Saturday 19 October 2019

UK Politics - Parliament Defers Critical Vote


U.K. Parliament Defers Critical Vote, 
Likely Forcing Brexit Delay


Result deals a setback to Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who has pledged to exit the EU on Oct. 31
LONDON—British lawmakers voted Saturday to postpone a decisive Brexit vote, likely forcing Prime Minister Boris Johnson to request a further delay of the U.K.’s departure from the European Union and further extending the uncertainty over a referendum decision to leave the bloc made more than three years ago.
The postponement, made at the first Saturday session of Parliament since the 1982 Falklands War, punts the crucial vote forward, likely to early next week.
Lawmakers passed an amendment giving them more time to review a deal Mr. Johnson concluded this week with European leaders. The agreement sets out citizens’ rights, a financial settlement to the EU and a special arrangement for Northern Ireland that would require customs checks on goods arriving there from elsewhere in the U.K. Once the amendment passed, 322 to 306, the government pulled the vote it had scheduled on Mr. Johnson’s deal.
The move was backed by opposition lawmakers, along with some who have recently left or have been expelled from the ruling Conservative Party. Critically, it was supported by the party’s allies in Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist Party, who oppose Mr. Johnson’s deal because they say it creates new barriers between Northern Ireland and the British mainland.
By law, failure to ratify a Brexit deal by the end of Saturday requires the government to seek a three-month extension of the current Oct. 31 deadline for Brexit, potentially pushing back a departure from the bloc that has already been postponed twice.
Despite this, Mr. Johnson kept lawmakers guessing, saying he wouldn’t negotiate an extension with the EU, drawing gasps in the House of Commons. However, the law doesn’t require a negotiation, only a request and his spokesman said the “government respects the law” but refused to elaborate.
The legislature is set to resume debate on the agreement next week, when the government will give lawmakers a further chance to vote on a deal possibly as early as Monday.
It is far from over for Mr. Johnson’s deal. The 28 pro-Brexit lawmakers who voted against former Prime Minister Theresa May’s withdrawal package on three occasions all rejected the amendment and spoke in support of Mr. Johnson’s deal during the debate.
So, too, did 10 of the 22 ex-Conservatives who quit or were expelled from the party for defying Mr. Johnson. Seven of the others who supported the amendment—including Oliver Letwin, who proposed it—signaled they would vote for Mr. Johnson’s deal.
“It seems they do have quite a good chance,” said Maddy Thimont Jack, senior researcher at the Institute for Government.
If lawmakers approve the deal then next week, it wouldn’t necessarily mean it is in the bag. It would have to undergo further scrutiny from lawmakers with the possibility that important amendments could still be passed, including one that would require the deal to be put to a second referendum.
If Parliament doesn’t ratify the agreement, the Brexit process would again be plunged into uncertainty, with an election or referendum likely needed to resolve the stalemate.
EU diplomats have scheduled a meeting on Sunday to discuss any U.K. request for a delay. Officials say leaders are unlikely to deny an extension if asked, but the timing of any decision is uncertain and governments may wish to aid Mr. Johnson by not responding until after next week’s vote.
If they grant one, EU governments could offer a shorter or longer extension than three months, which the government would be compelled to accept under the law. In any case, the extension could be shortened if the U.K. Parliament has approved the deal.
A spokesman for Donald Tusk, the European Council president who would be in charge of leading EU leaders’ discussions on an extension, declined to comment. A spokeswoman for the European Commission said the EU’s executive arm would await notification of the U.K. government’s next steps.
The amendment presented by Mr. Letwin states that the divorce deal only goes into effect once a swath of related Brexit legislation is passed through the lower house.
Before the amendment was passed in an emergency session Saturday, lawmakers argued they wouldn’t have time to examine the small print of the agreement, which runs to more than 500 pages. Some complained there had been no assessment of its economic consequences.
Mr. Johnson, whose ability to control Parliament is significantly restricted by the fact his government is in a minority, had urged lawmakers to back the revised withdrawal deal he negotiated with the EU. Because of the amendment, the government didn’t put the deal to a vote.
“Now is the time for this great House of Commons to come together and bring the country together today,” Mr. Johnson said. He said the deal provides “a real Brexit” that would be “the greatest single restoration of national sovereignty in parliamentary history.”
Jeremy Corbyn, leader of the main opposition Labour Party, said Mr. Johnson’s administration was seeking to “avoid scrutiny” of the new withdrawal deal, which he said was worse than the package negotiated by Mr. Johnson’s predecessor, Theresa May. He repeated Labour’s call for a second referendum to put any Brexit deal to voters alongside the choice of staying in the EU
The prospect of Parliament enforcing another delay reprises a familiar theme in Britain’s long-running Brexit saga. Government efforts to railroad Parliament into supporting its Brexit plans have repeatedly been rebuffed by a legislature that cherishes its independence.
Mr. Johnson’s strategy has been to keep the Oct. 31 deadline alive to present lawmakers with the option of backing his deal or exiting without one, an outcome many fear would cause economic havoc.
“That’s the Holy Grail of Brexit: Present Parliament with a binary choice that is inescapable,” said Anand Menon, professor of politics at King’s College London. Saturday’s amendment is aimed at changing that calculus and giving Parliament more time to scrutinize the new deal, he added.
Lawmakers in opposition parties worried that passing a deal counterintuitively opened an avenue for a departure without a deal on Oct. 31 by mistake. The reasoning: If a deal is approved, a swath of legislation needs to be passed to turn that decision into law. If that legislation wasn’t completed by Oct. 31, Britain would leave the EU without a legally binding divorce deal.
As lawmakers debated in Parliament, thousands of people gathered nearby to show their support for or opposition to leaving the bloc.
Stuart Holmes, a retired 72-year-old Londoner, paced back and forth through the green near the House of Commons, holding a sign reading, “Leave then negotiate.” He said three years of back and forth since the referendum has been too much.
“If we don’t honor that, where does it end?” he said.
Across the lawn, Lindsay Kitson, 66, said she was attending her second Brexit protest in central London. “It’s to tell our grandchildren that we stood up for their future,” she said.
Caitlin Ostroff and Laurence Norman contributed to this article.

