Monthly Archives: January 2013

Gabba Gabba Hey, My Musical DNA – Promo – Video

Posted: January 6, 2013 at 9:44 am


Gabba Gabba Hey, My Musical DNA - Promo
With thanks to THE RAMONES for use of the utterley BRILLIANT, "Pin Head" Remixed by Phil Ruby Satellite

By: Phil Calland

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Gabba Gabba Hey, My Musical DNA - Promo - Video

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DNA – LMoe Anthem Ft. Six Feet(12.13) – Video

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DNA - LMoe Anthem Ft. Six Feet(12.13)

By: Dtour563

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Sounds of DNA – Cold World – Video

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Sounds of DNA - Cold World
-This music is dedicated to all those kind of peoples that can make somethings different , to those peoples that show to us the human power to do pozitive things , to enjoy the fear and to forget our black side . We have to use our powers doing better things that war and violence . -We have to realise in our self our positive side , we have to change .. we need for a new start in our life.. this music is called Cold World cause I wanted to show with this name the reality in our life , in our friendship , in our family sometimes.. and with those images in the clip we will see the other side , people burning this Cold World showing the positive power of humans.. Producer : Serxho Fusha , work with FlStudio10 , finished as work at 01/01/2013 Genre: DeepHouse Facebook http://www.facebook.com ENJOY..

By: serxho fusha

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Sounds of DNA - Cold World - Video

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Obama reviewing DNA bill 'Katie's Law' named for slain NMSU student

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Sun-News photo by Diana M. Alba

CARLSBAD -- Of the many bills that have made it to President Barack Obama's desk in the past few weeks, the one named the Katie Sepich Enhanced DNA Collection Act of 2012 has the utmost significance to a Carlsbad family.

The federal DNA act is a spinoffof Katie's Law, which is already in effect in 25 states and requires that a DNA sample be taken upon arrest from anyone suspected of a felony.

Katie's Law is named after the daughter of Dave and Jayann Sepich. The Carlsbad resident was raped, murdered and burned at the age of 22 while attending New Mexico State University in Las Cruces.

At the national level, the Katie Sepich Enhanced DNA Collection Act of 2012 is now being reviewed in the White House after passing with a unanimous vote in the Senate last month. According to Jayann Sepich's daughter Caraline, the bill would allow for three years of funding for all states for the initial costs of starting the Katie's Law project and DNA database.

"She (Katie) fought very hard for her life," said Jayann Sepich. "She had her attacker's skin under her fingernails."

Jayann Sepich began pushing for DNA collection of those arrested after finding out that DNA was not collected in New Mexico. When the Sepich family traveled to Las Cruces in 2003 to meet with police investigators who had no leads on Katie's killer, Jayann Sepich said she remembers telling the police detective something along the lines of, "I'm sure that monster will be arrested for

He explained that someone arrested on a different charge could not be connected with the DNA of Katie's killer unless he or she was first convicted of a crime.

The detective's statement came as a shock to the couple because after having watched shows like "CSI" for years, they were both under the impression that taking a $30 cheek swab to gain a DNA profile of anyone arrested for a felony was common practice.

"We were sadly mistaken," Dave Sepich said.

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Obama reviewing DNA bill 'Katie's Law' named for slain NMSU student

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DNA links man to September home invasion in Largo

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LARGO DNA testing led to the arrest Thursday of a Largo man who was charged in connection with a violent home invasion in September.

Salvatore Va, 20, was among a group of men who kicked in a locked kitchen door the night of Sept. 14 at a home in the 800 block of Palm Drive, according to Largo police. Once inside, the men exchanged gunfire with a man who warned them not to enter. One of the shots narrowly missed a 3-month-old baby who was in the home, police said.

The group took money from the man and a woman who was with him before fleeing the home, police said.

Forensics investigators recovered DNA from the home, which was later matched to Va, according to an arrest report.

During questioning, Va admitted to detectives that he stood in the kitchen doorway while the other men robbed the home, but denied using a gun or going into the house, police said. He also claimed that he was unaware that the other men intended to commit a robbery.

Va, of Largo, was booked in the Pinellas County Jail on a charge of home invasion robbery. He remained jailed Saturday in lieu of $50,000 bail.

It was unclear whether police had identified the other men involved in the crime.

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DNA links man to September home invasion in Largo

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'DNA evidence' in India rape case

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5 January 2013 Last updated at 11:16 ET

DNA tests have linked five men with a gang rape and murder last month that has caused outrage in India, a court in Delhi has heard.

The pre-trial hearing was held at the District Court in the Saket area of the Indian capital.

The judge ordered the five to appear before her on Monday. A sixth suspect is expected to be tried as a juvenile.

The woman, 23, died last weekend. Her friend has been recalling the harrowing details of the attack on a bus.

The man, who has not been named, told Zee News how he and the victim had boarded the bus and paid a fare, before he was beaten unconscious by men on board, who then attacked her.

Prosecutor Rajiv Mohan told Magistrate Namrita Aggarwal that DNA tests confirmed by the Central Forensic Science Laboratory had shown that blood stains found on the clothing of all of the accused had matched the blood of the victim.

Mr Mohan also cited records from the Mount Elizabeth Hospital in Singapore, where the woman died, which said death was caused by septicaemia and multiple-organ failure.

