SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : FREE AMERICA -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: JDN who wrote (11583)9/11/2006 7:34:30 PM
From: Proud_Infidel  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 14758
 
Group wants beer ads sans sexy women
The Toronto Star ^ | 09/11/2006 | By DENE MOORE

MONTREAL—Bye-bye, beer babes.

At least, that could be the case under a new set of ethical guidelines adopted by a Quebec alcohol industry group.

Éduc'alcool is encouraging manufacturers, retailers and distributors to shun some of the sexy ads of yore and opt for more responsible methods of drawing customers.

"We know we have some rules, we have some laws, but we think that we could use a code of ethics," said Jean-Guy Dubuc, president of the organization funded by the provincial liquor agency.

"We're not against beautiful women, or fun, or anything like that. On the contrary."

But abuses or ethical breaches should have consequences, he said.

The group is asking the industry to voluntarily adopt the new code, which forbids sexism or the association of products with sexual performance, sexual attraction or popularity.

The code prohibits any implication that alcoholic products improve physical or intellectual capacities or has health benefits.

It bans the use of images of people who look younger than 25 and any that make alcohol particularly attractive to people under 18.

And the new rules also forbid excessive discounts or promotions and anything that encourages drinking games or drunkenness.

Industry groups have been asked to commit to the code of ethics by the end of the month.

A five-member industry panel will review complaints.

Violators will be given an opportunity to correct problems. If they fail to do so, the council will make public the brand and activities concerned, much like provincial press councils that self-regulate the newspaper industry.

The Quebec Bar, Pub and Tavern Owners' Association has already signed on.

"Society already asks us to be more responsible," said Renaud Poulin, president of the 2,000-strong association. "A code of ethics is a question of increasing understanding and awareness."

He said the code simply brings together rules they have loosely followed for many years.

"These are not ethics that are unknown to bar owners," he said.

Other industry groups have concerns.

"There's going to be this board and we have questions about how this board will operate," said Yvon Millette, president of the Quebec Brewers Association. "There's a lot left to interpretation."

Millette said the industry is already heavily regulated, and members of the public already have several options to make complaints, including Advertising Standards Canada, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission, the Canadian Broadcast Standards Council, provincial liquor agencies and the product manufacturer or media outlet themselves.

In 2004, Advertising Standards Canada received a record 230 complaints concerning advertising for alcoholic beverages, many of them that the ads were "degrading to women and highly offensive."

Twenty-four complaints were upheld, including complaints about ads that featured women kissing, women putting on suntan lotion, close-ups of women's buttocks, close-ups of women's breasts and nude women.

Last year, the council received 38 complaints, of which none was upheld.

"We're asking ourselves whether we need another layer of regulation," said Millette, whose group is not a member of Éduc'alcool.

There should be standards and boundaries for advertising, Millette said.

But in the end it is the public that will have the most impact on that, he added.

"If the consumers and the public in general don't like advertising ... their ruling will be felt at the sales level," Millette said.

"I think that's the ultimate judge."



To: JDN who wrote (11583)9/12/2006 7:54:31 AM
From: Proud_Infidel  Respond to of 14758
 
File under "Idiot Alert".....Irwin himself would be against this......

10 Stingrays Slain Since Irwin's Death
Forbes.com & AP ^ | September 12, 2006 | MERAIAH FOLEY

SYDNEY, Australia (AP)—At least 10 stingrays have been killed since “Crocodile Hunter” Steve Irwin was fatally injured by one of the fish, an official said Tuesday, prompting a spokesman for the late TV star's animal charity to urge people not take revenge on the animals.

Irwin died last week after a stingray barb pierced his chest as he recorded a show off the Great Barrier Reef.

Stingray bodies since have been discovered on two beaches in Queensland state on Australia's eastern coast. Two were discovered Tuesday with their tails lopped off, state fisheries department official Wayne Sumpton said.



To: JDN who wrote (11583)9/12/2006 8:44:45 AM
From: Proud_Infidel  Respond to of 14758
 
Gore sparks Australian furore on environment
Yahoo News (AFP) ^ | 9/11/06 | staff

news.yahoo.com

Former US vice president Al Gore has found himself at the centre of an Australian political spat as he promoted his environmental documentary "An Inconvenient Truth" Down Under.

Gore, who lost narrowly to President George W. Bush in the 2000 presidential race, was caught in the crossfire between rival Aussie politicians disputing his assertions on climate change in the film.

"There are three places I do not go for advice on climate change," fumed Industry Minister Ian Macfarlane, dismissing the film in which Gore singles out Australia as trailing the rest of the world on climate change.

"One of them is to unsuccessful candidates for the US presidency who cannot even convince their own people that they are right. The second place is the movie,"
he said, adding that the third was the Australian opposition.