Recipes - Salmon with orange-ginger glaze served with cheese-stuffed tomatoes

Salmon with orange-ginger glaze served with cheese-stuffed tomatoes


An orange-juice glaze adds bright natural flavor to this salmon dish. Pair it with stuffed tomatoes for a perfect light meal.
  • YIELD: SERVES 4
  • LEVEL: EASY
  • PREP TIME: 5 MINUTES
  • COOK TIME: 45 MINUTES
Why settle for boring fish? Both these recipes have few ingredients and take little time to cook, and they're just different enough for piquancy. You can cook them in separate baking pans at the same time, if you have oven room. Otherwise, cook the tomatoes first and keep them warm while the salmon is in the oven. And the fish is good cold, too, if there are leftovers.

INGREDIENTS

    For the fish:

  • 4 salmon fillets (about 2 pounds)
  • 1 cup freshly squeezed orange juice
  • 1 1/2 teaspoon fresh-ground ginger root (or 1 teaspoon powdered)
  • 2 teaspoons balsamic vinegar
  • For the tomatoes

  • 4 large tomatoes
  • 1/2 cup feta or other salty, medium-firm white cheese
  • 1/2 cup any blue-veined cheese
  • 1 long green onion (scallion)
  • 8 black olives, pitted and halved
  • 2 tablespoons fine, dry bread crumbs
  • 1 tablespoon olive oil
  • A pinch of dried thyme or oregano, or any dried herb of choice
  • A pinch each of salt and pepper

DIRECTIONS

For the orange-glazed salmon fillets:
Preheat the oven to 400° F (200° C).
In a skillet, cook the orange juice over medium heat for 15 minutes, stirring occasionally.
When the juice is reduced to half and thick, stir the vinegar and ginger into it.
Have a baking pan ready and lined with baking paper. Put the salmon fillets down on it, skin side down. Sprinkle the flesh with salt and pepper. Pour 1/4 cup of the orange juice over the fillets.
Bake the salmon for 10 minutes.
Drizzle the rest of the juice over the fillets and continue baking 10 to 15 minutes. When the flesh breaks off in rosy flakes, it’s done.
Remove the salmon to a warm platter, or cover it and keep it warm on the stove top. Now reduce the roasting juices by letting them cook another 5 minutes at the oven’s highest temperature. When the juices are thick, spoon them out and spread them over the fish.

