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Monday, February 1, 2016

US election: Ted Cruz wins Iowa Republican vote

"Tonight is a victory for courageous conservatives," he declared, to great applause, as he railed against Washington, lobbyists and the media.
He took 28% of the Republican vote, beating his rival, the once frontrunner Donald Trump, and Marco Rubio.
Votes in the Democratic race are still being counted, and suggest a tight race between the two leading candidates.

With 85% of results in, frontrunner Hillary Clinton and self-proclaimed Democratic socialist Bernie Sanders are less than 1% apart.
Mr Trump congratulated the Texas senator and said he was "honoured" by the second-place finish.
At least two candidates are dropping out following the results.
Sources close to Democrat Martin O'Malley, former Maryland governor, have told the BBC that he will suspend his campaign - narrowing the field to two competitive candidates.
On the Republican side, Former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee tweeted that he too would suspend his campaign.

Iowa has an unusual election system called a caucus, which involves people gathering at private homes, schools and other public buildings across the state. 
Democratic voters divide themselves into groups based on their preferred candidate, but the Republican caucus process is more like a traditional ballot. 
Over the coming months, the other 49 states as well as US territories will vote for the party nominees. 
Each states' delegates will be tallied and a nominee will become apparent as the summer draws near.
In November, the US will pick who its next president will be. He or she will assume office in January 2017.

Cam Newton Wore $849 Versace Pants and the Internet Lost It

For those like us who prefer livestreaming the latest runway show to cheering on a football team during the big game, the name Cam Newton might not immediately ring any bells. But this weekend, the Carolina Panthers quarterback was suddenly all over our radar thanks to a pair of truly spectacular, statement-making trousers.
Wiz Khalifa may have cool pants, but he’s got nothing on Cam Newton. After seeing the Versace pair he wore while arriving in San Jose, California, for the Super Bowl, Kanye‘s definitely going to want to start screenshotting some of the football player’s finer looks to add to his pants Pinterest board. The form-fitting pair in question are a $849 design from Versace’s Spring 2014 menswear collection, featuring a swirl of black and white stripes with trompe l’oeil gold baroque designs around the outer edges.
Of course, Twitter immediately exploded with reactions to Cam’s bold sartorial look, ranging from comparisons to Seinfeld’s Kramer to praise for being the only man in the world who could pull off pants this loud.
But really, this is probably all a part of the quarterback’s secret plan to win the Super Bowl. While everyone’s caught up criticizing his pant game, he’ll be too busy winning the actual game to hear any of the haters. And we have a feeling he already has his victory song all picked out, courtesy of Migos.

WhatsApp Passes One Billion Users Milestone

The California-based firm announced the milestone just six years after it was founded by ex-Yahoo! employees Brian Acton and Jan Koum.

The app's popularity has stemmed from its allowing groups of people to stay in touch simultaneously without having to enter contact details.

As well as text messages, users can also share photos, videos and other media.

It also offers a similar secure messaging service to the BlackBerry and has become more popular as the Canadian phone maker has seen its handsets fall in popularity compared to those made by other smart phone makers.

It has also proved popular in the US where mobile phone customers often have to pay for text messages.

More than half of its subscribers have been added in the last 21 months, according to Forbes.

A message on the app's blog section said: "One billion people are using WhatsApp. That's nearly one in seven people on Earth.

"We are proud of this milestone, and we're humbled by the extraordinary ways all of you have used WhatsApp.

"WhatsApp began as a simple idea: ensuring that anyone could stay in touch with family and friends anywhere on the planet, without costs or gimmicks standing in the way.

"So even as we celebrate this achievement, our focus remains the same.

"Every day, our team continues to work to improve WhatsApp's speed, reliability, security and simplicity. We're excited to see how far we've come. But now, it's back to work – because we still have another 6 billion people to get on WhatsApp."

WhatsApp was bought by Facebook in February 2014 for $19bn (£12bn).

It is popular in India, which has the largest number of users for a country, but faces competition in Asia from other messaging services like WeChat and Viber.

The app has proved controversial in some countries where fears remain over secure messaging, with Brazil trying but failing to ban the service in December 2015.

But supporters point to its successes such as helping refugees avoid getting into difficulty while crossing the Mediterranean Sea.

