ONLINE TODAY
► HUFFINGTON POST
■ 12 June 2013 : Edward Snowden Tells South China Morning Post: U.S. Has Been Hacking Hong Kong And China Since 2009
■ 13 June 2013 : Shermain Miles, Chicago Woman Arrested 396 Times, Ordered To Get Help Upon Release
► YAHOO FINANCE 11 June 2013 : German bank employee naps on keyboard, transfers millions || ► DAILY PIONEER
► TODAY in HISTORY
■ 13 June 1944 : V-weapons Attack Britain
■ 13 June 1982 : Fahd bin Abdulaziz became King
► Jiroemon Kimura 116
■ GUARDIAN : dies - video
■ BBC : dies
■ LATIMES : dies
■ BLOOMBERG : dies
■ ABC : dies
■ TELEGRAPH : dies
■ FRANCE 24 : dies
■ BOSTON : dies
■ DAILY MAIL : dies
■ and maybe all other media will be publicizing the same thing: dies, because death is not a matter of publication. A person can die without publication, even at a very young age - and you die young without known at all, oh, how poor you are, --- but it's not a matter of age that I highlight in my mind.
One thing I underline is : Do not neglect our parents when they have to be very old and when their physical condition require care as newborns.
I'm sure, it's not a vanity why someone could have a life so long, while his/her body functions have greatly declined.
When we were babies, they took care of us. When they've become elderly (and we know that the physical condition of the elderly is as weak as a baby), then it is our duty to repay all their kindness when they take care of us during our infancy.
If we give such an example to our children (How we treat our parents), then tomorrow -- if we do not die at the average age -- our children will know how to treat us. That's it. And as much as possible, do not leave them in the nursing home. Haaa .. This evokes a mini story idea!
Theme: Love in the family.
Characters: Dad (55), mother (48), grandma (85) and me (5 th).
Digest: One day they sat my grandmother in different table in the corner of the dining room. Usually we always eat together at the same table. I saw my father chopping wood boards and make them turn into a dining table for my grandmother. I heard mom always talked to my dad, but I did not understand what they were talking about.
I walked to the corner of the room and stood beside the table in front of grandma. I watched her just sat there with bowed head and feeding food to her mouth with her weak hand. We looked at each other. Her lips were smiling at me, but her eyes were crying. I can only wonder, "Does my grandmother cry to me?"
(to be continued...)
► ENTERTAINMENT
■ The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug - Official Teaser Trailer [HD]. The second in a trilogy of films adapting the enduringly popular masterpiece The Hobbit, by J.R.R. Tolkien, "The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug" continues the adventure of the title character Bilbo Baggins (Martin Freeman) as he journeys with the Wizard Gandalf (Ian McKellen) and thirteen Dwarves, led by Thorin Oakenshield (Richard Armitage) on an epic quest to reclaim the lost Dwarf Kingdom of Erebor. Published on Jun 11, 2013 by WarnerBrosPictures
■ Six Second Video. Published on Jun 11, 2013 by RayWilliamJohnson
► TRAVEL : Prince Fahd bin Sultan bin Abdulaziz al Saud's 82m Super Yacht Sarafsa visit Puerto Banus. Published on Feb 10, 2013 by stefan katafai
► Snowden as a teen online: anime and cheeky humour || ► VIDEO : NSA chief: Surveillance has stopped dozens of potential attacks
► If U.S. does not arm rebels, others may
By Arshad Mohammed - WASHINGTON - Among the consequences facing U.S. President Barack Obama if he decides against arming Syria's rebels is that Arab and European states may step in more aggressively, perhaps further fracturing rebel forces.
* West to discuss aid with Syria rebel leader; insurgents kill Shi'ites► North Korea blames South for 'sinister' moves
By Jack Kim - SEOUL - North Korea blamed the South on Thursday for scuttling fresh dialogue that aimed to ease tensions between the rival Koreas, saying Seoul deliberately torpedoed reconciliation talks planned for this week.
* Both Koreas unrelenting on impasse► End to legal debate on gay marriage unlikely
By Joan Biskupic - WASHINGTON - Whatever the U.S. Supreme Court decides this month, gay marriage appears destined to face several more years of legal debate and at least one more round of argument at the high court.
* Most Americans see gay marriage as inevitable: survey► Obama urges Massachusetts, Florida voters to back Democrats
► Sony presents next-gen console in battle for new gamers. Sony and Microsoft will be battling for the spotlight at the E3 videogame show with new consoles designed to put them at the heart of home entertainment. Images and soundbites from Sony presenting the Playstation 4 ahead of the show. || ► Microsoft unveils the new Xbox One. Microsoft on Monday fired a shot in the looming videogame console war with the announcement that its new champion - Xbox One - will launch in November in 21 countries.
