Friday, July 27, 2012

First Water Fueled Car of Pakistan

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PHD Dr. Gulam Serwar launched a car which does not need fuel to run because it’s a car of water.
The launching ceremony of Dr. Gulam Serwar’s water car was attended by Lahore Chamber’s alternative energy committee chairman Eng. Muhammad Saeed Iqbal Bhatti. They congratulated him at his successful invention of car. Dr. Serwar told to media that he has invented this car after the hard toil of Six year, which 60 % fuel consists of water. This car will not help Pakistan to reduce it’s fuel import bill but also helps to control the pollution causing by other ordinary cars because this car ventilates Oxygen not Carbon.

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Dr. Ghulam Sarwar, was recently covered by local Tv channel as he revealed his latest Toyota Corolla which runs on water. According to Dr. Sarwar, the car runs on 60% water and rest is diesel while an ordinary car may emit carbon-dioxide and kill our planet earth as we know it, but this doesn’t, this actually emits oxygen due to a system which separates hydrogen and oxygen from water and thusly, it doesn’t emit carbon-dioxide. Moreover, he also said that the car’s research
will be completed soon and by next year June, it can be run completely on water.
There are many scam out there on the internet and the world trying to lure you into buying their product to save precious money through fuel saving and all of them are fake. The best fake though is worth mentioning, it was some sort of am/fm modulator look-like device that claimed to save fuel to as much as 50% if you plugged it in your car’s lighter dock.
However, Dr. Ghulam Sarwar, was recently covered by local tv channel as he revealed his latest Toyota Corolla which runs on water. According to Dr. Sarwar, the car runs on 60% water and rest is diesel while an ordinary car may emit carbon-dioxide and kill our planet earth as we know it, but this doesn’t, this actually emits oxygen due to a system which separates hydrogen and oxygen from water and thus, it doesn’t emit carbon-dioxide. Moreover, he also said that the car’s research will be completed soon and by next year June, it can be run completely on water.
The research into the making of this technology took six long year but finally, the stretched out Corolla runs on 60% water and as per the Dr. Sarwar, the manufacturing of this kit will only cost 30,000 PKR and generate more than a million jobs. That is quite an optimistic estimate so lets go out hunting for water now but, if this Corolla can really move through that technology, than the largest automakers bragging and investing billions of dollars into green technology.
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Views of VUsolutions:
H2O gas powered vehicles is a joke…Hydrogen cannot be produced cheaper than oil and so its not going to be cheaper…fuel cell “technology” etc etc which claim to have more than 100% efficiency is fake…hoax..its technically not possible..
what this man has done is either that hydrogen + diesel fuel is used or maybe he has used only water in way that after every 4 strokes, comes a stroke where water is injected into the chamber, this water heats up and becomes high pressure steam which pushes the piston. This can increase efficiency.
he’s not invented anything new…this technology had already been patented somewhere in usa..
On the other hand, I don’t want to see water being so expensive that it is out of reach of people(Just like gasoline today). So I condemn from the bottom of my heart, any effort that has been put to make water a replacement fuel for mass production purpose. I don’t want my future generations fighting and dying for water. This would be the starting point of a new world order where countries would go to any extent to save their water and also steal water of other companies. Today America is in battle for oil, tomorrow it will be for water. Think about it. Please don’t support any idea that takes us further into slavery.
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Pakistani scientist run car on water produced hydrogen

This is about six minutes long documentary on a Pakistani scientist who produced hydrogen out of water and used it as a supplementary fuel along with diesel/petrol to run his limousines. The water produced hydrogen not only enhances power of engine but also reduces sixty percent consumption of available petrol or diesel. But he is facing threats allegedly from oil cartels whose extra ordinary profit margin in import of fuels could be at stake if this techology is produced at a industrial scale.


Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Top 10 Highest-Paid Olympic Athletes


#1 Roger Federer
#1 Roger Federer

Earnings: $54.3 million

Federer tied a record with his seventh Wimbledon singles crown this month. The win elevated him to the No. 1 ranking in the world, where he broke the record for most weeks ranked No. 1 in a career, which was previously held by Pete Sampras at 286. Federer won a gold medal in doubles at the 2008 Beijing Games.

#2 LeBron James
#2 LeBron James

Earnings: $53 million

James is on top of the world after capturing his first NBA title and third MVP award. He is the NBA's biggest endorsement star, thanks to deals with Nike, McDonald's, Coca-Cola, State Farm and Dunkin' Donuts. James is appearing in his third Olympics for the U.S.

#3 Kobe Bryant
#3 Kobe Bryant

Earnings: $52.3 million

Bryant's $25.2 million salary during the 2011-12 season was shaved by almost $5 million after the NBA lockout reduced the number of games by 20%. His jersey was the NBA's top seller in China, Europe and Latin America during the 2011-12 season. Bryant is the old man of the U.S. team roster at 33 years old--four years older than any of his teammates. Bryant averaged 15 points a game during the 2008 Olympics.

#4 Maria Sharapova
#4 Maria Sharapova

Earnings: $27.1 million

Sharapova earned $5.1 million in prize money over the past 12-months as she racked up four tournament wins, including a French Open title that completed a career Grand Slam. She earns four times that off the court from appearances and sponsors Evian, Head, Nike, Samsung and Tag Heuer. This will be Sharapova's first Olympics and she will be the first woman to ever carry the flag for Russia in the opening ceremonies.

#5 Kevin Durant
#5 Kevin Durant

Earnings: $25.5 million

The three-time NBA scoring champ just finished the first year of his five-year, $85 million contract with the Oklahoma City Thunder. His seven-year deal with Nike generates the bulk of his $13 million annual off-court income. Other partners include Sprint, Gatorade, Panini, General Electric and 2K Sports. This is Durant's first Olympics.

#6 Carmelo Anthony
#6 Carmelo Anthony

Earnings: $22.9 million

Anthony's three-year contract with the New York Knicks is worth $61 million. The deal includes a player option in year four worth $24 million. He makes about $8 million a year from endorsements, primarily from Nike's Jordan brand. London will be Anthony's third Olympics.

#7 Usain Bolt
#7 Usain Bolt

Earnings: $20.3 million

Bolt is expected to be the biggest star of the 2012 Summer Olympics after his triple gold 2008 Olympic performance that saw him set world records in the 100 and 200 meter sprint events. Bolt earns the bulk of his income through endorsements and sponsor bonuses for record race times. Partners include Gatorade, Hublot, Nissan Motor and Visa, but his biggest sponsorship deal is with Puma, which pays about $9 million annually.

