Sunday, 17 March 2013

Put Chalk in Your Closet to Make It Smell Better

Put Chalk in Your Closet to Make It Smell BetterClosets don't like to stay dry, and often attract unwanted scents (and sometimes creatures who like that environment). Once easy way to solve the problem? According to how-to illlustrator Yumi Sakugawa, the answer is chalk.

Chalk absorbs moisture, as many sources attest, so it's a helpful aid to reduce dampness?and the resulting smell in your closets. Just tie up a bundle with some sturdy string and hang it where it won't brush up against your clothes. It'll absorb moisture, the resulting smell, and your closet will become a nicer place to be.

8 Awesome Uses for Chalk That You've Probably Never Heard Of | Secret Tips from the Yumiverse

Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/lifehacker/full/~3/X1YMwq_smOg/put-chalk-in-your-closet-to-make-it-smell-better

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zodiac yeats: Home Improvement Tips for Spring - ECI Construction ...

March 20 is the first day of spring! Is your home ready for April showers and May flowers? If not, we?ve put together some home maintenance tips to prepare your home for the bright sunshine to come.

Raleigh-Home-Remodeling

  • Check your gutters. The earlier spring months are know for bringing a lot of rain, so it?s important to check for loose or leaky gutters. If they are clogged or full of debris, the water can end up in the basement or crawl space of your home. Check to make sure your gutters lead away from your foundation and are free of any trash.
  • Inspect your roof shingles. From the ground, visually check your roof shingles for any damage from the winter. Replace any shingles that are cracked, buckled or loose as the summer sun can do serious damage to roof shingles. Plumbing vents, chimneys and skylights should be checked and repaired by a qualified roofer.
  • Store firewood away from the home. Keep your firewood 2 feet from your home and at least 18 inches off the ground. Firewood kept near the house can attract spiders, snakes, rats and other pesky insects you don?t want running around your home.
  • Check your hose faucets. Over the winter, the faucet pipes can freeze due to the cold weather. You can check them yourself by turning the water on and placing your thumb over the opening. If you can stop the water from coming out, more than likely the pipe is damaged and will need to be replaced.
  • Prepare your lawn equipment. Check your gas and battery powered lawn mower, weed trimmer, etc and make sure they are ready for the summer. Cleaning the equipment and installing new cutting blades will make the yardwork easier.
  • ECI Construction has over 25 years of home remodeling and home repair experience. As a North Carolina local, President Doug Muehle understands the effects the seasons can have on a home. If you?re ready to prepare your home for the upcoming warmer months, do not hesitate to give him and his team a call. Contact the best Raleigh home remodeling company by calling 919-971-6415 or filling out their online contact form.

Source: http://www.eciconstructionnc.com/blog/home-improvement-tips-for-spring

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Source: http://zodiac-yeats.blogspot.com/2013/03/home-improvement-tips-for-spring-eci.html

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Syrian rebel chief: Fighters 'will not give up'

BEIRUT (AP) ? The chief of Syria's main, Western-backed rebel group marked the second anniversary of the start of the uprising against President Bashar Assad on Friday by pledging to fight until the "criminal" regime is gone.

Gen. Salim Idris, the head of the Supreme Military Council, called on Syrian soldiers to join the rebels in a "fight for freedom and democracy," and said: "Dear friends, the Free Syrian Army (fighters) will not give up."

In Damascus, authorities beefed up security measures as rebel groups called for stepped-up attacks on government troops and state institutions on the anniversary.

The revolt against Assad's authoritarian rule began in March 2011 with protests in the southern city of Daraa, after troops arrested teenagers who scrawled anti-regime graffiti on a wall. It has since morphed into a civil war that has killed an estimated 70,000 people, according to the U.N.

"We want (a) Syria where every Syrian can live in peace and liberty. This is our dream. This is what we are fighting for," Idris said in a video address obtained by The Associated Press form the military council's media office.

He spoke in an undisclosed location in northern Syria that is under rebel control.

"I know our battle is not so easy. We have to fight against planes, tanks and huge missiles," Idris said. "But our will is still very strong. We will not stop until this criminal regime has gone."

Idris, 55, studied in Germany and taught electronics at a Syrian military college before defecting to the rebel side in July.

