Wednesday, April 30, 2014

U.S. Department of State

from dept of state


Shared publicly  -  2:17 PM
 
 
 
Secretary Kerry writes about the importance of #NetFreedom  in his latest DipNote blog.

"Since the printing press, no technology has had a greater capacity than the Internet for individual empowerment, economic development, and human expression.

How telling then that, while countries around the world are devoting precious resources to expanding their citizens’ access to the Internet, Russia is doing the opposite.

Just yesterday, Russia’s Parliament passed a package of new restrictions on blogging and the Internet, a potent legislative cocktail of regression and repression.

It is part of a pattern. Russian-backed militias operating in Ukraine have been detaining legitimate journalists and knocking down television towers to block the truth from getting out. While the world celebrated the Internet’s potential for positive change at NETmundial, Russia isolated itself by objecting to the principles and ideals of Internet freedom."


Read more: http://goo.gl/1eaaKz


Nets Devote 146 Minutes to Racist NBA Owner, Skimp on Bad News for Obama

from newsbusters.org


By Scott Whitlock | April 30, 2014 | 12:35



When network journalists decide a story is important, they make sure it dominates the airwaves. Over the course of three and a half days, ABC, CBS and NBC vigorously investigated a racist rant by Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling, offering 146 minutes and 39 seconds of coverage since Saturday night. CBS devoted the most, a whopping 52 minutes and 13 seconds. 
NBC came in second with 48 minutes and 36 seconds. ABC was a close third with 45 minutes and 40 seconds. In contrast, important stories over the same time period that cast Barack Obama (or Democrats in general) in a bad light were buried by the network evening and morning shows.  For instance, new White House e-mails released on Tuesday show that the administration played a direct role in creating misleading talking points on the Benghazi scandal. Only CBS This Morning covered the story -- and for a mere two minutes and 50 seconds. NBC and ABC skipped it. 
In contrast to the almost 46 minutes of time ABC spent on Sterling, the network allowed a scant 18 seconds on Tuesday to its own poll finding Obama "facing the worst poll numbers of his presidency." 
More bad poll numbers for the President warranted a tiny 46 seconds on Wednesday's Today
CBS on Tuesday morning offered a mere 30 secondsto a controversial comment by Secretary of State John Kerry that Israel would become an "apartheid state" if it did not accept a two state solution with Palestine. 
This pales in comparison to the 52 minutes CBS gave to Sterling and his hateful remarks. Additionally, only CBS covered the Kerry comments at all. NBC and ABC avoided it. 
Democratic Congressman Bennie Thompson's smear over the weekend that Clarence Thomas is an "Uncle Tom" and Mitch McConnell is a "racist" went unreported by the networks. 
Obviously, a bigoted rant from an NBA owner is news. Sterling's racism shouldn't be minimized or ignored. But the above examples are important stories impacting American politics and the nation. If only ABC, NBC and CBS were as interested in investigating bad news for Democrats as they are for a basketball owner, the public might be better informed. 
[Thanks to MRC analyst Jeffrey Meyer for his assistance.]