Iowa Caucuses: Trump Swept Aside By Ted Cruz

Mr Cruz, a conservative US senator from Texas, led the billionaire businessman by 27.7% to 24.4%, with 90% of precincts reporting results in the Midwestern US state.
Florida Senator Marco Rubio, viewed by many Republicans as a more mainstream alternative, was nipping at Mr Trump's heels in third place at 23%.
Mrs Clinton, a former Secretary of State, has declared victory despite a wafer-thin lead of 49.8% over 49.6% for Mr Sanders, a US senator from Vermont, with 90% of precincts reporting in that race.
Toning down his trademark bombast, Mr Trump told supporters: "We finished second and I just want to say, I'm really honoured and I want to congratulate Ted."
But he went on to predict he would still win the Republican nomination.
The third Democratic candidate, Martin O'Malley, has suspended his campaign after trailing badly. He has gained less than 1% of Iowa's votes.
Republican Mike Huckabee has also dropped out of the race.
Turnout has been huge on both sides for the first-in-the-nation contest to pick candidates for November's US White House elections.
Long lines were reported at many caucus sites with many new voter registrations.
At one Des Moines precinct, Post-it notes were used after ballot papers ran out. At another venue, three times the expected number of voters turned up.
It is the moment of truth for the 12 Republicans and three Democrats in the race after months of rallies, televised debates and tens of millions of dollars of political advertising.
Mr Sanders, the 74-year-old self-described democratic socialist who has electrified youthful crowds, is urging voters to help him "make history" with a win in Iowa.
Mrs Clinton, the former First Lady, is hoping the imprimatur of the party establishment a muscular get-out-the-vote operation will seal victory.
A loss in Iowa for Mrs Clinton, who aims to be the first female US president, would be a stinging replay of her 2008 defeat to another upstart challenger, now-President Barack Obama.
"I know how to do this and I'm ready," she told CNN hours before voting.
Mr Trump, a real estate billionaire who has never stood for election before, held two rallies on Monday as he strived to fire up supporters of his plainspoken populism.
Iowa looked like a must-win for Mr Cruz, who visited all of the state's 99 counties and courted influential evangelical and conservative leaders.
Based on the outcome, candidates will be awarded delegates to the parties' national conventions in July when the presidential nominee is crowned.
A strong showing in the Midwestern state could generate momentum into next week's New Hampshire primary and Super Tuesday on 1 March, while also-rans will face pressure to drop out.

'Red Card To Block EU Laws' In PM's Reforms

Under the system, MPs would be able stop new laws coming into force if they club together and win support from 55% of parliaments across the bloc.

Members of parliament would have up to 12 weeks to convince those in other countries that the legislation needs to be blocked.

No 10 said the system allows David Cameron to fulfil a key manifesto commitment and answer one of the key demands from his party members in Westminster - to give national parliaments more say in EU laws.

The red card is one of a number of proposals in the "new settlement" between the UK and EU that will be published by European Council President Donald Tusk later today.

EU Reform Talks

The proposals will be circulated to other EU countries before a summit of leaders on 18 and 19 February.

If Mr Cameron is successful in convincing other leaders of the need for the reforms, he would be free to hold a promised referendum on whether to remain in the 28-member bloc - probably in early summer.

There were doubts on Sunday about whether an agreement would be reached when Mr Tusk left a dinner with the PM after only one hour and 45 minutes.

A Number 10 source said: "The draft proposal provides for a legally binding decision allowing 55% of national Parliaments to club together and force the Council to either stop the proposed legislation or amend in a way that addresses the concerns raised by Parliaments.

"This will strengthen the power of Westminster to stop unnecessary EU laws and addresses concerns that the current 'yellow card' system has not proved strong enough.

"It ensures that the European Commission cannot just ignore the will of national parliamentarians and delivers greater democratic control over what the EU does."

The source said a period of intense negotiation was expected to take place over the next few weeks before the summit with a view to securing support for all the "ambitious proposals".

On Sunday, it emerged that Mr Cameron and Mr Tusk had reached agreement on one of the most controversial proposals for EU reform - the Conservative manifesto pledge to ban in-work benefits for migrants.

Number 10 said EU officials were prepared to accept that Britain's public services were sufficiently overwhelmed to trigger an 'emergency brake', which would allow Westminster to stop paying the benefits to migrants for four years.

The emergency brake proposal was put forward by Brussels as an alternative to Mr Cameron's plan to impose a unilateral four-year curb which other member states regarded as being in breach of the freedom of movement principle.

Another proposal believed to be on the table is a reform to prevent non-EU nationals using sham marriages with Europeans to win the right to remain in the UK.

Downing Street denied the UK was seeking a veto over further integration in the eurozone, insisting that Britain was instead asking for a system to be created to ensure any concerns from non-single currency members are properly addressed.

The "red card" proposal was dismissed by the main group campaigning for Britain to exit the EU Vote Leave.