In the past year, the rebels have made significant advances on the battlefield, capturing large swathes of land outside of major cities and along the border with Turkey and controlling some areas in the northern city of Aleppo, Syria's largest urban center and its commercial hub. They have also seized border crossings along the frontier with Turkey and Iraq and have overrun major military bases. They captured dams on the Euphrates River and came within a mile of the center of Damascus, the seat of Assad's power.

On Friday, rebels battled regime forces in several smaller army bases and weapons depots around Aleppo, seizing some ammunition in an army depot near a village of Khan Touman, southwest of the city, according to activist groups.

An activist in Aleppo province, who is widely known as Yassin Abu Raed, said rebels led by the Jabhat al-Nusra and other Islamic radical groups also seized control of a checkpoint protecting a military academy.

Abu Raed, who did not give his real name for fear of persecution by the regime, also said rebels seized a missile base in al-Rashideen area in Aleppo province. Another activist group, The Observatory for Human Rights, said fighting for the missile base was ongoing.

In activist videos posted online Friday, rebels are seen walking around a warehouse, opening wooden boxes that contain missiles.

The videos appeared consistent with reporting from the area by The Associated Press.

The rebels have long complained that their side is hampered by the failure of world powers to provide heavier arms to help them battle Assad's better-equipped military and his airpower. The international community is reluctant to send weapons partly because of fears they may fall into the hands of extremists who have been gaining influence among the rebels.

Last month, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry announced that the Obama administration was giving an additional $60 million in assistance to Syria's political opposition and would, for the first time, provide non-lethal aid directly to the rebels. None of the aid, which is to include an undetermined amount of food rations and medical supplies, has been sent yet.

On Friday, leaders at a European Union summit failed to agree if they should send arms to the rebels.

An EU embargo prohibits any arms from being sent to Syria, whether to the rebels or to the Assad regime. That embargo is scheduled to remain in effect until May, when it will either be renewed or allowed to expire.

France and Britain have argued that they should be able supply arms to the rebels, saying the Assad regime is receiving arms from Russia and Iran. France and Britain claim that with more weaponry, the rebels could defend themselves and the civilian population and members of the Assad regime would see more clearly a need to negotiate a political settlement.

On Friday, some anti-government groups called for stepped-up attacks to mark the anniversary of the uprising. The banned Islamist Muslim Brotherhood group urged supporters for a "week of action" on the occasion but didn't specify what it would do.

A Damascus-based activist who identified himself as Abu Qais said regime troops increased patrols and security searches in the country's capital. He spoke on condition his real name not be used for security concerns.

In neighboring Lebanon, gunmen set fire to three fuel tankers with Syrian license plates to prevent them from crossing into Syria, the state-run National News Agency said.

The Lebanese news agency said the incident occurred in the northern city of Tripoli, and that the tankers were carrying fuel when they were stopped by the protesters and later set on fire. No casualties were reported.

In the past, protesters have closed roads to keep tankers from crossing into Syria, where there are severe gasoline and diesel shortages. They claim diesel exported to Syria is being used by regime tanks.

Many among Lebanon's Sunni Muslims have backed Syria's mainly Sunni rebel forces, in which radical Islamists have become increasingly active. Lebanese Shiite Muslims, including the militant Hezbollah group, have leaned toward Assad, whose tiny Alawite sect is an offshoot of Shiite Islam.

Separately, the Syrian Foreign Ministry complained in a letter sent to the Lebanese government on Thursday that armed groups have tried to infiltrate Syria from Lebanon repeatedly in the past 36 hours, triggering clashes with border guards.

Damascus said Syrian troops have exercised "utmost self-restraint" until now but warned that "this would not continue endlessly."

Also on Friday, at least eight Syrians were killed and 29 were injured when the bus they were traveling in from Syria overturned in the mountains in central Lebanon, officials said. The bus was headed to the Lebanese capital, Beirut, when the accident occurred in the Kahhaleh region.

George Kettaneh, operations director for the Lebanese Red Cross, said the casualties included women and children. He said it's unclear why the bus overturned.

It was not immediately known whether the Syrians were refugees fleeing the violence at home. The bus had Syrian license plates from the northeastern Hassakeh province, which recently witnessed heavy clashes.