#8 Novak Djokovic
#8 Novak Djokovic

Earnings: $19.8 million

Djokovic had one of the most successful years in the history of tennis in 2011. He won three Grand Slam titles and a record $12.6 million in prize money. Djokovic signed a new clothing deal with Japan's Uniglo in May after parting ways with Sergio Tacchini. Djokovic captured a bronze medal at the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

#9 Chris Paul
#9 Chris Paul

Earnings: $19.2 million

Paul's profile soared with his move from New Orleans to Los Angeles in a December trade to the Clippers. He led the team to its best record in franchise history. His sponsors include: Nike's Jordan brand, Jeep, Powerade and Upper Deck. Paul led the 2008 U.S. Olympic team in assists.

#10 Li Na
#10 Li Na

Earnings: $18.4 million

Li's 2011 French Open title made her the first Asian-born tennis player ever to win a Grand Slam singles event. Despite the sluggish overall sponsorship market, she signed seven multimillion-dollar endorsement deals after the historic win. Li shills for Babolat, Haagan-Daaz, Nike, Samsung, Mercedes and multiple Chinese companies. This will be Li's third Olympics as she represented China in 2000 at the age of 18 and again in 2008.

Top 10 List: The Greatest Living Business Leaders Today

I’d like to present my personal top 10 list of the people I consider most influential in terms of innovative thinking, focus on customers, and their desire to serve the less-fortunate, which is a strong and continual interest of mine.
Richard Branson has one of the world's most widely recognized personal brands

Without further ado and in no particular order, I present to you my personal Top 10:

1. Jeff Bezos, AmazonJeff Bezos is a pioneer in world of internet commerce, and was instrumental in defining this space that is now defining many aspects of the internet world. It is Jeff Bezos who innovated the concept of “predictive analytics”–recommending products to customers based on search history and buying habits. Whether you like the concept or you hate it, the idea has made online commerce more profit rich and efficient, and is making online shopping a better experience for consumers throughout the world.

2. Anne Mulcahy, Xerox – Anne turned things around when her company faced a financial crisis. Yes, I can directly relate. You can read about some of my adventures at Fishbowl here. Anne never aspired to the role of CEO, but neither did she shy away from the opportunity to lead when elected by the board of Xerox in 2001. During her tenure she was required to reduce the company’s workforce by 30% and later eliminated the entire desktop portion of Xerox. For her courageous execution in the face of adversity Chief Executive Magazine named her CEO of the Year in 2008 and U.S. News & World Report named her one of America’s Best Leaders. Forbes acknowledged Anne as one of the world’s most influential women in 2005 and 2009.

3. Brad Smith, Intuit, one of the world’s largest and most successful financial software companies. Intuit, of course, is maker of the QuickBooks accounting software we have integrated with our Fishbowl Inventory software. Even as a company of nearly $4B in revenue with a market cap of approximately $16.5B, Intuit continues to operate like a collection of startups. Brad has fostered a culture where nearly 8,000 employees are allowed to take risks and to grow by learning from success and failure.

4. Howard Schultz, Starbucks – From his upbringing in a poor family in the Bronx to an athletic scholarship and eventually the head of Starbucks, Howard Schultz is a consummate example of courage, hard work, and the ability to achieve the American dream. Even in the glow of his own successes, Howard is also interested in investing in others’ success and continues to invest actively in other business ventures, such as eBay.

5. Larry Page, Google – Larry Page is another example of a businessperson who can persevere any challenge. Larry and his company have faced much criticism and received ample praise over the years for his company’s actions. But in the midst of the storm, he has never let what others think sway him from pursuing the course for his company that he considers the best.

6. Tim Cook, Apple – Steve Jobs is a hard act to follow, but thus far, Tim Cook is doing a tremendous job. Rather than attempt to match the consumer-facing innovations Steve Jobs had been known for, Tim Cook is forging into the future with his own new advances, such as Apple’s newest innovative inventory management techniques.

7. Indra Nooyi, PepsiCo – Indra Nooyi, another of Forbes 100 Most Powerful Women, has not only led her company to record financial results but is making strides to move PepsiCo in a healthier direction, leading the courageous charge to shed traditional fast food properties and to replace them with initiatives to supply healthier foods. She is deeply caring and committed as a senior executive. She is a fun-loving executive as well—she played lead guitar for an all-woman rock band in college, loved to play cricket, and is known to sing karaoke and perform at corporate gatherings to this day. Yes, I have been known to relate to her fun-loving spirit as a senior executive as well.

8. Warren Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway – He is a deeply conservative trader during the times that everyone around him is moving from one extreme to the other to the tune of huge losses and gains. Warren Buffett is a perfect example of patience, proving that slow and steady generally wins the business race. (Although I continue to press my own desire to spur Fishbowl’s inventory software business to race!)

9. Sir Richard Branson, Virgin Group – Anyone who owns more than 400 companies and is worth billions of dollars is clearly doing many things right. I admire Richard Branson’s tenacity, and I admire his personal brand—so much so, that when my paired leadership partner, Mary Michelle Scott, and I recently traveled to Australia with several of our team in our launch of Fishbowl Australia, we made the effort and kept the commitment to fly with Virgin Airlines every step of the way.

10. Rupert Murdoch, News Corporation – Rupert Murdoch is a self-made and hard driven Australia-born head of an American publishing dynasty, as the founder, chairman and CEO of News Corporation. He continues to work unbelievably hard at an age when most would have retired long ago. In the midst of accusation and scandal he’s needed to find new strength to face the accusation of bribery, corruption and hacking by subsidiary firms. This news is still breaking, as Rupert resigns from the boards of several of the subsidiary companies involved. Regardless of the outcome, the work ethic and sheer tenacity Rupert Murdoch has shown in the face of adversity continues to serve as an example to all.
Collectively, these 10 individuals are my own “living legends” who exemplify leadership strength. Who are your examples, and why? I look forward to hearing your additions and your feedback on this illustrious list.

By: David K. Williams
Lifelong entrepreneur, CEO of Fishbowl and writer for HBR and Forbes.