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The victim's friend, who witnessed the attack, speaks to Zee News

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'DNA evidence' in India rape case

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Eczema – A Dream (Original) – Video

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Eczema - A Dream (Original)
This is my entry to the ShortSTUFF Contest. You can also find it here: http://www.youtube.com

By: Toni Perez

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Eczema - A Dream (Original) - Video

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My Psoriasis Story – Video

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My Psoriasis Story
Thankyou guys for watching I hope this can help many of you 🙂 My Nail Psoriasis i49.tinypic.com Psoriasis On My Leg i46.tinypic.com

By: xLittleMissKaitx

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Google concedes defeat in combating online censorship in China

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London, Jan. 6 (ANI): Google has reluctantly conceded defeat in its latest effort to combat online censorship in China.

Google's move comes after a year of behind-the-scenes brinkmanship over sensitive search terms banned by authorities.

The searching giant quietly dropped a warning message shown to Chinese users when they search for politically sensitive phrases, after Beijing found new ways to cut them off from the web, the Guardian reports.

According to the report, Google and Chinese authorities have been involved in a tense game of cat-and-mouse over the issue since May last year, when the feature was unveiled by the US company in an attempt to improve search for Chinese citizens.

The standoff came to a head in December, when Google finally decided to drop the feature because users were still being disconnected by Chinese authorities.

A source in China said Google decided it was 'counterproductive' to continue the technical dispute, despite several attempts to get around it, the report said.

A Google spokesman confirmed it removed the notification features in December, but declined to comment further due to the sensitivity of the situation in China, it added.

In November, Google's English-language and Chinese-language services were blocked for 24 hours as tensions stepped up.

Google resolved to drop the notification features in early December after users continued to report problems for certain searches, the report added. (ANI)

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Complex tales of censorship in 20th-century Japan

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Sunday, Jan. 6, 2013

THE ART OF CENSORSHIP IN POSTWAR JAPAN, by Kirsten Cather. University of Hawaii Press, 2012, 342 pp., $45.00 (hardcover)

REDACTED: The Archives of Censorship in Transwar Japan, by Jonathan E. Abel. University of California Press, 2012, 376 pp., $44.95 (hardcover)

Censorship in Japan has long been hot-button topic for everyone from journalists reporting on the latest police porn crackdown to academics delving into wartime controls on artistic expression, but as Kirsten Cather notes in "The Art of Censorship in Postwar Japan" her fluently written, industriously researched study of seven postwar obscenity trials the writer's intent is often to score points off the evil censors, not examine the actualities and implications of each side's argument.

Cather has thus set out to examine "the often-overlooked connection between the censor and critic, a link that is crucial to understanding the dynamic relationship of censor, artist and text in modern Japan." In these landmark trials, prosecutors have frequently played the role of, as Cather puts it, "narratologists, reception theorists, critics, editors, or even coauthors (or auteurs)," basing judgments on criteria that shift from case to case, era to era.

Following Japan's World War II defeat in 1945, the U.S.-led Occupation assumed the mantle of censor, while officially encouraging freedom of expression. But in the first postwar obscenity trial, which started in 1951 over an unauthorized translation of the D.H. Lawrence novel "Lady Chatterley's Lover," the Japanese prosecutors were firmly in charge, if at first hesitant about how exactly to proceed since the new constitution, written under Occupation aegis, expressly forbade censorship. They took recourse in Article 175 of the prewar Criminal Code, which defined "obscene objects" as those that "produce the sense of shame or disgust in human beings."

Naturally, the defense argued that the new constitution took precedence over a Meiji Era (1868-1912) statute, but the trial, as Cather describes in blow-by-blow detail, was hardly as simple as legally determining who was on first. By the time the Supreme Court handed down its guilty verdict in 1957, the Constitution-vs.-Article-175 debate had long been overshadowed by the judges' concern, backed by the prosecution's supposedly "rational" evidence (including lie detector tests purporting to measure sexual response), that the book indeed titillated readers in socially dangerous ways. "At the core of the guilty verdict," Cather notes, "was the fear that readers would uncritically identify with unscrupulous fictional characters." Lady Chatterley, c'est moi.

This landmark trial set a precedent that strongly influenced subsequent obscenity cases, despite differences in medium and shifts in social mores. Judges were concerned with protecting "innocent" readers or viewers, particularly if they were young and female. Also, realism, be it of imagery or description, continued to be cited as contributing to a work's perceived obscenity. Fiction, even of Lawrence's highbrow sort, was considered worse than "scientific" depictions, since a skillful writer could conjure visions in a reader's head more compellingly actual than any anatomical drawing. Lastly, the triumph of the "native" criminal code over the "foreign" constitution in the trial proved lasting.

Verdicts in succeeding obscenity trials were hardly uniform, however. Tetsuji Takeuchi's pioneering 1965 pinku (soft-core porn) film "Black Snow" was ruled obscene by the High Court, since the judges regarded its cinematic pornography as more dangerous than the printed variety, while dismissing its "redemptive" ending as too little, too late. On the other hand, a 1972-1980 trial prompted by four soft-core films released by the Nikkatsu studio under its Roman Porno label ended in victory for the defense. This time the prosecution overreached by indicting not only filmmakers, but also the industry self-censorship board Eirin, which had given their work its seal of approval. The High Court judges ended up acquitting everyone, while praising Eirin for maintaining a "minimum degree of sexual morality."

All this will be fascinating to not only students of censorship, but anyone interested in Japanese society's evolving attitudes toward freedom of expression including the freedom to be violently pornographic. Cather has succeeded admirably in presenting the complexity of an ongoing legal debate between censor and censored, as well as the social, political and cultural backdrop of her selected cases.

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