fantastic problem to have," he said.

"We take care of pretty much every single scenario we can have. We make sure the hotels, the buses, the truck companies that haul our equipment, the chartered planes, are ready to go. Cities contacted ? every city that's still in the mix. New York, Oakland, LA, Tampa Bay, Chicago, Detroit. Everything's ready to go," he said.

Several hours after he spoke Sunday, there indeed was another challenge. The Orioles' charter to St. Petersburg, Fla., was diverted to Jacksonville after there was smoke in the forward galley. Later that night, the Orioles completed their journey.

This season, seven of the playoff spots already have been filled. Texas took care of three clubs Sunday ? its win over the Angels assured the Rangers, Orioles and Yankees of postseason slots.

The only in-or-out race is in the AL Central, where Detroit has a magic number of one for eliminating the Chicago White Sox. Not so clear is which clubs will be division champs and which will be wild cards.

Figuring out who plays when and where, that's the tricky part. With 10 teams in the playoffs this year ? two more wild cards than last season ? tiebreakers and cross-country travel schedules also are factors.

"Pretty remarkable," Oakland designated hitter Jonny Gomes said. "I guess not only as a player, I'm also a huge fan of the game. If you look into it, baseball's in a really good place. This isn't going to happen in football. This isn't going to happen in hockey and the NBA. There's teams that are resting guys the last couple weeks of the season. Not here."

The lone team that knows anything for sure is San Francisco. The NL West champions will open the first round on Saturday at their beautiful waterfront ballpark.

Their opponent? Well, no telling.

"That's why it's good to clinch it and have some serenity here," Giants manager Bruce Bochy said.

"We know pretty much what's ahead of us, the day we're going to play, where we're going to play. That is a little sense of comfort," he said. "It's nice to know what's ahead of us. A lot of these teams don't."

Chaos, complicated, confusing. And pretty cool.

"It is crazy and it's good for baseball," Atlanta manager Fredi Gonzalez said. "I think the second wild card, they made it for them to kind of create some stuff there at the end with the fans, and it sure has done that."

Washington manager Davey Johnson, who started his playing career in the 1960s when only two teams made the postseason and they met in the World Series, isn't keen on this new playoff format.

His Nationals could finish with the best record in the majors but, because of a one-year tweak in the postseason schedule, play Game 1 on the road on Sunday.

"I just really figured out what the whole thing was the last couple days," he said. "It seems like the team with the best record should be able to open at home."

Up the Beltway in Baltimore, the Orioles begin this week tied with Yankees for the AL East lead. The O's could wind up in a one-game tiebreaker for the division crown, or in the wild-card matchup, or with the best record in the league.

"It throws a twist into things having two wild cards this year. I liked the idea because I felt it gave another team that had a good season a chance to get to the postseason," Orioles outfielder Chris Davis said.

"Now that we're in the top seed," he said, "I think it's a terrible idea."

___

AP Sports Writers David Ginsburg, Janie McCauley, Stephen Hawkins, Charles Odum, R.B. Fallstrom and Bernie Wilson contributed to this report.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/347875155d53465d95cec892aeb06419/Article_2012-10-01-Playoff%20Jumble/id-c8fe4541a72942cd85e5b551bd4e49c8

jim caldwell internet blackout jessica capshaw seattle times seattle times walker recall censor

Monday, October 1, 2012

Jets RB coach expects big Greene day

Jets running backs coach Anthony Lynn expects a big game from Shonn Greene Sunday.

The Jets lead back had a rough outing last week in Miami, rushing for 40 yards on 19 carries for a paltry 2.1-yard average. That led to the floating of an idea this week that backup Bilal Powell should take more of Greene?s carries.

Lynn said he knows he will have a motivated Greene today.

?I?m looking forward to seeing him play this week,? Lynn said. ?I know how this kid is. When he?s challenged and when he knows he didn?t play his best game he usually comes back with a tremendous performance.?

Lynn said he thought Greene played well against the Bills in Week 1 outside of two fumbles. He also thought the fourth-year back was on his way to a big game before suffering a head injury in the second quarter against the Steelers.

Last week against the Dolphins, Lynn said Greene made some mistakes and could have played better.

?I?m not down on him,? Lynn said. ?I know what he brings to the table. It?s a marathon, not a sprint. He has a tendency to get a little down on himself because he has very high expectations for himself.?

Greene typically plays better the more carries he gets in a game. He also has been a slow starter, improving as the season goes on.

?I?m trying to coach him out of that a little bit,? Lynn said. ?I?m trying to coach a little more urgency early on. You just don?t know how many touches you?re going to get. You?re not at the University of Iowa where they?re going to ride you and give you the ball 35 times a game. That?s not the case.?

***

Jets coach Rex Ryan called 49ers tight end Vernon Davis the best in football this week. He presents a huge challenge for the Jets defense, which has struggled against tight ends.