Sunday, July 22, 2012

How To Tell If Your Boss Is Trustworthy

. It’s important to know whether or not your boss is trustworthy. In fact, it’s a critical factor in your success and the quality of your life at work. So, how can you tell if your boss is trustworthy? Here are five things to look for

Leaders who are trustworthy:

Tell the truth as they understand it: This is easy to observe – just look to see whether your boss ‘tells everyone the same story.’ Untrustworthy bosses tend to tell different versions of events, depending on who they’re talking to. For instance, in a meeting with you and other staff, your boss might blame a problem on his boss – but when he’s talking to the boss, he blames it on someone else. Or when the head of sales asks your boss how the new product push is going, your boss might tell her it’s great – but when talking to someone else, she might say it’s a mess. An even more critical indicator is what behavior your boss encourages from you or other team members: does he or she invite or require you to shade the truth or not share important information with others? Not trustworthy.

Do what they say will do. None of us are able to deliver on every promise. But trustworthy bosses have good batting averages: generally speaking, they do the things they commit to doing. In addition – and this is important – if they can’t do as they promised, they’ll tell the truth about that, and say what they’ll do instead. A boss who’s evasive or vague about commitments, and who then seems unable or unwilling to admit, apologize and recommit when things go awry can’t be relied upon, especially in tough times.

Keep confidences. There’s a great scene in Game of Thrones, where a characters tells 3 versions of a confidential piece of information to 3 different people, to find out which one was betraying him. Now, I’m not encouraging you to be quite this Machievellian, but you can do the mini-version to discover whether your boss is sharing confidences. Tell your boss something you don’t mind if people know (but that they don’t), and ask him or her to keep it in confidence. Don’t tell anyone else. If it then comes back to you from another source, it’s a pretty good bet your boss spilled the beans. And, sadly, if it happens once, it’s most likely a standard part of how this person operates.

Speak and act for the greater good. How do your boss’ words line up with how he or she actually behaves? For instance, if he talks a good game about the importance of following company policy – but then doesn’t do it himself; or if she says inspiring things about the teamwork in public, but then focuses only on her own preferences or advancement…

Are capable and get results. Can your boss do his or her job? Trustworthy bosses have the skills and experience needed to get the expected results, and if they don’t, they acquire them. Untrustworthy bosses fake it – or blame you.
Now that you’ve assessed your boss – what if he or she failed? First, protect yourself. Do everything you can to avoid putting yourself in a situation where your boss’ untrustworthiness can hurt your career or your relationships (e.g., don’t share sensitive information, don’t rely on his or her word without checking with someone else, etc..)
But if your boss is really untrustworthy, get another job if at all possible. Untrustworthy bosses are dangerous to their employees, their companies, even to themselves. Having a truly untrustworthy boss is like keeping a live hand grenade in your desk. Sooner or later, something very painful and messy is bound to happen.

By: Erika Andersen
Erika Andersen, I cover how people & organizations work, and how they can work better.           

Source: http://www.forbes.com/sites/erikaandersen/2012/07/20/how-to-tell-if-your-boss-is-trustworthy/

Sunday, July 15, 2012

Top Global Telecom Companies

Telecommunications is the industry which provides media in which the transfer of information takes place over signals. Radio, television, computer networks and internet are the examples of telecommunication. It plays important role in the economic role and development. It has a very huge role to play in modern life. Below you will find top telecom companies of the world.

Vodafone Group Plc

Vodafone Group plc was founded in 1991 in United Kingdom. It is a multinational company operating in over 30 countries. It is one of the largest mobile telecommunication companies. Their products include fixed line, mobile telephony, Internet services and digital televisions etc.

Orange

France Orange telecom group is a multinational telecommunication company working in 35 countries at the moment. It is one of the world’s largest telecommunication companies. The company offers mobile, Internet, TV and fixed IP telephony services.

Reliance Communications Ltd

Reliance Communication ltd was founded in 2004 in India. The company offers their services in fixed line, mobile telephony, broadband, internet services, digital television, IT and network services. It is the only operator company in India, which offers 28 Mbit/s with 3G technology.

Telenor Group

Telenor Group was founded in 1855 in Norway. It is one of the largest telecommunication brands in the world. It is working in Bangladesh, Denmark, Finland, Hungary, India, Malaysia Montenegro, Pakistan, Russia, Serbia, Sweden, Thailand and Ukraine. They offer their services in fixed line, mobile telephony, internet, digital television and information technology etc.

China Mobile Limited

China Mobile limited is a Chinese mobile company which was founded in 1997. It is ranked first in mobile phone operator in the world at the moment. The areas served are China, Hong Kong and Pakistan. Their network has latest technologies of like 3G and 4G.

PTCL One Year Paid Internship Program

Pakistan Telecommunications Company Ltd. the prime provider of Telecommunication Voice & Data Services in the country is offering this opportunity. For more details, kindly log in:

Sunday, July 1, 2012

The Worst Moments in History

So often we publish lists that praise events in human history – tales of victory over diseases, disastrous situations, and the like. But alas, history is also replete with events that we must remember so as to not repeat them, but we wish had never happened. This list looks at ten of the worst moments in history when man showed that he can act with utter contempt for the rest of man.

11 Roman-Catholic Sex Abuse
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Sexual abuse of the naive and innocent by authority figures is nothing new to human history, but what makes this example of it especially heinous is that it has taken place under the unwatchful eye of the most powerful Christian organization in the world. Child rape and molestation are, in the common view, possibly the vilest, most despicable sin (and felonies) a person can commit, precisely because there can be no excuse for it. Add to that the sin of homosexuality (we speak here in terms of Christianity), and it seems an impossible situation for a child ever to be found in.
Priests ought to understand these sins better than most people, and in Roman-Catholic cultures all over the world, parents highly revere priests as authority figures, second fathers to their children, and excellent teachers of morality. Hence, the question everyone has asked, “How in God’s name could this have happened?”
It’s not just a matter of well kept personal secrets among the guilty parties. The Catholic Church held meetings in the 1950s concerning sexual abuse of minors by priests, and yet, apparently nothing was done to prevent the growing disaster. Those people known to have a history of committing sexual abuse against others were knowingly ordained and sent to priestly duties all over the world, not just in the United States, but in England, Ireland, Canada, Belgium, the Philippines, and many other nations.
The scandal didn’t hit the mainstream media until the 1980s, raising suspicion of Papal cover-ups to protect the image of Christianity. Fortunately, Christianity’s image has not suffered a fraction of the fall-out that the Catholic hierarchy has. Christ will never be torn down because of man’s sin, or it would certainly have happened by now. The priests are, as of this list, still being hunted down, investigated, and dealt with according to man’s law. God’s law will deal with the guilt of every sinner involved, if you believe in Him, but in the meantime, the Roman-Catholic denomination of the man many hold as the absolute greatest good in history has suffered severe damage to its reputation. Whether it is irreparable depends on how long a consecutive series of superlative Popes the Catholic Church can elect, beginning with John Paul II.

