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CBS News It s been a week now since former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden identified himself as the leaker of top-secret documents about U.S. surveillance programs. Snowden came out of the shadows and into the spotlight in Hong Kong, where he s getting a pretty friendly reception, so far. Our Seth Doane has filed this Sunday Journal: The story of man-vs.-Big-Brother certainly resonates here. This weekend, hundreds of Hong Kongers took to the streets. It was a show of support for Edward Snowden, who chose China, of all places, to seek refuge -- and turn the debate over hacking and cyber-security upside-down.What does this do to the U.S.-China relationship Well, it certainly complicates it, said David Zweig, a political science professor at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. Hundreds of supporters of Edward Snowden, who leaked top-secret information about U.S
stanley becher . surveillance programs, march to the Consulate General of the United States in Hong Kong on Saturday, June 15, 2013. AP Photo/Kin Cheung America has tried to
stanley tumblers make China look bad on the issue of cyber-security, said Zweig. But yet, here s a guy who knows that America is also not so clean on this issue. It was the U.S. that had put China s cyber-spying at the top of the agenda, in a meeting earlier this month b
stanley website etween Presidents Xi and Obama. But on the day they met, Qmoy Illegal Motion! Porn Interrupts Super Bowl
One of the big questions for the twenty-first century is what our biggest source of energy will be. Many are betting on natural gas, because it cheap and plentiful. Unfortunately it emits dangerous carbon into the environment. The sustainable alternative is solar, but that was deemed too expensive 鈥?until now. A recent court decision in Minnesota, a midwestern US state, may lay the groundwork for many US states seeking to invest in cost-effective energy infrastructures for the next century. Over at Huffington Post, Lewis Milford describes why administrative l
stanley becher aw judge for the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission, Eric Lipman, decided that it would be better for his state to invest in solar energy rather than natural gas. It worth reading the judge reasoning in full: First, he said that future electricity dem
stanley mug and is uncertain, at least in the next five years. In that, he echoes what we are seeing around the utility industry. Power demand is flat or declining. There are many reasons for the fall, but they suggest trouble for the electricity sector. Will electric utilities be able to survive as power demand drops And most important, what kind
stanley cup becher of power plants will they invest in, to replace the smaller amounts of power they need big ones or smaller, distributed ones Second, he turned to the current and future carbon regulations that might apply to new fossil plants, including those using natural gas. Minnesota existing law says fossil