Tuesday, April 29, 2014

After Sterling Ban, Clippers Coach Says Healing Process Begins

from abc


PHOTO: NBA Commissioner Adam Silver reads a statement during a news conference, in New York, April 29, 2014. Right, Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling, Dec. 19, 2010.
AUTO START: ON OFF
Los Angeles Clippers Coach Doc Rivers said tonight that the NBA's decision to ban owner Donald Sterling for life and fine him $2.5 million after he was recorded making racist comments about African-Americans can "begin the healing process" for the team, the league and the country.
"These last three or four days have been very difficult for everybody, no matter what your race," Rivers told reports before the game, set to tip off at 10:45 ET. "We can move forward. We have to. Yes, I do think [the NBA commissioner] made the right decision."
NBA Commissioner Adam Silver announced earler today at news conference in New York: "Effective immediately, I am banning Mr. Sterling for life from any association with the Clippers organization or the NBA."
Silver also said he would immediately recommend to the NBA Board of Governors that they force a sale of the Clippers and that he would do "everything in [his] power to ensure that happens."
NBA players and officials -- including Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Steve Nash, and Players Association president Kevin Johnson -- applauded the decision from Los Angeles.
NBA Players Association Vice President Roger Mason said that players across the league had made it clear they were willing to boycott the playoffs if the NBA didn't take swift, decisive action against Sterling.
Sterling, 80, has owned the team since 1981.
Sterling's lawyer, Robert Platt, declined comment when asked by ESPN whether Sterling would dispute or respond to the NBA's decision.
Rivers said he hasn't thought about whether to leave the team in the wake of the controversy.
"You want to work with people who share your values or respect them," he said. Rivers said he had never heard Sterling make racial remarks in his presence. "You would like to change him, you'd like to change anyone's mind who feels that way."
He said he is confident Sterling will be forced to sell the team, but said that in the meantime he is sympathetic with the players' ambivalence about wearing jerseys with Clippers name.
The Clippers were blown out by the Golden State Warriors in the first game after the tape of Sterling's racist rant was released.
The players were in a team meeting reviewing tape of the game when Silver made his announcement. Rivers said that when he told the team the commissioner's decision, there was total silence.
"They were just happy that it was a resolution and it's over, at least the start of it to be," he said.
The money from the $2.5 million fine -- the maximum amount allowed by league rules -- will be donated to anti-discrimination groups, Silver said.
"As part of the lifetime ban, Mr. Sterling may not attend any NBA games or practices, be present at any Clippers office or facility, or participate in any business or player personnel decisions involving the team. He will also be barred from attending NBA Board of Governors meetings and participating in any other league activity," said Silver.
PHOTO: Team owner Donald Sterling of the Los Angeles Clippers and V. Stiviano watch the San Antonio Spurs play  on May 19, 2013 in San Antonio, Texas.
Ronald Martinez/Getty Images
PHOTO: Team owner Donald Sterling of the Los Angeles Clippers and V. Stiviano watch the San Antonio Spurs play on May 19, 2013 in San Antonio, Texas.
The decision comes just days of public outrage directed at Sterling after an audio recording surfaced over the weekend that allegedly contained his voice saying racist comments to his then-girlfriend Vanessa Stiviano.
The tape recorded a man's voice, which the NBA said today is that of Sterling, telling Stiviano not to post pictures of herself with black men to Instagram or bring black men to Clippers games. One of the men mentioned is Hall of Famer Magic Johnson.
"The views expressed by Mr. Sterling are deeply offensive and harmful. That they came from an NBA owner only heightens the damage and my personal outrage," said Silver. "Sentiments of this kind are contrary to principles of inclusion and respect that inform our diverse, multicultural and multi-ethnic league."
Silver mentioned the league's role as a pioneer in diversity and acknowledged famous black players including Johnson.
When asked about past allegations of racial discrimination by Sterling, including two prior lawsuits, Silver said that the NBA was acting now because they had concrete evidence.
Sterling settled a lawsuit brought by the Justice Department in 2009 for housing discrimination; in 2011, Sterling won a lawsuit brought by former Clippers general manager Elgin Baylor over harassment and discrimination claims.
"Those are the only cases brought to our attention," Silver said. "When that [Baylor] litigation was brought it was watched closely by the league office. It concerned us greatly and we followed the litigation closely, but ultimately Elgin Baylor did not prevail in that litigation."
Silver said that he had been in discussions with Kevin Johnson, head of the National Basketball Players Association, and that the players would be supportive of the punishment.

