Is Genius Born or Can It Be Learned?

Is Genius Born or Can It Be Learned?

Is it possible to cultivate genius? Could we somehow structure our educational and social life to produce more Einsteins and Mozarts — or, more urgently these days, another Adam Smith or John Maynard Keynes?

How to produce genius is a very old question, one that has occupied philosophers since antiquity. In the modern era, Immanuel Kant and Darwin’s cousin Francis Galton wrote extensively about how genius occurs. Last year, pop-sociologist Malcolm Gladwell addressed the subject in his book Outliers: The Story of Success.
The latest, and possibly most comprehensive, entry into this genre is Dean Keith Simonton’s new book Genius 101: Creators, Leaders, and Prodigies . Simonton, a psychology professor at the University of California, Davis, is one of the world’s leading authorities on the intellectually eminent, whom he has studied since his Harvard grad-school days in the 1970s.
For most of its history, the debate over what leads to genius has been dominated by a bitter, binary argument: is it nature or is it nurture — is genius genetically inherited, or are geniuses the products of stimulating and supportive homes Simonton takes the reasonable position that geniuses are the result of both good genes and good surroundings. His middle-of-the-road stance sets him apart from more ideological proponents like Galton as well as revisionists like Gladwell who argue that dedication and practice, as opposed to raw intelligence, are the most crucial determinants of success.
Too often, writers don’t nail down exactly what they mean by genius. Simonton tries, with this thorough, slightly ponderous, definition: Geniuses are those who “have the intelligence, enthusiasm, and endurance to acquire the needed expertise in a broadly valued domain of achievement” and who then make contributions to that field that are considered by peers to be both “original and highly exemplary.”
Fine, now how do you determine whether artistic or scientific creations are original and exemplary One method Simonton and others use is to add up the number of times an individual’s publications are cited in professional literature — or, say, the number of times a composer’s work is performed and recorded. Other investigators count encyclopedia references instead. Such methods may not be terribly sophisticated, but the answer they yield is at least a hard quantity.
Still, there’s an echo-chamber quality to this technique: genius is what we all say it is. Is there a more objective method There are IQ tests, of course, but not all IQ tests are the same, which leads to picking a minimum IQ and calling it genius-level. Also, estimates of the IQs of dead geniuses tend to be fun, but they are based on biographical information that can be highly uneven.
So Simonton falls back on his “intelligence, enthusiasm, and endurance” formulation. But what about accidental discoveries Simonton mentions the case of biologist Alexander Fleming, who, in 1928, “noticed quite by chance that a culture of Staphylococcus had been contaminated by a blue-green mold. Around the mold was a halo.” Bingo: penicillin. But what if you had been in Fleming’s lab that day and noticed the halo first Would you be the genius
Recently, the endurance and hard work part of the achievement equation has gotten a lot of attention, and the role of raw talent and intelligence has faded a bit. The main reason for this shift in emphasis is the work of Anders Ericsson, a friendly rival of Simonton’s who teaches psychology at Florida State University. Gladwell featured Ericsson’s work prominently in Outliers.
Ericsson has become famous for the 10-year rule: the notion that it takes at least 10 years of dedicated practice for people to master most complex endeavors. Ericsson didn’t invent the 10-year rule , but he has conducted many studies confirming it. Gladwell is a believer. “Practice isn’t the thing you do once you’re good,” he writes. “It’s the thing you do that makes you good.”
Simonton rather dismissively calls this the “drudge theory.” He thinks the real story is more complicated: deliberate practice, he says, is a necessary but not sufficient condition for creating genius. For one thing, you need to be smart enough for practice to teach you something. In a 2002 study, Simonton showed that the average IQ of 64 eminent scientists was around 150, fully 50 points higher than the average IQ for the general population. And most of the variation in IQs is explained by genetics.
Personality traits also matter. Simonton writes that geniuses tend to be “open to experience, introverted, hostile, driven, and ambitious.” These traits too are inherited — but only partly. They’re also shaped by environment.
So what does this mean for people who want to encourage genius Gladwell concludes his book by saying the 10,000-hour rule shows that kids just need a chance to show how hard they can work; we need “a society that provides opportunities for all,” he says. Well, sure. But he dismisses the idea that kids need higher IQs to achieve success, and that’s just wishful thinking. As I argued here, we need to do more to recognize and not alienate high-IQ kids. Too often, principals hold them back with age-mates rather than letting them skip grades.
Still, genius can be very hard to discern, and not just among the young. Simonton tells the story of a woman who was able to get fewer than a dozen of her poems published during her brief life. Her hard work availed her little — but the raw power of her imagery and metaphor lives on. Her name Emily Dickinson. See pictures of a diverse group of American teens.