► Net freedom advocates warn on surveillance. Internet freedom advocates say revelations of massive US government online surveillance are just the latest milestone in the journey from a free-for-all internet to a more closely monitored system -- and warn of potential adverse effects.
► Thousands march through Moscow against Putin. Several thousand people marched through Moscow on Wednesday to support detained or jailed anti-Kremlin protesters, a day after President Vladimir Putin accused Washington of supporting a protest movement against him.
► Iran presidential hopefuls woo undecided voters. Iran's six presidential hopefuls took part in last-ditch election campaigning Wednesday, hoping to woo the millions of Iranians still undecided between a slew of conservatives and a moderate cleric backed by reformists. In the streets of Tehran, campaign posters loom large and Iranians express their opinions ahead of Friday's vote.
► Fake fingers help ex-yakuza lead lawful life. Anyone in Japan without a little finger could well be ex-mafia -- chopping off the appendage is a punishment for wanting to leave the Yakuza. But now one company which specializes in fake fingers is helping ex-gangsters go straight.
► Galeries Lafayette opens first store in Asia. Luxury French department store Galeries Lafayette officially opens its first branch in Asia.
► Solar Impulse. The Solar Impulse is a single-person solar-powered aircraft. It runs on energy produced by 12,000 solar cells that power its propellers. The plane can fly at night by reaching a high elevation of 27,000 feet (8,230 meters) and then gently gliding downward, using almost no power until the sun comes up to begin recharging its solar cells.VIDEOGRAPHIC
► Raw: NASCAR Driver Jason Leffler Dies in Wreck. NASCAR driver Jason Leffler died after an accident Wednesday night in a dirt car event at Bridgeport Speedway in Sweedsboro, New Jersey. (June 13)
► Edward Snowden tells a newspaper that he has evidence of U.S. hacking.
* NSA leaker mysterious despite hours of interviews
Wow, wow, wow, dahliiiing, .... wake up, wake up! I had a very strange dream. I feel this is all just a trick to shake up the Obama administration. And the whole world will be shaken by a wave of paranoia, to create global chaos.
Now here's the deal,
....
What is it, Cisca?
► You're crazy. That doesn't happen. Two-faced kitten born in Oregon
► MOVIES : Celebrating 50 Years of 'Cleopatra': True Stories of the Biggest, Craziest Movie Gamble of the 1960s
► NEWS : George W. Bush back in favor? His ratings make a surprising jump
Ahahahaha.... Oh ohohoo .... Eventually all of this will seem too easy to be understood. Oh, I see.
► HOMES : Keep ticks at bay with 9 smart landscaping tips
► 10 Things to Know for Today
► Google detects Iran phishing attacks. Google says it has discovered thousands of "politically motivated" phishing attacks on Iranian email accounts ahead of Friday's presidential election.
* Iran election: 90-second guide - VIDEO► SCIENCE & ENVIRONMENT : Secret life of the cat: What do our feline companions get up to?
* Election hope for Iran's reformists?
► VIDEO
■ World's 'tallest twisted tower' inaugurated in Dubai► US surveillance: Trading secrecy for public trust?
■ Iran exiles have 'difficult but safe' life in Turkey
■ Boat races and dumplings for China's Dragon Boat Festival
■ US leaker Snowden is a traitor, says John Boehner
Anyway, it's not an absolute statement. A person can also make the claim that America is a nation with a very ill psychiatric conditions, especially after the attacks of 9/11. The important question is not about attack 9/11 and its aftermath, but why America has more enemies than real friends? Please reflect on melodramatic news when an American could betray America. It's like a child who does not like to get his self in his family life, right? And he does not know how to tell his brothers about their father habit that like to spy on them. Should he go out of his family home and told his neighbors about his family life -- which in fact it is quite appropriate to be loved --- just because he does not like her father's behavior, hm?
"Please help me. I need a protection."
"Why? What happen?"
"My father will beat me. Likely I will be locked up and tortured."
"Why will your father do that?"
"Because I told my brothers about the his strange behavior."
"What did your father do?"
"He's spying on us. He even stalked my sister while she's in the shower. He worried my sister was dating with her boyfriend in the bathroom. I saw my father was spying on my sister's, then I told her. My Brothers and sisters also react to what is done by our father over the years. And he was angry because I revealed his deeds. Am I wrong?"