10 Great Chinese Famine
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From 1958 to 1962, China experienced a monumental famine that killed at least 45 million people. There are generally two causes blamed for it: natural disasters and the communist policies of Mao Zedong. Chairman Mao defined this period of his rule as the “Great Leap Forward,” and implemented economic and social changes with epic consequences. This entry is quite similar to #6 and #3.
Mao intended to turn China from an agrarian economy into a modern, urbanized, industrial giant on par with the U. S. But forcing his Great Leap Forward on the Chinese countryside led to nationwide crop shortages. Then the Yellow River flooded in 1959, drowning or starving 2 million. The next year, 60% of China’s farmland received no rain at all.
Mao’s idea of forcing farmers into industrial careers further destroyed the harvests. The famine became so intolerable that in some areas, people resorted to canniablism. Millions were tortured to death for the crime of stealing food to feed their families. One man, Liu Desheng, was found to have stolen a sweet potato, and he and his wife and son were urinated on, then forced to eat large gulps of human feces. They both died within weeks.
Mao and his officers meanwhile dined on $1,000 French meals and 20 year-old Scotch whisky. Mao is on record as having told his officers that there would be many deaths due to his Great Leap Forward, but that in the end, they would serve a greater good. The famine only ended when the weather improved in 1962. 5% of China starved to death, drowned, or were murdered.

9 Forced Extinction of Species
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Ecologists agree that Earth appears to be experiencing a mass extinction at present. These have happened many times in the past. The extinction of the dinosaurs is believed to have been caused most directly by a comet or asteroid impact. That event was nothing compared to the Permian-Triassic extinction, which may have been caused by a Gamma Ray Burst. That event resulted in 96% of all marine life and 70% of all land life dying.
What has happened to plant and animal species while modern man has been on Earth pales in the shadow of these two events, and yet humanity in general is doing terribly little to maintain critically endangered species. Most humans seem to adore “cuddly” animals. Anything with fur qualifies, and we have many tastes in what animals are beautiful. The tiger is magnificent. In 2005 there were only 250 breeding Siberian tigers in the Russian wild. There are well over 10,000 in captive breeding programs around the world: some people are trying to save species from extinction, while many others willfully poach those endangered animals for the black market.
Tiger penis is considered the ultimate aphrodisiac in some places in China. These magnificent animals are being killed, illegally and at extreme personal risk, for money and sexual gratification. In 2011, the Western Black Rhinoceros was declared officially extinct. They, like so many other gigantic African marvels, had been hunted coldly, and unsympathetically, by humans out for a cheap thrill and what they thought was sport and danger.
Black rhinoceroses are extremely aggressive and have terrible eyesight. They will charge headfirst into trees and termite mounds, thinking they see a territorial challenger. Males weigh an easy 3,000 pounds. The record is 6,380 pounds. There are only about 4,000 left in the African wild as of this list. The reason is two-fold: in 1900 there were several hundred thousand in Africa, but English “hunters” toured Africa to shoot down the Big Five: elephants, rhinoceroses, cape buffaloes, lions, and leopards.
This lister goes hunting now and then for deer, squirrels, rabbits, and doves, and these animals are very bountiful and fairly difficult to outwit in the wild. The hunter must also be a good marksman. But in Africa, elephants and rhinoceroses are too gargantuan to have natural predators except the very occasional lion. So they stand still or charge in the presence of humans. There’s no “hunting” involved. You can drive up to either species in a jeep in the middle of day and take pictures.
And armed with a .700 Nitro Express, which propels a 1000 grain solid bronze bullet at 8900 foot-pounds of force, there’s no skill involved. Some people just enjoy killing these magnificent animals for the empowerment it seems to instill. Also, rhinoceros horns are highly sought after in Chinese “medicine” for their ability to cure disease and impotence, neither of which the horn can do. It is made of pure keratin, and so are your fingernails. Keratin comes from the Greek κέρατος, which means “of the horn.”
There are anywhere from 470,000 to 690,000 African Bush Elephants left in the wild, and they are protected from poachers, but not well. They are poached for their ivory tusks, regardless of the international illegality of buying or selling them. Gorillas are poached for their hands, which are used as ashtrays. Then, of course, there is severe habitat destruction in virtually every ecosystem on the planet, so we can have our diamonds and gold, and build colossal megalopolis.

8 Fanatical Terrorism
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Splinter-cell terrorism refers to acts of terror, especially bombings, hijackings, and assassinations, committed by agents of organizations operating all over the world free of direct link to any organization. It is the ultimate example of guerrilla warfare, and as the world has seen in the past 20 years or so, huge, powerful, technologically advanced militaries have extreme difficulty stopping these criminals.
Splinter-cell terrorists are responsible for the September 11, 2001 attacks against the United States of America. Before that, the U. S. remained generally aloof to the global war of attrition being waged against these fanatics (lunatics). U. S. embassies were bombed in Africa in 1998, the USS Cole in 2000, and all the while, efforts were underway to find the leader of the primary aggressor against global civilization, al-Qaeda. That leader, Osama bin Laden, could not be found, until after 9/11, when the U. S. began hunting him down in earnest. It took a decade to catch him. In the meantime, other fanatics the world over were perpetrating atrocity after atrocity against innocent, unarmed civilians of dozens of countries, for the avowed purpose of eradicating Jews and Christians from Earth. Stopping each of these terrorists once they make their presence known can never put an end to the problem.
Islamic terrorists are not the only culprits, as Theodore Kaczynski and Timothy McVeigh prove. It is impossible to make these fanatics respect any military might, since to begin with, they are not afraid to die in the process of killing others. How civilized humanity can put a total end to this terrorism is still debatable, of course. Whether it even can be stopped is also debatable.