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Drug violence spins Mexico toward ‘civil war’

Mexican police carry a body after a clash with gangs that left 21 dead in the state of Chihuahua on February 10.
A shootout in a border city that leaves five alleged drug traffickers sprawled dead on the street and seven police wounded. A police chief and his bodyguards gunned down outside his house in another border city. Four bridges into the United States shut down by protesters who want the military out of their towns and who officials say are backed by narcotraffickers.

That was Mexico on Tuesday. What is most remarkable is that it was not much different from Monday or Sunday or any day in the past few years. Mexico, a country with a nearly 2,000-mile border with the United States, is undergoing a horrifying wave of violence that some are likening to a civil war. Drug traffickers battle fiercely with each other and Mexican authorities. The homicide rate reached a record level in 2008 and indications are that the carnage could be exceeded this year. Every day, newspapers and the airwaves are filled with stories and images of beheadings and other gruesome killings. Wednesday’s front page on Mexico City’s La Prensa carried a large banner headline that simply said “Hysteria!” The entire page was devoted to photos of bloody bodies and grim-faced soldiers. One photo shows a man with two young children walking across a street with an army vehicle in the background, with a soldier standing at a turret machine gun. Larry Birns, director of the Washington-based Council on Hemispheric Affairs, calls it “a sickening vertigo into chaos and plunder.” By most accounts, that’s not hyperbole. “The grisly portrait of the violence is unprecedented and horrific,” said Robert Pastor, a Latin America national security adviser for President Jimmy Carter in the late 1970s.

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“I don’t think there’s any question that Mexico is going through a very rough time. Not only is there violence with the gangs, but the entire population is very scared,” said Peter Hakim, president of the Inter-American Dialogue, a Washington-based policy center. Speaking on a news show a few weeks ago, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich called it a civil war. Birns agrees. “Of course it’s a civil war, but that only touches the violence of it,” he said Wednesday. “It’s also a civic conflict, as an increasing number of people look upon the law and democratic values as something that can be violated.” Hakim is not prepared to go that far. “One has to be careful and not overdo it,” he said. “Mexico is a long way from being a failed state. Mexico has real institutions. It paves roads and collects the garbage. It holds regular elections.” Enrique Bravo, an analyst with the Eurasia consulting group, points out that the violence so far is mostly affecting just drug gangs and is primarily localized along the U.S. border and Mexico’s western coast. The violence along the border is particularly worrisome, analysts say. “The spillover into the United States is bound to expand and bound to affect U.S. institutions,” Birns said. Pastor and Hakim note that the United States helps fuel the violence, not only by providing a ready market for illegal drugs, but also by supplying the vast majority of weapons used by drug gangs. Pastor says there are at least 6,600 U.S. gun shops within 100 miles of the Mexican border and more than 90 percent of weapons in Mexico come from the United States. And it’s not just handguns. Drug traffickers used a bazooka in Tuesday’s shootout with federal police and army soldiers in Reynosa, Mexico, across the border from McAllen, Texas. “The drug gangs are better equipped than the army,” Hakim said. Pervasive corruption among public officials is central to the drug cartels’ success. “There is so much money involved in the drug trade, there is so much fear involved in the drug trade, that no institution can survive unaffected,” Birns said. “This has really revealed just how corrupt Mexican officeholders are,” Hakim said. In one recent instance, Noe Ramirez Mandujano, who was the nation’s top anti-drug official from 2006 until August 2008, was arrested on charges that he accepted $450,000 a month in bribes from drug traffickers while in office. Such dire problems call for a new way of looking at the situation, some say. Pastor calls the problem in Mexico “even worse than Chicago during the Prohibition era” and said a solution similar to what ended that violence is needed now. “What worked in the U.S. was not Eliot Ness,” he said, referring to the federal agent famous for fighting gangsters in 1920s and ’30s. “It was the repeal of Prohibition.” That viewpoint has picked up some high-level support in Latin America. Last week, the former presidents of Mexico, Colombia and Brazil called for the decriminalization of marijuana for personal use and a change in strategy on the war on drugs at a meeting in Brazil of the Latin American Commission on Drugs and Democracy. “The problem is that current policies are based on prejudices and fears and not on results,” former Colombian President Cesar Gaviria said at a news conference, in which the 17-member commission’s recommendations were presented. Mexican President Felipe Calderon has taken the war on drugs to the cartels and some say it’s not working. “It’s as if the burden of being the main arena of the anti-drug war has overwhelmed Mexican institutions,” Birns said. “The occasional anti-drug battle is being won, but the war is being lost. And there’s no prospect the war is going to be won.” In the meantime, the killings will continue at a record pace. On Wednesday, the Mexican cities of Correon and Gomez Palacio reported at least eight shootouts involving heavily armed men. The toll: seven dead, seven wounded.