More than 1 million Syrians have fled the country's civil war to seek shelter in neighboring countries. In Lebanon alone, the U.N. has registered more than 360,000 Syrian refugees.

___

Associated Press writer Don Melvin in Brussels contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/syrian-rebel-chief-fighters-not-153125013.html

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Wednesday, 6 March 2013

Conn Carroll: California becoming a feudal society

Welcome to the demographics of the ?NEW? California.? It will be much older, less educated and more dependent on government.? It will be a European style welfare state.? As the demographics move in that direction expect the educated and the productive to leave even quicker.? We are watching as Sacramento policies are killing our farms, manufacturing has died, even Hollywood is moving to Tennessee, Canada and Mexico.

Below is the future of California ?Medicare and welfare.? Plus the very rich who love the weather and can afford high taxes and very high consumer prices.

?Unfortunately for California, this local-born population is not increasing fast enough to replace the disappearing immigration. The number of Californians under age 18 will virtually halt over the next 20 years, while population growth among those 65 and older will quadruple. The current ratio of one senior for every five working-age residents will become a 3-to-10 ratio by 2020, and 4-to-10 by 2030.

If California?s new native-born population was particularly wealthy or well-educated, this demographic imbalance might not be such a big problem. But it is not. And this will severely strain California?s generous welfare state.

See the full story by clicking on the blue headline

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Conn Carroll: California becoming a feudal society

Conn Carroll, The Washington Examiner, 3/2/13

For most of its history, California has occupied a special place in the mind of most Americans. From the height of the Gold Rush through the 1980s, California?s warm weather and booming economy drew enterprising, educated and talented immigrants from across the country. California was the melting pot of America?s melting pot, leading all states in the number of residents who were born in other U.S. states.

As I wrote in The Washington Examiner?s ?California in Crisis? series last week, that California is dead and gone. According to a 2012 University of Southern California study on state demographics, you have to go back to the early 1990s to find a time when more Americans were moving to California than leaving it for other states. Thanks to high housing prices and a weak job market, California is now a net exporter of U.S. citizens to other states.

As a result of this shift, native Californians became a majority of the state?s population only in the last decade. Their numbers will continue to rise. And since foreign immigration is also expected to level off, the report predicts growth will occur ?almost all among native Californians, many but not all of whom are the children of immigrants.?

Unfortunately for California, this local-born population is not increasing fast enough to replace the disappearing immigration. The number of Californians under age 18 will virtually halt over the next 20 years, while population growth among those 65 and older will quadruple. The current ratio of one senior for every five working-age residents will become a 3-to-10 ratio by 2020, and 4-to-10 by 2030.

If California?s new native-born population was particularly wealthy or well-educated, this demographic imbalance might not be such a big problem. But it is not. And this will severely strain California?s generous welfare state.

Even before the Great Recession, California already suffered from some of the highest levels of income inequality in the nation. And according to recent Public Policy Institute of California study, the recent downturn only exacerbated the problem. ?Compared to the rest of the country, California experienced larger declines in income at the bottom of the distribution and smaller declines at the top ? leading to the largest gap between upper and lower incomes in at least 30 years,? PPIC reported.

Worse, a 2012 California Budget Project study found that what little job recovery has occurred in the state has been confined to the low-skill sector. The employment rate for prime-working-age Californians with a bachelor?s degree or higher has been flat since the recovery began, whereas those with just a high school diploma and those without one have both seen job gains. To the extent that the California labor market is recovering, it is a McJobs recovery.

Of course, the Googles, Facebooks and Apples of California are all still swimming in profits and growth. If you do happen to have a job already among the highest fifth of California income earners, your weekly wages are up 1 percent since 2006. But every other income group has experienced sharp earnings losses.

California is rapidly becoming a near-feudal society. On one side is an older, educated, landed, wealthy elite that lives on California?s beautiful coasts. Then there is a much larger, younger, less-educated, indebted mass living inland, many of them working farm jobs at subsistence wages.

The good news is that both of these groups seem content supporting a Democratic Party whose policies (which I outlined in the series last week) reinforce these trends. And if any of the current Californians don?t like what the new California has become, they are free to leave.

The bad news is that millions of middle-class families already have, and the trend is likely to continue.

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Source: http://capoliticalnews.com/2013/03/04/conn-carroll-california-becoming-a-feudal-society/

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