7 Khmer Rouge Regime
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The Khmer Rouge were members of the Communist Party of Kampuchea, and during their 4-year reign of terror, from 1975 to 1979, they completely destroyed Cambodia, economically, politically, and demographically. They took advantage of the chaos following the Vietnam War to overthrow the Republican government and set up what their leader, Saloth Sar, who named himself Pol Pot, called “agrarian socialism.” It was, in reality, a forced relocation of every single Cambodian citizen from cities to farms where they were forced to farm regardless of skill or health. They were starved to death, beaten to death, overworked to death, and tortured to death.
Anyone deemed “intellectual” was immediately murdered to protect the regime. Anyone wearing glasses was deemed intellectual. These people were taken out into “killing fields” and hacked to pieces with machetes. Every single book that could be found was burned, as was all money. All banks and even hospitals were shut down. The citizens were no longer given more than two bowls of rice soup per day. All religion was banned, and those adhering to any religion were prime targets for murder, including Buddhists, Christians, and Muslims, anyone educated in western universities, and any ethnicity other than Cambodian.
The most notorious details of this sorry moment in human history come from S-21, now the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum. It was a high school before it was taken over. The Khmer Rouge guards forced the prisoners to eat the guards’ feces. The prisoners were forbidden from drinking water without permission, and if they did, they were beaten sometimes to death. They were water boarded, raped, their teeth and genitals electrocuted, bled to death, drowned, and castrated with pliers.
The death toll of this regime cannot be accurately calculated, because records were rarely kept well. The most reliable estimate is 2.5 to 3 million murdered. That was 21% of Cambodia’s population. Pol Pot died on 15 April 1998 of what was claimed to be heart failure. He might have been poisoned, or committed suicide, since he was about to be arrested for his crimes.


6 World War One
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One of only two wars to make this list, this one does because of the hideous speed at which hostilities escalated in 1914, and because there is no single villain to blame. Humanity in general is to blame for this one. In retrospect, it appears as if every country in Europe was harboring a festering hatred for one another, and everyone was looking for an excuse to invade. The act that touched it off was the assassination of Franz Ferdinand, Archduke of Austria-Este, by Gavrilo Princip, whose motive was no more complicated than a desire to prove his bravery to the Serbian army, which had rejected him for being too small and weak.
Almost every nation in Europe had a treaty with another nation, and these treaties all said the same thing: if anyone attacks you, we’ve got your back. Austro-Hungary declared war on Serbia, which prompted Russia to declare war on Austro-Hungary, which prompted Germany and Italy to declare war on Russia, which prompted the United Kingdom and France to declare war on Germany and Italy. Spain and, of course, Switzerland stayed out of it.
The United States stayed out of it until Germany waged total war on international unarmed merchant ships, particularly Lusitania, and because of the Zimmermann Telegram which Germany sent to Mexico, urging it to declare war on the U. S. The British intercepted this memo, but Mexico, to its credit, did not dare attack the U. S.
We can all agree that war is the epitome of human stupidity, and as wars go, WWI may be insurmountable in exemplary idiocy. War theory, if we may call it that, had progressed in terms of modern defense, but not attack: both sides were armed with more or less the very same weaponry, especially the Maxim machine gun, the first truly modern machine gun. It is belt-fed, fires the .303 British, the 8mm Mauser, or the 7.62 NATO, at a rate of 450 to 500 rounds per minute, sufficient to cut men in half, which is precisely what it did tens of thousands of times for 4 years.
The British, French, Germans, Russians, and Americans all had them, and for the first 2 and a half years, the trench warfare involved one side charging out across 100 to 1000 yards of no-man’s land, through shell craters, barbed wire, mud and mines, right into the waiting machine gun lines of the enemy trenches. Each time one side was beaten back with severe losses, the other side thought there would be a weakness and charged after them, right into waiting machine gun lines. Kaiser Wilhelm sent a telegram in late 1914 to his cousin, Tsar Nicholas II, that read, in Russian, “Nicky, how can we stop this?”
On the first day of the Battle of the Somme River, 1 July 1916, the middle day of the middle year of the Great War, as it was called before 1939, the British conducted the European Slow March, walking, not running, toward the Germans, on the theory that the slower they advanced, the more difficult they would be to hit, and more fearsome they would be to the enemy. After 12 hours, 19,240 British soldiers lay dead in about 25 square miles. This was the most lethal day in the British military’s history.
The Somme was begun in an attempt to draw men of both sides away from the Battle of Verdun, so a decision there could be attained. Instead, the Somme became an even larger battle in scale, and it and Verdun remain the most epic of the War. 698,000 men died at Verdun, 70,000 per month for 10 months. Over 300,000 died at the Somme. Each battle resulted in over 1 million casualties, the debut of the modern flamethrower at Verdun, and the tank at the Somme.
The Germans opened hostilities at Verdun with a 10-hour cannonade of 808 artillery pieces, firing almost 1 million shells, some as wide as steering wheels. Around the French fortifications, the blackened skeletons of trees were festooned with human and horse intestines. The Germans also used ample supplies of mustard gas in both battles. Mustard gas is essentially aerosol hydrochloric acid. One breath of it can kill a man by internal drowning. It also severely burns and blisters skin and blinds eyes.
Both battles ended in utter stalemate, because mobility had not progressed on par with firepower, and that lack of mobility, especially on the first day of the Somme, displayed more directly than any other action in any war the utter futility and insanity of warfare. Neither side could approach the other, but the Germans found their losses more irreplaceable than the combined French and British. When the Americans showed up, the Germans simply could not cope with the overwhelming enemy men and materiel for much longer. About 15 million, military and civilian, died, unless we include deaths from Spanish influenza, which was itself a direct result of the War. That puts the estimate at about 65 million.

