The home crowd was ready to erupt for their favoured son, but Kent Farrington and his horse doused that party in a dramatic way on Saturday afternoon.
Farrington and his excellent mount Uceko, last in a jump-off field of five, blew through the course in a time of 38.98, nipping Canada's Eric Lamaze and Derly Chin de Muze to win the $200,000 CN Reliability Grand Prix - the feature event at the 2012 Spruce Meadows National.
"My horse likes it here,'' commented Farrington, from Greenwich, Ct. "He's a big jumper and in a jump-off like that we can really let him go.'
Lamaze, still deciding which horse to take to the Olympic Games in London, must have had Derly whispering in his ear 'pick me, pick me' as she performed brilliantly in the jump-off.
Fourth of five competitors in the extra round, Lamaze and his mare scooted around the course clean and in a time of 40.40, besting the previous low of 44.75 set by Darragh Kerins and Lisona. And as much as the locals were hoping that the time would hold up, Farrington and Uceko had other ideas, wheeling through with a faster clocking and accepting the accompanying $66,000 pay-cheque.
"I thought the end of the course was where it got difficult,'' Farrington suggested. "The black planks is always a careful fence and then there was a distance to a combination which is always scopey. I opted to do six strides there; my horse has a giant stride, so that suited us. The test after that was a delicate skinny vertical on the side of the ring, which was difficult to jump, so that was sort of the real test of the course.''
"I didn't want to completely give it to him,'' Lamaze said with a smile, "but I knew that the time he would absolutely get. . . But, I went with what I felt was a competitive speed for my horse without taking any more risks than I had to. Kent is one of the fastest riders around and he knows his horse well.''
Even the on-course announcer mentioning Farrington had the fastest intermediate time didn't faze him.
"I didn't even hear anything, to be honest,'' he said. "I wanted to have an option at the end that if I felt under the pace I could do seven (strides) to the last jump. He slipped a little bit back at the vertical and I jumped that and I thought 'I think I'm fast enough, I think I'll do eight'.''
Kerins, the second competitor in the first round who watched 21 horses go before there was another clear, allowed himself to think, ever so briefly, that there might not be a jump-off.
"For a while I did think . . .'' the Irishman said with a shrugged. "I knew there were a lot of good horses at the end. I was delighted with my mare. It's her first time here. She hasn't jumped since the metre-50 on Wednesday; she jumped great, so I took a chance and just left her for the grand prix, but it all worked out.'
The grand prix is the first leg of the CN Precision Series, which consists of four events. The next is Saturday's CN Performance World Cup during the Continental tournament.
The 2012 National ends today with the Nexen Cup derby, slated for a 2: 15 p.m. start time.
Source: www.canada.com
Health Care Reform: Undoing Obama's Health Law Could Have Messy Ripple Effects - Huffington Post
WASHINGTON -- It sounds like a silver lining. Even if the Supreme Court overturns President Barack Obama's health care law, employers can keep offering popular coverage for the young adult children of their workers.
But here's the catch: The parents' taxes would go up.
That's only one of the messy potential ripple effects when the Supreme Court delivers its verdict on the Affordable Care Act this month. The law affects most major components of the U.S. health care system in its effort to extend coverage to millions of uninsured people.
Because the legislation is so complicated, an orderly unwinding would prove difficult if it were overturned entirely or in part.
Better Medicare prescription benefits, currently saving hundreds of dollars for older people with high drug costs, would be suspended. Ditto for preventive care with no co-payments, now available to retirees and working families alike.
Partially overturning the law could leave hospitals, insurers and other service providers on the hook for tax increases and spending cuts without the law's promise of more paying customers to offset losses.
If the law is upheld, other kinds of complications could result.
The nation is so divided that states led by Republicans are largely unprepared to carry out critical requirements such as creating insurance markets. Things may not settle down.
"At the end of the day, I don't think any of the major players in the health insurance industry or the provider community really wants to see the whole thing overturned," said Christine Ferguson, a health policy expert who was commissioner of public health in Massachusetts when Mitt Romney was governor.
"Even though this is not the most ideal solution, at least it is moving us forward, and it does infuse some money into the system for coverage," said Ferguson, now at George Washington University. As the GOP presidential candidate, Romney has pledged to wipe Obama's law off the books. But he defends his Massachusetts law that served as a prototype for Obama's.
While it's unclear how the justices will rule, oral arguments did not go well for the Obama administration. The central issue is whether the government can require individuals to have health insurance and fine them if they don't.
