Sunday, August 5, 2012

Cosmetologists and Dermatologists Best for Skin Diseases

Man-made clothes is the source of protection of our body from the external atmosphere and skin the nature- made clothe in the form of the organ helps to cover and protect every part of the internal body. If there were no layer of skin on the body, your muscles, bones and organs would be hanging out. Skin makes us feel the change in the weather and naturally adapts its temperature on accordance with the weather atmosphere. It also allows us the senses of touch. Eventually, many cases related to the disorders of the skin are being reported these days. Some of them have been listed here- athlete's foot, psoriasis, eczema, and rosaceous, skin cancer, atopic dermatitis, acne and many more. Now the question arises that if a person is under the influence of skin diseases who he should meet for the treatment.
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A cosmetologist is recognized as to beautify the skin.

He cares for the treatment of the human skin. He provides comprehensive medical care to the patients. He introduces his customer the basic and the most essential formulae to keep the skin moisturized and cleaned. The skin care taker?s performance include the chemical peels, facial, and to excrete the blackhead and whitehead from the skin. The esthetician also teaches the clients how to apply makeup effectively and remove excess hair from the body. The esthetician ambitions also involve beautifying the customers face.

The skin specialists while treating the client analyzes customers? skin care needs, develops and discusses the treatment and products with the clients. The skin specialist effectively to reduce fine lines and age spots apply chemical peels. Besides this the skin care provider, very attentively, cares for the amount of hair on the customers? skin, and carefully remove the hair.

He also with the new technology observes the blackheads on the face and its reason as well and then removes from the face and advises him the certain cream to be applied on the face.
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? A dermatologist is a medical specialist who deals in specialization in the diagnosis, treatment and prevention of skin disease and skin cancers. He treats the patents of all the ages. The dermatologist treat the disease caused by sunlight as well as the by others reasons these skin cancer such as basal cell carcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma and malignant melanoma. The dermatologists are experienced with the better practicing of skin cancer and skin diseases caused by advances in genetics, and molecular biology etc. The experience of the dermatologist reveals that generally most of the young people suffer from the acne skin problem and the dermatologist works with many teens to resolve their problems. There also some more skin diseases the dermatologist effectively deals with.

In Delhi, there are the best facilities given to the persons suffering from the skin diseases. Here, from allopathic, homeopathic to the ayuevedik skin specialists are approachable. One can easily access t the doctors without any hindrance. The ayurvedic doctors in Delhi since a long time have been working for the smooth treatment of the f the skin-disease-patients.

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Source: http://skin-cancer.ezinemark.com/cosmetologists-and-dermatologists-best-for-skin-diseases-7d3755344191.html

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Saturday, August 4, 2012

US-bound Cubans pour into Panama through Colombia

In this July 3, 2012 photo, Cuban migrant Mayra Reyes, sitting fourth from right, gathers with other Cubans with whom she traveled as they rest at a shelter along with another group of migrants from Bangladesh, after being found by Panamanian border police in the Darien province in Meteti, Panama. Panamanian authorities began noticing five years ago that the Darien Gap, the only interruption in the Pan-American Highway, was being used by migrant smugglers, usually to move people from Asia and Africa. Panama's Public Safety Minister Jose Murillo says that the movement of people from Asia and Africa has tapered off but that hundreds of Cubans are now taking the arduous Darien Gap route toward the United States. (AP Photo/Arnulfo Franco)

In this July 3, 2012 photo, Cuban migrant Mayra Reyes, sitting fourth from right, gathers with other Cubans with whom she traveled as they rest at a shelter along with another group of migrants from Bangladesh, after being found by Panamanian border police in the Darien province in Meteti, Panama. Panamanian authorities began noticing five years ago that the Darien Gap, the only interruption in the Pan-American Highway, was being used by migrant smugglers, usually to move people from Asia and Africa. Panama's Public Safety Minister Jose Murillo says that the movement of people from Asia and Africa has tapered off but that hundreds of Cubans are now taking the arduous Darien Gap route toward the United States. (AP Photo/Arnulfo Franco)

In this June 22, 2012 photo, a man bathes in a river at dawn in the Darien province on the border with Colombia, in Union Choco, Panama. Panamanian authorities began noticing five years ago that the Darien Gap, the only interruption in the Pan-American Highway, was being used by migrant smugglers, usually to move people from Asia and Africa. Panama's Public Safety Minister Jose Murillo says that the movement of people from Asia and Africa has tapered off but that hundreds of Cubans are now taking the arduous Darien Gap route toward the United States. (AP Photo/Arnulfo Franco)