JUST IN: NBA Fines, Indefinitely Suspends Clippers Owner

from nbc4la



NBA Commissioner Adam Silver promised swift action in what has been called a "defining moment" for the league




The NBA has fined and indefinitely suspended Clippers owner Donald Sterling amid its investigation into recorded comments allegedly made by Sterling, according to NBC News.
Sterling was fined $5 million, according to NBC News. The report comes before NBA Commissioner Adam Silver's scheduled press conference to discuss the league's investigation of racist comments allegedly made by Los Angeles Clippers owner Donald Sterling.
The 11 a.m. PT news conference comes just hours before the Clippers are scheduled to play their first home game since the comments — part of a recorded conversation with a female companion posted on TMZ and Deadspin — came to light. NBC News has not been able to authenticate the audio tapes posted on TMZSports.com or the extended clips posted by Deadspin.
Silver, who has been on the job since Feb. 1, faces what has been called a "defining moment" for the NBA. He has said the league will "move extraordinarily quickly in our investigation," which has been conducted amid on- and off-court protests, backlash from Clippers sponsors and calls for action from current and former NBA stars. More protests are expected Tuesday afternoon at Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles before the Game 5 playoff game between the Clippers and Golden State Warriors.
The NBA has not provided details regarding Silver's announcement, but the commissioner said over the weekend that he has broad authority regarding team ownership issues. Whether those powers extend to relieving Sterling — the 80-year-old owner bought the Clippers in 1981 — of team ownership remain unclear. Ownership revocation would likely lead to a legal battle.
Sacramento Mayor and special adviser to the National Basketball Player's Association Kevin Johnson said Monday that players are calling for the most "severe sanction possible."
Johnson, who called the decision a "defining moment" for the NBA, was asked during the "Today" interview whether the league can strip Sterling of his team ownership.
"I think it's a good question," Johnson said. "From the players' standpoint, whatever the maximum that's allowable is what we want the commissioner to impose.
"It's very clear that all of our players in the league want to explore the option," he added. "What player exactly would want to play for this owner?"
The penalty handed down by the league could involve a suspension, which would bar Sterling from attending games or team functions. Sterling did not attend Game 4 of the playoff series with Golden State in Oakland.
Sterling, worth a reported $1.9 billion, also could face a substantial fine.
The NBA constitution is not public, though it is understood the commissioner's powers are broad when it comes to dealing with matters deemed "prejudicial or detrimental to the best interests of basketball."
The National NAACP requested Tuesday a meeting with Silver to discuss the investigation. Roslyn M. Brock, the chair of the NAACP National Board of Directors, said the National NAACP wants to talk to Silver about what it calls, "the influence and impact of racism in the National Basketball Association."
The request comes a day after the organization's Los Angeles chapter announced Sterling would not be receiving a lifetime achievement honor he was slated to accept at an awards event next month.
V. Stiviano, the woman identified by her attorney as the female heard on the recording at the center ofthe investigation, told NBC4 from behind a reflective visor outside her home Monday that she has no comment. The man heard in the recording can be heard criticizing the woman identified as Stiviano for posting online about bringing black friends to games. The man is also heard chastising the woman for posting a photo on Instagram with Lakers great and Dodgers co-owner Magic Johnson.
Stiviano's attorney said she did not leak the recording to the media.
Johnson said Monday that he is disappointed, hurt and outraged by the comments.
"First, my name being associated, he singled me out personally," Johnson said. "Then he singled out African-Americans. Again, I'm always gonna fight for myself as well as my people."
Andy Roeser, the Clippers' president, released the following statement:  "Mr. Sterling is emphatic that what is reflected on that recording is not consistent with, nor does it reflect his views, beliefs or feelings. It is the antithesis of who he is, what he believes and how he has lived his life."
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Monday, April 28, 2014

Donald Sterling scandal merits an over-the-top reaction

from latimes



April 28, 20142:27 p.m.

What would be a suitable punishment for the Clippers owner? A fine or suspension wouldn't be enough. How about letting all his players become free agents?


Donald Sterling


The opinion that Donald Sterling can no longer be an owner is incorrect. He would make an excellent plantation owner.
What a story. Just when you think you have seen it all …
The late Bill Thomas, as fine an editor as the Los Angeles Times ever had, preached a doctrine of reacting quickly to major news stories, but also finding a quiet place amid the uproar to really digest it. His point was that news-media noise often is more for the sake of other news media than a real measure of the story.