5 The Black Death
Black Death
There is no one cause to blame for the Bubonic plague’s rise to power in 1346 or so, but Europe in general can be criticized strongly for its primitive belief in witches. Because “witches” were hunted down wholesale by reason of an insufferably pervasive fear of the Devil, domestic and feral cats were also killed by the hundreds of thousands, because they were thought to be witches’ “familiars,” that without one, a witch could not adequately cast spells.
So once witch-hunts showed up in full swing and cats started disappearing into the fires, the entire European world was ripe for an epidemic of rats. And the rats showed up in full swing in 1346 in the Crimea, via the Silk Road from China. There were no cats to check the rats stowing away onboard merchant ships, and these rats were infested with fleas. The fleas carried yersinia pests, better known as plague.
Today, this bacteria has been all but eradicated in most places around the world, because cleanliness is next to Godliness. A regular hot bath with soap will rid you of fleas, but such baths were not regular in the Middle Ages. Once bitten by an infected flea, curing yourself is really not difficult at all. Streptomycin prevents the bacteria from replicating, which gives the immune system enough time to tailor an antibody to kill it. Europe didn’t know about antibiotics, and had they, they might have had fair results by eating moldy bread.
Without treatment, plague is one of only three known diseases with a mortality rate of 100%. The other two are rabies encephalitis and HIV. Given the primitive medical knowledge of the Middle Ages, the world didn’t have a chance. Even the best physicians had no clue what to do to protect themselves, much less the populace.
Doctors entered homes only after donning full-body leather armor, helmets and masks shaped like hawk beaks, filled with aromatic herbs, due to the miasmatic theory of diseases. According to this theory, simply “stirring up the vapors” would cure the area of plague, while the doctor would remain safe breathing in his mask. The masks had red glass over the eyeholes, because even looking at an infected person was thought to cause infection.
Ringing bells was thought to stir up the vapors. Or the sick person could stand next to a latrine and inhale the stench. About the only method that actually worked to a small degree was smoking tobacco, because the smoke kept the fleas away. But the most infamous methods for curing the plague were based on the principle that God was very angry with the whole world.
The Flagellants began roaming the countryside by 1349, especially in Germany, and they beat themselves bloody with Roman-style flails, the same kind used to scourge Christ. The idea was that if they suffered enough, God would relent and the plague would stop. It didn’t work.
So, like clockwork, God’s wrath was blamed on the non-Christians throughout Europe, and that mostly meant Jews. In February of 1349, 2,000 Jews were hacked to pieces and burned at the stake in Strasbourg, on the French-German border. But the plague kept coming. It killed 40% of Egypt, 30% of the Middle East, about half of the 100,000 people in Paris. The worst hit area was Mediterranean Europe, including Italy, Spain, and southern France. There, about 75% to 80% died. The Pope, Clement VI, survived by surrounding his throne 24 hours a day with torches burning close to the floor. In the aftermath, his servants found scorched fleas “like pepper” just outside the ring of flame.
England suffered about 20% dead. The total average was about 25% of the whole world, as evidence indicates plague deaths in sub-Saharan Africa, India, and the Orient. As much as 66% of Europe and Asia succumbed. Approximately 100,000,000 people died in 4 years.

4 The Holodomor
Children Affected By Famine In Berdyansk, Ukraine - 1922
Holodomor is the Ukrainian word for “killing by hunger.” It is now the proper term for Josef Stalin’s forced starvation genocide against the Ukraine from 1932 to 1933. The manner by which Stalin forced it on the Ukrainian people is open for discussion, but most historians agree that he knew what was happening in the Ukraine and refused to provide relief of any kind, even ordering food shipments diverted from the Ukraine and what food its population had confiscated, violently whenever necessary. He imposed this particularly cruel death sentence on so many solely out of retaliation for the Ukraine striving for national recognition and independence.
Today, we refer to it as a country, Ukraine, with Kiev as its capital city. But at that time, it was still referred to as “the Ukrainian SSR,” or simply, “the Ukraine,” one of many areas of Russia. The famine was manmade, an imposition directly from Stalin, but whether he premeditated it beforehand is difficult to determine. Most of Russia was experiencing a famine at that time, and Stalin may have seen this a chance to make the Holodomor look, at best, like an accident, at worst, passive justice.
The numbers are the saddest testimony overall in every one of these entries. Records were not well kept during the famine, so the death toll ranges from 1.8 to 12 million. Some scholars have narrowed this down to about 4 to 5 million. The borders were closed by the NKVD, the precursor to the KGB, and anyone attempting to flee to other countries or Russian states was either shot or captured and brought back to starve. 190,000 tried to escape the Ukraine after the first year. Starvation may be the most awful cause of death. The commoners’ despair, agony, and terror led tens of thousands to resort to eating their own children. Many ate their own feet. It did not end until Stalin’s implementation of forced collectivization of grain threatened to destroy all of Russia, not just the Ukraine. Once the police and military stopped stealing everyone’s grain, farmers were able to grow for small communities, as they always had.

3 World War Two
Wcmg2
This war can be blamed mostly on one man, Adolf Hitler. Let us take a brief look at the motives by which he initiated global hostilities in 1939. Whereas, Stalin was patently paranoid that he would lose his power, Hitler was not afraid. He simply carried a fuming rage which, in childhood, he directed against nothing in particular.
He was imprisoned for his failed Beer Hall Putsch, an attempt to overthrow the Kaiser government, in 1923. While serving 8 months, he and Rudolf Hess wrote Mein Kampf, in which Hitler blamed absolutely everything bad that had ever happened to Germany on the Jews, all of them everywhere on Earth. Whether he actually believed this is open to debate, but there is no denying that he saw in Jews an outstanding scapegoat, one against which all non-Jewish Germans would rally.
It worked better than he could possibly have imagined. He emerged from prison a national hero and 10 years later took control of the government. What followed was a nationwide brainwashing: everyone began hating Jews intensely. Many of the Jews saw the trouble coming and left for England or America. Most stayed, hoping they would be saved. They weren’t, until it was too late.
6 years later, Hitler made good on his promise to acquire “lebensraum” for the German people, by invading Poland. Britain and France immediately declared war on Germany. Russia made a pact with Germany because Stalin knew he could not conquer Germany at that time. Hitler bided his time before invading Russia 2 years later, in the knowledge that Russia’s military was woefully inadequate. Japan invaded China for its resources, and in September 1940 Japan, Italy, and Germany became the formal Axis Powers, solely because they understood their identical desires to conquer other countries.
Japan attacked Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, in retaliation for the U. S. embargo on oil, iron, and machinery. The U. S. then declared war on Japan, and there were declarations of war all around. Oh, what a merry world it became so quickly. After 6 years, 71 million people were dead. Rome, Paris, Moscow, Leningrad, and London were smoldering. Dresden, Hiroshima, Nagasaki, Stalingrad, and Manila were obliterated.
The most infamous aspect of the War will forever remain the Holocaust. It is also referred to as HaShoah, which is Hebrew for “The Catastrophe.” Much has been said about it already on Listverse, so let us briefly examine Hitler’s methods, by which he remorselessly and unsympathetically attempted to eradicate an entire race of humans.
His seething, abiding rage found in Jews the perfect target, and he set about in his political ambitions, surrounding himself with men who agreed, some for power, some out of rage or delight, all out of hatred, that the Jews as a race needed to, and could, be extinguished. The Wehrmacht, for its part, had nothing at all to do with the Holocaust, and had very little idea it was going on. They were an honorable institution, if honor, just as compassion, can be found in war.
The Schutzstaffel, or SS, carried out the murder of 6 million men, women, and children, by poisonous gas, shooting, beating, torturing, “scientific” experiments, systematic starvation, and overwork, on the pretense that “Aryans” were superior humans, and that Jews were no better than cattle, in which terms, the question was asked, “Do we feel bad when we slaughter cows for food?”
1.1 million were murdered at Auschwitz, 700,000 to 800,000 at Treblinka, 600,000 at Belzec, 360,000 at Majdanek, 320,000 at Chelmno, 250,000 at Sobibor. Merely because they were Jewish. Meawhile, at least 750,000 soldiers and civilians died in 199 days in Stalingrad. That was only one battle of the War.