In this June 19, 2012 photo, a Panama border police officer walks with his rifle after taking a bath in the river near a police station in the Darien province on the border with Colombia, in Union Choco, Panama. Panamanian authorities began noticing five years ago that the Darien Gap, the only interruption in the Pan-American Highway, was being used by migrant smugglers, usually to move people from Asia and Africa. Panama's Public Safety Minister Jose Murillo says that the movement of people from Asia and Africa has tapered off but that hundreds of Cubans are now taking the arduous Darien Gap route toward the United States. (AP Photo/Arnulfo Franco)

In this June 19, 2012 photo, Panama border police patrol by boat in the Darien province on the border with Colombia, near Yaviza, Panama. Panamanian authorities began noticing five years ago that the Darien Gap, the only interruption in the hemisphere-spanning Pan-American Highway, was being used by migrant smugglers, usually to move people from Asia and Africa. Panama's Public Safety Minister Jose Murillo says that the movement of people from Asia and Africa has tapered off but that hundreds of Cubans are now taking the arduous Darien Gap route toward the United States. (AP Photo/Arnulfo Franco)

In this June 19, 2012 photo, people bathe in the river as the sun sets in the Darien province on the border with Colombia, in Union Choco, Panama. Panamanian authorities began noticing five years ago that the Darien Gap, the only interruption in the Pan-American Highway, was being used by migrant smugglers, usually to move people from Asia and Africa. Panama's Public Safety Minister Jose Murillo says that the movement of people from Asia and Africa has tapered off but that hundreds of Cubans are now taking the arduous Darien Gap route toward the United States. (AP Photo/Arnulfo Franco)

(AP) ? Led by smugglers armed with knives and machetes, Mayra Reyes and 14 other Cubans sloshed through swamps and rivers and suffered hordes of mosquitoes as they struggled across the notorious Darien Gap between Panama and Colombia, the only north-south stretch of the Americas to defy road-builders.

After walking for three days, the group reached the foot of a steep, scrubby mountain. There, the smugglers peeled away and told the Cubans they would have to press ahead alone.

"I thought I was going to have a heart attack," the 32-year-old hairdresser from Havana told The Associated Press. "What the guides did was get us to the mountain, where we had to wait for nightfall while these green and black poisonous frogs got on top of us."

Hundreds of Cubans like Reyes are taking that arduous new route toward the United States, trekking across the 85 miles (135 kilometers) of steamy tropical jungle that divides Colombia and Panama, through mountains, ravines, and muddy ground teeming with poisonous reptiles, jaguars, wild boars, guerrillas and drug traffickers,

And after that, they still face a journey across 1,700 miles (2,700 kilometers) and six countries to reach the United States.

Panamanian immigration authorities detained 800 Cubans near the border with Colombia from January through the first week in July, compared to 400 in all of 2011.

"We have detained up to 90 people in one week," said Frank Abrego, director of Panama's National Borders Service.

Thousands of islanders over the decades have used rudimentary rafts to travel the 90 miles (150 kilometers) that separate Cuba from the United States, but that journey can be deadly, and the U.S. Coast Guard has been patrolling the Florida Straits more aggressively, halting many before they can reach Florida. Most Cubans who reach U.S. soil can stay, but those intercepted at sea are usually returned to their homeland, and U.S. figures indicate that more than 1,000 have been stopped at sea so far this year.

So Cubans have turned to land routes. In the first nine months of this fiscal year, 7,407 Cubans have entered the United States through the border with Mexico, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

The route across the Darien Gap arose partly because many Cubans are now using the South American nation of Ecuador as the start of their path to the United States. President Rafael Correa eliminated visa requirements for Cuba in 2008, as other countries in Latin America, including Mexico, made it harder for Cubans to reach their shores.

All a Cuban needs is an exit permit from the Cuban government and a letter of invitation from a citizen of Ecuador, where some people sell such letters for $300 to $500. If Cubans have a letter of invitation and prove they can finance their travel abroad, it's relatively easy to get an exit permit if they are not doctors, scientists, military or members of other professions deemed high value by the government.

