And the winner is “you have beautiful lips”

A new survey just released shows that praising a woman on her lips is the best way to enter her heart. I hope the single African guys who need a little help in the romance department might add this to their pick up lines.

The site (badoo) which conducted the survey has 87 million registered users. The survey analyzed the success rates of opening lines from nearly 200,000 online flirtations in 11 languages.

The sites members were asked to use one of 12 different ice-breakers, each complimenting a woman on a characteristic of her body or appearance. Success was determined by 1) prompting any response and 2) launching a conversation.

And the winner is … “You have beautiful lips.”

Even though the beautiful lips compliment was successful across all countries, some compliments did better in some countries than others. For instance, for

  • American, Australian and Brazilian women: Tell her how beautifully she dresses.
  • Spaniards: Compliment her hair.
  • Germans and Canadians: Tell her her skin is perfect
  • If she’s Dutch or Portuguese, concentrate on the ears. According to the survey, they liked: “You have beautiful ears.”
  • Sweden – – – “You have a beautiful figure”
  • Poland: It’s all about the arms.  Just say “You have beautiful arms”

African women were not represented in the survey. In any case, if you’re not sure what the woman will appreciate most, just stick to the lips; it works for all of them. It will surely work for the African woman.

If you want to graciously share your personal experience with African women, the space below is yours. Go ahead.[ad#Adsense-200by200sq]

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Dozen countries added to nations with forced child labor

WASHINGTON — The Labor Department is adding a dozen countries to the list of nations that use child labor or forced labor, as officials warn the global economic crisis could cause an upswing in the exploitation of children and other workers.

From coffee grown in El Salvador to sapphires mined in Madagascar, the agency’s latest reports released on Wednesday identify 128 goods from 70 countries where child labor, forced labor or both are used in violation of international standards.

“Shining light on these problems is a first step toward motivating governments, the private sector and concerned citizens to take action to end these intolerable abuses that have no place in our modern world,” said Labor Secretary Hilda Solis.

New to the list are Angola, Central African Republic, Chad, El Salvador, Ethiopia, Lesotho, Madagascar, Mozambique, Namibia, Rwanda, Zambia and Zimbabwe.

The annual reports are not intended to punish or shame the countries where an estimated 215 million child laborers toil in factories, on farms or as domestic helpers. In fact, the agency says many of the countries that appear on the list are taking steps to address child labor problems. Labor Department officials say making the public aware of the problem helps promote efforts to combat child labor.

While the total number of child laborers fell by about 3 percent from 2004 to 2008, the rate of decline has slowed in recent years.

“I think the very recent picture gives us significant cause for concern,” said Sandra Polaski, deputy undersecretary for the Bureau of International Labor Affairs. “That has a lot to do with the economic crisis.”

India remains home to the greatest number of child laborers, followed by China. But smaller nations in sub-Saharan Africa have a much higher proportion of children – up to one-third of children under 14 – who go to work instead of school each day.

For the first time, the reports include a set of proposed actions for each government to consider to help reduce the problems detailed.

The agency praises India and some other countries for working to address the problem through anti-poverty programs and compulsory education. Brazil, Thailand, Jordan, Ivory Coast and Ghana also win plaudits for their efforts to combat child labor.

At the same time, the report calls out some of the worst offenders. They include Uzbekistan, where local officials require children to pick cotton, and Myanmar, where forced labor of adults and children helps produce everything from sugar and teak to rubber and rubies.

“They know what the problem is and they know how to fix it, they just need to get serious about doing it,” Polaski said.

The problem is complicated in countries like India, Pakistan and Tonga that have no legislation setting a minimum age for work. That makes children more vulnerable to being pulled into hazardous or grueling trades.

Some of the most common products produced by child labor or forced labor include cotton, sugar cane, tobacco, coffee, bricks, gold, diamonds and coal.

Since 1995, the Labor Department has spent more than $740 million in programs to help more than 80 countries combat child labor.

The agency is also working to combat instances of child labor in the United States. Last year, for example, investigators from the agency’s Wage and Hour Division found children as young as 6 working on blueberry farms in Michigan. Eight farms were fined about $36,000 for violating federal migrant-housing and child-labor laws.

Solis said inspections this year during the harvest in Michigan, New Jersey and North Carolina have yet to find child labor violations.

