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  • The Libor Scandal and Capitalism’s Moral Decay

    The Libor Scandal and Capitalism’s Moral Decay

     

     
     

    JUL 13 2012, 2:45 PM ET 1

     

    The scandal engulfing the financial industry is yet another sign that our business leaders no longer respect the rule of law. 

    615_Scales_of_Justice.jpg

    Reuters

    Maybe the acronym at the heart of the scandal is too confusing. Or Americans are simply tired of hearing about greedy bankers. By any measure, though, the Libor bank scandal is an extraordinary example of the 1 percent stealing from the 99 percent – and our crumbling ethics.

    If an organized crime group was accused of breaking into the Nassau County Treasurer’s Office on New York’s Long Island and stealing $13 million, outrage would be widespread. And if the same group was accused of stealing millions from the City of Baltimore and other struggling municipalities, they would emerge as an issue in the presidential campaign.

    Instead, the Libor scandal is emerging in dribs and drabs and drawing little public attention. The middle class is being victimized, and there is little protest.

    Last month, the British bank Barclays agreed to pay $453 million to American and British authorities to settle allegations that it manipulated key interest rates for profit between 2005 and 2009, specifically the London Interbank Offered Rate, or Libor. American and British investigators are now examining whether traders at a dozen other banks — including the “too-big-to-fail” U.S. banks JPMorgan, Citibank and Bank of America — also manipulated rates.

    It is hard to overstate the impact of the Libor benchmark, which is used to value some $360 trillion in loans and financial contracts worldwide. It affects lending to governments, businesses and consumers, and even student loan and credit card rates.

    So Barclays’ victims weren’t just other banks and traders. They included taxpayers in dozens of communities who are believed to have paid millions more in interest than they should have at the height of the financial crisis. Teachers and other public servants may have been laid off because of bankers’ pursuit of ever-higher profits.

    Lawsuits filed by the City of Baltimore and dozens of other parties against Barclays, JP Morgan, Bank of America, Citibank and Deutsche Bank have been consolidated into a single case in a New York federal court. Banks are denying any wrongdoing, and the true scope of the losses — and the role of American banks — is expected to emerge in the complex legal battles ahead.

    I do not believe all bankers are evil. I admire business owners who innovate, create jobs and strengthen communities. But theft — whether the perpetrator is clad in a business suit or blue jeans — is theft.

    And let’s not kid ourselves. Our ethical decay stretches beyond Wall Street. It spans industries, political parties and groups. In April, systematic bribery by executives of the U.S.’s second-largest company – Walmart – was reported across Mexico. In June, American sports officials accused cyclist Lance Armstrong of engaging in a massive doping conspiracy. And Jesse Jackson Jr. appears to be the fifth member of Congress to be embroiled in an ethics scandal in two years.

    Around the world, a globalized economy is creating planetary-sized profits — and relentless pressure. A May survey by Ernst & Young of 400 chief financial officers around the world found that a growing number of them were willing to pay bribes and falsify their firm’s financial performance to survive the financial downturn.

    The number of chief financial officers who said they would engage in bribery to stay in business grew from 9 percent in 2011 to 15 percent in 2012. And the number who said they would misstate their company’s financial health to get though a downturn rose from 3 percent in 2011 to 5 percent in 2012.

    “One of the most troubling findings of the survey is the widespread acceptance of unethical business practices,” Ernst & Young said in a statement. “It is particularly alarming that respondents are increasingly willing to make cash payments.”

    Corporate boards and other overseers, meanwhile, appear to be looking the other way. Eighty-one percent of those surveyed worldwide by Ernst & Young said anti-bribery and anti-corruption codes of conduct were in place in their companies. But nearly half said they did not believe employees had been punished for violating those polices.

    The same problem exists in American institutions. Senior executives at Walmart tried to bury internal reports of bribes being paid. Leaders of Congress continue to hand out shamefully light punishments to their peers, such as the 2010 censure of New York Representative Charles Rangel.

    And a report released today by former FBI Director Louis Freeh found that Joe Paterno and other senior leaders at Penn State covered up Jerry Sandusky’s sexual abuse of children for over a decade to protect the university’s multi-million dollar football program.

    Many columnists have said this before and many more will say it in the future. I am no paragon of virtue and I have made mistakes. But we can and must do better. Our moral decay threatens us.

    A liberal, capitalist democracy — and a middle class — can only thrive in a culture where the rule of law is respected, information is reliable and the playing field is as level as possible. If we abandon that, we lose much more than self-respect. We squander a way of life.

    This post originally appeared at Reuters.com, an Atlantic partner site.

