Archive for May, 2010

Link Latte 134


#134Week of May 30, 2010

Best 2009 Skyscraper: Aqua Building, Chicago[architecture]
Found Functions: Awesome New Project, info[photography]
A carnivorous squid that lived 500 million years ago[weird nature]
Impressive Drone Flying[wow tech, video]
Perfectly Zoomable, Awesome Space Images[space]
Impressive new software: sculpting 3D characters[cool video]
Death From Laughter[fascinating info]
Motion-Induced Blindness[awesome optical illusion]
DIY Children Carriages and Strollers Parade[russian photos]
The Most Expensive, Sophisticated Watches, more[gadgets]
Counter-intuitive: The Monty Hall Problem, more info[fascinating]
CERN: Chameleon Particles Caught in the Act of Changing[science]
History of the Electric Car[infographic]
Bubble Wrap Bathroom[geek fun]
Another Neat Rube Goldberg Machine[cool video]
Unromantically Tricky Tandem Bicycles[weird tech]
New Religion: Order of the Smile[interesting site]
Antique Marbles: some sold for $5,000vintage]
Who’s going to direct “The Hobbit” now?[movie news]
Huge Gallery of Quirky Inventions[Popular Science Archive]
Inside Pixar and Toy Story 3[cool article]
Supernova any day now: Betelgeuse… Gone[interesting discussion]
Great graphics of the efforts to stop the oil leak[tech]
The Fifties B-Movie “Empire Strikes Back”[wow trailer]
New Tro-Lo-Lo?[fun video]
Robot Dog Locomotion: New and Improved!, more[wow video]
Making great music on a bunch of old phones[wow video]
Sign up for The Toilet Paper: Training Jeopardy champions since 2009[promo]
Top Armies in the World[compilation]

SEE ALL OTHER LINK LATTE ISSUES HERE



Peculiar Postage – Unusual Stamps from Around the World

“QUANTUM SHOT” #633
Link – article by Simon Rose

“Pass me the magnifying glass, Igor”

Stamp collecting and philately are very specialized areas and it is not the purpose of this article to conduct a definitive study of postage stamps, in terms of their rarity, financial value and so on. Rather, this is an examination of some of the more unusual and curious postage stamp designs from around the world.

This postcard from 1905 uses stamps to indicate the “love language” (pre-smileys and emoticons, you know). Some options include: “I miss you”, “My Heart Is Free”, “Do You Think About Me?” Very sweet… especially since you have to use your tongue to glue the stamps in the proper spot, so it is literally tongue-spoken from the heart:


(image credit: Vladimir Jorf)

This stamp was printed on silver foil by the government of Tonga (more on such stamps here):



(images by Rod Perry, via)

These stamps issued in Malaysia feature a variety of nocturnal animals and actually glow in the dark:

This 1986 stamp from Paraguay is printed on cedar:


(image via)

In 2004, Switzerland issued this wooden stamp made from 120-year-old fir trees:

Switzerland also produced this embroidered stamp in 2000, celebrating the world-famous embroidery created in St. Gallen, one of the Swiss cantons:


(images via 1, 2)

This Austrian stamp from 2005 is similarly made of threads, embroidered into the design of the Edelweiss, the well-known alpine flower. The stamp was issued in honour of the Austrian embroidery industry, which dates back to the eighteenth century. The stamp has a self-adhesive backing, but can even be worn if so desired (more info):

Austria Post also produced in the world’s first stamp made of soccer ball material in 2008, to mark the UEFA Euro soccer tournament:


(on the right: famous Lufthansa’s soccer ball airplane paint scheme)

In 2006, Austria issued this curious stamp, which could even be said to be out of this world. The stamp contains 0.03 grams of dust from a meteorite found in Morocco two years earlier, which was fixed to the stamp with a special adhesive:


(image via)

These cloth stamps from Grenada, the Gambia, Sierra Leone and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, honour the humble teddy bear:


(images via)

The Rock of Gibraltar is one of the world’s most recognized natural features and it appeared on this Gibraltar stamp in more ways than one in 2002. The stamp’s top layer is actually embellished with finely pulverized pieces of rock from the famous landmark:


(image via)

This 2007 stamp printed on thinly sliced cork is from Portugal, commemorating the country’s cork industry, which produces around 30% of the world supply:


(images via)

A Singapore souvenir set of $5 stamps from 2008 was covered in beads on a sheet shaped like a handbag:

Several countries around the world have produced scented stamps offering a variety of different aromas. The small Himalayan nation of Bhutan was probably the first nation to issue this type of stamp in 1973. These stamps were perfumed to smell like roses:

In celebration of the Year of the Pig in 2007, China really did issue a stamp bearing the aroma of sweet and sour pork (above, right). It is rumoured that the stamp’s adhesive actually tasted a little like the famous Chinese delicacy, but this is far from established fact.