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Jailed politician refuses Zimbabwe amnesty deal

Roy Bennett, left, pictured with MDC leader Morgan Tzvangirai.
Officials in Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe’s ruling party have offered to release imprisoned opposition leaders in exchange for a promise of amnesty covering the party’s nearly 30-year rule, one jailed politician’s wife said Wednesday.

Roy Bennett, who had been slated to be sworn in as deputy agriculture minister before his arrest last week, has refused the deal — “and I think every single Zimbabwean would want him to,” Heather Bennett told CNN. Roy Bennett was arrested Friday on terrorism-related charges before he could take his new post in the unity government that took office last week in Harare. He is a longtime Mugabe foe who served as treasurer of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change. Heather Bennett would not identify which members of Mugabe’s Zanu-PF party offered the deal, but she said the party wants a blanket amnesty for any crimes committed between Zimbabwe’s independence in 1980 and 2009. Cabinet ministers in the new government have either denied the amnesty-for-release allegation or refused to comment. Roy Bennett has been charged with illegally possessing firearms for the purposes of trying to commit acts of insurgency, banditry and terrorism and to illegally leave the country, his lawyer said Tuesday.

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“Roy is a thorn in their side, and they know that with Roy in government, it’s not going to be an easy ride for them,” his wife said. “He’s going to be checking them all the time by doing this, and I fear that they are going to try and put him away for a long time.” Bennett’s arrest strained the first meeting of a Cabinet assembled under a hard-won power-sharing deal between the Zanu-PF and MDC, an agreement aimed at ending the lingering impasse from last year’s disputed elections. The deal puts MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai in the newly created post of prime minister, and Heather Bennett said Tsvangirai’s inability so far to free her husband has left the party looking weak. If Tsvangirai “acts decisively and has Roy released, that may bring back a shred of respect to the MDC,” she said. “But at this stage, they are looking like they lack leadership.”

Zimbabwe’s new leaders are grappling with a massive humanitarian and economic crisis. Many civil servants — including teachers, doctors and nurses — have been on strike since September, demanding higher pay as Zimbabwe’s currency has plummeted in value. That has caused many schools to close and exacerbated a cholera epidemic that has killed nearly 4,000 people and infected about 65,000 people since August. Bennett’s next court date is set for March, but his lawyer plans on lodging an application for bail on Thursday. Heather Bennett said she is not holding out any hope her husband will be released anytime soon.

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California: One Vote Short of Averting Catastrophe

California: One Vote Short of Averting Catastrophe

It’s becoming a cliché: California lawmakers again fail to reach agreement on a budget. As California engages in a budget battle that has left the government of the world’s eighth largest economy slipping toward insolvency, Republican Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and the Democratic legislative majority continue to search for one last Republican vote to pass a budget. But the complex negotiations hit a snag Wednesday when Republican state senators ousted their leader, Senator Dave Cogdill, who had dared to agree to a plan involving a tax hike, and replaced him with a staunch antitaxer. To avoid a collapse of state finances, legislators are attempting to pass a $42 billion budget-balancing plan that includes $14.4 billion in new taxes, an action anathema to the rank-and-file Republican minority. “I don’t want to see a tax increase passed,” said Senator Dennis Hollingsworth, the new Republican leader.

The economic free fall is causing budget difficulties in other states, but California faces the deepest crisis. With the budget talks stalled, Schwarzenegger sent layoff notices to 10,000 state workers and ordered a halt to the last 275 state-funded public-works projects still under construction. Call it shovel-ready in reverse.