" We have no right to judge the affairs of your family, but you're allowed to be here until whenever you want, or until your father realizes his mistake and all of you can communicate these issues with more familiarity."
"Thank you. It's so kind of you. What should I call you?
"Me? I am named Mr. Handsome from Russia. She says so."
"Who?"
► FUTURE
■ Why we need young minds to design our future
■ Does coffee really sober you up when drunk?
► TRAVEL
■ My City : Dubai
Piers Morgan : The Luxury Life of Dubai & A Luxury Tour Of Dubai. Uploaded on Dec 25, 2011 by TheKingsToys
■ Episode 3 - Pt 2: Female reverence at a Buddhist temple in China
► NSA Director Alexander calls Snowden's claim about total wiretapping 'false'
► Snowden says he will fight any extradition from Hong Kong - report. "I'm neither traitor nor hero. I'm an American," Snowden said.
► NSA is 'bamboozling' lawmakers to gain access to Americans' private records – agency veteran
► Miss me yet? Polls shows Americans like Bush again
ahahha .... I could not help but laugh until my tears out. ... ahahahaha.... ahahahhaa ... I'm not sure how someone woke up in the morning and was dubbed as the Fool, because foolishness needs time, ahahahha.... So if you woke up today and I called you, "Hello idiot", it's not because I just got to know you, but since I've been watching you for a long time, ehehehehe, ...you have to change yourself if you do not want such imaging sticky on you forever. Stupid. A big mistake. Semi-permanent Disaster. Stop it!
► OP-ED : Europeans 'shocked and angry' by 'unaccountable' American surveillance
► Ron Paul fears US might assassinate NSA leaker Snowden
► Putin agrees to head All-Russia People's Front(Wait a minute! Fears. Fears. Can it be a trigger for other people's ideas? Apparently, the fear of someone not only appeared as a fear for him only, but it can also be frightening to others. Stop it! Stop the fear! Stop the killing plan!)
► Putin talks NSA, Syria, Iran, drones in RT interview (FULL VIDEO)
► Our priority is to stop violence - Lavrov on Syria crisis
► VIDEOS
■ Restless Taksim: Turkey night lit with tear gas shots & belches. Thousands of protesters tried to reclaim Taksim Square on Tuesday night, mocking the police and calling them to leave. Some engaged in direct confrontation, launching fireworks, throwing stones, and lighting fires. A van standing on the square was set alight in the process. Police fired back, bombarding the crowds with tear gas, and pushing them in the narrow streets with water canon. Scores of flag and flare-wielding protesters had to flee the square, some leaving for Gezi Park, where some tear gas was also reportedly fired.
■ Deadly Division: Bloodshed on rise as sectarian war rages in Iraq. At least 70 people have been killed and 230 injured in Iraq - during just one day in the latest spike in violence. Suicide blasts, roadside bombs and gun battles rocked the country on Monday, continuing weeks of bloodshed, which has claimed nearly 2-thousand lives since April. Much of the violence is blamed on Sunni insurgents, after months of protests against the Shi'ite-led government. RT's Lucy Kafanov investigates the sectarian tension.
■ Roles Reverse: Developing nations shift economic gravity. With many of the world's leading financial states deeply submerged in debt, developing economies are taking center stage, signaling big changes in the world of finance. RT's Business Presenter Katie Pilbeam looks at how emerging markets are surpassing developed nations.
■ 'EU shocked & angry by unaccountable US surveillance'. The recent NSA leaks have awakened many Europeans to the "disturbing" privacy violations regularly committed by the US that their own governments facilitated and may have benefited from, Jim Killock, the executive director of Open Rights Group, told RT
■ Roles Reverse: Developing nations shift economic gravity. With many of the world's leading financial states deeply submerged in debt, developing economies are taking center stage, signaling big changes in the world of finance. RT's Business Presenter Katie Pilbeam looks at how emerging markets are surpassing developed nations.
Mmmmm ... mwah! Can I leave a love letter to him -- Mr. Putin -- through you, RT? ehhehhee ...
► Inside Story - Inside Story Americas - Public Safety or Privacy Intrusion? Edward Snowden's revelations about the U.S. National Security agency's Internet and telephone monitoring programme have provoked debate at home and abroad. We ask if it is acceptable or not for the US government to access American citizen's personal data. Inside Story Americas, with presenter Shihab Rattansi, discusses with guests: Peter Swire, Law Professor at Ohio State University and Chief Counsellor for Privacy in the Clinton administration; Julian Sanchez, researcher on privacy and technology at the Cato Institute; and Karen Reilly, research director for the Tor Project which provides software that allows users to access the Internet anonymously.