Issued to raise awareness of the dangers of forest fires, these Brazilian stamps smell of burnt wood:

Also from Brazil, where most of the planet’s supply of coffee beans originates, this stamp is scented with the aroma of coffee, one of the country’s largest exports:


(images via)

Another country renowned for a product derived from beans is Switzerland, world famous for its chocolate. This stamp was sold in a foil-wrapped booklet, similar to most chocolate bars. However, the stamp merely smells like chocolate and apparently when licked tastes exactly like glue:


(image via)

In honor of the centenary of the Nobel Prizes in 2001, the United Kingdom issued this stamp with the scent of eucalyptus. When the stamp is scratched, eucalyptus aroma, hidden in tiny capsules in the stamp’s top layer, is released:

The stamp shown above right is giving off sandalwood scent; it comes from India.

Several countries have placed moving images on their stamps. This one from Austria includes forty eight images, which allow a three second “movie” to appear when the stamp is viewed from certain angles.


(image via)

The small Himalayan nation of Bhutan is famous for its stamps, including the first ever stamp made of steel:

These embossed stamps, depicting famous world leaders, are printed on plastic:

These stamps issued in 1973 by Bhutan are also real phonograph records. They contain traditional folk songs and an oral history of the kingdom, in both English and Bhutanese, and really can be played on a record player:


(images via)

More recently, Bhutan introduced postage stamps that doubled as actual CD-ROMs. One is entitled “Bhutan: In Harmony with Nature”, the other “Bhutan: 100 Years of Monarchy”.


(images via)

So there you have it, a look at some of the more peculiar, quite unusual, slightly odd and downright weird postage stamps from around the world. Until next time…


(image credit: Tatiana Glinskaya)

Also Read: “Flags Of Forgotten Countries” ->

Or Try “Britain’s Colorful Pub Signs” ->

Simon Rose is the author of science fiction and fantasy novels for children, including The Alchemist’s Portrait, The Sorcerer’s Letterbox, The Clone Conspiracy, The Emerald Curse, The Heretic’s Tomb and The Doomsday Mask.

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Billboard Love Story


Link
Scroll down for today’s pictures & links.

Billboard Love Story

Stop motion animation on the epic scale: 355 pictures have been taken, printed in billboard size and shot again (no computer animation involved). This is the second of Olympus PEN videos, see the first one here.


Link

Credits: Agency: DSG Dialog Solutions GmbH; Creation: Christian Wilfer, Alexandra Lier; Directors: Takeuchi Taijin, Peter Göltenboth; Production Company: BIG FISH

Today’s pictures & links:

Hyllie Water Tower, Sweden

Industrial photography by Kim Høltermand: visit his site for more alien-looking technology artifacts.


(image credit: Kim Høltermand)

————

Chevrolet Corvair Monza GT Concept Car, 1962

Rare promotional image of this curvaceous machine:


(image via)

“Developed under the leadership of GM Design chief Bill Mitchell, this stunning concept was the work of Larry Shinoda, also designer of the Sting Ray Corvette… “ – more info.



(image via)

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Hebrides!

Perhaps the most fantasy-like landscape on Earth, this is Skye’s Trotternish Peninsula, with basalt pinnacles looming over the Sound of Raasay – see more photos in this gallery.


(photo by Jim Richardson, National Geographic)

————

Mixed fresh links for today:

The Evolution of the Alphabet[cool animated image]
Ugly Mystery Beast Washes Up in Ontario, more[weird]
Hundred Little-Known Facts About the “Empire Strikes Back”[interesting]
Rocket Bikes and Cycles! Read all three articles[geek tech]
“Odessa” Nazi Network[sinister organization]
Ripley’s Weird & Wonderful Objects[a selection]
Life-Saving “Dance”, closer view[wow video]
The Origin of Levis[interesting]
Interesting Artist and Animator from China[art video]
Incredible Hail Storm[wow video, loud audio]
Figure Skater vs. Hockey Players[fun video ad]
Japanese Penguin Goes Shopping[cute video]
You, but smaller. Order your doll here.[cool site]

————

Russian Aircraft Carrier “Admiral Kuznetsov”

Once also known as “Leonid Brezhnev”, this is the flagship of the Russian Navy. More info here.