Why is California in this situation The state has a history of difficult and protracted budget negotiations, in large part because the state constitution requires a two-thirds majority to pass either a budget or a tax increase. Forty-seven other states get along fine without this hurdle, which gives the minority party, in this case the Republicans, an amount of power and leverage far out of proportion to its numbers in a legislature and state dominated by Democrats.

When Schwarzenegger swept then governor Gray Davis out of office and himself into the governor’s chair in the dramatic 2003 recall election, he promised to end the partisan gridlock in Sacramento and balance the state’s books. Neither miracle happened. A social liberal, Schwarzenegger had been careful to wave high the no-new-tax flag. In prior budget years, he touted bonds and found other gimmicks to put off costs until later.

But now, with tax receipts drying up and the state nearly out of cash, unemployment and foreclosures above the national average, and the state cast out of the municipal-bond market , Schwarzenegger recognizes that this year’s shortfall is just too big to fix with cuts alone. Unlike the Federal Government, which can run endless deficits, states are required by law to balance their books yearly.

The current budget proposal would raise up to $14.4 billion by imposing a variety of temporary taxes — hiking the sales tax by a penny, adding 12 cents to the gasoline tax and raising the car-license fee . Cuts include $8.6 billion from K-12 classrooms, which probably would force schools to pink-slip teachers and increase classroom sizes; a 10% cut to the university system; a continuation of the two-days-a-month furlough of state workers that recently closed state offices, including the Department of Motor Vehicles; and several billion in cuts to social welfare and programs for the elderly, sick and poor. Republican leaders insisted on a $1 billion tax break for large corporations, believing it will encourage companies to expand their work forces in California.

The two-thirds rule to pass a budget means that fixing the yawning $42 billion gap in California’s $143 billion budget requires three Republicans in both the Assembly and the state senate to join with Democrats. Because the California GOP is deeply conservative, opposes taxes on principle and holds sway in home districts gerrymandered sharply to the right, Republican moderates feel as if they are dead men walking, politically. Republican incumbents who break ranks are ferociously opposed in the primaries. And if a renegade chooses to run statewide, raising funds is as easy as a bullfrog’s finding water in the Mojave.

A budget process dependent on political suicide is not a good system. The other alternative is for the Republican Party to stand firm on its no-tax pledge and solve the crisis by only cuts and shutdowns. George Skelton of the Los Angeles Times recently pointed out that the no-tax solution offers two dire options: fire all the state workers and shut down the University of California and the state colleges, or eliminate all state money for health care and social services — all the monies that help the blind and disabled, aged, homebound, poor, mentally ill, those on welfare, those in emergency rooms, etc. Either way, without a tax hike, the wheels come off the bus and California’s government — and life as many people experience it in the Golden State — grinds to a halt. On Wednesday afternoon, Schwarzenegger spoke to GOP intransigence, saying, “If you think you can do
this budget without any increase in revenues, then you have a big math
problem.”

Thus far, a series of all-nighters by legislators, plus the governor’s actions shutting down the state government piece by piece, have not shaken loose the one remaining GOP vote needed to pass the spending plan.

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Man accused of wife’s beheading appears in court

Muzzammil Hassan has been charged with second-degree murder in the death of his wife, Aasiya Zubair Hassan.
A Buffalo, New York-area man accused of beheading his estranged wife made his first appearance in court Wednesday to face murder charges, according to CNN affiliate WKBW.

Muzzammil Hassan, 44, is charged with second-degree murder in the death of his 37-year-old wife, Aasiya Zubair Hassan, days after she filed for divorce and was granted a restraining order against him. In court Wednesday, Hassan waived his right to a felony hearing, WKBW said. The case will go before a grand jury. In the meantime, Hassan will be jailed without bail. If convicted, he faces a sentence of 15 years to life, WKBW reported, citing prosecutors. Muzzammil Hassan went to the police station in the Buffalo suburb of Orchard Park on Thursday and told officers that his wife was dead, authorities have said. He also led them to her body at the offices of Bridges TV. The couple began the network in 2004 to counter negative Muslim stereotypes; Muzzammil Hassan is its chief executive officer, and Aasiya Hassan was general manager. Aasiya Hassan filed for divorce February 6, police said, and Muzzammil Hassan was served with divorce papers at the station. That night, he showed up at the couple’s home, she notified authorities, and he was served with a restraining order.