     

    COPYRIGHT © 2012 BY THE ATLANTIC MONTHLY GROUP. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 

  • Exclusive Q&A with Red Bull’s Sebastian Vettel13 Jul 2012

     
     

    Exclusive Q&A with Red Bull’s Sebastian Vettel13 Jul 2012

    Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel customises a pair of jeans to be auctioned for charity, Berlin, Germany, July 2012Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel, Berlin, Germany, July 2012Sebastian Vettel (GER) Red Bull Racing RB8. Formula One World Championship, Rd9, British Grand Prix, Race, Silverstone, England, Sunday, 8 July 2012Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel, Berlin, Germany, July 2012Sebastian Vettel (GER) Red Bull Racing celebrates on the podium. Formula One World Championship, Rd9, British Grand Prix, Race, Silverstone, England, Sunday, 8 July 2012Sebastian Vettel (GER) Red Bull Racing. Formula One World Championship, Rd9, British Grand Prix, Qualifying, Silverstone, England, Saturday, 7 July 2012Sebastian Vettel (GER) Red Bull Racing. Formula One World Championship, Rd5, Spanish Grand Prix, Practice, Barcelona, Spain, Friday, 11 May 2012Kimi Raikkonen (FIN) Lotus and Sebastian Vettel (GER) Red Bull Racing, walk to the drivers parade. Formula One World Championship, Rd9, British Grand Prix, Race, Silverstone, England, Sunday, 8 July 2012Sebastian Vettel (GER) Red Bull Racing RB8. Formula One World Championship, Rd9, British Grand Prix, Qualifying, Silverstone, England, Saturday, 7 July 2012Sebastian Vettel (GER) Red Bull Racing. Formula One World Championship, Rd6, Monaco Grand Prix, Qualifying Day, Monte-Carlo, Monaco, Saturday, 26 May 2012Sebastian Vettel (GER) Red Bull Racing RB8 on the grid. Formula One World Championship, Rd9, British Grand Prix, Race, Silverstone, England, Sunday, 8 July 2012Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel, Berlin, Germany, July 2012Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel customises a pair of jeans to be auctioned for charity, Berlin, Germany, July 2012Race winner Sebastian Vettel (GER) Red Bull Racing, kisses the trophy. Formula One World Championship, Rd4, Bahrain Grand Prix, Bahrain International Circuit, Sakhir, Bahrain, Sunday, 22 April 2012Sebastian Vettel (GER) Red Bull Racing RB8. Formula One Testing, Mugello, Italy, Day Three, 3 May 2012

    In the build-up to his home Grand Prix in Germany next weekend, we caught up with Red Bull’s Sebastian Vettel to discuss his hopes for Hockenheim, his 2012 title rivals and – more importantly – to get his thoughts on fame and fashion. Why fashion? Vettel was at Berlin’s iconic Bread & Butter fashion fair, getting to grips with a branding iron and some paint to help customise a pair of one-off jeans to be auctioned off to raise funds for the Wings for Life charity…

    Q: Formula One racing is a glamorous business. Do you consider yourself to be a fashionista?
    Sebastian Vettel: 
    Ha, to be honest fashion is not too high up on my agenda, but of course I do look at the mirror before I leave the house so I am not totally free of a vanity. (laughs) One thing is clear: my clothes have to be comfortable. Jeans and a t-shirt, with a shirt loosely worn over the top – these kind of things. When it comes to colours, I would count myself among the gutsier dressers. I definitely do like things colourful. 

    Q: What’s the craziest item of clothing you have bought?
    SV: 
    There has never been an ‘extreme’ purchase. I am not that kind of guy. I have always bought things that I will definitely wear. Actually, that’s not entirely true. I once bought an old-fashioned hat in my teens – I never wore it.

    Q: Finish the sentence. Clothes have to be…
    SV: 
    …comfortable, functional and, of course, they should look good. At least I hope they look good! (laughs)

    Q: If jeans are the mainstay of your wardrobe, which famous names do you associate with them?
    SV: 
    Well, I think everybody wears jeans. They are a global garment; a part of our everyday culture. Sure, it was different in the days of James Dean or Marlon Brando, as jeans back then were not the norm but the exception – rebel gear – so you could probably name them as the most famous poster boys for jeans. Today you can wear jeans to almost every occasion. At least I can! I still count myself below the age when you become a bit too old for that. 

    Q: What’s the age limit then?
    SV: 
    When you’re over 30 or so? Then the ‘every occasion’ should be narrowed down. 

    Q: What are the downsides to fame?
    SV: 
    What people don’t see. They see you in the car, see you racing, and if it works out for you they cheer you. But they don’t see what it takes to be at this level – the discipline, the daily training and toil, overcoming your inner temptations and struggling through tempers. Those are the physical challenges that the outside doesn’t see. But then there is also the intellectual challenge – in meetings with your engineers, to be at the same level of discussion as they are, to understand what is going on technically in an almost laboratory-like environment. All these aspects are hidden from the fans. They don’t appreciate it because they don’t see it. When you switch on the telly and see qualifying you might think that it’s much ado about nothing – just a few laps. But to get there is a 24/7 marathon for at least ten months.

    Q: Have you ever bought a fashion magazine?
    SV: 
    It might surprise you, but yes, I have. Several times. (laughs) 

    Q: So you are into high-end fashion magazines like Vogue and Harper’s Bazaar?
    SV: 
    Oops, I have to admit that I have never heard of the latter.

