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Wednesday, February 15, 2012

2013 China's President : Xi Jinping (prounounced Shee Jin Ping)

Source : Yahoo News

China's vice president and future leader Xi Jinping will meet with President Obama today, nearly 40 years to the day after President Nixon arrived in Beijing to radically reshape relations between the two nations.  Xi is in the U.S. for a week's worth of meetings in Washington, Muscatine, Iowa, and Los Angeles. 

Xi and Obama have some things in common. Xi's daughter, Xi Mingxe, is a sophomore at Harvard, Obama's alma mater. Obama is a basketball fan, and word is Xi hopes to catch a Clippers game Friday in L.A., but it is not yet on his official schedule.

Xi is also a fan of American movies, particularly World War II epics such as "Saving Private Ryan" and the gangster film "The Departed."

Nevertheless, no one expects this visit to be a real game changer.  Instead, this is Xi's debut as a world leader, and an indication of how China increasingly sees itself on the world stage, according to experts on China-U.S. relations.

The timing - and just about everything else about Xi's visit - is being carefully orchestrated.  It comes just before China undergoes a massive, once-a-decade leadership change.  Xi's predecessor, Hu Jintao, made a similar trip in 2002, just before he took over.  Xi Jinping (prounounced Shee Jin Ping) is scheduled to replace Hu Jintao as general secretary of the Communist Party this spring and as president of the People's Republic in 2013.

As for the U.S.?  The administration has a long list of  topics to discuss with Xi, everything from trade, to the military, to human rights, according to Deputy National Security Adviser Ben Rhodes.

There is also the issue of two American citizens currently detained in China.  Dr. Xue Feng is a geologist serving an eight year prison sentence for purportedly selling state secrets.  Hu Zhicheng, a businessman, is blocked from leaving China under similar accusations.  Obama raised the issue of Feng's imprisonment when he came to China in 2009 to no avail. 

On this trip, China is not expected to agree to a single request.  That's expected to be frustrating for the U.S., but symbolic of an increasingly confident China, say long time political observers in China.

Xi embodies both that confidence and a shift; the world hasn't seen a leader like him in China before.

At 58, Xi is of a generation that came of age at a time when China was no longer receiving major aid from the U.S.  His predecessors grew up during an era, going back to World War II, in which many Chinese could not imagine life without U.S. assistance.  But Xi was just 24 in 1978, the dawn of China's transformation from a closed, communist economy to the international powerhouse that it is today.  Many Chinese in his generation hold respect for the U.S. but no longer feel as indebted nor, perhaps, as grateful.

Perhaps the most sensitive subject expected to be discussed during Xi's official visit is the so-called "pivot," the administration's intention to bolster security in the Asia-Pacific. The region is a top priority in Obama's new defense strategy.  The shift comes amidst growing concern over China's strategic goals and potential effort to reduce U.S. capabilities in the Far East.  But many Chinese see it as nothing more than an effort to contain China.

Still, China is not looking for a fight.  Domestic stability, and the flow of American dollars (to keep purchasing Chinese goods), are key to maintaining China's economic growth.

The trip marks a return to familiar territory and fond memories for Xi.  He will spend time in Muscatine, Iowa (the "pearl of the Mississippi" and former home to Mark Twain).   In 1985, he traveled to Muscatine to study advanced hog raising techniques and spent two nights with an Iowa family.

While it may be his official "U.S. debut," what we do know about Xi plays well in China.  He grew up the son of an influential politician.  His family enjoyed the privileges of the elite until his father had a falling out with Chairman Mao and went to prison. As a result, at the formative age of 15, Xi left his life of urban comfort and was sent to the countryside for re-education as part of the Cultural Revolution.

He spent seven years living in a cave and working the land. Many Xi observers in China say this lead to a personal transformation.  During this time he learned to work well with the local community, despite radically different backgrounds and, at times, ideologies.  This would prove to be an enduring, and valuable, trait put to use during his early career in the military and subsequent shift to politics.  

Although a U.S. Embassy memo, made public via Wikileaks, referred to him as "redder than red,"  within China he's known as more of a centrist than a fervent Maoist.

His visit comes following U.S. Vice President Joe Biden's visit to China last summer, and ahead of Secretary Hillary Clinton's visit this spring.  By then, Xi will be the head of the Communist Party.

Outside of his professional biography, what is known of his personal life is rather colorful as compared to leaders past. Xi is married to the famous folk singer Peng Liyuan (although while the two were dating he reportedly told her he didn't know any of her songs because he doesn't watch much TV).

