Thursday, October 11, 2012

Japan economy shaky as island spat hits business

In this Sept. 16, 2012 photo, a part of the ceiling has fallen down inside a burned Japanese plant after it was torched by anti-Japan demonstrators on the previous day in Qingdao in Sandong Province, China. The craggy island specks in the East China Sea aren't even an economic backwater. They have no factories, no highways, no shops, no people ? only goats. But the high-pitched row between Beijing and Tokyo over their ownership is exacting a growing toll on Japan, threatening to send its recovery from last year's disasters into reverse. (AP Photo/Kyodo News) JAPAN OUT, MANDATORY CREDIT, NO LICENSING IN CHINA, FRANCE, HONG KONG, JAPAN AND SOUTH KOREA

In this Sept. 16, 2012 photo, a part of the ceiling has fallen down inside a burned Japanese plant after it was torched by anti-Japan demonstrators on the previous day in Qingdao in Sandong Province, China. The craggy island specks in the East China Sea aren't even an economic backwater. They have no factories, no highways, no shops, no people ? only goats. But the high-pitched row between Beijing and Tokyo over their ownership is exacting a growing toll on Japan, threatening to send its recovery from last year's disasters into reverse. (AP Photo/Kyodo News) JAPAN OUT, MANDATORY CREDIT, NO LICENSING IN CHINA, FRANCE, HONG KONG, JAPAN AND SOUTH KOREA

In this Sept. 16, 2012 photo, a man sits in a park in front of a burned Japanese plant after it was torched by anti-Japan demonstrators on the previous day in Qingdao in Sandong Province, China. The craggy island specks in the East China Sea aren't even an economic backwater. They have no factories, no highways, no shops, no people ? only goats. But the high-pitched row between Beijing and Tokyo over their ownership is exacting a growing toll on Japan, threatening to send its recovery from last year's disasters into reverse. (AP Photo/Kyodo News) JAPAN OUT, MANDATORY CREDIT, NO LICENSING IN CHINA, FRANCE, HONG KONG, JAPAN AND SOUTH KOREA

In this Sept. 15, 2012 photo, people crowd outside Japanese supermarket Heiwado after its windows were broken by anti-Japan demonstrators in Shangshain Hunan Province, China. The craggy island specks in the East China Sea aren't even an economic backwater. They have no factories, no highways, no shops, no people ? only goats. But the high-pitched row between Beijing and Tokyo over their ownership is exacting a growing toll on Japan, threatening to send its recovery from last year's disasters into reverse. (AP Photo/Kyodo News) JAPAN OUT, MANDATORY CREDIT, NO LICENSING IN CHINA, FRANCE, HONG KONG, JAPAN AND SOUTH KOREA

In this Sept. 16, 2012 photo, a cyclist looks back at badly-damaged Japanese supermarket Aeon following an anti-Japan demonstrators' attack in Qingdao in Sandong Province, China. The craggy island specks in the East China Sea aren't even an economic backwater. They have no factories, no highways, no shops, no people ? only goats. But the high-pitched row between Beijing and Tokyo over their ownership is exacting a growing toll on Japan, threatening to send its recovery from last year's disasters into reverse. (AP Photo/Kyodo News) JAPAN OUT, MANDATORY CREDIT, NO LICENSING IN CHINA, FRANCE, HONG KONG, JAPAN AND SOUTH KOREA

(AP) ? The craggy island specks in the East China Sea aren't even an economic backwater. They have no factories, no highways, no shops, no people ? only goats. But the high-pitched row between Beijing and Tokyo over their ownership is exacting a growing toll on Japan, threatening to send its recovery from last year's disasters into reverse.

Sales of Japanese cars in China are in a free-fall. At the China Open last weekend, a representative of Sony Corp., which is a sponsor of the tennis tournament, was loudly booed at the title presentation for the women's final. Chinese tourists are cancelling trips to Japan in droves. And some analysts say Japan's economy will shrink in the last three months of the year.

The business and economic shockwaves come after Japan last month nationalized the tiny islands, called Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China, which were already under Tokyo's control but are also claimed by Beijing. The move set off violent protests in China, and a widespread call to boycott Japanese goods. Toyota Motor Corp. and Honda Motor Co. dealerships were burned down in one city.