    Q: You are living your dream. How does it feel?
    SV: 
    Different than you might think. You have always dreamed about the racing and in that respect it cannot get bigger. But the life that goes with it you cannot dream about because you don’t know what it will be like. You can’t imagine in the slightest what comes your way. You are permanently travelling, have a 24/7 job, and have little time for yourself, and even less time for friends and family. Don’t get me wrong, I am not complaining as I love to live this life and if I had to choose all over again I would always pick this one, as I get the most satisfaction out of racing. I have never come across anything that would remotely give me the same level of fun. But I also have to admit that it comes with baggage and it seldom looks from the outside how it feels to live it. All that glitters isn’t gold! 

    Q: But you look pretty comfortable…
    SV: 
    …and I definitely am. I am in a lucky position and I hope that I do appreciate it enough. 

    Q: What makes Formula One racing glamorous? 
    SV: 
    I think Formula One and glamour go hand in hand, yes, but for me the sport, of course, takes priority. It’s more the fascination with the technical aspects, rather than the grid girl beside your car. That doesn’t mean that I never dare to take a look, but it is definitely not the highlight of my weekend! (laughs) 

    Q: Who do you think is cool? Brad Pitt, Barack Obama, Homer Simpson?
    SV: 
    Somebody who lives in his own way. If you follow the footsteps of others you will never leave marks. To judge Brad Pitt, for example, I would have to know him, which I don’t. What I admire is people who are grounded and resistant to all kinds of whisperings. Kimi Raikkonen, for example. You may like him or not, but he lives his way. He does the things he has identified as worthy for him and he is not trying to be everybody’s darling. At least he doesn’t give that impression.

    Q: Is Raikkonen the closest thing to a friend you have among your competitors? The two of you are often seen chatting together during the drivers’ parade…
    SV: 
    Yes. He is straightforward and honest and he tells you if he has a bad day. Period. He is real. He’s not political. He’s never up to something. If he doesn’t want to tell you something he will say so and not hum and haw. He doesn’t beat around the bush, never coming to the point. 

    Q: After years of being the darling of the media, you have felt a bit of head wind so far this season. Could that have a positive effect?
    SV: 
    I believe in the saying that you are never as good as others say you are – and not as bad. I would not go so far as to say that you should ignore all of it, but it should not influence you. My parameter is that you should be able to look in the mirror and be satisfied with what you see. I adore honesty and self-honesty. How easy and convenient would it be to say that the wheel came off and that’s why I flew off the track? But mistakes do happen and you have to stand tall through them and also apologise when it’s your fault. Like in Spa two years ago when I tried to overtake Jenson (Button) but lost the car and ruined both our races. It was natural that I went to him and apologised. I expect the same. It’s about respect. 

    Q: So far we’ve seen seven winners in nine races. Who would you say has the upper hand?
    SV: 
    At the moment it is still very competitive. There are a number of drivers performing on a similar level, as the results show. There are three of us within 29 points – after nine races. I think that the drivers who stand out right now are Fernando (Alonso) – he is one of the most complete drivers – and Lewis (Hamilton), who is very quick even though he was a bit unlucky in Silverstone. But then again there are plenty of others. Michael (Schumacher) is still in the game, as I don’t think that he’s lost it. The truth is that your performance is only as good as you and the package you have – and that can change every fortnight. So there are definitely more names to drop than just one. 

    Q: When it comes to the greats of the sport, would you judge them by the number of titles they’ve won?
    SV: 
    Yes – and no. Sure, success plays a huge part in our business. If you take names like Alain Prost, Ayrton Senna, Jackie Stewart or Niki Lauda for example, they all won numerous titles. But sometimes there are other names which remain in your memory because they had something extra. Everyone in Formula One is a quick driver, but then there have been guys who had that special something, who connected exceptionally well with the fans. Maybe they had a good sense of humour or could mock themselves. These things make these men linger in our memories even though their number of wins doesn’t match up to others…

    Q: Who would you class as one of these drivers?
    SV: 
    Jochen Rindt. He won one championship but he was someone that went far beyond that title. He was an icon – and not just for the German, Austrian or Swiss fans. He was probably the first Formula One ‘superstar’. He met the expectations of his time – and of course he was a flashy dresser! (laughs)

    Q: You have lived out of your suitcase for several years now. How at home do you feel?
    SV: 
    Sure, your suitcase becomes very dear to you. And with time packing becomes routine, of course. You never quite eliminate the mistake of taking too many things that in the end you don’t need. I think that is in a traveller’s DNA. (laughs) Overall I believe that being in Formula One is kind of the antithesis of being a holiday traveller. They look forward to getting on the plane, sleeping in a hotel, having a breakfast buffet in the morning, whereas we are happy to sleep for once in a while in our own bed and fumble around in our own kitchen. 

    Q: What must you never forget to pack?
    SV: 
    Toothbrush – and the white socks that immediately identify you as a German! (laughs) 

    Q: If you had one month to yourself how would you spend it?
    SV: 
    Definitely not jumping on a plane! I would spend some time with friends and family and for the rest of it I would take a tour either on foot or on a bike. Set a destination and then to go off cross-country. 