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Police had responded to several domestic violence calls at the couple’s address, but no one was arrested, Orchard Park Police Chief Andrew Benz said Tuesday. However, two women claiming to be Aasiya Hassan’s sisters — one in Pakistan and one in South Africa — told reporters and posted in a blog that she lived in fear of him. Bridges TV released a statement Monday saying its staff members were “deeply shocked and saddened by the murder of Aasiya Hassan and the subsequent arrest of Muzzammil Hassan. Our deepest condolences and prayers go out to the families of the victim.”

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Sharpton blasts Post cartoon linking stimulus bill to chimp


A New York Post cartoon Wednesday drew fire from civil rights activist Al Sharpton and others who say the drawing invokes historically racist images in suggesting an ape wrote President Barack Obama’s economic stimulus package.

The artist, Sean Delonas, called Sharpton’s reaction “ridiculous,” and the newspaper defended its decision to run his cartoon. But other African-American leaders joined Sharpton, who has been the butt of previous Delonas panels, in attacking what they called the cartoon’s racial overtones. “Sean Delonas’ cartoon in today’s New York Post is insensitive and offensive,” National Urban League President Marc Morial said in a statement issued Wednesday afternoon. “Comparing President Obama and his effort to revive the economy in a manner that depicts violence and racist inferences is unacceptable.” The cartoon showed two police officers standing over the body of a chimpanzee they just shot, a reference to this week’s mauling of a Connecticut woman by a pet chimp, which police killed after the attack. In the cartoon, one of the officers tells the other, “They’ll have to find someone else to write the next stimulus bill.” New York Post: See cartoon The nearly $800 billion stimulus package was the priority for Obama, the first African-American U.S. president, who signed it Tuesday. Watch Sharpton raise racism concerns, and see the cartoon » “The cartoon in today’s New York Post is troubling at best, given the racist attacks throughout history that have made African-Americans synonymous with monkeys,” Sharpton said. Sharpton questioned whether Delonas “is making a less-than-casual inference to this form of racism.”

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“The Post should at least clarify what point they were trying to make in this cartoon, and reprimand their cartoonist for making inferences that are offensive and divisive at a time the nation struggles to come together to stabilize the economy if, in fact, this was yet another racially charged cartoon,” he said. In a brief phone interview with CNN, Delonas called the controversy “absolutely friggin’ ridiculous.” “Do you really think I’m saying Obama should be shot I didn’t see that in the cartoon,” Delonas said. “It’s about the economic stimulus bill,” he added. “If you’re going to make that about anybody, it would be [House Speaker Nancy] Pelosi, which it’s not.” Col Allan, the Post’s editor-in-chief, said the cartoon “is a clear parody of a current news event.” “It broadly mocks Washington’s efforts to revive the economy. Again, Al Sharpton reveals himself as nothing more than a publicity opportunist,” Allan said in a written statement. But Sharpton and Morial were not alone in their criticism. Barbara Ciara, president of the National Association of Black Journalists, said the Post showed a “serious lapse in judgment” by running the cartoon. “To think that the cartoonist and the responsible editors at the paper did not see the racist overtones of the finished product should insult their intelligence,” Ciara said in a written statement. “Instead, they celebrate their own lack of perspective and criticize those who call it what it is: tone deaf at best, overtly racist at worst.” Jeff Johnson, a former activist turned Black Entertainment Television host, said provocative cartoons are good, but that “none of this is appropriate on any level.” “The Post ultimately has to answer … [for] a specific reference to the president of the United States to violence and to his connection to an animal likeness,” Johnson said.

In California, civil rights leader Earl Ofari Hutchinson called on the Post to apologize. “In times past, that depiction of African-Americans has been vigorously condemned as racially offensive,” Hutchinson said in a statement issued from his Los Angeles Urban Policy Roundtable. “The cartoon also subtly condones violence. We call on the Post management to issue an immediate apology and a statement that racial insults will not be tolerated by Post writers and cartoonists.”

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Will Obama convince allies to help out in Afghanistan?

President Obama hopes diplomacy will play a larger role in handling the situation in Afghanistan.
As the debate plays out about whether President Obama’s decision to send an additional 17,000 troops to Afghanistan will help ease the increase in Taliban insurgency, the president is reaching out to allies for help.