For the cheese-stuffed tomatoes:
Preheat the oven to 400° F (200° C).
Cut the tomatoes in half, from the stem end down. Squeeze out the seeds and gel. Place them, cut side up, on a baking tray lined with baking paper.
Chop the cheeses into dice and mix them.
Chop the scallion and mix it into the cheeses.
Spoon the cheese mixture into the cavities of the tomatoes.
Place 2 halves of olives on top of each tomato.
In a small bowl, mix the bread crumbs with the salt, pepper and dried herb. Sprinkle this over the tops of the tomatoes.
Dribble the olive oil over all.
Roast for 20 minutes. There will be some liquid on the bottom – spoon it over the tops of the tomatoes when you serve.
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Escape from Egypt - Little penguin with a sad past claims Penguin of the Year title

Little penguin with a sad past claims Penguin of the Year title

6:29 pm on 18 October 2019
A little blue penguin with a rough past has been crowned New Zealand's penguin of the year.
Little blue penguin Draco is this year's Penguin of the Year.
Little blue penguin Draco is this year's Penguin of the Year. Photo: Supplied.

Twelve-year-old Draco, who is the long-time partner of last year's winner, Timmy, beat off stiff competition from Mo and Elmo to take the title in the second year of the National Aquarium's competition.

Global interest had been high since the opening of voting for the title this year, and more than twelve thousand people from around the world cast votes.

Life hasn't always been calm seas for Draco, she arrived at the Napier aquarium's rehabilitation centre after she was hit by a car when she was less than one-year-old. The injury left her with a permanent head injury.

The aquarium says fans really enjoyed finding out who was named the naughty and good penguin for each month, following the antics that earned them the titles.

Draco has been noted for being very friendly to the other penguins, often visiting them in their burrows.

"She received Good Penguin of the Month recently for taking care of Burny's egg, which Burny had left in her burrow, and also sticking up for Timmy when Tux tried to push him off the pier," the aquarium says.

Draco and Timmy's back-to-back wins arguably make them the penguin "power-couple" in residence.
All of the penguins housed at Napier's National Aquarium are Little Penguins, or Blue Penguins, and are the smallest penguin species in the planet, reaching a maximum height of 30 centimetres.
The rehabilitation centre works to nurse animals back to full health to be released to the wild, although injured penguins like Draco are kept at the aquarium if they might struggle in the wild.

Who is Draco?

Although she is now a model penguin, when Draco landed at the Aquarium it took her some time to adapt to her new home and her keepers - and her wicked temperament earned her the name Draco, after a character from the Harry Potter series.

"When they first arrive, we're not too sure of the sex - we have to do DNA to find out what sex they are," said Rebekah Cuthbert, the National Aquarium's Bird Supervisor.

"Quite often we just give them a name to refer to them by, until we've found their DNA. And it was just around the time that all the Harry Potter movies were quite popular and coming out.
"When she did first arrive here, she was obviously very afraid, and would often try to bite us and was quite aggressive.

"But as she got to realise we were the providers of food and we weren't going to hurt her, she sort of changed her tune a bit, and sort of really mellowed out. Sort of like how Draco ended up at the end of the Harry Potter books I guess."

In the campaign to be crowned Penguin of the Year, Draco was boosted by two high-profile celebrity endorsements: comedian Rhys Darby, and the Kiwi actor Jonno Roberts, who is currently playing her namesake in the Harry Potter and the Cursed Child production on Broadway.

While celebrity endorsements can go either way towards achieving a candidate success, it seems this year it worked out for Draco.