(image credit: aviaflot)

Another atmospheric image:


(image credit: aviaflot)

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Hayley Mills in the “Truth About Spring”, 1965


(image via)

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Mass Transportation on the Moon

Enticing concept of the Moon passenger shuttle, from the pages of 1965 LIFE Magazine:


(image via)

Futuristic view of the maintenance and repair station in space (from 1965 LIFE Magazine, as well):


(image via)

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I See You!


(original unknown)

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Outstanding! The Advent of Bikini.


(vintage postcard, circa 1955)

————

What Did You Just Say??


(original unknown)

READ THE PREVIOUS ISSUE ->

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Ruchi Thaker asked:

Eligibility for Seeking Asylum in the US

A person physically in the United States, who expresses a fear of persecution on account of race, religion, nationality, political opinion, or membership in a particular social group, is eligible to apply for asylum. While some of these categories are clear, others, such as what constitutes a “social group,” is subject to significant litigation in federal courts. If a person receives a grant of asylum, he or she will subsequently be able to apply for adjustment of status (green card).

To seek legal protection from being deported, asylum seekers must:

Be outside their country of nationality. Asylees are by definition in the United States and thus necessarily outside their country of nationality. The law expressing this is INA § 101(a)(42)(A).

Be afraid of persecution by the government in the native country. Torture, for example, is persecution recognized under the law, while harassment or discrimination is almost never found to be a kind of persecution. However, the cumulative effect of various types of harm can be persecution when added together, such as economic disadvantage (unable to obtain gainful employment), interference with one’s right to privacy, substandard living conditions, deprived of higher education, and/or ostracized by society. Where these lines are drawn is different in each case.

Be harmed or fear harm by parts of the government. The police and the army are parts of the government. Harm by right-wing or left-wing political groups or religious zealots that the government is “unable or unwilling to control” also meets the demands of asylum laws.

Be affected by at least one of several defined conditions. As suggested above, these conditions are: political opinion, race, religion, nationality, and social group. The last category, social group, usually refers to people with certain characteristics that a particular society might lump together and about which it generally has an unfavorable attitude, such as homosexuals. The law generally does not include people who fled their homes due to civil wars, generalized violence, or criminal prosecution. However, one of these reasons may suffice for asylum if it can be connected to one of the five listed conditions.

Not be a danger to the community. Finally, international law recognizes that countries have the right to exclude asylum seekers who may be a danger to society. Those excluded are those who have committed “particularly serious crimes,” including aggravated felonies as defined in INA § 101(a)(43), pose threats to national security, or who have committed war crimes or “crimes against humanity.”

Bars to Seeking Asylum

Even if you meet the above criteria for asylum, you may be barred from seeking asylum under certain circumstances. Some of the bars to asylum include but are not limited to:

conviction for a “particularly serious crime” (includes aggravated felony convictions)

committed a serious nonpolitical crime outside of the United States

poses a danger to the security of the United States

has engaged, ordered, assisted, or otherwise participated in the persecution of any person on account of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion

Warning Against Filing a Frivolous Asylum

If you file a frivolous asylum application, you will be PERMANENTLY BARRED from seeking any form of discretionary relief in the United States, including adjustment of status, cancellation of removal, or voluntary departure.

For immigration purposes, an asylum application is frivolous if any of its material elements is deliberately fabricated.

Remember, the credibility of your claim is at issue in an asylum case. What you write in your application, and what you say under oath in an asylum interview or in an immigration court, will decide whether you are a credible person and have a credible claim.

If the immigration judge finds that you have filed a fraudulent asylum application, not only will you have a deportation order that will be difficult to reverse on appeal, but you will never be able to apply for any other form of discretionary relief!

So, if you knowingly submit a fraudulent asylum application, you are subject to the harsh penalty of permanently becoming ineligible for other relief, regardless of sympathetic circumstances.

A frivolous finding is basically a “death sentence” for immigration purposes, so you should never file a frivolous application.

Withholding of Removal (INA § 241(b)(3))

The Attorney General may not remove a person to a country where his or her life or freedom would be threatened because of his or her race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion.

