Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Iron Sky Sequel Gets Crowdfunded

COLOGNE, Germany -- The sequel to the indie sci-fi spoof Iron Sky has raised $150,000 in crowd-financing to go towards script and promotional development.

Iron Sky producers completed their first round of fan-funding on crowd financing site IndieGoGo in just under 60 days. Director Timo Vuorensola said the cash would go to finishing the script for the sequel to the 2012 Nazis-from-the-moon feature, titled Iron Sky: The Coming Race and doing initial promotional development.

The feature, billed as a dark comedy sending up Hollywood's mega-budget science fiction films, aims to begin shooting in 2015.

The first Iron Sky raised more than $1 million of its $10 million budget via crowd funding, with the rest coming from traditional funding sources. Vuorensola has said he wants to raise a much larger portion of the $15 million budget for Iron Sky 2 from online fans, giving him greater control over the production and release of the sequel.

?The crowd funding campaign we finished now is just the beginning ? we will continue down this road, because it offers us much more freedom to develop the film exactly the way we want it to be, and to create a distribution system which makes sense to all," said producer Tero Kaukomaa.

Udo Kier and Stephanie Paul, who co-starred in Iron Sky, have signed on for the sequel, with further cast to be announced as the production proceeds.?
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Source: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1927812/news/1927812/

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Monday, July 8, 2013

Martyr myth: Inside the minds of suicide bombers

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Portraying suicide bombers as psychologically normal is wrong and plays into the hands of their leaders, says criminal-justice researcher Adam Lankford

IN THE aftermath of 9/11, terrorism experts in the US made a bold and counter-intuitive claim: the suicide terrorists were psychologically normal. When it came to their state of mind, they were not so different from US Special Forces agents. Just because they deliberately crashed planes into buildings, that didn't make them suicidal ? it simply meant they were willing to die for a cause they believed in.

This argument was stated over and over and became the orthodoxy. "We'd like to believe these are crazed fanatics," said CIA terror expert Jerrold Post in 2006. "Not true... as individuals, this is normal behaviour."

I disagree. Far from being psychologically normal, suicide terrorists are suicidal. They kill themselves to escape crises or unbearable pain. Until we recognise this, attempts to stop the attacks are doomed to fail.

When I began studying suicide terrorists, I had no agenda, just curiosity. My hunch was that the official version was true, but I kept an open mind.

Then I began watching martyrdom videos and reading case studies, letters and diary entries. What I discovered was a litany of fear, failure, guilt, shame and rage. In my book The Myth of Martyrdom, I present evidence that far from being normal, these self-destructive killers have often suffered from serious mental trauma and always demonstrate at least a few behaviours on the continuum of suicidality, such as suicide ideation, a suicide plan or previous suicide attempts.

Why did so many scholars come to the wrong conclusions? One key reason is that they believe what the bombers, their relatives and friends, and their terrorist recruiters say, especially when their accounts are consistent.

In 2007, for example, Ellen Townsend of the University of Nottingham, UK, published an influential article called Suicide Terrorists: Are they suicidal? Her answer was a resounding no (Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, vol 37, p 35).

How did she come to this conclusion? By reviewing five empirical reports: three that depended largely upon interviews with deceased suicide terrorists' friends and family, and two based on interviews of non-suicide terrorists. She took what they said at face value.

I think this was a serious mistake. All of these people have strong incentives to lie.

Take the failed Palestinian suicide bomber Wafa al-Biss, who attempted to blow herself up at an Israeli checkpoint in 2005. Her own account and those of her parents and recruiters tell the same story: that she acted for political and religious reasons.

These accounts are highly suspect. Terrorist leaders have strategic reasons for insisting that attackers are not suicidal, but instead are carrying out glorious martyrdom operations. Traumatised parents want to believe that their children were motivated by heroic impulses. And suicidal people commonly deny that they are suicidal and are often able to hide their true feelings from the world.

This is especially true of fundamentalist Muslims. Suicide is explicitly condemned in Islam and guarantees an eternity in hell. Martyrs, on the other hand, can go to heaven.

Most telling of all, it later emerged that al-Biss had suffered from mental health problems most of her life and had made two previous suicide attempts.