The result has been a flood of islanders traveling to the South American nation, which borders Colombia along the Pacific Ocean.

"Going to Ecuador is the easiest way right now to get out of Cuba," said Andy Gomez, a senior political fellow at the University of Miami's Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies. "For the majority, Ecuador is a stopping point but they have to come up with the money to get to their final destination, the United States," he said.

According to Ecuadorean official figures, between 2007 and February 2012, 106,371 Cubans entered the country legally and 97,923 left legally. It is unclear what happened to the other 8,448.

In Ecuador, many Cubans work to save money to pay smugglers to take them to Mexico's border with the United States, a route shared with many Central American migrants who have to cross territory controlled by drug traffickers and who often face extortion and kidnapping.

Few, though, cross the Darien, one of the world's most rain-drenched regions. While several thousand indigenous people live along its trails and rivers, the jungle is so dense, the ground so swampy or mountainous, that the few attempts to cross it by car or motorcycle have taken weeks or months. That terrain, and fears of environmental damage to its wild ecosystem, have continued to frustrate planners trying to link South and North America with the Pan-American Highway.

Panamanian authorities began noticing five years ago that the Darien Gap was being used by migrant smugglers, usually to move people from Asia and Africa who had traveled to the area by boat from Brazil, said Jose Mulino, Panama's public safety minister. That has tapered off. Panamanian immigration officials have detained just 97 non-Cuban migrants in the area since the start of the year.

"That traffic of Africans and Asians has considerably decreased, and the big problem we have now is the flow of Cubans who are coming through the jungle," Mulino said.

The Cuban migrants are sharing dangerous paths used by drug traffickers and rebels of the leftist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, Mulino said, That has sometimes caused problems for local law enforcement.

Police recently had to call off a drug raid after spotting a group of Cubans near the border, Abrego said.

"We had to get them out of there and take them to Panama City," he said. "We lost the raid's effectiveness."

Authorities have yet to determine if their guides work for either group, Mulino said.

"It's not clear if the rebels, or the drug traffickers, or both, are the ones guiding the migrants," Mulino said. "Someone is helping them and those people are the ones who walk that area."

Mildred Morales, a 34-year-old Cuban nurse who was part of Reyes' group, said she paid $300 just to cross the border into Panama. She had spent about $1,000 since leaving Ecuador three days earlier.

"From the moment you leave Ecuador you have to pay people off, police and immigration officials in Ecuador and in Colombia," the Havana woman said. "This is not cheap."

After climbing the mountain, the group walked another six hours to a river. From there, Panamanian authorities detained them and took them eight hours by canoe to the town of Yaviza, where the Pan-American Highway ends in Panama. From there, they went by car to a detention shelter in the town of Meteti.

The Cubans remained in Meteti for several days until immigration authorities gave them, like most Cuban migrants, a temporary permit allowing them to be in the Central American country as long as they report to authorities every two weeks. Authorities in Meteti say it's rare to see the Cubans again.

Like everyone in the group, Morales was nursing dozens of mosquito bites and thinking about the rest of the journey north.

"We don't know what kind of problems we'll face in the rest of the countries," Morales said. "We have heard from other Cubans that it is possible to reach Mexico's borders with the United States."

____

Associated Press writers Gonzalo Solano in Quito, Ecuador and Olga R. Rodriguez in Mexico City contributed to this story.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/3d281c11a96b4ad082fe88aa0db04305/Article_2012-08-02-Panama-Cuba-Crossing%20the%20Gap/id-4934a21d02a84d7fa49bbf6363f99fc8

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Tenn. Dems disavow Senate nominee, cite hate group

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) ? The Tennessee Democratic Party is disavowing the man who won the party's nomination to challenge Republican Sen. Bob Corker in November, saying the little-known candidate belongs to an anti-gay hate group.

Mark Clayton, 35, reported raising no money and campaigned little but received more than 48,000 votes, twice the number of his nearest competitor in Thursday's seven-candidate Democratic primary.

Clayton is vice president of Falls Church, Va.-based Public Advocate of the United States, which calls itself a conservative advocacy group. The Southern Poverty Law Center calls the organization an anti-gay hate group.

Clayton did not immediately return messages left Friday. Public Advocate says on its website that it "offers strong and vocal opposition to," among other things, "same-sex marriage and the furtherance of so-called gay rights."