(Excerpt) Read more at news.yahoo.com ....



To: JDN who wrote (11583)9/13/2006 3:36:32 PM
From: Proud_Infidel  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 14758
 
UNBELIEVABLE!

Mother, warned not to cry, testifies about finding bodies of daughter and son
Court TV ^ | Sept. 13, 2006 | Emanuella Grinberg

courttv.com

BARTOW, Fla. — Under threat of a mistrial, a mother was forced to relive the day she discovered her children dead without shedding a tear Tuesday during the trial of the man accused of killing them.

Nicoletta Dosso was the first person to come upon the bloody crime scene where her children, Frank Dosso, 35, and Diane Patisso, 28, were shot to death.

In the same office where her son lay dead in a pool of blood from gunshot wounds to the head, Nicoletta Dosso also discovered her daughter's husband, George Patisso, 26, slumped against the body of 68-year-old George Gonsalves, her husband's business partner.

Dressed from head to toe in black, the grieving mother had barely taken her seat in the witness box Tuesday before she began stifling sobs while family members and friends sat red-eyed in the gallery holding tissue boxes.

The emotional display prompted a swift response from lawyers representing the defendant, Nelson Serrano, who faces the death penalty if convicted of four counts of first-degree murder.

"Mrs. Dosso's role in this case is more emotional than any witness identification situation I can imagine," defense lawyer Robert Norgard told the court after the jury was quickly rushed out of the room. "If she breaks down in front of the jury, we will ask for a mistrial."

Circuit Judge Susan Roberts agreed that an emotional display would unfairly bias the jurors against the defendant, and issued a stern warning to the prosecutor and, indirectly, to the witness and her family.

"If she gets emotional, I will grant a motion for a mistrial," Roberts said, eliciting emphatic headshakes from Dosso's friends and family. "If [the prosecutor] wants to put her on the stand with that in mind, he may do so."

In a compromise, both sides agreed to let the witness give her testimony outside the presence of the jury and then play a video of the testimony for the jury if it was deemed "unemotional" enough.

As a result, the Sicilian-born mother of three offered a sanitized version of the events that took place on Dec. 3, 1997.

Nicoletta Dosso said she and her husband were supposed to go to their son's home that evening for coffee and cake to celebrate his twin daughters' 10th birthday.

At about 6 p.m., Frank Dosso's wife called to say he had not returned home.

When they went to look for him at the Bartow office of Erie Manufacturing and Garment Conveyor Systems, where Frank Dosso worked for his father's business, Nicoletta was the first to come upon her daughter's body in a pool of blood.

"I went down and I said, 'My God what they do, I don't know who did this to you, Diane,'" the witness said in an Italian accent.

As she continued through the offices, she saw George Gonsalves' foot sticking out of her son's office, and discovered the bodies of the three other men inside.

"I wanted to hug [Frank], but I could not. I did not want to touch the dead," she said, her voice restrained. "I don't want to spoil. I knew that was even worse for me to do."

The widow of Frank Dosso received the same cautionary instructions about her composure before she did her own runthrough outside the presence of the jury.

Maria Dosso Jacoby testified that she and her three daughters waited for Frank Dosso to return home that night with Chinese take-out.

Anxious for an answer, she left her three daughters at home with a friend and drove to Erie's offices with George Gonsalves' wife, Inocencia.

"There was already crime-scene tape, there was an ambulance," testified Maria Dosso Jacoby, who has remarried since her husband's death.

"Did your husbands have any enemies or people that might want to injure him?" assistant state attorney John Aguero asked Jacoby.

"No," Jacoby said, without betraying any emotion.

Polk County prosecutors contend that Serrano, 67, went to Erie Manufacturing to kill Gonsalves, who had removed Serrano from his position as president of Garment Conveyor Systems and cut his salary. He killed the others, they say, so there would be no witnesses.

Serrano's lawyers claim evidence places their client in Atlanta the day of the shootings. They also point to a lack of forensic evidence linking the Ecuadorian native to the crime scene.

Earlier Tuesday, several Erie employees testified about the acrimonious relationship between Serrano and his partners, Gonsalves and Phil Dosso, the husband of Nicoletta Dosso and the father of Frank and Diane.

Before Serrano left the company in July 1997, former employee Todd White testified Tuesday that Serrano asked him to leave Erie and join him in a new company he was starting.

"I told him I wasn't comfortable leaving, and at that point he proceeded to become very disgruntled and very upset," testified White, who left Erie in 1999. "He kept saying things like, 'If you choose not to, I think you'll be sorry, because I plan to see this company fail. I guarantee you this company will fail.'"

Phil Dosso is expected to testify Wednesday and provide further details of the turmoil between the partners that preceded Serrano's departure six months before the shootings.