Seeing footage of Toyota cars getting smashed by angry rioters, Toyota President Akio Toyoda had looked almost tearful, confiding in reporters: "I couldn't bear to watch. It hurt as though I was getting beaten."

A report by J.P. Morgan, released Tuesday, projected Japanese auto exports to China will crash 70 percent during the October-December period. The export of auto parts will slip by 40 percent ? about the same drop estimated for exports of other consumer products, such as electronics, it said.

The aftermath of the latest phase of the sizzling territorial spat with China will cause Japan's economy, the world's third biggest, to shrink 0.8 percent in the fourth quarter, according to J.P. Morgan. It had previously forecast no growth in the quarter.

J.P. Morgan chief economist Masaaki Kanno fears the fallout could get worse in the months ahead, as the September sales numbers for Japanese automakers only account for damage that started the middle of the month.

Toyota said Tuesday that sales of new vehicles in China dropped 49 percent in September from a year earlier to 44,100 vehicles. Honda said September sales plunged 41 percent to 33,931 vehicles. China sales for Nissan Motor Co. slid 35 percent last month to 76,100 vehicles.

Even the most optimistic scenario does not foresee a recovery in Japan's economy until the second quarter of next year, Kanno said.

"What we have ahead of us is going to be terrible," he said. "It's like last year's disaster all over again."

The quake and tsunami in northeastern Japan last year hobbled the economy for months. Auto production was particularly hard hit because parts suppliers had been located in the disaster area. Flooding in Thailand that followed added to the automakers' woes. They had only bounced back toward the end of last year, after months of rebuilding.

Kanno's report said the number of Chinese tourists would decline by 70 percent while Japanese tourists to China would fall by 30 percent.

Ayumi Kunimatu, spokeswoman for Japanese carrier All Nippon Airways, said 43,000 seats had been cancelled for flights from September through the end of November ? 28,000 of them from China to Japan, and 15,000 from Japan to China. Up to now, China flights had made up a quarter of ANA's international passengers.

A person who answered at China International Travel Service in Beijing confirmed group tours to Japan had been called off. The Chinese state-run news agency Xinhua reported that more than a hundred thousand Chinese cancelled Japan trips, and the number of tour groups to Japan had plunged by 40 percent.

The tourism fallout to hot springs and ski resorts is likely to deal a serious blow to Japan's regional economies, which are already more vulnerable to such slowdowns.

China, with its growing middle class, had been one of the emerging markets that Japanese companies were counting on to boost sales amid a long stagnation in their domestic market.

Japan's trade with China reached record levels over the last 12 months, totaling more than $340 billion. China is Japan's biggest export market.

Although the immediate damage is being felt in Japan, the souring relations and the realization of the so-called "China risks" are likely to crimp investments from Japan, hurting the Chinese economy as well, in the long run. Japan not only exports to China but also has significant manufacturing investments there in areas such as autos.

The unfolding dispute between the two Asian neighbors underlines how easily historical animosities can be revived ? and so emotionally ? no matter how closely intertwined the economies have grown. Enmity between the two nations started with Japan's military victory against China's dying Qing empire in 1895 and then exploded as Japan invaded swathes of China in the 1930s and 1940s and enforced a brutal occupation. China's communist government has nurtured anti-Japanese sentiment in successive generations through its control of education and the media.

Carl Weinberg, chief economist at High Frequency Economics, based in Valhalla, New York, said the territorial dispute is not going to set off a shootout.

"However, economic conflict has already begun. This can and will cost the woebegone Japanese economy dearly in the form of exports," Weinberg wrote in his weekly report, estimating that the loss of 40,000 vehicles for Toyota is worth about half a billion dollars.

Increasingly, Japanese have been looking to other nations such as Vietnam, Thailand and Indonesia as destinations for investment, and a hostile China could speed up that trend.

Japanese supermarket chain Aeon Co. said damage at one of its stores had totaled 700 million yen ($8.8 million) as looters smashed windows, broke in and ran amok, toppling shelves and kicking merchandise. That doesn't account for the loss of sales from the store's closure or boycotting consumers.

But spokesman Toshiyuki Mukohara was calm, noting the company remained committed to China, and its 34 other outlets were doing business as usual.

"We are dealing with regular Chinese people," he said.