The Tennessee Democratic Party said in a statement that many Democrats knew nothing about any of the candidates and suggested that Clayton won simply because his name appeared first on the ballot.

Party spokesman Sean Braisted said officials are trying to figure out what the party can do beyond condemning Clayton.

"We aren't taking any options off the table at this time," Braisted said in an email. "He does not speak for the Democratic Party."

In 2008, the party stripped a state senator who had sided with Republicans in a legislative leadership vote of her 19-vote primary win on the grounds that Republican involvement made the outcome "incurably uncertain." Last month, a federal court upheld the action.

The Democrats and the state attorney general's office argued that the primaries are a party function and not a state election, so courts generally cannot get involved in disputes over who is named as the nominee.

Clayton ran for the Senate as a Democrat in 2008, collecting just over 32,000 votes and finishing fourth.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/tenn-dems-disavow-senate-nominee-cite-hate-group-221340374.html

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Syria says reaches deal with Russia for oil products

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Syria has reached an agreement to send its crude oil to Russia in return for shipments of refined oil products, Syria's deputy prime minister for economic affairs said on Friday.

"We will deliver our oil and receive gasoline and fuel oil; it will be a barter," Qadri Jamil told journalists, adding that Syria is producing about 200,000 barrels per day.

Jamil, leading a delegation of economic officials including the country's oil and finance ministers, was in talks with Russian government and private sector officials on ways to alleviate the economic effects of sanctions on Syria.

"We need oil, oil products. Shortages of these materials are making the situation in the country difficult," he said at a news conference.

He also said Syria had asked for credit from Russia and that the size and terms of any loan would be decided "within weeks".

Russia, which along with China has defended Syrian President Bashar al-Assad from harsher sanctions in the U.N. Security Council, is one of Damascus' few remaining allies.

(Reporting by Thomas Grove, editing by Jane Baird)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/syria-russia-reach-deal-crude-oil-products-minister-150530465.html

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Friday, August 3, 2012

CCI: 'Girls Gone Genre' Panel Tackles Women in Film and TV ...

Marti Noxon, left, Jane Espenson, Angela Robinson, Deborah Ann Woll and Gale Anne Hurd (photo by Alan Kistler)

A crowd waited in line for an hour at Comic-Con International to attend ?Girls Gone Genre,? a panel celebrating female creators and empowered characters. Panelists included writers and producers Marti Noxon (Fright Night, Jane Espenson (Once Upon a Time), Karyn Kasuma (Jennifer?s Body), Gale Anne Hurd (The Walking Dead) and Angela Robinson (True Blood) and actress Deborah Ann Woll (True Blood).

Hurd spoke fondly of how some projects that people didn?t have faith in were able to become wildly successful and showcase inspirational women, such as when she worked on the first Terminator film.

?When [James Cameron] and I would talk about [Sarah Connor], we would talk about a central character be relatable,? she recalled. ?She was a waitress, she wasn?t really happy with her body, her big question was would she survive her bad boss. Little did she know. ? But we wanted to start there because something I think what people respond to is ordinary people in extraordinary circumstances.?

Smiling, Hurd continued, ?The first time we showed [The Terminator] to the investors, they said, ?We?re so embarrassed by this movie. This is a down-and-dirty exploitation movie. It?ll be out of theaters in two weeks, and we really wish we could take our name off it.? But audiences felt differently. ? Sarah Connor as the lead of the first film, that surprised the investors as well. It was called ?The Terminator? and we said no, this is Sarah Connor?s story.?

Noxon said, ?People always talk about the influence of the female staff members on [Buffy the Vampire Slayer], but truly, and Joss [Whedon] agrees with this, there is no greater woman than he. He taught me a lot of things that I now spout about feminism. I?d say for me the greatest thing about Buffy ? is that she is so human. That kind of prototypical action or horror heroine is either so perfect she wasn?t accessible or the girl who got killed in the first act or because she had sex. So what a refreshing thing to see a girl be silly and superficial and vain ? because we are not just one thing. And the worst thing that gender stereotyping does to us is it reduces us to just a few things ? Buffy was so great and men and women love it for just that reason, it?s layered like an onion.?

?Yes!? Espenson exclaimed. ?It?s a vicious, delicious onion with a strawberry center!? As the audience laughed, she added, ?A whole bunch of little boys were watching that, too. Buffy was universal. ? Everyone felt like an outcast. And she was very flawed. And then I go to [Battlestar Galactica], and Starbuck is incredibly flawed and damaged. ? You can?t be perfect to be identifiable.?