Who was she up against?
In total, 7400 votes were cast in the initial round of voting to select the finalists, out of which Draco, Elmo and Mo were all put forward.

Although Draco ended up running away with the voting in the final, the race for second was tight with just five votes separating the second and third placed Little Penguins.

Both Elmo and Mo have strong personalities, Ms Cuthbert said.

"Elmo's our oldest penguin at 18 years of age - in the wild their average lifespan is ten to12, so it's about the same as us living until we're 120.

"She's been with us about fifteen or sixteen years. She came to us with a very badly damaged flipper after being tangled in fishing lines.

"So unfortunately the damage to the flipper was too bad. So she's only got one flipper now, but she's doing it quite well."

"Mo is our resident bad boy - he is all about food, and he'll often steal food off the keepers or even sometimes the other penguins when it comes to feeding time."

The Penguin of the Year competition was started just last year, off the back of the Aquarium's successful Penguin of the Month competition.

But while the penguins might have no idea about their new celebrity status, the National Aquarium said they hope more people will start to take notice of the work being done.

"We do it, the majority for fun, but also just to bring awareness to people about these birds are here because they're sick and injured.

"Predominantly we work as a rescue rehabilitation centre for the birds. For the most part, we can fix them up and get them back out into the world. And we just provide a home here for birds that are no longer able to survive by themselves."

Ms Cuthbert said it's easy for people to help wild penguins out, "be it as simple as keeping your dog on the lead or picking rubbish up off the beach [these are] things you can do to help our native wildlife and our environment."

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Friday 18 October 2019

Recipes - Chorizo Bean and Veggie Soup

Recipes - Chorizo Bean and Veggie Soup


This was one of my "experiments" I decided to mess around with. With winter coming, I try to find more warm you from the inside soups to keep the chill off, and I'd seen a recipe for pork chop soup a while back, so I thought I'd try to give it a bit more of a ZING factor. This is not "hot" spicy, but the combination of the ancho chili powder and the sweetness of a mild poblano pepper round out the spice combination quite well. Plenty of veggies, a goodly amount of meat, and a red-toned broth that is both rich and flavorful. Definitely stick-to-your-ribs fare. 



INGREDIENTS:

1 lb. Chorizo Sausage
1 lb. Boneless Pork Chops 
2 Tbsp. olive oil 
1 large yellow onion 
2 medium carrots
3/4 lb. Yukon Gold potatoes
2 stalks celery
1 Poblano pepper
3 garlic cloves, minced
3 garlic cloves, crushed 
2 tsp. paprika 
1 Tbsp. kosher salt 
1 Tbsp. Ancho Chili Powder
1 6 oz. can tomato paste 
1 can (15 oz.) Pinto Beans
1 can (15 oz.) Kidney Beans 
1 can (15 oz.) Hominy (white or yellow)
1 can (10 oz.) Petite-Diced Tomatoes with Chilis
2 pt. Pork Bone Stock (see recipe here)
1 pt. Water 


PREP:


Halve the onions, then thinly slice (1/8") root to tip. Slice the celery (1/4") and carrots (1/4"). Seed and dice the poblano pepper (1/8"). Dice the potatoes, skin on (1/4"). Partially freeze the Chorizo and slice into 1/4" disks. Thin-slice the pork chops (1/8") with the grain. Drain and rinse the beans and the hominy. Do not drain the tomatoes, though.

RECIPE:


Heat large non-stick or enameled dutch oven to medium high, add Chorizo and brown until nearly done (about 8 minutes). Remove to a bowl. Take the grease out to a small bowl, returning about 1 Tbsp. back to the pan. Now brown the julienned pork chop until done, about 4 minutes. Remove the pork, add another Tbsp. of grease, and fry the onions until translucent. Add the minced garlic and fry for about a minute. Add the can of tomato paste and cook for another 2 minutes, stirring often. Add the carrots, pork bone stock and water, stir well to blend in the paste. Add the Ancho chili powder, paprika, salt, and crushed garlic. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat to a simmer. Cook for 10 minutes

While the pot is coming up to heat, add the chorizo, pork chop, potatoes, celery, poblano pepper, diced tomatoes, beans and hominy to the pot. Bring back to the boil again, then reduce to a low simmer (use a diffusing plate if necessary). Cover and cook for another 60 minutes, stirring occasionally. Serve.