That mandate takes effect in 2014, at the same time that the law would prohibit insurance companies from denying coverage to people with existing health problems. Most experts say the coverage guarantee would balloon costs unless virtually all people joined the insurance pool.
Opponents say Congress overstepped its constitutional authority by issuing the insurance mandate. The administration says the requirement is permissible because it serves to regulate interstate commerce. Most people already are insured. The law provides subsidies to help uninsured middle-class households pay premiums and expands Medicaid to pick up more low-income people.
The coverage for young adults up to age 26 on a parent's health insurance is a popular provision that no one's arguing about. A report last week from the Commonwealth Fund estimated that 6.6 million young adults have taken advantage of the benefit, while a new Gallup survey showed the uninsured rate for people age 18-25 continues to decline, down to 23 percent from 28 percent when the law took effect.
Families will be watching to see if their 20-somethings transitioning to the work world will get to keep that newfound security.
Because the benefit is a winner with consumers, experts say many employers and insurers would look for ways to keep offering it even if there's no legal requirement to do so.
But economist Paul Fronstin of the Employee Benefit Research Institute says many parents would pay higher taxes as a result because they would have to pay for the young adult's coverage with after-tax dollars. Under the health care law, that coverage now comes out of pre-tax dollars.
Fronstin says there's no way to tell exactly how much that tax increase might be, but a couple of hundred dollars a year or more is a reasonable ballpark estimate. Upper-income taxpayers would have a greater liability.
"Adult children aren't necessarily dependents for tax purposes, but an employer can allow anyone to be on a plan, just like they now allow domestic partners," said Fronstin. "If your employer said, `I'm going to let you keep this,' it would become a taxable benefit for certain people."
Advocates for the elderly are also worried about untoward ripple effects.
If the entire law is overturned, seniors with high prescription costs in Medicare's "donut hole" coverage gap could lose annual discounts averaging about $600. AARP policy director David Certner says he would hope the discounts could remain in place at least through the end of this year.
Yet that might not be possible. Lacking legal authority, Medicare would have to take away the discounts. Drugmakers, now bearing the cost, could decide they want to keep offering discounts voluntarily. But then they'd risk running afoul of other federal rules that bar medical providers from offering financial inducements to Medicare recipients.
"I don't think anyone has any idea," said Certner.
A mixed verdict from the high court would be the most confusing outcome. Some parts of the law would be struck down while others lurch ahead.
That kind of result would seem to call for Congress to step in and smooth any necessary adjustments. Yet partisan divisions on Capitol Hill are so intense that hardly anyone sees a chance that would happen this year.
Also on HuffPost:
Source: www.huffingtonpost.com
LAW 'N HISTORY: Old whiskey and young women - Patriot Ledger
He was the original Tasmanian devil; a charming rogue as dashing and devilish off the screen as he was on it. At a fit and muscular 6-foot-2 and 180 pounds, the seemingly permanently bronzed hulk, complete with a cleft chin and dimples, looked every bit the movie star that he was. Perhaps unknowingly being far more insightful than he intended, he described his life as, “I like my whiskey old and my women young.” Little did he know he was describing his downfall.
Errol Flynn was born on June 20, 1909 in Australia. Tasmania to be exact. After a somewhat turbulent school career which found him in trouble for fighting and having sex with the daughter of a school official, he left for a succession of jobs before finding his true calling- acting. His first role, a minor one filmed in New Guinea, was in 1933. Two years later he married the French actress Lili Damita, who bore him one son. The lore of Hollywood beckoned and soon he was in America.
His big break came when Warner Brothers, searching for a film to ride in the wake of MGM’s popular Mutiny on the Bounty, cast him in the lead of Captain Blood. The movie was a major hit. Soon he starred in a movie that would forever define him, The Adventures of Robin Hood, in which he again played the debonair swashbuckler.
As busy as he was working, and despite being married, his nightlife was never-ending. He partied and he drank, not necessarily in that order. Many of his female cohorts, whom he often met in the fast lane of show business, were attractive and young. It thus came as little surprise, to the Hollywood crowd at least, that in 1942, the year of his divorce, he was charged with two counts of statutory rape, of having sexual relations, at different times, with two 16-year-olds, Betty Hansen, an aspiring actress, Peggy Satterlee, a nightclub dancer.