Although the flare-ups have calmed in recent weeks, it would still require courage to be seen in a Japanese car in some Chinese cities.

Japanese automakers temporarily closed some of their China factories. Production is back up this week but reduced to lower levels as demand has collapsed.

Toyota, which makes the Prius hybrid, Camry sedan and Lexus luxury models, had planned to sell 1 million vehicles in China this calendar year.

"But that may be very difficult to achieve," company spokesman Dion Corbett said.

___

Follow Yuri Kageyama on Twitter: www.twitter.com/yurikageyama

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/f70471f764144b2fab526d39972d37b3/Article_2012-10-09-Japan-China/id-7dd71971662c4da8ba7bc2fdf127e1e7

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Film Review: Killing Them Softly | Sassi Sam Girlie Gossip Files


Directed by: Andrew Dominik
Starring: Brad Pitt, Ben Mendelsohn, Ray Liotta, Scoot McNairy, Richard Jenkins,
Sassi?s Star Rating: 3/5

Frankie (Scoot McNairy) isn?t very bright. Neither is Russell (Ben Mendelsohn). When the two decide to rob a mob?s poker game, everything goes surprisingly well. But repercussions come in the form of Jackie Cogan (Brad Pitt) and his guns ? the metal ones ? not his arms.

If you?re a fan of Brad Pitt, crime dramas, dark humour, and bloody violence you may really like this. If you prefer Brad Pitt strutting around fields with his shirt off, we don?t blame you, but this may not be your kind of flick.

The film is adapted from George V. Higgin?s novel, Cogan?s Trade. Directed by Andrew Dominik, Killing them Softly neatly ties around the collapse of the American economy. Unsurprisingly, Pitt steals the show with his?effortless acting as a smart, adept killer that knows how the world really works. He guides viewers through the meandering plot, as he seeks to gun down his incompetent targets. But it?s a hard time for everyone, including hard people.

Join Pitt and his guns as he seeks to restore his own sense of order.

Killing them Softly, in cinemas now.

Love
Allison

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Tags: Brad Pitt, Killing Them Softly, movie reviews

Category: Film & TV

Source: http://sassisamblog.com/2012/10/11/film-review-killing-them-softly/

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Iraq officially retreats from ambitious oil plans

BAGHDAD (AP) ? Iraq officially stepped back on Wednesday from its ambitious plans to more than triple its oil production by 2017, but it remains more optimistic than the world's leading global energy monitor about how fast and how high it can boost output.

Baghdad's latest targets show that Iraq, which is now pumping some 3.4 million barrels a day, remains eager to be a major player on the world energy map despite decades of wars and sanctions. It recently nudged out Iran as OPEC's second-largest producer, and further production gains would solidify its place behind the bloc's top producer, Saudi Arabia.

Speaking at a ceremony in Baghdad to mark the release of the International Energy Agency's less rosy outlook for Iraq's energy sector, Iraq's Deputy Prime Minister on energy Hussain al-Shahristani predicted that the country's oil production will reach 5 million to 6 million barrels per day in 2015. He envisions that rising to 9 million to 10 million barrels per day by 2020, a level that could be sustained for 20 years.

Iraq had previously been targeting production capacity of 12 million barrels per day by 2017. Many experts consider that target unrealistic.

"The conclusion of our studies and those of the independent consultants engaged in the Ministry of Oil are that it is feasible and desirable for Iraq to raise its oil production to about 9 to 10 million barrels per day by 2020," al-Shahristani added, without giving reasons for adjusting the oil targets.

The Paris-based IEA issued Tuesday a mid-range forecast envisioning oil production of 6.1 million barrels a day by 2020 and 8.3 million barrels a day by 2035.

Encouraged by improvement in the security situation, Iraq started in 2008 to attract international oil companies to develop its vast untapped oil and gas reserves to bring in sorely needed cash for postwar reconstruction. Top among major oil companies are the U.S.'s Exxon Mobil, Anglo-Dutch Royal Dutch Shell, the U.K.'s BP, China's CNPC and Russia's Lukoil.

Since then, Iraq has awarded 12 oil deals to develop about 65 percent of its 143.1 billion barrels of proven oil reserves. Three other deals to develop major gas fields were also awarded. As a result, Iraq's daily production and exports have jumped to levels not seen since the late 1970s or early 1980s.