Obama said in an interview on Canadian television Tuesday that diplomacy will play a bigger role in U.S. efforts in Afghanistan. “I am absolutely convinced that you cannot solve the problem of Afghanistan, the Taliban, the spread of extremism in that region solely through military means,” Obama told journalist Peter Mansbridge in a wide-ranging interview with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. “We’re going to have to use diplomacy. We’re going to have to use development.” The Pentagon announced Tuesday that Obama had approved a significant troop increase for Afghanistan, which is expected to include 8,000 Marines and 4,000 Army troops. An additional 5,000 troops will be deployed at a later date to support combat forces, bringing the total to 17,000, the Defense Department said. View a chart of U.S. troop levels in Afghanistan » Canada has about 2,800 troops in Afghanistan, but Parliament has voted to pull them out by 2011. Obama suggested he will take up the issue with Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper when the two meet Thursday in Ottawa. That may be why Obama is reaching out to Canada to help ease the burden on U.S. troops in Afghanistan, who may remain there as long as five years, according to Gen. David McKiernan, commander of U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan. “This is not a temporary force uplift,” McKiernan told reporters. “It will need to be sustained for some period of time, for the next three to four to five years.”

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CNN security analyst Peter Bergen said the United States shouldn’t necessarily count on NATO countries to lend a hand. “I think it’s probably not very realistic. … We’ve constantly asked our NATO allies … for more soldiers on the ground. Very few NATO countries are going to be willing to send their soldiers into harm’s way,” he said. Watch more on the U.S. efforts in Afghanistan » Bergen said that while some nations like Great Britain may step in, “You’re only looking at a few thousand soldiers, even if those countries stood up to the plate. “You’re not going to get the Germans or the French, I think, to send significant numbers of additional soldiers to what is, after all, a pretty hot war now.” Bergen added that if the U.S. and allied forces look to deal with the Taliban in the form of negotiations, it’s going to be from a “position of strength.” Watch an interview with a Taliban commander » “That’s one of the reasons we’re seeing this large deployment of American soldiers into the south. There’s no point, I think, of people thinking — there’s no having these negotiations with the Taliban from a position of weakness. Better to do it from a position of strength,” he said. In an interview on CNN’s “Fareed Zakaria GPS,” which aired Sunday, Afghan President Hamid Karzai said that, with a resurgent Taliban, a still-flourishing drug trade and a border with Pakistan believed to be home base for al Qaeda, his country can’t afford for U.S. troops to leave any time soon. “U.S. forces will not be able to leave soon in Afghanistan because the task is not over,” Karzai said. “We have to defeat terrorism. We’ll have to enable Afghanistan to stand on its own feet. We’ll have to enable Afghanistan to be able to defend itself and protect for its security…. “Then, the United States can leave and, at that time, the Afghan people will give them plenty of flowers and gratitude and send them safely back home.” At the same time, Karzai said the actions of troops currently in Afghanistan have turned some of the public against them. “It’s the question of civilian causalities. It’s a question of risk of Afghans. It’s the question of home searches,” he said. “These activities are seriously undermining the confidence of the Afghan people in the joint struggle we have against terrorism and undermining their hopeful future.” In the Logar and Wardak provinces, close to the capital of Kabul, there has been an alarming increase in Taliban attacks. Some 3,000 U.S. troops are likely to be based in the area, trying to prevent Taliban infiltration and getting the cooperation of local people. The locals, however, appear to have mixed feelings about the new presence. One person told CNN’s Atia Abwai that locals are fine with U.S. forces bringing security, but “not airstrikes.”

The man said locals don’t want people coming into Afghan homes and killing other Afghan citizens. Watch more on Afghan citizens’ concerns Abwai is embedded with the U.S. Army’s 10th Mountain Division in eastern Afghanistan.

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Facebook Does an About-Face on Privacy

Facebook Does an About-Face on Privacy

Behold the two faces of Facebook: It’s such a smart young company. It’s such a slow learner.

Both faces peeked out from the wreckage of the privacy imbroglio that wracked the social-networking site this week. Yes, it was asinine, a tempest in a teapot, but it underscored a more fundamental problem that continues to plague Facebook — the world’s most popular social network is simply not learning from its mistakes.

Quick recap: Earlier in the month, Facebook changed its users’ terms of service so that “the Company may retain archived copies of your User Content.” A consumer-rights blog sounded an alarm last weekend, sparking a protest among users who interpreted the move as insidious. Facebook, they said, would now own, forever and for always, all the deeply private and personal stuff you upload to Facebook to share with the whole world — even the pictures of your dog Muffy! “Facebook owns you!” critics cried. A few even went so far as to cancel their free accounts.

