[25106] in Discussion of MIT-community interests

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No more pills or capsules to swallow

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Yacon Diet Spray)
Wed Mar 26 11:37:36 2014

To: mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu
Date: Wed, 26 Mar 2014 08:37:34 -0700
From: "Yacon Diet Spray" <YaconDietSpray@keranataosbeany.us>
Envelope-to: mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu

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As seen on ABC's Shark Tank

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JERUSALEM  A weekend cyberattack campaign targeting Israeli government websites 
failed to cause serious disruption, officials said Sunday. The attacks followed 
warnings in the name of the group Anonymous that it was launching 
a massive hacking assault to protest Israeli policy toward the Palestinians.Yitzhak 
Ben Yisrael, of the government's National Cyber Bureau, said hackers had 
mostly failed to shut down key sites."So far it is as was 
expected, there is hardly any real damage," Ben Yisrael said. "Anonymous 
doesn't have the skills to damage the country's vital infrastructure. And 
if that was its intention, then it wouldn't have announced the attack 
ahead of time. It wants to create noise in the media about 
issues that are close to its heart," he said.Posters using the name 
of the hacking group Anonymous had warned they would launch a massive 
attack on Israeli sites in a strike they called (hash)OpIsrael starting 
April 7. Some said they were launching the assault in "solidarity" with 
the Palestinians.Israel's Bureau of Statistics was down on Sunday morning 
but it was unclear if it was hacked. Media said the sites 
of the Defense and Education Ministry as well as banks had come 
under attack the night before but they were mostly repelled.An Israeli government 
spokesman issued a statement saying sites were operating properly as usual. 
It said an Education Ministry site was down temporarily due to a 
technical issue unrelated to hacking attem
an, a founder of the anti-nuclear 
Plowshares Movement.In Latin America, the Jesuit emphasis on helping the 
poorest peoples often drew the society into political upheaval, including 
the cause of liberation theology, a Latin American-inspired view that Jesus' 
teachings imbue followers with a duty to fight for social and economic 
justice. U.S. Jesuit James Carney was killed in 1983 serving as chaplain 
to a rebel column from Honduras.Pope John Paul II, hoping to re-direct 
the religious order, took the extraordinary step in 1981 of replacing the 
Jesuit's chosen leader with his own representative. The society encompasses 
a range of outlooks, including tradition-minded men. Still, conservative 
Catholics often view Jesuits as a band of disloyal liberals. The day 
after Francis was elected, George Weigel, a John Paul biographer, wrote 
in the conservative National Review magazine that the pope "just might take 
in hand the reform of the Jesuits" that Weigel argued was never 
finished.  (Smolich rejects any suggestion that the order isn't faithful 
to the church or its teachings.)It's too early to say how these 
past conflicts could influence Francis and his relationships with the society. 
He had disavowed liberation theology as a misguided strain of Catholic tenets, 
while still maintaining a focus on the economic failings of Western-style 
capitalism and the need to close the divide between rich and poor.Jesuits 
also worry that the religious order coul

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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">FILE - In this Sunday, March 31, 2013 photo, Pope Francis greets 
the faithful at the end of the Easter Mass in St. Peter's 
Square at the Vatican. Francis is the first Jesuit to be elected 
pope, and members of the order have only started absorbing the novelty 
of one of their own leading the church. But they have also 
started thinking ahead, to the potential impact of this pontificate on their 
many ministries, colleges and overall future. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini, 
File)The Associated PressNEW YORK  For decades, the Society of Jesus has 
faced the same struggles to find priests that have plagued the wider 
Roman Catholic Church. The Rev. Chuck Frederico, one of the priests who 
evaluate Jesuit applicants, says he usually heard from five a week, or 
fewer.Then, last month, the former Cardinal Jorge Bergoglio stepped out 
on the balcony of St. Peter's Basilica   the first Jesuit 
to be elected pope.The number of queries jumped to four or five 
each day."Some guys who made contact in the past weeks are serious 
candidates," said Frederico, vocations director for the region from Maine 
to Georgia. "This election of the Holy Father has given them reason 
to examine this more fully."Jesuits have only started absorbing the novelty 
of one of their own leading the church. Most were so shocked, 
they Googled to confirm the connection before they dared to celebrate. Robert 
Wassmann, an instructor at Washington Jesuit Academy, a middle school, told 
the Archd
 ness 
would ultimately allow up to 200,000 workers a year into the U.S. 
to fill jobs in construction, hospitality, nursing homes and other areas 
where employers now say they have a difficult time hiring Americans or 
legally bringing in foreign workers. Even after the deal was struck, some 
industries, such as construction, continued to voice complaints about the 
terms.Without offering details, Graham said on NBC's "Meet the Press" that 
negotiators were revisiting the low-skilled worker deal. But he issued a 
statement a short time later saying he was confident the agreement would 
hold.Graham sounded optimistic overall, predicting the bill would pass the 
100-member Senate with 70 votes in favor. Senators believe an overwhelming 
bipartisan vote is needed in the Democratic-led Senate to ensure a chance 
of success in the Republican-controlled House. Floor action could start 
in the Senate in May, Schumer said.Meanwhile two lawmakers involved in writing 
a bipartisan immigration bill in the House, Reps. Luis Gutierrez, D-Ill., 
and Mario Diaz-Balart, R-Fla., sounded optimistic that they, too, would 
have a deal soon that could be reconciled with the Senate agreement."I 
am very, very optimistic that the House of Representatives is going to 
have a plan that is going to be able to go to 
a conference with the Senate in which we're going to be able 
to resolve this," Gutierrez said Sunday on CNN's "State of the Union".
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