Davis, a 6-foot-3, 250-pound freak of nature, has blazing speed and is a sure-handed receiver.

?He plays like a wideout,? safety Yeremiah Bell said. ?The thing they like to do with him is get him vertical a lot. They like to stretch the field with him. It?s going to be a challenge for us to get some hands on him and not let him get into the route quickly. It seems like the quicker you let him get into the route and get his horses running, then the better he gets. It?s going to be key to get hands on him and slow him down and kind of frustrate him.?

The Jets signed Bell and LaRon Landry this offseason to improve their safety play. This will be a test to see if the moves worked.

?He?s great, an overall complete tight end,? Landry said. ?He can be used as a wideout. That?s the way I see him, a big, physical, strong wideout. We?ve just got to play him well in coverage. I might be matched up on him a couple of times. I?m ready for whatever.?

brian.costello@nypost.com

Source: http://www.nypost.com/p/sports/jets/coach_expects_big_greene_day_yX8dhb1DHVBm1yiKgIx9bL?utm_medium=rss&utm_content=Jets

beezow doo doo zopittybop bop bop cordova demaryius thomas transtar 316 william daley truffles

Google Catalogs Comes To The Web, Now Integrated With Google Shopping

Google Catalogs - The Wisconsin Cheeseman - Early Fall 2012Google Catalogs launched as an iPad and Android app in August 2011. Just ahead of the holiday shopping season, Google is now?also making this sevice available on the web. Google Catalogs on the web will feature brochures from about 300 brands, including the likes of Williams Sonoma, J.Crew, Eddie Bauer and Bose. From within the catalogs, shoppers can click on featured items to get more information and, of course, buy them from the retailer's own sites.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/NaxCtPeKIYI/

turkey recipes happy holidays norad how to carve a turkey how to cook a turkey yorkshire pudding larry the cable guy

Soon-To-Be-Acquired BlueSprig?s AirCover Family Locator Is An App That Lets You Track Those Close To You

aircover family locatorWe last heard about AirCover -- an app developed by Founders Den co-founder Jason Johnson's own startup BlueSprig -- when it launched as an all-in-one protection assistant, letting people secure their devices from viruses, back up files, locate a lost iPhone or Android handset, track family members, and more. Fast forward to today, and Blue Sprig is launching the first offshoot of that flagship product, AirCover Family Locator, which takes the people-tracking element and extends it into a standalone app. But while you often hear of spinoffs coming out of the success of the original app, it seems that the opposite is the case here.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/Ap09Cx7HH-E/

super bowl halftime show 2012 ahmad bradshaw tom brady halftime super bowl 2012 super bowl score madonna super bowl performance superbowl commercials

Merciful Assistance or Physician-Assisted Killing? | World of ...

Merciful Assistance or Physician-Assisted Killing?Imagine that your father, age 85, has been diagnosed with a terminal illness and given only three months to live.

Fortunately, he is still well enough to walk, and finds himself one night near a tall bridge. Having contemplated the suffering he believes will attend his final days, he decides to end his life by jumping off the bridge. However, he is too weak to hoist himself up atop the protective railing.

Suddenly, he sees his very own physician, Dr. Jones, walking by. He begs Dr. Jones to help him climb atop the railing, adding, ?Don?t worry, Doc, it will be my decision to jump.? The doctor is taken aback, but quickly determines that his patient is not psychotic or severely depressed, and is capable of making a rational decision regarding suicide. The doctor tries to persuade your dad that pain and suffering can usually be well-controlled during the final days, but the patient is insistent: he wants to end his life.

Would you agree that Dr. Jones is fulfilling his obligations as a physician by assisting your father in jumping off the bridge?

If not, would you support the doctor?s providing your father with a lethal dose of medication?

From the standpoint of medical ethics, I see no fundamental moral difference in a doctor?s assisting a patient to jump off a bridge ? without, of course,?pushing?him off ? and a doctor?s prescribing a lethal dose of medication to ?assist? in the patient?s suicide. The main difference is that, whereas anybody can assist a suicidal patient in climbing over a bridge railing, only physicians and a few other health care professionals are authorized by law to prescribe medication ? and, in Oregon and Washington state, to prescribe lethal medication for ?physician-assisted suicide? (PAS).

Of course, there are important?procedural?differences between my bridge scenario and the way PAS is handled in these states. There are numerous procedural safeguards in place to ensure that dying patients are thoroughly evaluated, and not pressured or coerced into requesting lethal medication ? though the evidence is mixed as to how effective these safeguards have been. One study of physician-assisted suicide in Oregon and the Netherlands found no evidence that disadvantaged groups (such as the elderly or disabled) are being disproportionately affected by the laws (Battin et al). On the other hand, another study (Finlay and George) concluded that, ??there is reason to believe that some terminally ill patients in?Oregon?are taking their own lives with lethal drugs supplied by doctors despite having had depression at the time when they were assessed and cleared for PAS.?