How does an actor?s viewpoint in this genre differ from a writer, producer or director?

On her character Jessica from HBO?s True Blood, Woll said, ?Even in one episode, she can be incredibly sexy and incredibly dorky. She can be incredibly wise and also na?ve. ? It?s never one thing. I also feel that in the past the strong heroine has often been a fighter who takes on very masculine aspects. ? I like that Jessica?s very compassionate. She becomes stronger the more she opens up to the world and embraces those, what we consider feminine, aspects of herself.?

?Genre is a safe space to be transgressive and explore themes,? Robinson added. ?It was kind of neat to go from The L Word ? the nuances of how women interact ? it was kind of nice to bring that into True Blood. You can have crazy-sexy or you can have someone just give someone a look and we?ll examine that. [In the writers? room]. I see myself as kind of an advocate for the female characters on the show.?

?Joss, being the person he was, was interested in what I really felt,? Noxon explained. ?I got to write these characters from a female point of view and not be restricted. ? If I had gone onto The Pretender as I?d planned, I probably wouldn?t be writing these dimensionalized characters and because of that I got hooked on genre.?

?Being a woman who writes genre can help you because they?re not as many of them out there,? she added. ?But then also ? I feel there are ways that it?s absolutely held me back [due to perception]. Just look at the Nicki Minaj video where if you take the pickle juice, you?ll be drinking pickle juice all your life. Okay, no one knows what I?m talking about! [laughter] Look up the video with Nicki Minaj talking about the music business and drinking the pickle juice!?

Laughing, Espenson continued the topic. ?It?s all based on perception. How we?re perceived ? and how we self-perceive. I was raised in the ?70s, and when I was a little kid you were asked, ?So, are you going to be a nurse or a stewardess???

Raising a different perspective, Robinson mentioned how when she arrived at a studio to direct Herbie Unloaded, she was sometimes told automatically that the messenger?s entrance was in the back. ?And I?m like, ?I?m directing the movie!?? she said, laughing with the audience. ?People don?t know what to make of me. ? Whenever there?s a black person on a studio lot, we eye each other. And we give this little nod, like, ?You made it here! Good for you!? You walk into rooms and people have these preset conceptions. ? So I kind of start talking quickly and intelligently when I?m there in the gap before they can [speak]. And then they have no box for me and they just kind of take it at face value and then we can actually have a conversation.?

?I feel very responsible about things, like not being too skinny,? Woll revealed, garnering applause from the audience. ?There?s wanting to be a good role model and encourage other women. You have to have the confidence in yourself.?

?I was really lucky,? Hurd said. ?I had gone to work for Roger Corman, who honestly believed that gender didn?t matter, except perhaps that women worked harder for less money. And he hired women in every capacity. I did have a role model ? Barbara Boyle was the operating officer, and she was tough and she was a fighter. She?s one of the founders of women in film. The good news is that the landscape has changed.?

What advice would the panelists give to aspiring screenwriters?

?Whatever you do, you get good through doing it,? Espenson replied. ?A lot of disadvantage that women have had in the writers? room is that they aren?t given enough time in the writers? room to learn while they are there. It?s the ability to fail and get back up that makes you better. Don?t just get through the door ? persevere. Maybe you?ll lose a couple jobs early on, a lot of people do, and stick with it.?

Woll added, ?I would say really be yourself and stick with your principles. You don?t want to do that nude scene? Don?t do it. You get a say in your career.?

?You really need to learn those basics, and I learned that early on and took a lot of classes,? Noxon said. ?But I don?t think I became a writer until I was willing to tell on myself in ways that were embarrassing and very humbling. What makes good writing is that the devil is in the details. All those little things that are particular to your characters and particular to your story that you observe. And that?s a journey that takes time. What?ve you got to say? My breakthroughs came when I stopped trying to sell and just tried to tell the truth as I see it.?

Source: http://spinoff.comicbookresources.com/2012/08/01/cci-girls-gone-genre-panel-tackles-women-in-film-and-tv/

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Friday, June 8, 2012

Insight: Can Occupy Wall Street survive?