It is now producing 3.4 million barrels a day, up from nearly 2.4 million a day in 2009, and its daily exports averaged 2.6 million barrels a day last month. Oil revenues make up nearly 95 percent of the budget.

But the IEA said Iraq needed to sort out internal issues in order for its predictions to come true. Among the most troublesome is the lack of oil-related infrastructure like pipeline networks, storages and export terminals. Another is the dispute between Iraq's central government and the self-ruled northern Kurdish region over rights to develop natural resources.

The IEA report also noted that boosting Iraq's oil production is crucial for international markets, as Iraq is expected to account for nearly half of the expected growth in global oil output in the current decade. A more pessimistic IEA forecast in the same report sees Iraqi oil output rising to just 4 million barrels a day in 2020 and to 5.3 million barrels in 2035. In its high case, IEA says that oil production could reach 9.2 million barrels in 2020.

The monitor reported that Iraq's annual revenues from energy exports could double to an average of $200 billion annually over the next 20 years. That optimistic scenario would make Iraq's economy the same size as that of Saudi Arabia now by 2035.

The IEA is a policy adviser to 28 member countries, mostly industrialized oil consumers. The group's predictions are important because they are seen as key benchmarks for energy markets.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/iraq-officially-retreats-ambitious-oil-plans-153212953--finance.html

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Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Bentley refuses to comply with health care exchange deadline | al.com

MONTGOMERY, Alabama -- Gov. Robert Bentley announced this afternoon that Alabama will not comply with a deadline in setting up state health insurance exchanges required under the Affordable Care Act.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services asked states to submit lists of essential benefits, that would be models for plans offered on the exchanges, by today.

Bentley said the state would not submit the information because there had been a lack of guidance from the federal government.

"As you are aware, I am a staunch opponent of the Affordable Care Act," Bentley wrote? to Secretary Kathleen Sebelius of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

"As both a physician and a governor, I have determined that it is irresponsible and short-sighted to make a decision on essential health benefits by confining the decision to a select few plans and without having been offered clear guidance from the federal government."

Bentley has added his voice to a chorus of GOP governors speaking out against - or refusing to comply with - various portions of the Affordable Care Act, President Obama's landmark healthcare insurance overhaul.

The Affordable Care Act requires states to set up insurance exchanges, which are web-based marketplaces in which people can shop for health insurance plans. The exchanges are supposed to be up and running by 2014.

Bentley said the state simply does not have enough information on guidelines to make a decision that could impact the health care coverage of every person in the state.

Bentley also said that he was concerned health savings accounts were not part of the health care equation.

"The Affordable Care Act includes many provisions, all supposedly geared toward making health insurance affordable, yet it does not include any significant mention of health savings accounts. I contend that the law does not make health insurance affordable and negatively affects consumer choice," Bentley said.

Today's deadline was expected to serve as a gauge of attitudes toward the exchanges. However, the real test is expected to come Nov. 16 when states are required to submit a blueprint for how their exchanges will operate.

"We will let the federal government know what our intentions are by Nov. 16," Bentley Press Secretary Jennifer Ardis said.

Today's requirement was considered with something of a soft deadline with no severe repercussions for the state for refusing to comply. According to Kaiser Health News if a state does not choose then the benchmark will be the largest small group plan in the state.

Industry officials say in Alabama that is Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Alabama's 320 Plan.

Rep. Greg Wren, R-Montgomery, who has previously criticized the Bentley administration's progress toward establishing an exchange, praised Bentley's decision.

"We hope the feds hear our collective call for partnering with us instead of dictating to us," Wren said.

Source: http://blog.al.com/spotnews/2012/10/bentley_refuses_to_comply_with.html

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Monday, October 1, 2012

No relief for relief workers: Humanitarian aid work raises risk of depression and anxiety

ScienceDaily (Oct. 1, 2012) ? Humanitarian workers are at significant risk for mental health problems, both in the field and after returning home. The good news is that there are steps that they and their employers can take to mitigate this risk.

These findings, from a new study by scientists at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and collaborators, including Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health, are published online in the journal PLOS ONE.