2 The Crusades
Crusades1
Whereas, Stalin never offered any political explanation for, nor a formal admission of, attempting to starve all of Ukraine, and Hitler explained the Holocaust as “a necessary step” in the process of purifying and strengthening the “master race,” the Crusades were undertaken by both the Christians and the Muslims for the openly expressed purpose of exterminating the opposing religion along with all its adherents, solely to glorify God. It remains the blackest moment in the history of all religion.
It lasted from c. 1063 until c. 1434, when handheld gunpowder weapons were first used to good effect in combat. Keep in mind, before you denounce God for allowing or causing it to happen, that doing so is foolishly dismissive. Assuming there is a God, the Crusades were not his fault. They remain humanity’s fault by two causes: first, the refusal to tolerate differences; and second, the active enjoyment derived from hurting things, especially other humans, since they can best voice their disapproval of such actions.
The use of the word “God” in any language to justify one’s actions of violence is but a means to an end, and also sweetens the enjoyment of another person’s pain, since by denouncing that person as an infidel, the malicious party can believe that person is also destined for eternal agony, after the agony s/he is forced to suffer on Earth. Sounds appetizing, doesn’t it? Because we all get angry at other people for various perceived offenses, deep down doesn’t it sound appetizing to believe those people are going to Hell, regardless of how much they suffer in life? No one would ever admit to it, of course, but it’s a primitive passion innate in every human, and precisely the heart of the Crusades.
In 1099, the 1st Crusade ended in “Christian” victory, when knights and soldiers from France, England, Germany, and Apulia (southern Italy) successfully besieged Jerusalem from 7 June to 15 July. They were opposed by the Islamic Fatimid Caliphate of Egypt, under Iftikhar ad-Dawla, who had 400 cavalrymen and a garrison of Muslim and Nubian troops comparable in size to the invaders, about 13,000 for each side. Inside the city there lived over 60,000 unarmed civilians, mostly Muslims and Jews.
Once the city fell, the invaders stormed in, ransacked every building and murdered every single man, woman, and child within the walls. 70,000 people were hacked to pieces “in the name of Christ.” The horses waded in blood up to their knees. Probably half the women were raped, and most of everyone was tortured by varying methods. It was unbridled, bacchanalian sadism. About 500 Jews fought alongside the Muslims, then took refuge in a synagogue. The French burned the synagogue to the ground, with everyone in it.
88 years later, Salah ad-Din successfully took Jerusalem back for Islam and allowed all those inside to return unharmed to their homelands provided they paid a ransom. Those who could not afford it were sold into slavery. Two years later, Richard I of England (the Lionheart) arrived with Phillip II of France and Frederick I of Germany. Richard was not the chivalrous hero he is frequently depicted as in films. He spent barely 6 months of his 10-year regency in England. He lived in France, spoke only Langues d’Oil and Langues d’Oc, two dialects of Old French, did not speak any form of English, and used England as a money machine to finance his conquests. He loved the sport and glory of overpowering other nations. His Crusade, the 3rd, ended in an uneasy stalemate.
There would be 6 more Crusades, with the Holy Land changing hands several times, costing hundreds of thousands of lives, all in the name of one god or another. All the while, both bibles stated, “Love your enemies.”

1 War Against Terror

File:Army.mil-2007-03-21-084518.jpg



The War on Terror (also known as the Global War on Terror or the War on Terrorism) is a term commonly applied to an international military campaign led by the United States and the United Kingdom with the support of other NATO as well as non-NATO countries. Originally, the campaign was waged against al-Qaeda and other militant organizations with the purpose of eliminating them.
The phrase 'War on Terror' was first used by US President George W. Bush and other high-ranking US officials to denote a global military, political, legal and ideological struggle against organizations designated as terrorist and regimes that were accused of having a connection to them or providing them with support or were perceived, or presented as posing a threat to the US and its allies in general. It was typically used with a particular focus on militant Islamists and al-Qaeda.
Although the term is not officially used by the administration of US President Barack Obama (which instead uses the term Overseas Contingency Operation), it is still commonly used by politicians, in the media and officially by some aspects of government, such as the United States' Global War on Terrorism Service Medal. Many analytics considered this war as a modern form of Crusades.
The 9/11 attacks resulted in 2,996 casualties, which included 343 firefighters and 59 police officers who were in trying to save victims inside the World Trade Center. The War on Terror launched by George W. Bush Jr. has led to at least 227,000 people (more than 300,000 according to other estimates). This includes 116,657 civilians (51%) between 76 - 108,000 insurgents or Taliban Islamists (34% to 36%), 25,297 Iraqi and Afghan soldiers (11%), and 8,975 American, British, and other coalition forces (3.9%).
Based on the documents released by WikiLeaks, the Guardian estimated in October 2010, 109,032 civilians and soldiers were killed in Iraq between 2004 – 2009. This included 66,081 civilians, 23,984 enemy forces, 15,196 Iraqi soldiers, and 3,771 coalition troops.
Yet these statistics do not take into account that the deaths tolls were only from the coalition reports. icasualties.org has listed 4,770 coalition troops (4,452 American and 179 British) who have died in combat in Iraq since 2003, and 2,441 soldiers (1,566 American, 364 British, and 56 French) who died in Afghanistan since 2001.
It is worth mentioning the number of pro-Saddam forces that died in Iraq: 16,595 security forces from the post-Saddam era, 1,764 private contractors, 1,002 Sons of Iraq, and between 38,778 and 70,278 other supporters of the regime.
In Afghanistan, there were 7,500 casualties from Afghan security forces – 200 were from the Northern Alliance, and more than 38,000 were either part of the Taliban or insurgents.
In the ongoing war on terrorism the Pakistani armed forces alone have so far lost the equivalent of two full brigades. Among those killed were one three-star and a couple of two-star generals.
According to Pakistan Army, 3,097 personnel had been killed and 721 others permanently disabled.
The total number of Pakistanis killed in the conflict has gone up to 40,309.