    Q: Your home Grand Prix at Hockenheim is just around the corner. Do you feel that you owe your fans something there?
    SV: 
    Sure, it is always a special race, no doubt. So it is different, yes. But on the other hand, you don’t get more points there so I will enjoy the weekend and do my best. That goes without saying…

    Q: But you would like to win it, wouldn’t you?
    SV: 
    Yes I would.

     

    Copyright. 2012. F1.com All Rights Reserved

  • Freeh Report: Penn St. hid key facts

     

     

    NCAA FB

     

    Freeh Report: Penn St. hid key facts

    Watch: Louis Freeh says Penn State officials hid key facts and failed to act.
     
     

    Watch: Louis Freeh says Penn State officials hid key facts and failed to act.

     
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    UPDATED JUL 12, 2012 7:21 PM ET
         

     

    STATE COLLEGE, PA. (AP)

    Joe Paterno and other top Penn State officials buried child sexual abuse allegations against Jerry Sandusky more than a decade ago to avoid bad publicity, according to a scathing report Thursday that exposed a powerful ”culture of reverence” for the football program and portrayed the Hall of Fame coach as more deeply involved in the scandal than previously thought.

     


    FREEH REPORT

    Read the complete Freeh reportwith findings regarding how much Penn State university leaders knew of Jerry Sandusky sexual abuse.

     

    The alleged cover-up by Paterno, then-university President Graham Spanier and two other Penn State administrators allowed Sandusky to prey on other boys for years, said the report by former FBI Director Louis Freeh, who was hired by the university’s trustees to investigate.

    He called the officials’ behavior ”callous and shocking.”

    ”Our most saddening and sobering finding is the total disregard for the safety and welfare of Sandusky’s child victims by the most senior leaders at Penn State,” Freeh said at a news conference in Philadelphia upon the release of the 267-page report. ”The most powerful men at Penn State failed to take any steps for 14 years to protect the children who Sandusky victimized.”

    The findings of the $6.5 million, eight-month investigation into one of the biggest scandals in the history of college sports could further stain Paterno’s reputation. The revered coach who emphasized integrity both on and off the field and ran what was considered one of the cleanest programs in sports died of lung cancer in January at age 85, months after he was summarily fired by the trustees.

    Freeh said that while he regretted the damage the findings would do to Paterno’s ”terrific legacy,” the coach ”was an integral part of this active decision to conceal,” and his firing was justified.

    Asked whether the actions of the four officials amounted to a crime such as conspiracy or obstruction, Freeh said that would be a matter for a grand jury to decide.

    In a statement, Paterno’s family strongly denied he protected Sandusky for fear of bad publicity.

     

     

    Four of the most powerful people at The Pennsylvania State University — President Graham B. Spanier, Senior Vice President-Finance and Business Gary C. Schultz, Athletic Director Timothy M. Curley and Head Football Coach Joseph V. Paterno — failed to protect against a child sexual predator harming children for over a decade.

     

    The Freeh Report

     

    ”The idea that any sane, responsible adult would knowingly cover up for a child predator is impossible to accept. The far more realistic conclusion is that many people didn’t fully understand what was happening and underestimated or misinterpreted events,” the family said. ”Sandusky was a great deceiver. He fooled everyone.”

    The findings could have consequences for the criminal case against Penn State athletic director Tim Curley and retired senior vice president Gary Schultz, who are awaiting trial on charges of failing to report abuse and lying to a grand jury. In addition, the Pennsylvania attorney general’s office is still investigating the scandal, and others could be charged.

    Sandusky, a former member of Paterno’s coaching staff, is awaiting sentencing after being convicted last month of sexually abusing 10 boys over 15 years.

    Freeh and his team, which included lawyers and former law enforcement officials, interviewed more than 430 people and examined more than 3.5 million emails, handwritten notes and other documents. Paterno died before he could be interviewed but testified before a grand jury.

    The investigation focused largely on the university officials’ decision not to go to child-welfare authorities in 2001 after a coaching assistant told Paterno that he had seen Sandusky sexually abusing a boy in the locker room showers.

    Paterno and the others gave various explanations for their decision, saying among other things that they misunderstood the allegations, that they did the best they could and that this was the ”humane” way to handle the matter.

    But the Freeh report said: ”It is more reasonable to conclude that, in order to avoid the consequences of bad publicity, the most powerful leaders at the university – Spanier, Schultz, Paterno and Curley – repeatedly concealed critical facts relating to Sandusky’s child abuse from authorities, the university’s board of trustees, the Penn State community and the public at large.”

    A number of other factors contributed to the decision to keep quiet, the report found, including ”a culture of reverence for the football program that is ingrained at all levels of the campus community.”

    Spreading the blame around, the report also said the trustees failed to exercise oversight and didn’t inquire deeply into the matter when they finally learned of it.

    Spanier’s lawyers Thursday denied Spanier took part in a cover-up and said Freeh’s conclusion ”is simply not supported by the facts.” Spanier was ousted along with Paterno four days after Sandusky’s arrest last November.

     

    FOX SPORTS POLL

     
    • In light of Freeh Report, does Penn St. football deserve death penalty?
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    Attorneys for Curley and Schultz said that the investigation was flawed and that their clients would prove their innocence in court. Curley lawyer Caroline Roberto called it a ”lopsided document that leaves the majority of the story untold.”