ABC News' Devin Dwyer contributed to this report

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Introducing Screenwise : Google will pay you to track your online move

Less than a month after announcing a controversial new privacy policy that shares user data across all its sites with no opt-out option, Google is introducing a system to monitor all online activity of those who participate in a program called Screenwise. In exchange for unrestricted access to information on your every online move, the search and software giant is offering financial compensation.
By signing up for Screenwise and installing a browser plugin (only Google Chrome is supported at present), you'll be given $5 in store credit on Amazon. For every three months you continue to provide Google with browsing data, you'll earn an addition $5 gift card, up to a total of $25. Only those over 13 can participate and, perhaps not surprisingly, signups are currently on hold due to overwhelming interest.
For those willing to make their online lives a completely open book, Google plans to offer a more elaborate tracking system that utilizes special hardware. The device, which connects to your broadband router, will monitor the online activity of all computers in your home. This program, which isn't available yet, will compensate participants $100 for signing up and $20 a month for up to a year.
While the idea of getting paid to browse the web might sound win-win, it's important to note that Screenwise will track private browsing data in its Chrome extension (though supposedly won't link it to you directly) and will share data with third-parties should you opt for the hardware-based option.

Monday, February 13, 2012

Osama Bin Laden told children to go to Europe or America

| Mail Online

Osama Bin Laden told his children to live peacefully in the West where they would get a good education, his brother-in-law has revealed.

Zakaria al-Sadah, whose sister is the fifth wife of the Al-Qaeda leader, said Bin Laden did not want his children and grandchildren following in the same path of terrorism like him. 

'He told his own children and grandchildren, go to Europe and America and get a good education,' according to an interview with Sadah in The Sunday Times.


Terror: Osama Bin Laden wanted his children to live in west where they would get a good education

Pakistani officials are refusing to release three of Bin Laden's wives and nine of his children who are being held in a tight security compound in Islamabad. 

According to Sadah, who was recently reunited with his sister, his children have been left traumatised by the raid carried out by US Navy Seals on May 2 last year which killed Bin Laden.

 

 
The children were discovered hiding in Bin Laden's compound in the Pakistan city of Abbottabad.

Sadah, a 24-year-old journalism student, says the children will not eat and have not seen the sun for nine months.

He said the worst affected was his 12-year-old daughter Safiyah, who held  the head of her injured mother during the attack.


Protest: Amal, one of three wives, being held in Islamabad

Amal, a 29-year-old Yememi, and the two other wives, Khairiah and Siham, have gone on hunger strike to protest against their imprisonment, according to Sadah.

Sadah, who fears his sister could be charged with committing crimes against Pakistan, thought he would be given permission to take the children back to Yemin when he was asked to visit last November.

But Pakistani officials believe they could be hiding information and have so far refused to issue them with passports.

He said: 'These children have seen their father killed and they need a caring environment, not a prison - whatever you think of their father and what he has done.'

'They have never had a normal life. They do not know what it is like to see the sun and to run around the garden. It breaks my heart to see them.'

The wives are said to have remained loyal to their husband and were openly hostile to the U.S. officials who interviewed them after the raid.

None have been charged with any crime.

Amal, the youngest of the three widows, was shot in the leg as she lunged at Navy Seals to try to protect her husband during the raid.

Mission: A photo of sixteen-year-old Hamza Bin Laden a son of Osama Bin Laden taken in 2008

A photo of sixteen-year-old Hamza Bin Laden, a son of Osama Bin Laden

She was reportedly given the chance years earlier to leave her marriage to the world's most wanted terrorist but chose instead to be 'martyred' by his side telling family and friends that she wanted to 'go down in history.'

She lived in the Abbottabad compound with the two elder wives Khairiah Sabar, a child psychologist, and Siham Sabar, a teacher of Arabic.

Each wife and her children were allotted their own floor and Bin Laden would spend time with each group.

Khairiah, who was reportedly the 'spiritual mother' of the family, had slipped back into Pakistan to rejoin her husband after she had escaped to Iran and the Saudi Arabia.

Siham fled Afghanistan and went into hiding for several years, until she was called to return to the terror leader.

Under Islamic law, a man may have only four wives at one time. Bin Laden married six times, but divorced his second wife in the 1990s and annulled the fifth marriage within 48 hours.

 

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Whitney Houston meninggal

Whitney Houston, who ruled as pop music's queen until her majestic voice and regal image were ravaged by drug use, erratic behavior and a tumultuous marriage to singer Bobby Brown, has died. She was 48.
Houston's publicist, Kristen Foster, said Saturday that the singer had died, but the cause and the location of her death were unknown.

Saturday, February 11, 2012


"Remember that not getting what you want is sometimes a wonderful stroke of luck." - Dalai Lama

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