Researchers surveyed 212 international humanitarian workers at 19 NGOs. Prior to deployment, 3.8% reported symptoms of anxiety and 10.4%, symptoms of depression, broadly in line with prevalence of these disorders in the general population. Post-deployment, these rates jumped to 11.8% and 19.5%, respectively. Three to six months later, while there was some improvement in rates of anxiety -- they fell to 7.8% -- rates of depression were even higher at 20.1%.

Adjusting to home life is often difficult. "It is quite common for people returning from deployment to be overwhelmed by the comforts and choices available, but unable to discuss their feelings with friends and family," says Alastair Ager, PhD, study co-author and Professor of Clinical Population & Family Health at the Mailman School.

Even tuning into one's own family can be a challenge. "I remember one highly capable humanitarian worker struggling because the time she spent with her children simply didn't give the same 'buzz' as leading emergency operations in the field," adds Dr. Ager. "She felt guilty in this, but her nervous system had become 'wired' for emergency settings."

It was continual exposure to a challenging work environment that increased risk for depression, not the experience of particular dangerous or threatening situations. Weak social support and a history of mental illness also raised risks. On the plus side, aid workers who felt highly motivated and autonomous reported less burnout and higher levels of life satisfaction, respectively.

The paper outlines several recommendations for NGOs: (1) screen candidates for a history of mental illness, alert them to the risks associated with humanitarian work, and provide psychological support during and after deployment; (2) provide a supportive work environment, manageable workload, and recognition; and (3) encourage and facilitate social support and peer networks.

The well-being of humanitarian workers can be overshadowed by the needs of the populations they serve. "It has been challenging to get mental health care for workers onto the agendas of agencies employing them -- and even onto the radar of workers themselves," says Dr. Ager. "Depression, anxiety and burnout are too often taken as an appropriate response to the experience of widespread global injustice. We want them to know that the work they are doing is valuable and necessary and the situations difficult, but this doesn't mean they need to suffer." The study, he notes, provides "the first robust research evidence to establish the case that good staff care can make a real difference."

Dr. Ager and colleagues are also looking at the experience of those working as humanitarian workers in their own country. Results are due later this year.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal Reference:

  1. Barbara Lopes Cardozo, Carol Gotway Crawford, Cynthia Eriksson, Julia Zhu, Miriam Sabin, Alastair Ager, David Foy, Leslie Snider, Willem Scholte, Reinhard Kaiser, Miranda Olff, Bas Rijnen, Winnifred Simon. Psychological Distress, Depression, Anxiety, and Burnout among International Humanitarian Aid Workers: A Longitudinal Study. PLoS ONE, 2012; 7 (9): e44948 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0044948

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/iql3Ya7EIFM/121001132152.htm

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Trial of Pope's butler: Journalists admitted, but secret evidence not

Paolo Gabriele, the once-trusted valet who used to dress the 85-year-old German pontiff, is charged under Vatican law with the ?aggravated theft? of confidential papers.

By Nick Squires,?Correspondent / September 30, 2012

In this photo released by the Vatican paper L'Osservatore Romano, pope's butler Paolo Gabriele sits in the wood-trimmed courtroom of the Vatican tribunal, at the Vatican, Saturday. The Vatican opened the public trial Saturday of the pope's butler for allegedly stealing and leaking papal correspondence to a journalist, the most embarrassing scandal of Pope Benedict XVI's papacy.

L'Osservatore Romano/AP

Enlarge

The Pope?s personal butler will be cross-examined by a Vatican court on Tuesday in a closely-watched trial in which he is accused of stealing highly sensitive documents, some of them from the desk of Benedict XVI himself.

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The trial opened on Saturday in a wood-paneled court room in a Vatican tribunal within the walls of the tiny city state.?The case inevitably has garnered headlines given that it revolves around the great mystery cliche: "Did the butler do it?" Or rather, "was it only the butler who did it?"

The documents at the heart of the case have lifted the lid on corruption at the highest levels of the Roman Catholic Church, which is still battered by revelations of clerical cover-ups of child sexual abuse. With this case, the Vatican is trying to showcase greater transparency, allowing a pool of journalists to cover each meeting. Experts, however, say that the latest saga does not help the Vatican's already damaged image.

?It is certainly embarrassing for the Vatican but I?m not sure it will resonate that much among ordinary Catholics around the world,? says Alessandro Speciale, Vatican correspondent for Religion News Service.??The Church was already badly tarnished by the pedophile sex abuse scandals. That was much more serious.?