    Freeh said officials had opportunities in 1998 and 2001 to step in.

    In 1998, police investigated after a woman complained that her son had showered with Sandusky. The investigation did not result in charges. But the emails show Paterno clearly followed the 1998 case, Freeh said. University officials took no action at the time to limit Sandusky’s access to campus.

    Then, after the 2001 report of Sandusky sexually abusing a boy in the showers, university officials barred him from bringing children to campus but decided not to report him to child-welfare authorities.

    Some of the most damning evidence against Paterno consists of handwritten notes and emails that portray him as having been involved in that decision.

    According to the report, Spanier, Schultz and Curley drew up an ”action plan” that called for reporting Sandusky to the state Department of Public Welfare. But Curley later said in an email that he changed his mind about the plan ”after giving it more thought and talking it over with Joe.” Instead, Curley proposed to offer Sandusky ”professional help.”

    In an email, Spanier agreed with that course of action but noted ”the only downside for us is if the message isn’t (heard) and acted upon and we then become vulnerable for not having reported it.”

    Freeh suggested it was Paterno’s intervention that kept administrators from going to authorities. ”Based on the evidence, the only known intervening factor … was Mr. Paterno’s Feb. 26 conversation with Mr. Curley,” Freeh said.

     

     

    Michael Boni, a lawyer for a boy known as Victim 1, called the report a ”serious indictment against Penn State’s culture and environment of protecting at all costs the football program.” He added: ”Nothing is shocking anymore in this case … but the fact that the highest levels of the school made a conscious decision to cover up what Sandusky had done, it comes close. It is shocking.”

    Karen Peetz, chairwoman of the trustees, said the board ”accepts full responsibility for the failures that occurred.” She said the panel believes Paterno’s ”61 years of excellent service to the university is now marred” by the scandal.

    The report chronicled a culture of silence that extended from the president down to the janitors in the football building. Even before 1998, football staff members and coaches regularly saw Sandusky showering with boys but never told their superiors about it. In 2000, after a janitor saw Sandusky performing oral sex on a boy in the team shower, he told his co-workers. None of them went to police for fear of losing their jobs.

    Reporting the assault ”would have been like going against the president of the United States in my eyes,” a janitor told Freeh’s investigators. ”I know Paterno has so much power, if he wanted to get rid of someone, I would have been gone.” He went on to assert that ”football runs this university.”

    According to the report, Sandusky was permitted to retire from the university in 1999 ”not as a suspected child predator but as a valued member of the Penn State football legacy,” thus ensuring his access to football events and campus facilities. That, in turn, ”provided Sandusky with the very currency that enabled him to attract his victims.”

    Sandusky received what Freeh called an unprecedented lump sum of $168,000 when he retired. But the former FBI chief said there was no evidence it was an attempt by the university to buy Sandusky’s silence.

    The report could influence investigations under way at the NCAA and at the U.S. Education Department, which is examining whether the university violated the Clery Act, a federal law that requires reporting of certain crimes on campus. The Freeh report said Penn State apparently failed to comply with the law. Neither the Education Department nor the NCAA would comment directly on the report.

     

     

    George Enteen, a retired professor of Russian history, called the Freeh report a ”terrible mark” on the character of Paterno, a man he otherwise respected as someone who raised a lot money for Penn State and elevated the school’s reputation and academic quality.

    ”The worst suspicions were borne out,” Enteen said. Paterno, he added, ”was the key figure. If he had said, `Report it,’ they would have.” But he said: ”It doesn’t negate all the good things he did.”

    Christian Beveridge, a masonry worker who grew up near Penn State, said the findings will damage Paterno’s legacy.

    ”He built this town,” Beveridge said. ”All of his victories, he’ll be remembered by everyone in town for a long time, but there will be that hesitation.”

    Scott Berkowitz, president of the Rape, Abuse and Incest National Network, said the hard-hitting report ”is opening people’s eyes to the potential liability that schools face if they don’t address this correctly.”

    ”Heads of every college and university in the country have got to be taking note of this, and calling board meetings today and saying, `We need to make sure that we change the way we’re doing things,”’ he said.

      • © 2012 Fox Sports Interactive Media, LLC. All rights reserved

  • Bentley Launch Fastest Model In Their History

    YOU ARE HERE: HOME / .LATEST NEWS / BENTLEY LAUNCH FASTEST MODEL IN THEIR HISTORY

    Bentley Launch Fastest Model In Their History

    JUNE 20, 2012 BY  LEAVE A COMMENT
    Bentley have sold many Continental models over the years. The luxury coupe is often snapped up by footballers, celebrities or just people with a little too much money. Despite the company the car keeps it is a brilliant and a very capable machine. The Continentals latest incarnation offers more power but less weight, not to mention a V8 option. But let’s be honest here… It is the GT Speed variant we have all been waiting for.