From a strictly ethical perspective, I believe physicians have no more business helping patients kill themselves with lethal drugs than they do helping patients jump off bridges ? regardless of how ?voluntary? the patient?s decision may be. Clearly, neither action is compatible with the traditional role of the physician as healer. Indeed, psychiatrist and ethicist Dr. Thomas Szasz has argued that ?physician-assisted suicide? is merely a euphemism for ?medical killing.? For these reasons, I am opposed to the November ballot initiative in Massachusetts for a measure that would allow terminally ill patients to be prescribed lethal drugs.

And yet, as always, there are two sides to the story. When my 89-year-old mother was in her final days, she was in a good deal of discomfort much of the time. Despite having first-rate home hospice care, and the availability of powerful pain relievers ? which my mother often refused to take ? her dying was not an easy or peaceful process, for her or for our family.

There were times when I wondered if I could ever bring myself to provide her with the Oregon ?solution.? ?Fortunately, my mother never requested this, and overall, I believe my family made her final days as dignified and comfortable as she would permit.

The debate over PAS often is clouded by a mistaken understanding of the dying process. Some advocates of the Oregon and Washington approach argue that the dying patient who wants to end her life has no recourse but to take a lethal drug prescribed by her physician. But in truth, ?competent, dying patients may end their lives by simply refusing food and drink. Indeed, medical ethicist Cynthia Geppert MD, PhD informs me that voluntary refusal of food and drink is now considered an accepted approach to dying, in palliative care medicine.

Many readers will instinctively recoil from this claim. ?How could you let your loved one die of hunger and thirst?? they will understandably ask. But we usually ask this based on our own unpleasant experiences of hunger and thirst, as healthy, active persons. For the dying patient, voluntary refusal of food and fluids does not result in an agonizing or painful death, as a report in the?July 24, 2003?New England Journal of Medicine?concluded. According to the 307 hospice nurses surveyed in this study, most patients will die a ?good? death within two weeks after voluntarily stopping food and fluids.

We may agree, as a society, that competent adults ought to be?at liberty?to end their own lives. But this is not the same as asserting their ?right? to commit suicide, much less insisting that physicians should be complicit in fulfilling such a right. Unlike liberties, rights impose reciprocal obligations on others. And, in my view, the physician?s obligation during a patient?s final days is to do everything medically possible to relieve pain and suffering ? not to relieve the patient of his life.

?

Acknowledgement: Thanks to Bret Stetka MD and Medscape for permitting use of some material contained in my essay, ?Do We Need ?Thanaticians? for the Terminally Ill??, available at:?http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/771274.

References:

Battin MP,?van der Heide A,?Ganzini L,?van der Wal G,?Onwuteaka-Philipsen BD: Legal physician-assisted dying in?Oregon?and the Netherlands: evidence concerning the impact on patients in ?vulnerable? groups. J Med Ethics.?2007 Oct;33(10):591-7.

Finlay IG,?George R. Legal physician-assisted suicide in?Oregon?and The Netherlands: evidence concerning the impact on patients in vulnerable groups?another perspective on?Oregon?s?data. J Med Ethics.?2011 Mar;37(3):171-4. Epub 2010 Nov 11.

Ganzini L, Goy ER, Miller LL et al. Nurses? Experiences with Hospice Patients Who Refuse Food and Fluids to Hasten Death. N Engl J Med 2003; 349:359-365 Accessed at: http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMsa035086

Further Reading

Ronald Pies MD is Professor of Psychiatry and Lecturer on Bioethics & Humanities at SUNY Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, NY; and Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston. He is the author of several psychiatric textbooks; as well as of Everything Has Two Handles: The Stoic?s Guide to the Art of Living, Becoming a Mensch (Hamilton Books), The Judaic Foundations of Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy, and Ziprin's Ghost, a collection of short stories (Harvard Book Store).

Like this author?
Catch up on other posts by Ronald Pies, M.D. (or subscribe to their feed).


Trackbacks

No trackbacks yet to this post.


????Last reviewed: By John M. Grohol, Psy.D. on 30 Sep 2012
????Published on PsychCentral.com. All rights reserved.

APA Reference
Pies, R. (2012). Merciful Assistance or Physician-Assisted Killing?. Psych Central. Retrieved on October 1, 2012, from http://psychcentral.com/blog/archives/2012/09/30/merciful-assistance-or-physician-assisted-killing/

?

Source: http://psychcentral.com/blog/archives/2012/09/30/merciful-assistance-or-physician-assisted-killing/

Tom Kenny Long Island Medium Alfonso Ribeiro morgan freeman cbs sports nascar adam sandler

nQuo: Maps that have changed my world view: - NatGeo Atlas of the World - Sim City - Google Earth - Grand Theft Auto - Flyover mode, iOS 6 Maps