Paolo Gabriele, the once-trusted valet who used to dress the 85-year-old German pontiff and travel with him in his Popemobile, is charged under Vatican law with the ?aggravated theft? of confidential papers from the Pope?s private apartments and the Vatican secretariat of state.

Gold nugget, copy of the Aeneid

He is also accused of stealing an eclectic trio of gifts intended for the 85-year-old Benedict: a gold nugget, a check from a benefactor to the Pope for 100,000 euros, and a 16th century copy of the Aeneid, the epic poem by Virgil.

All the items were allegedly found squirreled away in the Vatican apartment he shares with his family, not far from the Pope?s apartments.

Mr. Gabriele, who is married with three children, is accused of passing the documents onto an Italian investigative journalist, Gianluigi Nuzzi, who in May published them in an explosive book, ?His Holiness ??The Secret Papers of Benedict XVI.?

The papers, memos, and letters lifted the lid on allegations of corruption in the awarding of public works contracts, obstructing the reform of the Vatican bank, and a mud-slinging campaign involving false accusations of homosexual affairs.

Several of the documents cast a bad light on Tarcisio Bertone, who as secretary of state is the Pope?s right-hand man and effectively the Vatican prime minister.?Documents appear to show that Cardinal Bertone did his utmost to block efforts to clean up alleged corruption and cronyism within the city state.

Reformer removed?

Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano, a senior member of the Vatican administration, discovered that it was wasting millions of euros in overpaying for goods and services, for instance.

But Cardinal Bertone allegedly had him removed from his post three years before his term was up and sent to faraway Washington as the Pope?s nuncio, or ambassador.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/cQFu3zXlEPA/Trial-of-Pope-s-butler-Journalists-admitted-but-secret-evidence-not

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News and Society -Crime News Blog: Penn State in the Wake of The ...

Penn State has been in the news a lot recently due to the Jerry Sandusky scandal. A number of high officials have been implicated, the NCAA has slapped Penn State with serious sanctions, and once-hero Joe Paterno's statue was removed recently after a plane flew over campus demanding it be taken down. Some say that no press is bad press, but is this really the case here?

The anger people feel is understandable. There was serious injustice taking place, the rape of innocence and violations of trust. When justice is subverted and crimes hidden, people naturally are outraged. Why didn't someone who knew about this situation do something to stop it? If the proper channels of communication and law were not blocked by people in positions of power, then this case would have been resolved long ago. Instead, it seems these people did not want the public relations nightmare that would ensue if this story reached the light of day. But it eventually did.

Now that the Sandusky Scandal reached its crescendo with the guilty verdict, the community is faced with a situation that is much worse than if people had done the right thing when they could have. This would have saved boys from torment, which is most important, but it would have also saved The Penn State University and surrounding State College community from a great deal of headache and heartache. It can be compared to ripping off a band-aid quickly. It will hurt a bit at first, but it's much better than the agonizing pain of peeling it off slowly. Instead of being in the process of healing, the pain continues.

This is not just about the football program, the college, the community, or the state of Pennsylvania. The lessons that can be learned here can be applied to our nation and our world at large. When action can be taken to rectify a terrible situation, it is best to act swiftly to do the right thing, even though it may seem dangerous or unpopular at first. Justice will eventually uncover the criminals, and so it is much better to be a part of the solution, rather than to help prolong the problem.

The wrongdoers are facing penalties for their actions, but because of all the negative media coverage, they have sullied the reputations of many innocent people associated with Penn State. Perhaps there will be some good that comes from this all, though it is hard to see now. As the football program licks its wounds, some of the other sports could take the spotlight. Maybe there will be an increased focus on academic excellence. And what if this scandal inspires more young people to seek social justice?

What do you think? Will Penn State be able to weather this storm, repair its damaged reputation, and come through this tragic situation stronger? And can all of this negative coverage be used for something good?

Kyle Hunt works at Hunt Law, a criminal defense firm in State College, PA. http://www.ehuntlaw.com/

Article Source:http://EzineArticles.com/?expert

Source: http://newsandsociety-crimenews.blogspot.com/2012/09/penn-state-in-wake-of-sandusky-scandal.html

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