The trial, which ran for nearly a month in early 1943, was itself like a Flynn movie, complete with his multitude of adoring fans mobbing the court scene. Starring in the role of his primary defender was Jerry Geisler, the high powered attorney to the stars. The jury was packed with women who, Geisler hoped, would be drawn to the charismatic defendant, who sat quietly as the two young girls detailed the lurid details from the witness stand.
The pretty, and innocently attired, Betty Hanson took the stand first and detailed how she had dinner with Errol at the home of one of his friends. Of how she drank some foul-tasting drink which sickened her. Errol took her upstairs where they had sex.
Satterfield, similarly, told the enraptured jurors that Flynn took advantage of her on his yacht. Indicative of their relationship, Flynn had nicknamed her “J.B.” (for jail bait). On successive evenings, they shared nights of unwelcomed bliss on the gentle ocean.
On cross, Geisler had a field day with both witnesses, which at some points had spectators either laughing or shaking their heads in disbelief. The witnesses confused their stories and readily admitted to sordid pasts.
Although he probably didn’t need to, Flynn took the stand and casually testified that he never had sexual relations with the two young ladies. After deliberating for thirteen hours, the jury entered a packed and tense courtroom and rendered its verdict.
In a scene worthy of a Hollywood drama, bedlam broke out. The crowd cheered wildly as the defendant spontaneously leapt to his feet, a broad smile stretching his handsome face. Flashbulbs popped. Female admirers rushed to touch the star. The judge rendered the final review when he told the jury, which had just presided over a lengthy trial involving the alleged ravaging of two young females, “I have enjoyed the case, and I think you have.”
While similar scandals had wrecked careers in the past, this one had the opposite effect. Errol’s popularity soared. Indeed, indicative of his devil may care persona, a term was coined which found popularity throughout the world, “In like Flynn.”
As always, Flynn remained in character. During the down time of his trial, the bad boy spent much of his time wooing eighteen year old Nora Eddington, who worked in a nearby food stand. When she became pregnant, they wed. They had two children before divorcing in 1949.
Epilogue
A year later he wed for the third time. Despite being married, he, as always, took up with another female, this one an aspiring actress, Beverly Aadland. Calling her by her nickname, he sighed, “Here I go again Woodsey.” She was 15.
This romance however would not end like the others. His lifetime of drinking and carousing took its ultimate revenge. His good looks, like his career and health, faded. He died in 1959, having recently just turned 50.
Jamie Wells assisted in the preliminary research of this article. Marc Kantrowitz, who is writing longer versions of his columns for a future book, can be reached at rmarckantrowitz@comcast.net.
Source: www.patriotledger.com
MPs To Vote On Changes To Human Rights Law - lbc.co.uk
Home Secretary Theresa May is seeking the backing of MPs to tackle foreign criminals who use human rights laws to avoid deportation.
She is expected to ask members to pass a motion declaring the right to a family life - enshrined in Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights - is not absolute.
Ms May wants the public interest to come first and the right to family life to be superceded by the need to protect the economic wellbeing of the country, promote public safety and cut crime.
The move is likely to be seen as a direct challenge to judges who have previously interpreted Article 8 through the development of case law.
"This is not an absolute right. So in the interests of the economy or of controlling migration or of public order - those sort of issues - the state has a right to qualify this right to a family life," she told BBC1's The Andrew Marr Show.
"What I am going to do is actually set out the rules that say this is what Parliament, this is what the public believe is how you balance the public interest against the individual's interest.
"We are going to ask Parliament to vote on this to say very clearly what constitutes the right to a family life.
"I would expect that judges will look at what Parliament will say and that they will take into account what Parliament has said.
"If they don't then we will have to look at other measures and that could include primary legislation."
According to Home Office figures, last year 185 foreign prisoners successfully appealed against deportation after citing the right to family life.
Ms May's comments come as ministers prepare to impose a new "financial independence" rule intended to curb the number of spouses, children and other dependants of migrants coming into the country.
Immigration Minister Damian Green said: "We will shortly be announcing a major overhaul of the existing family migration rules, to reduce burdens on the taxpayer, promote integration and tackle abuse.
"The reforms will protect the British public from foreign criminals who try to abuse human rights laws to avoid deportation.
"We plan to make it clear when the rights of the law abiding majority will outweigh a foreign criminal's right to family and private life."