Chief executive Matthew Elliott said: "What the Government is asking for from the EU is trivial - these proposals will not take back control from the EU. These gimmicks have been ignored by the EU before and will be ignored again as they will not be in the EU treaty."

The Secret of the Seven Sisters

On August 28, 1928, in the Scottish highlands, began the secret story of oil.

Three men had an appointment at Achnacarry Castle - a Dutchman, an American and an Englishman.

The Dutchman was Henry Deterding, a man nicknamed the Napoleon of Oil, having exploited a find in Sumatra. He joined forces with a rich ship owner and painted Shell salesman and together the two men founded Royal Dutch Shell.

The American was Walter C. Teagle and he represents the Standard Oil Company, founded by John D. Rockefeller at the age of 31 - the future Exxon. Oil wells, transport, refining and distribution of oil - everything is controlled by Standard oil.

The Englishman, Sir John Cadman, was the director of the Anglo-Persian oil Company, soon to become BP. On the initiative of a young Winston Churchill, the British government had taken a stake in BP and the Royal Navy switched its fuel from coal to oil. With fuel-hungry ships, planes and tanks, oil became "the blood of every battle".

The new automobile industry was developing fast, and the Ford T was selling by the million. The world was thirsty for oil, and companies were waging a merciless contest but the competition was making the market unstable.

That August night, the three men decided to stop fighting and to start sharing out the world's oil. Their vision was that production zones, transport costs, sales prices - everything would be agreed and shared. And so began a great cartel, whose purpose was to dominate the world, by controlling its oil.

Four others soon joined them, and they came to be known as the Seven Sisters - the biggest oil companies in the world.
In the first episode, we travel across the Middle East, through both time and space.
We waged the Iran-Iraq war and I say we waged it, because one country had to be used to destroy the other.
- Xavier Houzel, an oil trader
Since that notorious meeting at Achnacarry Castle on August 28, 1928, they have never ceased to plot, to plan and to scheme.
Throughout the region's modern history, since the discovery of oil, the Seven Sisters have sought to control the balance of power.

They have supported monarchies in Iran and Saudi Arabia, opposed the creation of OPEC, profiting from the Iran-Iraq war, leading to the ultimate destruction of Saddam Hussein and Iraq.