    Turning the Bentley Continental from a luxury cruiser to a ballistic missile is the 2012 GT Speed. This is the fastest Bentley ever produced as its 616BHP W12 engine willpropel the car to 205MPH. This British brute also churns out a biblical 590lb-ft of torque aiding it in a 0-62MPH sprint of just 4 seconds. Stiffer suspension, sharper steering and a retuned gearbox complete the package. The GT Speed will cost you £160,000 making it £20,000 cheaper than the recently unveiled Vanquish from Aston Martin. Though this is more of a sledge hammer to the Aston’s elegant cheese knife, there is no doubt that Bentley are looking to be very competitive.

    FILED UNDER: .LATEST NEWS TAGGED WITH: 

  • Mark Webber Signs For 2013 F1 Season With Red Bull

    Mark Webber Signs For 2013 F1 Season With Red Bull

    JULY 10, 2012 BY INSIDE LANE LEAVE A COMMENT
    To get into Formula One you must undergo a long and arduous journey from the very bottom of motorsport. It requires high levels of skill and determination and even with those you will still need a good dose of luck. Mark Webber is widely regarded as “one of the nicest guys in the paddock” and he knows just how hard it is to get into Formula One. For now his is staying there.

    Webber entered F1 in 2002 and has done a fair bit of moving around in his decade within the sport. The question lately has been if he will remain either in F1 or with his current team. Mark often appears, in his own words, as the “number 2” driver within Red Bull. However, he currently leads his team mate, Vettel, in the championships. His contract runs out this season and for the past few years he has only signed a one year deal not knowing when he will make his exit. Shortly after winning the British Grand Prix, showing that he has still got what it takes, Mr Webber signed with double world champions Red Bull Racing for the 2013 season.

    FILED UNDER: .LATEST NEWS TAGGED WITH: 2013CONTRACTF1FORMULA ONEMARK WEBBERRED BULL
  • For My Friend Bob at Twoberry

     


    A Scrabble tile poem to triple word score your heart

    Posted about 18 hours ago by Photo_booth-7_thumb Annie Colbert to Holy Kaw!

    Like this post

    Mike Keath scores big points for his Scrabble tile poem.

    Each tercet (three lines of iambic pentameter with ABA rhyme scheme) in the poem below is formed from the set of 100 Scrabble® tiles, which consist of 98 letters (including all letters A-Z) plus two blank “wildcards” that can be assigned any letter. The poem is visually depicted using six sets of Scrabble® tiles, where the two blanks in each set are indicated by red tiles. In this challenge we deem it quite permissable to use different letters for the blanks in each separate set of tiles (each stanza).

    Full-size and regular text version at cadaeic. (H/T BoingBoing)

    The love of words.

  • 7 Surprising Facts About Dolphins. Amazing

    FACT SHEET
     

    7 surprising facts about dolphins

    The friendly sea mammals can sniff out bombs, form complex networks, and eat dozens of pounds of fish a day

    POSTED ON JULY 4, 2012, AT 8:15 AM
    A typical 260-pound dolphin eats some 33 pounds of fish a day — that's the equivalent of you scarfing down roughly 20 pounds of steak.

    A typical 260-pound dolphin eats some 33 pounds of fish a day — that’s the equivalent of you scarfing down roughly 20 pounds of steak. Photo: Thinkstock/iStockphotoSEE ALL 93 PHOTOS

    Dolphins are famously intelligent and gregarious creatures, which helps explain why humans are so fascinated by them. And now, new research suggests that the bottlenose dolphin’s genetic makeup is actually much more human-like than scientists once thought. The findings are part of a growing canon of evidence bolstering the idea that the marine mammals are the second smartest of Earth’s inhabitants. Here, seven recent revelations about dolphins:

    1. Genetically, they’re a lot like humans
    Dolphins are at least as smart as apes, and can do many of the things apes can do, such as “mirror self-recognition, communication, mimicry, and cultural transmission,” researcher Michael McGowen tells Discovery News. In fact, new research shows that dolphins’ relatively large noggins can be explained by an evolutionary history that’s remarkably similar to our own. After mapping 10,000 of the mammal’s genes, McGowen and his colleagues discovered that dolphin minds evolved to allow for complex cognition just like humans’ brains, as evidenced by a high metabolic rate that allows dolphin bodies to power large, energy-demanding brains.

    2. They’re gangsters
    Dolphins are the gangsters of the sea, and have been observed patrolling small expanses of oceans in hierarchical pods. Each little swimming army comes with small subgroups assigned different tasks, such as protecting the group’s females, recruiting other members to improve their ranks, or acting as peaceful liaisons to go out and communicate with rival pods. Sounds a lot like “the Mafia,” says Virginia Morell at Wired.

    3. They can sniff out bombs
    Dolphins are the Navy’s secret weapon for clearing underwater mines. They’re employed in conflict areas like the Middle East’s Strait of Hormuz, a key passageway for the world’s oil tankers that’s often dotted with bombs, thanks to mounting U.S.-Iran tensions. The military trains dolphins much in the way it trains bomb-sniffing dogs, teaching them how to spot hard-to-detect explosives and then mark them for the Navy’s divers to disarm. There is, however, one downside to such a technique: The enemy can’t tell a military dolphin from a wild one, so Iranian soldiers could indiscriminately attack all dolphins they see.  