► Al Jazeera World - Sarajevo My Love. Hero or war criminal? A profile of Jovan Divjak, an ethnic Serb who defended Sarajevo against attack from Serb forces during the Bosnian war. A film by Eylem Kaftan.
► Inside Story - Can the UK end religious violence? There has been a disturbing increase in anti-Muslim attacks in the UK after the murder of a soldier in May. We examine how big a threat the increase in anti-Muslim attacks is to the social fabric of the UK.
► THE CURE
■ Flying Eye Hospital - Part 1. An estimated 285 million people are blind or visually impaired around the globe, yet 80 percent could be cured, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO). The Orbis Flying Eye Hospital is an aeroplane converted into an operating theatre - it has flown to 78 countries including Ethiopia, India, China and Bangladesh - to treat patients and train local medical staff.
■ Flying Eye Hospital - Part 2. In Zambia, more than 30,000 children are visually impaired. According to the charity Orbis, the country is home to 10 percent of Africa's visually impaired children. In this segment of The Cure, Dr Joff Lacey follows Lucy as she undergoes life-changing treatment at Zambia's only paediatric eye clinic, with the help of surgeons from the Orbis Flying Eye Hospital - an aeroplane converted into an operating theatre.
■ Pedal Medics. With just one doctor for every 10,000 people, getting access to healthcare in some parts of Kenya is a major challenge. In this segment of The Cure, Dr Javid Abdelmoneim travels to Kenya's Nyanza region as Bike4Care distribute their latest batch of bicycles, and joins healthcare worker Kennedy for his first day of home visits on two wheels.
► NSA chief says surveillance stopped attacks. The director of the National Security Agency has said that recently disclosed top-secret US surveillance programmes have helped to prevent "dozens" of potential attacks in the country. Al Jazeera's Kimberly Halkett reports from Washington. NSA chief General Keith Alexander made the comments at a Senate hearing on Wednesday when asked if the intelligence community could estimate how much the agency's broad monitoring of phone call and internet data had helped preventing attacks. || ► US spying tactics spark fears in Canada. Surveillance tactics of the US National Security Agency raise questions in neighbouring Canada. Canadian government insists it has no access to the data gathered by the US institutions and reveals their own cyber-snooping programme. Al Jazeera's Daniel Lak reports from Toronto.
► Inside Story - Inside Story: Elimate Child Labour, says the ILO. A new report to mark World Day Against Child Labour by the International Labour Organisation (ILO) paints a grim picture of children working in the shadows and calls for 'concerted and joint action at national and international levels to eliminate child in domestic labour.'
► Geeks Who Leak: Hacktivists Are Changing How We Handle Secrets
By Michael Scherer - The President calls them a threat. The Internet calls them heroes. A new generation of informers is unapologetically spilling top-secret data
* TIME Poll: Support for NSA Leaker (and His Prosecution)
* Jeff Rosen: The Debate Over Speech, Security and Law
* PRISM by the Numbers: Inside the Data-Collection Program
* The Government Has a Big Data Problem
* Forget PRISM, Cyberchiefs Say They Need to Pry Even Further
► NEW TIME POLL: Support for the Leaker—and His Prosecution
► Cremation: The New American Way of Death
► Chinese media chide U.S. over surveillance
One newspaper says Washington owes China an explanation; another runs a cartoon showing the Statue of Liberty holding a recorder and microphone. Above, Edward Snowden backers rally in Hong Kong.
* Snowden: U.S. hacked China, Hong Kong
► POLITICS
■ Lindsay Mills and other pole dancers missing in action
■ U.S. faces challenges trying to charge Edward Snowden
■ U.S. loses millions on coal leases, inspector general report says
■ Republicans oppose, Democrats support NSA surveillance, poll says
► LOCAL : More Americans consider themselves multiracial
Savannah, Ga. — U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Jason Dinkins with the 3rd Combat Aviation Brigade is hugged by his daughter Olivia Chastain after a welcome-home ceremony at Hunter Army Airfield. PHOTOGRAPH BY: Stephen Morton / Associated Press
This hug looks so warm. I'm impressed with this little girl expression, also with her little fingers, and her little flag. I can feel there's a great love in the little things.
Dear little girl,
you close your eyes and think your longing to your dad will be hidden,
but look,
it will be more easily seen.
I can see it. I can feel you.
Dear little girl,
you close your eyes and think your longing to your dad will be hidden,
but look,
it will be more easily seen.
I can see it. I can feel you.
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