The Seven Sisters were always present, and almost always came out on top.
At the end of the 1960s, the Seven Sisters, the major oil companies, controlled 85 percent of the world's oil reserves. Today, they control just 10 percent.
New hunting grounds are therefore required, and the Sisters have turned their gaze towards Africa. With peak oil, wars in the Middle East, and the rise in crude prices, Africa is the oil companies' new battleground.
Everybody thought there could be oil in Sudan but nobody knew anything. It was revealed through exploration by the American company Chevron, towards the end of the 70s. And that was the beginning of the second civil war, which went on until 2002. It lasted for 19 years and cost a million and a half lives and the oil business was at the heart of it.
- Gerard Prunier, a historian
But the real story, the secret story of oil, begins far from Africa.
In their bid to dominate Africa, the Sisters installed a king in Libya, a dictator in Gabon, fought the nationalisation of oil resources in Algeria, and through corruption, war and assassinations, brought Nigeria to its knees.
Oil may be flowing into the holds of huge tankers, but in Lagos, petrol shortages are chronic.
The country's four refineries are obsolete and the continent's main oil exporter is forced to import refined petrol - a paradox that reaps fortunes for a handful of oil companies.
Encouraged by the companies, corruption has become a system of government - some $50bn are estimated to have 'disappeared' out of the $350bn received since independence.
But new players have now joined the great oil game.
China, with its growing appetite for energy, has found new friends in Sudan, and the Chinese builders have moved in. Sudan's President Omar al-Bashir is proud of his co-operation with China - a dam on the Nile, roads, and stadiums.
In order to export 500,000 barrels of oil a day from the oil fields in the South - China financed and built the Heglig pipeline connected to Port Sudan - now South Sudan's precious oil is shipped through North Sudan to Chinese ports.
In a bid to secure oil supplies out of Libya, the US, the UK and the Seven Sisters made peace with the once shunned Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, until he was killed during the Libyan uprising of 2011, but the flow of Libyan oil remains uninterrupted.
In need of funds for rebuilding, Libya is now back to pumping more than a million barrels of oil per day. And the Sisters are happy to oblige.
In the Caucasus, the US and Russia are vying for control of the region. The great oil game is in full swing. Whoever controls the Caucasus and its roads, controls the transport of oil from the Caspian Sea.
Tbilisi, Erevan and Baku - the three capitals of the Caucasus. The oil from Baku in Azerbaijan is a strategic priority
for all the major companies.
From the fortunes of the Nobel family to the Russian revolution, to World War II, oil from the Caucasus and the Caspian has played a central role. Lenin fixated on conquering the Azeri capital Baku for its oil, as did Stalin and Hitler.
On his birthday in 1941, Adolf Hitler received a chocolate and cream birthday cake, representing a map. He chose the slice with Baku on it.
On June 22nd 1941, the armies of the Third Reich invaded Russia. The crucial battle of Stalingrad was the key to the road to the Caucasus and Baku’s oil, and would decide the outcome of the war.
Stalin told his troops: "Fighting for one’s oil is fighting for one’s freedom."
After World War II, President Nikita Krushchev would build the Soviet empire and its Red Army with revenues from the USSR’s new-found oil reserves.
Decades later, oil would bring that empire to its knees, when Saudi Arabia and the US would conspire to open up the oil taps, flood the markets, and bring the price of oil down to $13 per barrel. Russian oligarchs would take up the oil mantle, only to be put in their place by their president, Vladimir Putin, who knows that oil is power.
The US and Putin‘s Russia would prop up despots, and exploit regional conflicts to maintain a grip on the oil fields of the Caucusus and the Caspian.
But they would not have counted on the rise of a new, strong and hungry China, with an almost limitless appetite for oil and energy. Today, the US, Russia and China contest the control of the former USSR’s fossil fuel reserves, and the supply routes. A three-handed match, with the world as spectators, between three ferocious beasts – The American eagle, the Russian bear, and the Chinese dragon.
Peak oil – the point in time at which the highest rate of oil extraction has been reached, and after which world production will start decline. Many geologists and the International Energy Agency say the world's crude oil output reached its peak in 2006.
But while there may be less oil coming out of the ground, the demand for it is definitely on the rise.
The final episode of this series explores what happens when oil becomes more and more inaccessible, while at the same time, new powers like China and India try to fulfill their growing energy needs.
And countries like Iran, while suffering international sanctions, have welcomed these new oil buyers, who put business ahead of lectures on human rights and nuclear ambitions.
At the same time, oil-producing countries have had enough with the Seven Sisters controlling their oil assets. Nationalisation of oil reserves around the world has ushered in a new generation of oil companies all vying for a slice of the oil pie.
These are the new Seven Sisters:
Saudi Arabia's Saudi Aramco, the largest and most sophisticated oil company in the world; Russia's Gazprom, a company that Russia's President Vladimir Putin wrested away from the oligarchs; The China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC), which, along with its subsidiary, Petrochina, is the world's secnd largest company in terms of market value; The National Iranian Oil Company, which has a monopoly on exploration, extraction, transportation and exportation of crude oil in Iran – OPEC's second largest oil producer after Saudi Arabia; Venezuela's PDVSA, a company the late president Hugo Chavez dismantled and rebuilt into his country's economic engine and part of his diplomatic arsenal; Brazil's Petrobras, a leader in deep water oil production, that pumps out 2 million barrels of crude oil a day; and Malaysia's Petronas - Asia's most profitable company in 2012.
Mainly state-owned, the new Seven Sisters control a third of the world's oil and gas production, and more than a third of the world's reserves. The old Seven Sisters, by comparison, produce a tenth of the world's oil, and control only three percent of the reserves.
The balance has shifted.

Bill Gates Memorized Employees’ License Plates to Track Them at Work

Co-founder of Microsoft Bill Gates during a visit to the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine in Liverpool, England, on Jan. 25.
Dave Thompson-Getty ImagesCo-founder of Microsoft Bill Gates during a visit to the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine in Liverpool, England, on Jan. 25.
Bill Gates used to have the license plates of his employees’ cars memorized so he could track when they arrived and left work.
The Microsoft cofounder revealed some of his former business tactics in a wide-ranging interview on BBC Radio 4’s Desert Island Discsprogram. “I knew everyone’s license plate, so I could look out in the parking lot and see when did people come in, when were they leaving. Eventually I had to loosen up, as the company got to a reasonable size,” he said.
Gates, who is the richest person in the world with a net worth of $87.4 billion, said he worked weekends and “didn’t really believe in vacations” during his early years leading Microsoft. He admitted he was “a little more intense than most people at the time but “no more intense than Steve Jobs,” who cofounded Apple.
Gates also told the BBC that he and Paul Allen, who later became a co-founder of Microsoft, rigged their high school’s scheduling software so Gates would be the only boy in all-girl classes. “It wasn’t that I could talk to them or anything—but they were there,” he said. “I think I was particularly inept at talking to girls.”