 

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Recipes - No-Knead Focaccia Pizza

No-Knead Focaccia Pizza 


Recipe courtesy of Lisa Starr


Ingredients
4 cups plain flour
2 teaspoons salt
1 teaspoon instant yeast granules*
2 cups warm water
3 tablespoons olive oil
Toppings (optional of your choice)


Instant yeast granules are sold in small, vacuum packs in the baking section of supermarkets. Topping can include marinara sauce, mozzarella, pesto, caramelized onions, olives, lightly fried mushrooms, pine nuts, pineapple, tuna, capers, peppers, biltong etc. You also have the option of brushing with just olive oil mixed with crushed garlic or chili flakes and sprinkling over Maldon salt to make plain focaccia. Pizza can easily be kept parve if preferred.

Preparation Instructions



1: Combine flour, salt and yeast in a deep bowl, add water and mix with a large spoon till all the flour is incorporated to make a loose, sticky dough, then cover and allow to rise in a warm place for 1 hour.*
2: Pour 3 tablespoons of olive oil onto a cookie sheet pan lined with baking paper and turn the oven on to 210 C.
3: Using two forks , pull the sticky dough away from the sides of the bowl, and scrape onto the oiled pan. Briefly roll ball of dough in oil to coat completely and allow to rise again for 20 minutes while the oven heats.
4: Drizzle over a few drops of extra oil then, using your fingers, press the dough down to stretch as close as possible to the corners of your cookie sheet. Push down with your fingers to create dimples all over as these little pockets hold flavor. 
5: Add toppings of your choice - or add crushed garlic/chili flakes and Maldon salt if you prefer to make plain focaccia bread -  and bake for 20 to 25 minutes till puffed up, lightly golden and crisp underneath.

COOK'S NOTES: * I recently read a handy tip for quick bread rising. Run the empty dryer for 1-2 minutes then place the covered bowl inside and close the door. An especially handy tip when the weather turns cold. Note that the plain garlic 'n herb version of this bread is delicious served with soup. Interestingly, it also freezes surprisingly well.

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Male and female mice have different brain cells

OCTOBER 17, 2019, by California Institute of Technology

Credit: CC0 Public Domain

Caltech researchers have discovered rare brain cell types that are unique to male mice and other types that are unique to female mice. These sex-specific cells were found in a region of the brain that governs both aggression and mating behaviors.

The study was done as a collaboration between the laboratory of David Anderson, Seymour Benzer Professor of Biology, Tianqiao and Chrissy Chen Institute for Neuroscience Leadership Chair, Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator, and director of the Tianqiao and Chrissy Chen Institute for Neuroscience; and a team at the Allen Institute for Brain Sciences in Seattle, Washington. A paper describing the research appears online on October 17 in the journal Cell.

"The results show that there are differences between male and female mammalian brains at the level of cellular composition as well as gene expression but that those differences are subtle, and their functional significance remains to be explained," says Anderson.

There are many different types of cells within the brain, such as neurons that transmit signals and glial cells that support neural functions. Although all of these cells contain the same set of genes, or genome, the types of cells differ in how they express those genes. As an analogy, one can imagine the genome as an 88-key piano in each cell. Each cell does not use all 88 keys. Therefore, the subset of keys that the cell "plays" determines the type of cell it is.

The hypothalamus is a fundamental region of the brain found in all vertebrates including humans. Previous studies have shown that a specific anatomic subdivision in the hypothalamus, called the ventrolateral subdivision of the ventromedial hypothalamus (VMHvl), contains cells that control aggression and mating behaviors. In these studies, strong stimulation of these neurons in male and female mice immediately caused the animals to become aggressive, even in the absence of any threat. However, weak stimulation caused the mice to begin mating behaviors.