On Monday, Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg responded on his company blog, explaining that the change was needed to ensure that stuff like Wall posts and internal messages would remain intact even after someone quits the service. This would make sense — you don’t want gaps in interuser communications. But rather than mollify the masses, the explanation inflamed them. So today, Zuckerberg recanted and said Facebook was reverting the TOS to its original language and would continue to study the situation. He also launched a Facebook group, soliciting user feedback on how best to handle the situation and help establish a users’ Bill of Rights.

“More than 175 million people use Facebook,” Zuckerberg pointed out. “If it were a country, it would be the sixth most populated country in the world.” Hmmm, let’s see. The sixth most populated country in the world is Pakistan. Though some might find the comparison to such a volatile yet
critically important-to-the-future country apt, the reality is that Facebookland is not a constitutional democracy; it’s a benevolent dictatorship. And that’s why it keeps making the same mistakes.

Remember Beacon, Facebook’s ill-fated social-ads play Same deal. One day Zuckerberg announced that the company unilaterally would be
broadcasting users’ activities on third-party sites via newsfeeds. Then next day, a hue. A cry. Followed by a Zuckerberg recant on the company blog.

Businesses are not democracies, nor should they be. Sometimes the boss needs to make hard, unpopular decisions that may even drive away some customers. But that wasn’t the case with either Beacon or this latest hoo-ha. Both were avoidable mistakes.

So here’s a suggestion for the Gentle Leader: Instead of this cycle of acting first and recanting in the face of public displeasure later, why not get your public on board from the get go The Bill of Rights group is a
nice idea, but Facebook could go much further and easily create a massive advisory board — tens of thousands of people strong — who would be only too happy to vet ideas before their implementation. Facebook is a wonderful public experiment in social networks. But it needs to do a much better job of utilizing its own internal connections.

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Kansas budget standoff ends, but other states in limbo

California state senators struggle through a long budget negotiation session Tuesday.
Kansas leaders Wednesday ended a standoff that had delayed tax refunds and state paychecks by agreeing to borrow $225 million from various state accounts, a spokeswoman for the governor’s office said.

Republican lawmakers approved moving money into the state’s main account to pay the bills after budget cuts agreed to by Gov. Kathleen Sebelius, spokeswoman Brittany Stiffler said. The state resumed processing income tax refunds on Wednesday — they had been suspended last week because of low funds — and state employees’ paychecks will be paid on time Friday, Department of Administration spokesman Gavin Young said. Republicans earlier this week denied the Democratic governor’s request to move the money, saying they could not approve the certificate of indebtedness, also known as internal borrowing, until they knew the state could repay the money by June 30, the end of the fiscal year. However, Republicans said they would be likely to approve the internal borrowing if Sebelius agreed to the Legislature’s proposed budget cuts for the 2009 fiscal year. On Wednesday, she approved about $300 million in budget cuts. “She blinked, and that’s helpful,” Senate Majority Leader Derek Schmidt, a Republican, said Wednesday. “I’m just sorry we had to have high drama and worry a lot of Kansans about our ability to pay our obligations,” Sebelius said Wednesday. Kansas was one of several states to meet this week to address budget concerns in a time when 43 states are starting the year short on funds, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. “This is an equal-opportunity recession. States in virtually every part of the country are suffering… even the energy states are starting to report problems,” Corina Eckl of the National Conference of State Legislatures said. iReport.com: What you’d fix first “For most, it has only gone downhill. They have tried to make up the difference with expanded gambling, with delays of construction projects, with hiring freezes, with fee and tax increases. But almost all of this has failed to regain lost ground, merely serving as a firebreak against worse troubles,” she said. California faces a $42 billion deficit that prompted Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to declare a fiscal emergency in December. California lawmakers worked into early Wednesday but couldn’t pass a budget. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger issued 10,000 layoff notices Tuesday, affecting a wide spectrum of state agencies and employees, in an effort to deal with the budget crisis, a spokesman said. Another 10,000 layoff notices might be sent Wednesday, the spokesman said. All the layoffs would take effect July 1, the start of the new fiscal year. The Republican governor has butted heads for months with the Democratic majority over easing the $11.2 billion revenue shortfall this fiscal year alone. Cuts would save California $750 million for the year. The $42 billion deficit is for the current and next fiscal years. Interactive: See projected state budget gaps »

