Russia
has dispatched a submarine to the Arctic Ocean to plant a flag on the
seabed of the ocean to claim the North Pole as its territory.

Russia
plans to plunge to the bottom of the sea in the next few days to take
samples it believes will prove the Lomonosov Ridge, which runs under
the Arctic Ocean, is an extension of the Siberian continental shelf and
therefore Russian territory.

If a country is able to prove the
continental shelf is connected to their land, under a UN convention it
will be able to claim sovereignty over the North Pole, a land the size
of Western Europe, and all of its fuel and mineral deposits.

The
Russians will also plant a one-meter titanium flag at the bottom of the
sea to symbolize their claim. The sea depth of the North Pole has been
measured at 13,410 ft (4087 m).

Some people believe that the
Russian's Arctic expedition is aimed at sending a clear signal to world
powers that Russia has shrugged off its post-cold war weakness and will
be aggressively pushing and defending its national interests from now
on.

'The Arctic is Russian. We must prove the North Pole is an
extension of the Russian coastal shelf. Of course, [the expedition] is
important in terms of science, but also in terms of geopolitics as
well,' Artur Chilingarov, Russia's most famous explorer leading the
mission told the media.

Although Denmark and Canada have also
been trying to prove their claim over the Arctic Ocean through their
control over Greenland, the closest country to the North Pole, Russia's
new expedition was able to provoke the most propaganda from the West.

Russian
state-run TV also had a field day presenting all of the recent news
regarding the expedition, following a mysterious aircraft's appearance
above the Russian submarine last week. The Russian media reported the
aircraft to be a NATO spy plane.

There is a lot of speculation
whether the 460,000-mile territory Moscow is planning on claiming has a
lot of mineral reserves or not. However, it's clear that in the
energy-starving world today, the North Pole can have substantial
influence on various issues around the world.

There is a growing tension for Arctic resources between the
U.S. and the Russian Federation.


Canada, under Steven Harper, is
becoming heavily involved in these tensions. Prime Minister Harper has
made statements declaring that Canada will militarise its Arctic region
to protect the area. In reality this is part of an effort to secure Arctic energy resources for U.S. energy interests as part of the
North American Union.

(source Battle for the Arctic has begun)

Alternative view on the story on Al Jazeera. but nothing in the UK news about it.




Since the revamp of Technorati several months ago the service has been decidedly dodgy. There are thousands of blogs who can no longer claim their blogs, automatic ping's no longer seem to work, widgets are not recording links, post updates are not working and mass problems are visible on the support forum all complaining about the same things.

Did Technorati get it wrong, did they not test the new system extensively enough before release, is the system overloaded, or are there external pressures, as some have suggested, from governments to limit the effectiveness of some the blogs, especially those politically centric ones that many government agencies would wish would just go away.

Whatever the problems, Technorati needs to make a public statement as to the health of its systems, as many blogs rely upon the rankings provided by Technorati for their advertising revenues, as well as getting their messages out.

Baroness Young, the Environment Agency quango’s chief executive, got a performance related bonus of about £24,000 on
top of her £163,000 salary. A further eight executives, including the
director of water management, shared in the “performance bonuses” handout last month. The
average paid to each executive was equivalent to 10% of their salaries,
although Young received 15%.

At a meeting on September 20 the Environment Agency board “expressed concern over the inadequacy
of evacuation plans in some areas of England and Wales and believed that
there may be a serious risk of loss of life in significant flood events”.

Gloucestershire, where thousands of homes have been flooded and at least three
people have died, was one of the local authorities that did not have an
evacuation plan. Tewkesbury borough council, which covers one of the
worst-hit towns, had also failed to make full preparations.

Young, a 59-year-old Labour peer, has warned that water bills will have to
rise to cover the costs of increasing Britain’s protection against flooding. (source)

NO Baroness Young, that is what we have already paid our taxes for, not for diversity training, political correctness or friggin eels, and certainly not your damn bonus…

Most of the targets set for the agency are unconnected to floods or
environmental emergencies. For example, executives had to put in place plans
to tackle the decline in eels and “increase focus on a performance
management culture through developing our scorecard”.

So as ususal, a NuLab quango, who in this case is supposed to protect Britain against flooding, fails miserably in its execution of duty, and the participants get promoted, rewarded with bonuses and praised by ministers. It seems that the protection of eels is far more important than life and property.

The Taxpayer money given as bonuses needs collecting back, and spending on flood defences, with the executives of the quango being sacked as incompetent.

As one Times commenter states:
I have always been perplexed by the concept of bonuses being awarded to
those in governmental agencies. The argument is always made that high
salaries and bonuses are necessary to hire and retain people to keep
them from “jumping” to the private sector.

Why not let them test the private sector. There, unlike the
public sector, there are targets, goals, and expectations to be met. If
not met, people are fired. In the public sector, failures and
Incompetence are met with bonuses, retention, and/or the hiring of
someone else on the payroll to do the job.

I think that Baroness Young should now go to personally meet those people who have lost their homes and businesses, to see the families of those who have died in the floods and justify to them why she should get a bonus or even keep her job.

NuLab – Destroying Britain from the inside out.