    4. Dolphins have scary, hand-like penises
    Male dolphins possess one of the stranger sex organs on the planet: A retractable penis used to navigate through the ocean, kind of like how humans use their hands to feel their way around. A dolphin’s propensity to depend on his penis as a do-it-all multi-tool helps explain why the animals are known to “hump inanimate objects.”

    5. Killer whales are actually dolphins
    It turns out Shamu and Flipper have more in common than you’d believe. Orcas, or killer whales, actually aren’t whales at all, but are instead classified as the largest member of the dolphin family. That explains why the distinctive black-and-white animals are surprisingly intelligent as the “trainable stars of many aquarium shows,” says National Geographic

    6. Dolphins are voracious eaters
    An average-sized dolphin weighing in at 260 pounds eats roughly 33 pounds of fish per day. For an average-sized human, that’s essentially the equivalent of eating 15 to 22 pounds of steak a day. And yet, the svelte dolphin doesn’t gain any weight.

    7. Dolphins are endearingly maternal
    Until recently, dolphin births were largely a mystery. Then in 2007, at an enclosed pool in Italy, a photographer captured a few shots of a mother dolphin going into labor, only to see a baby emerge tail-first amidst a cloud of blood. “I was extremely lucky,” says photographer Leandro Stanzani, who had been snapping shots of dolphins for 14 years. Shortly after giving birth, the mother was observed gently nestling her newborn calf to the surface for its first gulp of air, demonstrating that the widly complicated animals aren’t just horny, mafia-like gangsters — they can be motherly, too.

    Sources: Daily MailDiscovery News,Facts.RandomHistory.comNational Geographic, Wired

     

     

  • The Lowdown on the Place Where Martians are Held Captive, and Live on Strawberry Ice Cream.

    UFOS, AREA 51 AND OTHER STRANGE EVENTS

     

    • GEORGE KNAPP, I-TEAM REPORTER

      Strikers Walk Off Job at ‘Secret Base’

      Security officers at a Nevada military base that is one of the most classified in the world have walked off the job in a dispute over wages. The workers are able to talk about their labor dispute, but they can’t say anything about where they work. It’s a place that, for many years, didn’t officially exist — Area 51.
       
    • GEORGE KNAPP, INVESTIGATIVE REPORTER

      Special Report: Area 51 Uncovered

      The infamous Nevada military base known as Area 51 is one of the most secretive places on Earth.  Eyewitness News has aired many stories about the base over the years but we’ve never had much of a look inside — until now.
       
    • CHIEF INVESTIGATIVE REPORTER GEORGE KNAPP AND CHIEF PHOTOJOURNALIST MATT ADAMS

      Area 51: 20 Years of Intrigue

      It’s been 20 years this month since Eyewitness News began reporting on a then-obscure military facility now known all over the world as Area 51. Chief Investigative Reporter George Knapp broke the story of Area 51 and has a look back.
       
    • CHIEF INVESTIGATIVE REPORTER GEORGE KNAPP AND CHIEF PHOTOJOURNALIST MATT ADAMS

      I-Team: In Search of the New Area 51

      The most famous, or infamous, military base in the world, Nevada’s Area 51, is once again generating its share of wild speculation. George Knapp investigates if the base has shut down or moved its most sensitive projects to other less-visible locations.
       
    • GEORGE KNAPP, CHIEF INVESTIGATIVE REPORTER

      I-Team: CIA’s Area 51 Roadrunners Hold Reunion in Las Vegas

      The Roadrunners, former CIA employees who worked on top secret spy planes out at the Area 51 military base, celebrated their reunion in Las vegas. Though unlike past years, they are now able to speak openly about the work they did to protect our country. George Knapp of the I-Team is the only local journalist invited to attend.
       
    • GEORGE KNAPP, CHIEF INVESTIGATIVE REPORTER

  • British Grand Prix 2012: Lewis Hamilton looks for McLaren revival after ‘racing his heart out’

    British Grand Prix 2012: Lewis Hamilton looks for McLaren revival after ‘racing his heart out’

    Lewis Hamilton is praying that McLaren can find a major step forward to stop his title hopes slipping away after a dispiriting British Grand Prix at Silverstone.

    British Grand Prix 2012: Lewis Hamilton looks for McLaren revival after 'racing his heart out'
    Consoling arm: Jenson Button and Lewis Hamilton hope for a McLaren revial after disappointing outings at the British GP Photo: PA

     

    8:52AM BST 09 Jul 2012

     

     

     

    Hamilton and team-mate Jenson Button had been hopeful of a strong showing on home soil, but the pair struggled for pace and could ultimately manage only eighth and 10th place finishes respectively.

    Red Bull’s Mark Webber took his ninth Formula One career victory with Fernando Alonso and Sebastian Vettel rounding out the podium, leaving Hamilton 37 points adrift of the Ferrari driver in the title chase.

    Button is 79 points behind in eighth place, while McLaren also dropped to fourth in the constructors’ championship behind Lotus.