(Reuters) - More than eight months after Occupy Wall Street burst onto the global stage, decrying income inequality and coining the phrase "We are the 99 percent," the movement's survival and continued relevance is far from assured. Donations to the flagship New York chapter have slowed to a trickle. Polls show that public support is rapidly waning. Media attention has dropped precipitously.

Bursts of violence, threats of municipal chaos and two alleged domestic terror plots have put Occupy on a recurring collision course with law enforcement.

Even its social media popularity, a key indicator of the strength of a youthful movement, has fizzled since its zenith last fall.

National electoral successes - the legacy of the Tea Party, the other major American grassroots movement created in recent years - are not even on the agenda of the famously leaderless organization.

While the movement's signature triumph has been to draw worldwide attention to income inequality in America and elsewhere, some who are sympathetic say it has nevertheless failed a crucial test of social movements: the ability to adapt and grow through changing tactics.

"Most of the social scientists who are at all like me - unsentimental leftists - ... think this movement is over," said Harvard University professor Theda Skocpol, a liberal academic who wrote a book on the Tea Party.

She and others wonder whether Occupy will ever really thrive without solid footing in the mainstream of American political discourse.

Bill Dobbs of Occupy New York's press team takes a different view. He compares the OWS struggle to that of America's civil rights movement - long and uphill, with broad goals to radically alter American society. The first step, he said, has been to re-animate America's long-dormant spirit of social activism.

"We in America have allowed ourselves to be put into a political coma," Dobbs told Reuters. "Occupy Wall Street has shaken the country out of that coma."

But are sporadic protests enough to change the nation?

BOMB PLOT

Skocpol identified what she said are several key differences between the Tea Party and Occupy Wall Street. She said Tea Party activists are generally 45 and older, with many in their 60s; they moved swiftly from organizing rallies to participating in local and national electoral politics, and established local chapters, each with its own leader.

By contrast, the Occupy movement is populated by mostly younger activists who eschew traditional politics and have resisted top-down organization. Instead, she said, they focused on encampments, which left them vulnerable to dissolution after they were evicted from their tent cities.

Headlines about a plot to blow up a bridge in Cleveland during last month's May Day demonstrations and another to attack President Barack Obama's Chicago campaign headquarters with Molotov cocktails during the recent NATO summit drew crucial media oxygen away from the peaceful activities of the movement's large majority.

"Eight months in, the Tea Party were beginning to impact primary elections, and by the second year were having a tremendous impact," Skocpol said. "They were, if not electing, then at least changing the kind of candidates that were being elected.

"But Occupy got bogged down in tent cities. In social movement literature we'd argue that there was a failure to engage in tactical innovation at a crucial time." Certainly the movement shows few signs of creating a summer of discontent in American cities this year.

Its next big gathering is scheduled for Philadelphia, the week of July 4. Organizers say the group will camp out for four days in the "streets and parks of Philadelphia ... as a collective exercise of our free speech" and conduct workshops and panels.

Last month, following credible but unremarkable attendance at national May Day rallies and NATO protests in Chicago, about 200 Occupiers gathered in New York's Union Square to plan a fall re-emergence: a "Yes We Camp" rally on September 17 to underscore the right of activists to occupy public space, like parks and sidewalks.

AN ALLIANCE FORGONE

Last October, lower Manhattan's Zuccotti Park hummed with energy, a loose collective of aggrieved Americans united by shared outrage at a spectrum of economic injustices. The spectacle of "horizontal democracy," drum circles, and a revitalized American counterculture captured everyone's attention.

More than 12,000 newspaper stories a month referenced the movement, according to two university sociologists, Patrick Rafail and Jackie Smith. The two most popular Twitter hash tags, #occupy and #OWS, hit cyberspace at an average rate of 20 to 60 times a minute, according to SocialFlow, which analyzed OWS Twitter trends for Reuters. The frenzy peaked after police arrested hundreds of protesters on the Brooklyn Bridge on October 1. That night, more than 1,500 of just those two tags went pinballing through the Twittersphere every minute.

A Time Magazine poll in October found 54 percent of those polled had a favorable opinion of Occupy Wall Street, while 86 percent believed Wall Street itself and lobbyists had too much influence in Washington. By November 2, OWS New York raised more than $500,000 in donations, and by year-end, nearly three quarters of a million dollars.

Public support for OWS spiked briefly following a November 15, pre-dawn New York City Police Department raid that cleared Zuccotti Park and three days later when images of University of California campus police pepper-spraying seated protesters went viral.