Top 12 Celebrations and Events in 2012


1: The Queen’s Diamond Jubilee

June 2 – 5, 2012

In honour of the Lilibet’s Diamond Jubilee, celebrating 60 years on the throne, many events will be happening across Britain in June, with the main events taking place over an extended weekend from June 2 – 5, 2012.
Lilibet is only the second monarch, after Victoria in 1897, to reach this 60-year milestone.
Several major events have already been announced, including a concert at Buckingham Palace and a flotilla along the River Thames. More information will be available online throughout 2012.

www.direct.gov.uk

2: WorldPride

June 23 – July 8, 2012

The eyes, ears and rainbows of the world will be on London in 2012 as it hosts WorldPride.
What promises to be an event on a truly mammoth scale, WorldPride will be held between two other significant celebrations, The Queens Diamond Jubilee and the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games.
Organized by InterPride, WorldPride promotes lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) issues on an international level through parades, festivals and other cultural activities.
London’s WorldPride in 2012 is expected to attract over one million visitors. The two week festivities will take place from June 23 – July 8, 2012, with the main parade held on July 7.

www.pridelondon.org

3: London 2012 Festival

June 21 – September 9, 2012

The London 2012 Festival is the finale of the four-year Cultural Olympiad, taking place June 21 – September 9, 2012.
Complementing the sporting events at the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games, the festival will be the biggest party the UK has ever seen, with over 1000 events taking place all over the UK from leading artists from around the world. Events will continue to be announced throughout the year.

festival.london2012.com

4: 200th anniversary of the birth of Charles Dickens

February 7, 2012

The year will bring many activities and events to commemorate the 200th anniversary of one of England’s best loved authors, Charles Dickens.
Dickens was born in Portsmouth, but spent much of his time in Kent and his London home is now a museum, currently the subject of a major £3million project to restore and redevelop it in time for 2012.
Charles Dickens was born on February 7 1812, and in 2012, organizations in England and worldwide are planning festivals, exhibitions and other events in honour of the internationally acclaimed English novelist.
In addition, the year of the bicentenary will see new long-lasting commemorative initiatives, including exciting legacy projects and heritage trails.

www.dickens2012.org
www.visitkent.co.uk
www.dickensmuseum.com

5: Cotswolds Olympicks, 400th Anniversary

June, 2012

At the time of the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games, England will also be celebrating the 400th anniversary of its Olympic roots – Robert Dover’s Cotswolds Olympicks.
Started by a local barrister, Captain Robert Dover, the world’s inaugural Olympick Games were staged on a Cotswold hillside in 1612.
Today the annual event, held at the start of June, attracts thousands of spectators as ‘athletes’ partake in country-side games such as obstacle courses and tug-of-war, in addition to unique sporting competitions such as shin-kicking.

www.olimpickgames.co.uk

6: Marc Rees: Adain Avion

June – August, 2012

Adain Avion is the fuselage of a DC9 airplane that has been transformed into a mobile art space.
As part of the Cultural Olympiad, it will travel across Wales, ‘nesting’ in different locations, with the public encouraged to document its fantastic journey through online media.
Adain Avion will make stops in Swansea, Ebbw Vale, LLandudno, and Llandow throughout summer 2012.

www.adainavion.org

7: The Sinking of the Titanic, 100th Anniversary

April, 2012

April 2012 marks the 100th anniversary of the Titanic disaster and to mark this moment in history, the city of Belfast will be unveiling the ‘Titanic Quarter,’ set to become the largest waterfront development project in Europe.
New tours and attractions will also be unveiled across Belfast and other parts of Britain with a connection to the doomed ship, including a new interactive museum, Sea City, in Southampton, England.
This unique visitor attraction will house permanent and temporary exhibitions focusing on different areas of the Titanic story.
A program of events will also take place offering theatre, lectures and much more.

www.nitb.com
www.visit-southampton.co.uk

8: Wales Coastal Path

The Wales Coastal Path is set for completion in 2012, creating 250 miles of uninterrupted walking paths along the stunning Welsh Coast.
Last year, National Geographic ranked the Pembrokeshire Coast the second best coastal destination in the world.
The completion of this path is set to encourage even more visitors to discover this hidden gem.

www.visitwales.com

9: Edinburgh Hogmanay

December 30 2011 – January 2 2012

New Year’s celebrations are held world-wide but there is no better place to party than Edinburgh.
In 2012,the Edinburgh Hogmanay street party will span four days from December 30 2011 – January 2 2012, and will be one of the major events in the countdown to the London 2012 Festival.
This will be the first in a series of events to be staged in Scotland as part of the London 2012 Festival and will feature a new commission as part of New Year’s celebrations.

www.edinburghshogmanay.org

10: Harry Potter Studio Tour

Spring 2012

With the final Harry Potter film released in July 2011, Harry Potter fans won’t have to wait too long to get a behind-the-scenes glimpse into his wizardly world.
To add to the 2012 excitement, Warner Bros Studios will be opening a tour of their Leavesdon Studio, just north of London, featuring original sets, costumes, props and effects used in all eight Harry Potter films.

wbstudiotour.co.uk

11: Speed of Light

August 2012

Presented in partnership with the Edinburgh International Festival, Speed of Light will be one of the most extraordinary and high-profile events in the London 2012 Festival program.
For three weeks in August2012, Edinburgh’s famed Arthur’s Seat will be transformed into an innovative combination of sporting endeavour and visual art.
During a series of night time events, Speed of Light will feature as a signature contribution to Scotland’s Cultural Olympiad program.

www.speedoflight2012.org

12: The Olympic Torch Relay – Be a Part of It!

May – July 2012

The Olympic Torch will arrive in Britain on May 18 2012, and make its way across every nation and region on a 70 day, 8,000 mile journey.
It is said that the Olympic flame will travel within one hour of 95% of the UK population.
Celebrations and events across Britain will mark the flame’s arrival, creating unique local experiences across the UK.

www.london2012.com