    Having been outpaced by Red Bull and Ferrari at two contrasting circuits in Valencia and Silverstone, the team appear to have a sizeable task on their hands to catch up to their rivals.

    And Hamilton said: “We are still in the fight but unless we find something it is going to be hard to stay in the fight.

    “I raced my heart out as always but we just struggled, we did not have enough speed in general.

    “I wish we could have done better at my home grand prix but the others have clearly made another step forward so it was a real tough race.

    “We have a lot of time to find from somewhere, we need a lot of downforce from somewhere.

    “I don’t know where the guys can find that but I really pray that they can find it.”

    McLaren have little time to find the required improvements to the MP4-27 with just two weeks until the German Grand Prix at Hockenheim.

    Hamilton does not expect an upturn in form to arrive in time for that race, one of three taking place over four weekends during a crucial phase of the season.

    “I am sure we will have a very similar car (at Hockenheim) but with some upgrades,” he said.

    “I hope we can have a better race. These guys in front have really picked up.

    “Mercedes, Lotus, Red Bull and Ferrari have all picked up a lot of pace so we are a little bit behind at the moment.

    “I expected us to get at least fifth place but those four teams in front of us were much quicker than us.

    “The fans were incredible this weekend and it’s a shame we couldn’t give them a better result.”

    Button was similarly bleak in his assessment of the team’s speed.

    He said: “The cars I was racing with, the Saubers and Williams, I was surprised I was racing with them because they must have had bad strategies or something as they were much much quicker than me.

    “It was a disappointing day and as a team we have a lot of work to do.”

     

     

  • British GP: Mark Webber wins after late pass on Fernando Alonso

    8 July 2012Last updated at 13:35 GMT

    British GP: Mark Webber wins after late pass on Fernando Alonso

    By Andrew BensonChief F1 writer at Silverstone

    Red Bull’s Mark Webber beat Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso in a close battle to win the British Grand Prix.

    Alonso led much of the race from pole position, but Webber benefited from a different tyre strategy to chase the Spaniard down after the final pit stops.

    Webber passed Alonso into Brooklands with four laps to go and held him off to the flag.

    Red Bull’s Sebastian Vettel took third ahead of Ferrari’s Felipe Massa.

    I’ve had a few [wins], but this one is taking a little bit to sink in. I had a single opportunity to pounce and I wasn’t going to let that slip

    Mark Webber

    McLaren’s Lewis Hamilton struggled to eighth and team-mate Jenson Button 10th.

    The McLaren’s lack of pace on the high-speed sweeps of Silverstone two weeks after it struggled on the slow-speed Valencia street circuit is a serious concern for Hamilton’s title hopes.

    He is now fourth in the championship, 37 points off Alonso, whose lead over Webber has been cut to 13 points. Vettel is third, 29 points behind Alonso.

    McLaren, who started the season with the fastest car, appear to have been left behind by Red Bull and Ferrari, who have both improved their cars dramatically in recent races.

    Alonso and Webber fought a private battle for victory, which was decided by tyre choices.

    Ferrari chose to start Alonso on the hard tyre - as McLaren did Hamilton – while Red Bull went for the more conventional choice of softs.

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    Fernando Alonso
     

    Alonso’s mixed feelings over result

    The decision meant that after the final pit stops Alonso was on the soft tyre and Webber on the hards, which turned out to be the better race tyre.

    Webber closed a four-second deficit in eight laps and Alonso was helpless to fend off the Red Bull as Webber passed him around the outside of the Brooklands corner at the end of the DRS overtaking zone.

    The Australian became after Alonso only the second driver to win two races this season.

    He said: “I’ve had a few [wins], but this one is taking a little bit to sink in. It didn’t look like a spectacular race between us initially, but it was one – pacing the stints on the tyres, Fernando starting on the harder tyre…

    “After the first stint Fernando had I thought he was in good shape to close the win out. But it came our way and I am absolutely over the moon, absolutely rapt.

    “I had a single opportunity to pounce and I wasn’t going to let that slip. Fernando, with the front-left tyre, if you lose balance around this place, the speed is very high in that [second] sector and it’s very hard for the driver to do something.

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    Red Bull's Mark Webber
     

    British GP 2012: Mark Webber ‘very proud’ after ‘special’ win

    “It was obvious he was pushing as hard as possible but the balance wasn’t with him.”

    Alonso said: “The victory was quite close today, but Mark was much quicker in the last laps and he deserves the victory. But I am very proud of the progress Ferrari have made in the last few weeks and we are now fighting for victories in the last few races.”

    The threatened rain never came, and the race took place in sunshine.

    As Alonso and Webber battled at the front, Vettel, who slipped back from fourth on the grid to fifth behind Massa on the first lap, made use of an early first pit stop to pass the Brazilian.

    Nevertheless, it was Massa’s most impressive race for some time, and it was a timely performance as Ferrari consider who will partner Alonso at the team next year.

    The Lotus drivers Kimi Raikkonen and Romain Grosjean were fifth and sixth, while Michael Schumacher, whose Mercedes faded from its third-place grid slot, passed Hamilton in the closing laps to take seventh.

    Williams driver Bruno Senna and Button took the final points places.