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That building was crap to begin with.

Sez the guy who never came even 10,000 miles near it. LOL

nativepakistan.com

ISLAMABAD: Quaid-e-Azam Muhammad Ali Jinnah's residency in Ziarat will be rebuilt within three months, the government announced on Sunday.

Jinnah's residency has been blown up by militants in Ziarat on Saturday, the building where Quaid spent the last days of his life with his sister Fatima Jinnah in 1948, a year after Pakistan came into being.

It was unfortunate that only one police man was deployed at the site during daytime.

When it was built, it was the largest earthen dam in the world. I think there's one bigger now in Russia or something.

Yessir Goatee sir.

The biggest one is in Pakistan. LOL

en.wikipedia.org

Tarbela Dam (Urdu: تربیلا بند‎) on the Indus River in Pakistan is the largest earth filled dam in the world and is second largest by the structural volume.

Majority of Americans Don't Trust Newspapers and Television News
According to a new Gallup poll, confidence in mass media continues to fall

By Allie Bidwell
June 18, 2013 RSS Feed Print

Comment (41)
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Only 23 percent of Americans have confidence in newspapers, according to Gallup.

Only 23 percent of Americans have confidence in newspapers, according to Gallup.

Continuing a decades-long downward trend, fewer than one-fourth of Americans have confidence in newspapers, according to a recent Gallup poll.

[READ: Paywalls Could Be Print's Salvation Online]

The percentage of Americans saying they have "a great deal" or "quite a lot" of confidence in newspapers dropped to 23 percent this year from 25 percent last year, according to a report on the poll, which was released Monday.

American confidence in newspapers reached its peak at 51 percent in 1979, and a low of 22 percent in 2008.

But newspapers don't stand alone. Confidence in television news has also been slipping -- it's tied with newspapers this year at 23 percent, which is slightly up from last year's all-time low of 21 percent. Newspapers and television news rank near the bottom of a list of 16 "societal institutions," according to the report. The only institutions television news and newspapers beat out this year are big business, organized labor, health maintenance organizations and Congress. Americans expressed the most confidence in the military, at 76 percent, and small businesses, at 65 percent.

[STUDY: Newspapers Becoming More Polarized]

Gallup attributed the drop in confidence to a number of factors, including a growth in social networking websites and an online audience that left news outlets struggling to find their place.

"Americans' confidence in newspapers and television news has been slowly eroding for many years, worsening further since 2007," the report says. "By that point, newspapers and television news had been struggling for years to figure out how to adjust their strategy for a growing Internet audience."

Though all key demographic groups express low levels of confidence in the media, according to the report, the levels of negativity varied by age, education and gender. College graduates are less likely to trust the media than those with only a high school diploma, for example. The poll also found that women are slightly more confident than men in both television news and newspapers.

[ALSO: Pulitzer Recognizes New Direction for Old School Journalism]

Much of the confidence can also be measured by political orientation. Conservatives remain the most critical of newspapers and television news, while liberals are the most supportive. Confidence in newspapers by party also mirrors their ideologies. Democrats are most confident, at 33 percent, while Republicans, at 16 percent, are least confident.

"The divided Congress, with Democrats controlling the Senate and Republicans the House, is likely part of the reason for the low levels of confidence rank-and-file Democrats and Republicans express, and is tied to Americans' frustrations with Congress' inability to get much done," the report says.

I know that the sources in that story aren't the only ones finding a link between environmental lead and violent crime.

www.motherjones.com

"It's the only hypothesis that persuasively explains both the rise of crime in the '60s and '70s and its fall beginning in the '90s. Two other theories -- the baby boom demographic bulge and the drug explosion of the '60s -- at least have the potential to explain both, but neither one fully fits the known data. Only gasoline lead, with its dramatic rise and fall following World War II, can explain the equally dramatic rise and fall in violent crime."

The brain is the human organ most sensitive to lead. It causes enormous problems in the developing brains of children.

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