In this new work, led by Caltech graduate student Dong-Wook Kim, the researchers examined gene expression in individual cells in the VMHvl. This was made possible by advanced transcriptomic techniques that can enumerate and identify the RNA transcripts that a cell contains; this information can then be used to classify different cell types. Previous studies were only able to examine 10 percent of the transcripts in each cell, whereas this study looked at a larger proportion of transcripts. The team discovered that there are 17 different types of brain cells in this tiny region alone. What is more, an examination of the patterns of gene expression revealed that some of these 17 cell types are much more abundant in male mice than in females, while others are found only in females.

It was known that different genes are expressed in the two mouse sexes—indeed, a genetic test can tell you whether a mouse is male or female—but this is the first discovery of types of cells that are sex-specific in a mammalian brain. Cells are considered to be distinct types when the expression of large clusters of genes varies from cell to cell.

Future work will try to determine the functions of these differing cell types.

The paper is titled, "Multimodal Analysis of Cell Types in a Hypothalamic Node Controlling Social Behavior."

Explore further Sex and aggression controlled separately in female animal brains, but overlap in male brains



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Jason Chaffetz: Pelosi and impeachment – There have already been 3 votes. Here's why there may not be a fourth

https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/pelosi-impeachment-votes-jason-chaffetz

Speaker Pelosi isn't refusing to hold a vote on impeachment. She is refusing to hold a fourth vote on impeachment. There have already been three votes.  They all failed. Miserably.
In other words, Congress has explicitly voted NOT to pursue impeachment.
In December 2017, January 2018, and against in July 2019 under Pelosi's leadership, the House held votes on whether to open an impeachment inquiry. The results weren't even close.

All three votes came up as "privileged resolutions." Under Congressional rules, members can vote to table the resolution or to proceed.  To affirmatively table a privileged resolution kills it, meaning the resolution has failed.
Though the first two impeachment votes came up during the Republican majority, the votes to reject or table them were indisputably bipartisan.
In December 2017 there were 126 Democrats who joined House Republicans to reject Rep. Al Green's impeachment resolution 364-58.
A month later, a new resolution was introduced with similar results: Again, 121 Democrats voted to table. Support for impeachment rose from 58 votes in December to 66 in January. But that was before Democrats won a majority in 2018 and Nancy Pelosi became Speaker.
Do any of us want to live in a country where Congress can unambiguously reject legislation and the Speaker of the House can force it through anyway? 
With Democrats having won dozens of new seats, Rep. Green tried again just three months ago in July 2019. His impeachment resolution was one of four introduced in the 116th Congress. This time even more Democrats voted against an inquiry – 137 up from 121 in the previous Congress.
After this third rejection to pursue impeachment, Rep. Lance Gooden, R-Texas, introduced a resolution to dethrone Chairman Nadler from the House Judiciary Committee for pursuing impeachment proceedings after the House had voted explicitly not to move forward with impeachment.
No wonder why Speaker Pelosi is reluctant to hold a fourth vote. It could fail again.
And that’s true despite the fact that she gets the added benefit of a supportive press thoroughly lacking intellectual and professional curiosity.
The Speaker’s quest for impeachment gets the benefit of the daily drip of negative propaganda against President Trump and no accountability or pressure for following the rule of law, fairness, precedent, or respect for the will of “the people’s house.”
Many Republicans, including President Trump, are calling on Speaker Pelosi to hold an impeachment vote. But the truth is – she already has. Until she holds another vote, the previous vote should stand. The House has explicitly voted against pursuing an impeachment inquiry, hence the current proceeding is invalid.

Do any of us want to live in a country where Congress can unambiguously reject legislation and the Speaker of the House can force it through anyway?

More fro

Americans should recognize this power grab for what it is and reject those who endorse it.

Just because Speaker Pelosi decrees there is an impeachment inquiry doesn't make that inquiry valid.
To the contrary, that motion was brought to the floor of the House and it failed three times. These are the seeds of a Constitutional crisis.