But the New York eviction robbed the landmark camp of a central location, and most protesters simply returned to their lives. The core of the movement disappeared from public consciousness.

A seemingly natural alliance with the nation's politically active labors unions has been hindered by Occupy's general lack of interest in electoral politics, said Kate Bronfenbrenner, author of several books on labor union organizing.

"A FLOATING ABSTRACTION"

Public support soured through the quiet winter months of early 2012.

When protesters returned to Zuccotti Park on March 17 for the movement's six-month anniversary and threatened to re-occupy the park, police moved in swiftly, arresting dozens more.

In April, an NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll found that 71 percent of respondents said they did not support OWS. News story citations have dropped below 1,000 a month as of May, according to Smith and Rafail.

Related Twitter traffic has slowed to about five tweets a minute, according to SocialFlow. In significant numbers, #Occupy and #ows are being co-opted by an Oregon wildlife campaign and Connect the Left, a liberal umbrella group.

OWS New York's general fund is down to $31,000 and its bail fund to about $50,000, said Christine Crowther of the OWS NY finance committee.

Almost all of the 300 or more camps that sprung up around the nation have been disbanded, according to Arun Gupta, co-founder of The Occupied Wall Street Journal, the movement's newspaper of occasional record.

"In many cities, most prominently New York, the general assemblies have disintegrated, because the democratic practice becomes a floating abstraction without the space to anchor it," he wrote recently on Aljazeera.com.

While the movement has splintered into small, self-sustaining cells that focus on individual issues at the local level and coordinate where necessary with the other "working groups," a national structure is in place. Different Occupy chapters connect through group conference calls and constant online activity.

OFF THE RADAR

Washington political consultants say they have no serious Occupy-backed or inspired candidates on their radar for this fall's elections, and many Occupy activists say elections are not a top priority.

"As a community that works with consensus with a 90 percent threshold, we'd never be able to build consensus around a single candidate - ever," said Justin Stone. The New York activist still participates weekly in "sleepful protests" in the city - essentially camping on the sidewalk.

(Additional reporting by Edith Honan and Thomas Ferraro; Editing by Martin Howell and Prudence Crowther)

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UN: Monitors shot at trying to reach Syria 'massacre' village

Rebels in Syria say Assad's forces had slaughtered at least 78 people, including women and children, but Assad's people say it was the rebels and the numbers were far fewer. ITN's Paul Davies reports. Warning: Some pictures in this report are disturbing.

By msnbc.com news services

Updated at 11:20 a.m. ET: BEIRUT --?United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said on Thursday that U.N. monitors were shot at trying to get to the scene of the latest Syrian massacre in which at least 78 villagers were allegedly slaughtered by forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad.

Opposition activists said up to 40 women and children were among the dead in Mazraat al-Qubeir, near Hama, on Wednesday, posting film on the Internet of bloodied or charred bodies.


Syrian activists say 100 people were killed by government supporters Wednesday in the province of Hama, including many women and children. Meanwhile, diplomatic efforts to quell the crisis continue to stall. NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin reports.

Confirmation of Wednesday's massacre will pile pressure on world powers to act, but they have been paralyzed by rifts pitting Western and most Arab states against Assad's defenders in Russia, China and Iran.

The U.N. chief told the General Assembly that the unarmed observers were initially denied access to the scene in central Hama and "were shot at with small arms" while trying to get there. He did not mention any casualties.

Ban said each day in Syria was seeing more "grim atrocities" and that for many months it had been evident that Assad and his government "have lost all legitimacy."

Any regime that tolerates killings such as one in which 108 people were slain in the town of Houla on May 25?and Wednesday's attack near Hama "has lost its fundamental humanity," he said, condemning "this unspeakable barbarity."?

Earlier, Syria's pro-government Addounia TV said U.N. observers had arrived in Mazraat al-Qubeir, but the chief of the U.N. mission said that Syrian troops and civilians had barred them.

11-year-old boy says he survived Syria massacre

"They are being stopped at Syrian army checkpoints and in some cases turned back," General Robert Mood, the head of the U.N. observer mission, said in a statement earlier on Thursday. "Some of our patrols are being stopped by civilians in the area."