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Last month, the state began delaying $3.5 billion in payments to taxpayers, contractors, counties and social service agencies so the state could continue funding schools and making debt payments. Watch more on California’s budget woes » Also today, New Jersey’s governor announced that all state employees will be forced to take two unpaid furlough days, a move that will save $35 million, part of the nearly $4 billion in budget cuts that state is making. In Maryland, tax collections in nearly every category are falling short of expectations, with dismal revenue projects putting more pressure on state legislators to balance the budget without relying on the federal stimulus package, CNN affiliate WBAL reported. State workers in Colorado may face unpaid time off in an effort to spare the state’s colleges and universities millions of dollars in budget cuts, KUSA-TV in Denver reported Tuesday. Interactive: Estimated job growth across the country Gov. Bill Ritter, a Democrat, announced plans recently to furlough some state workers to balance the budget. Roughly $600 million in budget cuts need to be made by the end of this fiscal year, according to KUSA. State lawmakers will debate a bill in the House this week that would require furloughs for state workers depending on how much money they make. “It’s drastic, but we’re in a drastic situation,” Rep. Steve King, R-Grand Junction, told KUSA. In Washington state, proposed budget cuts have led to protests in the capital, Olympia, KOMO-TV in Seattle reported. State officials are looking at some $300 million in cuts as part of a package the governor is expected to sign this week. Lawmakers also are aiming to cut nearly $6 billion over the next two years. But about 100 union members, state employees, school supporters and health care providers rallied on the lawn of the Capitol, telling lawmakers to stop the health care and education cuts and prevent tuition hikes. State employees said they want fair pay, better benefits and pensions and no layoffs. Hawaii faces a nearly $2 billion budget shortfall in the upcoming fiscal year. That figure has led legislators to seek alternative ways of balancing the budget, including possible reductions in health and retirement benefits for government workers, KHNL-TV in Honolulu reported Tuesday. One bill being debated in the Legislature aims to cut off insurance benefits for all employees retiring after July 1 regardless of how many years they had worked. Back East, states such as New York and Florida, which have high unemployment rates and huge budget shortfalls, also are looking to cut programs. In New York, the expected budget shortfall is around $1.7 billion, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. President Obama took his economic stimulus message to Florida last week to hard-hit Fort Myers. The jobless rate in the area is 10 percent, up from 2.3 percent this time in 2006, and the area’s foreclosure rate of 12 percent is the highest in the nation. Interactive: See where the stimulus money is going »

And Michigan’s Democratic Gov. Jennifer Granholm, whose state has been hit especially hard by the recession and the auto industry’s near collapse, said job creation is paramount to turning the economy around. “We see the impact of this every day, and I’m speaking not just for Michigan, but for governors across the country. We need help. We need it now. And it’s not about budgets; it’s about creating jobs in our states,” she said recently on CNN’s “State of the Union With John King.”

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All 18 survive helicopter crash off Scotland

A Super Puma helicopter, similar to the one in this file photo, went down about 120 miles east of Aberdeen.
All 18 people aboard a helicopter that crashed off the coast of Scotland have been recovered alive, a Royal Air Force officer told CNN.

The Super Puma ditched about 120 miles east of Aberdeen while approaching an offshore platform, said Barry Neilson, commander of the RAF’s aeronautical rescue coordination center at RAF Kinloss. The RAF was providing helicopter assistance to the Aberdeen Coast Guard. James Lyon, assistant controller at the RAF Kinloss center, said: “We have been picking up beacons from their lifejackets… Two aircraft are on the scene.” He did not know if the pilot transmitted a mayday before the aircraft ditched. “We believe it was quite close to the platform it was supposed to be landing on,” he added. The area is home to a number of offshore oil rigs. Lyon said he did not know which one the helicopter was heading to or where it was coming from. One RAF helicopter and one civilian helicopter were already on the scene, Neilson said, with two more civilian helicopters en route. Another RAF helicopter was providing support, he said, and surface vessels were also involved in the operation. The RAF received its first report of the crash at 6:43 p.m. (1:43 p.m. Eastern time). Lyon said the Super Puma is regularly used to transport people to and from oil platforms in the North Sea and as far as he was aware it has a good safety record. Weather at the crash site is relatively good, though slight fog is hampering visibility, he said.

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