(c) Sky News 2012
Source: www.lbc.co.uk
Law of the Sea Treaty may be improved, but remains deeply flawed - Human Events (blog)
One of President Ronald Reagan’s finest hours was in 1982 when he killed that year’s version of the Law of the Sea Treaty. With the apt acronym LOST, the treaty would have ceded sovereignty and taxing authority over the oceans throughout the world to the United Nations.
Now, the Law of the Sea Treaty is back, supposedly refurbished so well in a 1994 reworking of the agreement that some say Reagan now would support it. The new version is supported by President George H.W. Bush, Reagan’s vice president, and by President George W. Bush, as well as by five Republican secretaries of state: George Shultz and James A. Baker III, who served in that post under Reagan, Henry Kissinger, Colin Powell and Condoleezza Rice.
“Flaws in the treaty regarding deep-seabed mining, which prevented President Ronald Reagan from supporting it, were fixed in 1994,” the five secretaries wrote in the Wall Street Journal on May 30. They added that other problems had been dealt with. Some Senate Republicans already have pledged support: Dick Lugar of Indiana, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Olympia Snowe of Maine.
But not so fast. Writing June 5 in the Los Angeles Times, former Reagan Attorney General Edwin Meese III insisted that Reagan would not sign the treaty today because it still poses “a direct threat to American sovereignty.” He added, “President Reagan so strongly opposed the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea that he didn’t just not sign the treaty. He very publicly refused to sign it. He also dismissed the State Department staff that helped negotiate it.” Tough guy.
“Reagan would not support it,” Doug Bandow told us; during the LOST debate 30 years ago he helped craft Reagan administration policy as a deputy representative to the Third United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea, which concluded in 1982. He is now a senior fellow at the libertarian Cato Institute. Seabed mining, in fact, remains a problem in his view, even though changes have made the section “better than it was.”
These seabeds under the world’s oceans—71 percent of the world’s surface—effectively would become U.N. property and the Law of the Sea Treaty would empower a new international bureaucracy, the International Seabed Authority. Only recently was America even granted a permanent seat on the governing council. “But that doesn’t mean anything,” Bandow said, because America easily could be outvoted by 35 other council members.
The authority could tax income and redistribute proceeds from America’s and other developed countries’ production on those seabeds to Third World countries—or, as is so often the case, to Third World despots’ Swiss bank accounts. LOST’s language even says the money could be given to “peoples who have not attained full independence or other self-governing status”—that is, almost anybody.
Supporters cite certainty, China
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce supports LOST, arguing that the treaty “provides certainty in accessing resources in the Arctic and Antarctic and could ultimately enable American businesses to explore the vast natural resources contained in the seabeds in those areas.”
LOST supporters, such as a May 9 editorial in the Christian Science Monitor, also contend that it would help temper Chinese claims to large portions of the South China Sea and other areas. China is one of 162 countries that have signed the treaty. “I am utterly baffled by how they think the Chinese will behave better under the treaty,” Bandow said. “China already said LOST doesn’t apply to the South China Sea. In a real crisis, it won’t matter. These are issues of great power politics.”
Currently, American sea interests are protected by the U.S. Navy, by far the most powerful naval force on earth. Critical shipping lanes such as the Strait of Hormuz or the Strait of Malacca are more likely to be kept open by the U.S. Navy, not by treaty.
Finally, as Human Events’ Hope Hodge reports on page 12, Sen. Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.) proposes a “Madisonian” approach that would retain valuable navigation rights for businesses and the U.S. Navy, but allow Congress to dispense with other provisions that encroached on American autonomy. But, the treaty can’t be split into “good treaty” and “bad treaty.”
Senate 1994 rejection
The treaty was signed by President Bill Clinton in 1994, but he couldn’t muster the two-thirds approval needed in the Senate to make it a binding treaty, and the Senate has not voted on it since. Hearings were held May 23 this year by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, chaired by Sen. John Kerry, (D-Mass.) He said more hearings are forthcoming. But a vote wouldn’t happen until after the presidential election. At that point, even if Republicans take back control of the Senate, the treaty could be approved by the lame-duck Democratic majority joined by renegade Republicans. So, it’s possible a treaty signed by a Democratic president back in 1994 could be approved by a Democratic Senate repudiated by voters in November.
In short, the Law of the Sea Treaty is still LOST, even if improved. It is not the best path, the only path and certainly not a guaranteed path toward America’s energy self-reliance. In fact, relinquishing even a limited measure of U.S. sovereignty to a worldwide organization could precipitate mischief we can’t begin to imagine.
Source: www.humanevents.com
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