Her case is far from unique. Consider Qari Sami, who blew himself up in a caf? in Kabul, Afghanistan, in 2005. He walked in ? and kept on walking, past crowded tables and into the bathroom at the back where he closed the door and detonated his belt. He killed himself and two others, but could easily have killed more. It later emerged that he was on antidepressants.

Even Mohammad Atta, the 9/11 ringleader and the archetype of the "normal" suicide terrorist, was misunderstood. He struggled with social isolation, depression, guilt, shame and hopelessness for many years.

Experts make other mistakes too. They assume that suicidal people are easily identifiable, that they must be irrational, and that suicide terrorists are a subset of the broader population of non-suicide terrorists, who we know tend to be relatively normal.

The misconception has been further exposed by psychologist Ariel Merari of Tel Aviv University in Israel. He recently conducted psychological tests on 15 failed suicide bombers, 12 non-suicide terrorists and 14 organisers of suicide attacks, all associated with Palestinian terror groups.

When the regular terrorists were asked if they had ever considered carrying out a suicide operation, 11 of 12 said that they had not. Among the organisers, nine of 14 said no. None exhibited suicidal tendencies or had ever attempted suicide.

For the would-be bombers it was a different story. Not only had they all agreed to undertake a suicide mission, eight displayed depressive tendencies, six displayed suicidal tendencies and two of them had previously attempted suicide.

Merari's findings provide compelling evidence that at least some suicide terrorists are suicidal. My own research adds to this, documenting suicidal traits in more than 130 attackers.

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Source: http://feeds.newscientist.com/c/749/f/10897/s/2e59232e/l/0L0Snewscientist0N0Carticle0Cmg21929240A0B20A0A0Emartyr0Emyth0Einside0Ethe0Eminds0Eof0Esuicide0Ebombers0Bhtml0Dcmpid0FRSS0QNSNS0Q20A120EGLOBAL0Qonline0Enews/story01.htm

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A tanker train that leveled part of a Canadian town rolled for 7 miles unattended before it derailed and burst into giant fireballs, its company said.

At least one person was killed and some of the missing are feared dead, the Quebec provincial polic...

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2 Texas Senators: 1 Chooses Death, 1 Chooses LIFE!


http://theblacksphere.net/2013/07/2-...-chooses-life/

"Donna Campbell is a conservative who has spent a lifetime helping others through medicine and Christian ministry. She is a double-board certified physician, working mom, woman of faith, and proud parent of four daughters.

Donna Campbell was born on a naval base and grew up with a great respect for the military and law enforcement. Her father served in the U.S. Navy and later as a trooper in the highway patrol. Her mother worked in factories most of her life until becoming an R.N. at the age of 48."

Source: http://talk.baltimoresun.com/showthread.php?332439-2-Texas-Senators-1-Chooses-Death-1-Chooses-LIFE!&goto=newpost

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Monday, July 1, 2013

Rolocule?s Motion Tennis iOS game brings Wii-like gaming to your Apple TV [video]

Screen Shot 2013-06-29 at 15.48.59

One of the products with biggest potential in Apple?s inventory is the Apple TV. It may look like a little square box capable of doing nothing but stream, but with a couple of tweaks it can be transformed in to a device which not only replaces your traditional set-top box, but also your games console.

AirPlay is yet to be fully adopted by games developers, but having played the likes of Real Racing 2, there?s definitely scope for that to change. Rolocule, and Indian developer, has seen the promise shown by Apple TV and released a game called Motion Tennis.

The company in question developed a technology called Rolomotion which uses your iPhone or iPod touch?s gyroscope sensor to detect motion and ? through AirPlay ? transform your device in to a handheld motion controller, like the Wii. Check out the video below, it shows the technology being used on a game called Motion Tennis:

What?s amazing is that this game is available right now on the App Store. It?ll set you back $7.99 (?5.49 UK) and is compatible with any iPhone or iPod touch running iOS 6.0 or later. May seem like an obvious point, but, I have to make it clear: You need an Apple TV to get this to work, so don?t download if you don?t.

Tip of the hat to iDownloadBlog for spotting the game.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TodaysIphone/~3/evdTI3wrQm4/

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