Labor Department: http://www.dol.gov/

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US Army doctor who claims Barack Obama is a Kenyan-born President will choose jail over Afghanistan

Birther US army doctor Lt Colonel Terrence Lakin after the court martial. He faces up to three and a half years in prison. Photograph: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images

A US army doctor faces up to three and a half years in jail after he was found guilty by a court martial yesterday of willfully missing a flight when deployed to Afghanistan because he doubts Barack Obama‘s right to be president. The trial of Lt Col Terrence Lakin was a rallying point for the “birther” movement, conspiracy theorists who believe Obama has fraudulently taken over the presidency and is not a “natural born citizen”. Lakin posted a video on YouTube saying he had no choice “but the distasteful one of inviting my own court martial”.

On Tuesday he pleaded guilty to one of the two charges – failing to follow an order to meet with a superior and failure to report for duty at Fort Campbell, Kentucky. He pleaded not guilty to the second count, relating to missing a flight to take him to the military base, but was convicted of that charge by the military jury.

Doubts about Obama’s legitimacy to be president have swirled around the further lunatic fringes of conservatism and the right-wing blogosphere since he became a serious contender for the White House in 2008. Prominent “birthers”, such as Orly Taitz, a California-based lawyer, claim that Obama was born in Kenya and that the birth certificate that Hawaiian officials possess showing that he was born in Honolulu on 4 August 1961 is a fake.

Lakin had hoped to turn his court martial into a trial over Obama’s legitimacy, but in September a military judge ruled that the president’s birth certificate was not an appropriate area for the court to consider.

At his hearing, Lakin told the jury that he had been “praying and soul searching. I believed there was a question that needs to be answered to ensure a valid chain of command. But I had asked every question, done everything else I could short of disobeying orders, without success.”

(http://www.guardian.co.uk)

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Any tingling sensation in legs while pregnant? It may come back, sorry

Restless Legs in Pregnancy Likely to Recur, Researchers Say
Among those who developed syndrome, many had later occurrences, study found

Women who experience restless legs syndrome (RLS) during pregnancy are at increased risk for having it again during future pregnancies or developing a chronic form of the condition later in life, researchers have found.

RLS causes unpleasant sensations in the legs. Symptoms are generally worse at night and tend to progress with age. Movement generally relieves symptoms.

Italian researchers recruited 74 women who had RLS during pregnancy and 133 who did not. Six-and-a-half years later, the women were interviewed about RLS symptoms, additional pregnancies, occurrences of other diseases and medication use.

Of the women who had RLS during pregnancy, 18 (24 percent) also had the disorder at the end of the study, compared to 10 (8 percent) of the women who did not have RLS during pregnancy, the investigators found.

About 60 percent of the women who had RLS during a first pregnancy had the disorder again in a future pregnancy, compared to 3 percent of the women who did not have RLS during a first pregnancy, according to the report published in the Dec. 7 issue of the journal Neurology.

"This is the first long-term study to look at a possible connection between restless legs syndrome in pregnancy and repeat occurrences in later years or future pregnancies," study author Dr. Mauro Manconi, of Vita-Salute University in Milan, said in an American Academy of Neurology news release.

"Most of the time, when a woman experiences RLS in pregnancy, it disappears after the baby is born. However, our results show that having the condition during pregnancy is a significant risk factor for a future chronic form or the short-term form in other pregnancies down the road," Manconi added.

 

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All About Africa: More Information With less Digging

Key geographic and census information on Africa

 African countries and their capitals, geography and population statistics. Data is accurate as of September 2010.

African countries are classified according to geography, language or colonial history.