Syrian rebels reportedly killed dozens of Syrian soldiers over the weekend, following the massacres of civilians by the regime last week in Houla. Both Mitt Romney and Sen. John McCain are calling for the arms for the rebels. Former Ambassador to Syria Theodore Kattouf discusses.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton described the latest reported massacre?as unconscionable.

"We are disgusted by what we are seeing (in Syria)," she told a news conference during a visit to Istanbul.

'Completely false'
The Syrian state news agency quoted an official source in Hama describing reports from Mazraat al-Qabeer as "completely false," saying security forces had intervened at the request of residents after a "terrorist group committed ... a monstrous crime", killing nine women and children.

Syrian authorities have also denied responsibility for the Houla killings, blaming foreign-backed Islamist militants.

As with the May 25 killings -- which Western powers blame on Assad's troops and loyalist "shabbiha" militia -- the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said "shabbiha headed into the area after the shelling and killed dozens of citizens, among them women and children."

Shabbiha, drawn mostly from Assad's minority Alawite sect that is an offshoot of Shiite Islam, have been blamed for the killings of civilians from the Sunni Muslim majority. That has raised fears of an Iraq-style sectarian bloodbath and the prospect of a wider regional confrontation between Shiite Iran and the mainly Sunni-led Arab states of the Middle East.

NYT: US envoy fears Syria conflict will develop into regional sectarian war

Reports of mass killings have emerged not even two weeks after a recent massacre that killed about 100 people. NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin reports.

Some 13,000 people have been killed in Syria over 15 months of repression and later armed rebellion.

The main Syrian National Council opposition group responded to reports of the new massacre by calling for stepped-up military assaults on Assad's forces.

The failure of a cease-fire brokered by U.N. envoy Kofi Annan in March to halt the bloodshed has raised questions about its continued worth.

The 300-member group of U.N. truce observers has been in Syria for weeks.

Events in Syria are difficult to verify as state authorities tightly restrict access for international media.

Up with Chris Hayes panelists Colonel Jack Jacobs, MSNBC military analyst; Karam Nachar, an activist who has been working with opposition leaders in Syria; Jeremy Scahill of The Nation magazine; and Josh Trevino of the Texas Public Policy Foundation, discuss whether civil war is inevitable in Syria, and whether there's anything the United States and the world can do to stop it.

Rebel groups inside Syria, which helped escalate what began as popular demonstrations for democracy into what is approaching a civil war, say they are no longer bound by Annan's cease-fire and are calling for more foreign arms and other support.

Western leaders, wary of new military engagements in the Muslim world and especially of the explosively complex ethnic and religious mix that Syria represents, have offered sympathy but shown no appetite for taking on Assad's redoubtable armed forces, which can call on Iran and Russia for supplies.

Assad: Syria faces 'real war waged from the outside'

In Washington on Wednesday, the United States and Saudi Arabia, among dozens of mostly Western and Arab countries in the Friends of Syria working group, called for further economic sanctions against Syria including an arms embargo, travel bans and tougher financial penalties.

Thirteen men were shot dead at close range in Syria. Activists claim the killers were government militia. The government blames the rebels. NBC's John Ray reports. Some of the images in this report may be disturbing.

Separately, ministers and envoys from 15 countries and the European Union agreed at a meeting hosted by Turkey in Istanbul on Wednesday to convene a "coordination group" to provide support to the opposition but left unclear what this may entail.

The U.S. and its allies in Europe, Turkey and the Arab world also agreed to work on a political transition plan for Syria, hoping to persuade Russia to join a broadened diplomatic effort to ease Assad out of power, a senior U.S. official said.?

Syria agrees to wider aid efforts, UN says

But with neither Russia nor China present, and both remaining hostile to the idea of global sanctions against the Syrian government or any Libya-style military intervention, it was unclear what effect the show of unity might produce.?

Brutal shelling and attacks have made life inside of Syria's Homs harrowing and for those who try to flee, perilous.? NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin reports.

Speaking in Beijing, Russia's foreign minister presented a counterproposal for international action, proposing a conference on Syria but with an emphasis on pressuring opposition groups to respect Annan's peace plan.?

Sergei Lavrov criticized the Friends of Syria meetings that the U.S. and its partners have been having for being "devoted exclusively to the support of the Syrian National Council and its radical demands." He said the Russian gathering would, by contrast, put pressure on the Syrian opposition to "end all violence and sit down for talks."?

Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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