To win a claim for withholding of removal, you must show that there is a “clear probability” that you will be subject to persecution if forced to return to the country of removal, or that it is “more likely than not” that you would be persecuted if you are removed to the home country.

Of course, this is a higher burden of proof than the showing of “past persecution or a well-founded fear of future persecution” required for asylum. However, unlike asylum, which is a discretionary form of relief, withholding of removal is mandatory once you establish that your life or freedom would be threatened in the proposed country of removal on account of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion.

If granted withholding of removal under INA § 241(b)(3), the applicant can remain in the United States, but can NOT be granted lawful permanent resident status (green card) on that basis.

Additionally, a grant of withholding of removal only means that you cannot be deported to your native county; if and when the United States government finds another country that will accept you, you will be deported to that country.

Convention Against Torture (CAT)

Article 3 of the United Nations Convention Against Torture protects aliens who fear torture in their native country. Unlike asylum and withholding of removal, CAT does not require that the alien be persecuted on account of race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion.

Convention Against Torture is a treaty that prohibits the return of a person to a country where there are substantial grounds for believing that the person would be in danger of being subjected to torture if returned to his or her native country.

“Torture” is defined in Article 3 of CAT. There are no bars to eligibility for Convention Against Torture, and those who do not qualify to seek asylum can nonetheless seek protection under CAT.

To win a Convention Against Torture claim, you must prove that it is “more likely than not” that you would be subject to torture if forced to return to your native country.

If you are granted protection under Convention Against Torture, you cannot be removed from the United States to the country from which you fear being tortured, but you can be removed to any other country if that county will accept you.

A grant of CAT relief does not entitle you to become a lawful permanent resident (green card holder). However, based on such a grant of relief, you can obtain an employment authorization document (EAD) and can reside and work lawfully in the United States.

Competent Representation is Key

As it is true about any other area of immigration law, competent representation of your asylum claim is key in putting forth the best and strongest possible application. If you wish to seek asylum, withholding of removal, or relief under Convention Against Torture you are required to file Form I-589. Form I-589 covers all of these forms of relief. There is no filing fee associated with an application for asylum.

Be careful of lawyers or representatives who “promise” you that you will win your asylum case and that you have “nothing to worry about”! You should consult competent attorneys prior to filing an application for asylum, because there are severe consequences for filing a fraudulent asylum application before an Immigration Court. While those who “promise” you a victory have nothing to lose if you do not win your asylum case, you have everything to lose! Do not take unnecessary risks!

If you believe you are eligible for asylum, withholding of removal, or relief under Convention Against Torture and would like to apply download Form I-589 from USCIS

If you wish to consult Thaker Berowitz LLP about your eligibility for any of these forms of relief, confidential asylum consultation.

Disclaimer:

While the information in this article is current at the time of writing, you should ALWAYS seek legal advice before you engage with the USCIS. Rules and interpretations change constantly and this article should not be considered legal advice. It it informational only. Asylees are strongly encouraged to seek legal advice as early as possible in the process.

Low Cost Bargain

Scott asked:


I don’t know much about politics currently and I would like to be able to keep up with and contribute to political conversations.

Photoshop Life

Ocüpado asked:


During the election, Politics talks about the election, but so does the Election section. After the election, Politics goes back to regular politics, but so does the Election section.

I don’t get it.

Bonus Question: Why do you prefer hanging out here as opposed to the Politics section?

politics

What are careers that involve politics or history?

Flower asked:


I am an upcoming senior, and I love love history and politics. I’d like to get an idea of the type of career I want to pursue so that I can better decide on a college.

Photoshop Life

Kinz asked:


For instance, do any feminists refrain from wearing revealing clothing because they thinks it’s demeaning? Inversely, do any feminists WEAR revealing clothing because you feel it’s somehow liberating? Or do you refuse to let your politics affect your fashion choices?

ProConsultancy.com

ayesh;<3 asked:


I know that Chartism failed, but i was wondering if it had any effect on politics at all during the industrial revolution.

ProConsultancy.com

Sharon F asked:


During a discussion about the recent debates with an acquaintance, I learned that she was not a registered voter. This is someone in her mid 30′s and also did a few years in the military. I was a bit turned off with continuing the conversation. Do you think a person who is unregistered to vote has a valid opinion and a right to discuss politics? Her excuse for not registering is that she’s just not into politics. Valid or invalid excuse?

Failed Experiment