Name of region[87] and
territory, with
flag 
Area
(km²)
Population
(2009 est)
except where noted 
Density
(per km²)
Capital
Eastern Africa: 6,384,904 316,053,651 49.5  
Burundi 27,830 8,988,091[88] 322.9 Bujumbura
Comoros 2,170 752,438[88] 346.7 Moroni
Djibouti 23,000 516,055[88] 22.4 Djibouti
Eritrea 121,320 5,647,168[88] 46.5 Asmara
Ethiopia 1,127,127 85,237,338[88] 75.6 Addis Ababa
Kenya 582,650 39,002,772[88] 66.0 Nairobi
Madagascar 587,040 20,653,556[88] 35.1 Antananarivo
Malawi 118,480 14,268,711[88] 120.4 Lilongwe
Mauritius 2,040 1,284,264[88] 629.5 Port Louis
Mayotte (France) 374 223,765[88] 489.7 Mamoudzou
Mozambique 801,590 21,669,278[88] 27.0 Maputo
Réunion (France) 2,512 743,981(2002) 296.2 Saint-Denis
Rwanda 26,338 10,473,282[88] 397.6 Kigali
Seychelles 455 87,476[88] 192.2 Victoria
Somalia 637,657 9,832,017[88] 15.4 Mogadishu
Tanzania 945,087 41,048,532[88] 43.3 Dodoma
Uganda 236,040 32,369,558[88] 137.1 Kampala
Zambia 752,614 11,862,740[88] 15.7 Lusaka
Middle Africa: 6,613,253 121,585,754 18.4  
Angola 1,246,700 12,799,293[88] 10.3 Luanda
Cameroon 475,440 18,879,301[88] 39.7 Yaoundé
Central African Republic 622,984 4,511,488[88] 7.2 Bangui
Chad 1,284,000 10,329,208[88] 8.0 N’Djamena
Congo 342,000 4,012,809[88] 11.7 Brazzaville
Democratic Republic of the Congo 2,345,410 68,692,542[88] 29.2 Kinshasa
Equatorial Guinea 28,051 633,441[88] 22.6 Malabo
Gabon 267,667 1,514,993[88] 5.6 Libreville
São Tomé and Príncipe 1,001 212,679[88] 212.4 São Tomé
Northern Africa: 8,533,021 211,087,622 24.7  
Algeria 2,381,740 34,178,188[88] 14.3 Algiers
Egypt[89] 1,001,450 83,082,869[88] total, Asia 1.4m 82.9 Cairo
Libya 1,759,540 6,310,434[88] 3.6 Tripoli
Morocco 446,550 34,859,364[88] 78.0 Rabat
Sudan 2,505,810 41,087,825[88] 16.4 Khartoum
Tunisia 163,610 10,486,339[88] 64.1 Tunis
Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic[90] 266,000 405,210[88] 1.5 El Aaiún
Spanish and Portuguese territories in Northern Africa:
Canary Islands (Spain)[91] 7,492 1,694,477(2001) 226.2 Las Palmas de Gran Canaria,
Santa Cruz de Tenerife
Ceuta (Spain)[92] 20 71,505(2001) 3,575.2
Madeira Islands (Portugal)[93] 797 245,000(2001) 307.4 Funchal
Melilla (Spain)[94] 12 66,411(2001) 5,534.2
Southern Africa: 2,693,418 56,406,762 20.9  
Botswana 600,370 1,990,876[88] 3.3 Gaborone
Lesotho 30,355 2,130,819[88] 70.2 Maseru
Zimbabwe 390,580 11,392,629[88] 29.1 Harare
Namibia 825,418 2,108,665[88] 2.6 Windhoek
South Africa 1,219,912 49,052,489[88] 40.2 Bloemfontein, Cape Town, Pretoria[95]
Swaziland 17,363 1,123,913[88] 64.7 Mbabane
Western Africa: 6,144,013 296,186,492 48.2  
Benin 112,620 8,791,832[88] 78.0 Porto-Novo
Burkina Faso 274,200 15,746,232[88] 57.4 Ouagadougou
Cape Verde 4,033 429,474[88] 107.3 Praia
Côte d’Ivoire 322,460 20,617,068[88] 63.9 Abidjan,[96] Yamoussoukro
Gambia 11,300 1,782,893[88] 157.7 Banjul
Ghana 239,460 23,832,495[88] 99.5 Accra
Guinea 245,857 10,057,975[88] 40.9 Conakry
Guinea-Bissau 36,120 1,533,964[88] 42.5 Bissau
Liberia 111,370 3,441,790[88] 30.9 Monrovia
Mali 1,240,000 12,666,987[88] 10.2 Bamako
Mauritania 1,030,700 3,129,486[88] 3.0 Nouakchott
Niger 1,267,000 15,306,252[88] 12.1 Niamey
Nigeria 923,768 158,259,000[88] 161.5 Abuja
Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha (UK) 410 7,637[88] 14.4 Jamestown
Senegal 196,190 13,711,597[88] 69.9 Dakar
Sierra Leone 71,740 6,440,053[88] 89.9 Freetown
Togo 56,785 6,019,877[88] 106.0 Lomé
Africa Total 30,368,609 1,001,320,281 33.0  

 

 

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