The noise these days, of course, is a brass band compared with the flutes and violins of yesteryear. Journalism is drowning under the volume of reactive rants. The old saying that whoever dies with the most toys wins has now been replaced by whoever shouts the loudest.
That being said, every bit of media noise and public anger — every statement of dismay and distrust made by anyone with a keyboard or a microphone, every written and broadcast rant — is justified in this one.
You want to take Sterling by the lapel and scream at him: "What were you thinking?" But of course, he wasn't. Nor would you even want to hear more of his thoughts, because what has come out is probably only the tip of the iceberg.
This wasn't Calvin Griffith in Waseca, Minn., in 1978, saying he was happy to have his Twins there because there were more white people in the state. This wasn't Jimmy "The Greek" Snyder in 1988, talking about black athletes being better because they were bred for it from the days of slavery. This wasn't Al Campanis in 1987, wrestling with "lack of necessities."
Assuming these recordings are authentic, this was a full-blown, spill-your-guts, this-is-really-who-I-am-and-how-I-think expose. Campanis said that blacks had no buoyancy and couldn't swim. That was stupid and racist, but if you knew Campanis, also more misguided than heartfelt.
Sterling, in essence, is purported to have said that blacks were not on the same level of humanity as whites. That is horrifying.
If the title hasn't already been taken, you could write a book about this and call it the Perfect Storm.
A man, rich like a Rockefeller, has a wife of 50 years and a parade of female acquaintances less than half his age. One of the young women, one who may have had an ax to grind and a plan in mind, engages Sterling in a conversation that gets recorded. The recording somehow gets to TMZ, which breaks the story.
Whether Sterling was taped legally isn't clear, but in this case score one for the new journalism of getting the story out there first and thinking about it later.
The Perfect Storm continues when the recording becomes public just as Sterling's Clippers are taking a 2-1 series lead into Game 4 of an NBA playoff series with a hard-to-beat Golden State Warriors team.
Then there is the perfect timing. The news breaks on Sterling's 80th birthday. Happy birthday, Donald.
Before Game 4, the Clippers make some team gestures of protest, but have had enough heart taken out of them to lack the competitive fire needed at this level and time of year. They are routed by the Warriors.
It may mark the first time that a sports owner has thrown his entire team under the bus during the most important time in its history.
This affects more than the players. Andy Roeser, the Clippers team president, releases a feeble statement expressing uncertainty that it was Sterling on the tape, thereby allowing himself to be turned into a pathetic lackey.
This brings us to Tuesday night, Game 5 of the playoffs series. At Staples Center. A packed house. People paying lots of money to watch a team they love, owned by a man they now hate.
Could this be any stranger? Could there be any bigger challenge to focusing on basketball? Clippers star Chris Paul was asked about coming home Tuesday night and all that might bring. He said, "I can't say I won't be a little nervous."
Sterling has burned down his own house.
Another thing the aforementioned Bill Thomas taught was that, while everybody else is perseverating on what is now, the smart thing is to look at what is next.
One possibility is that Sterling, who loaned Jerry Buss part of the money he needed to buy the Lakers years ago, might be bailing out the Lakers once again.
New NBA Commissioner Adam Silver has the sword in his hand. There has been talk of banning Sterling from the rest of the playoffs this year. That's not enough, nor might there be many games left anyway.
There has been talk of suspending him for a year. Baseball tried that with former Cincinnati Reds owner Marge Schott after she made a series of racist remarks. It didn't work. A couple of years later, she stated her support of Adolf Hitler and was suspended for life.
There has been talk of a $1-million fine. Chump change.
Instead, how about allowing those Clippers players who no longer want to play for Sterling to have their contracts voided and become free agents? When Coach Doc Rivers said that he couldn't imagine what Sterling could say to him that would make him want to coach the Clippers again next season, that was a hint that couldn't be lost on the NBA.
How does a starting team that includes Kobe, CP3 and Blake Griffin sound to Lakers fans? Jim Buss goes from goat to hero.
Unfair to Clippers fans? Yes. Suitable punishment for Sterling? Yes.
Too crazy to actually happen? Not after what happened the last few days.


http://www.latimes.com/sports/la-sp-clippers-sterling-dwyre-20140429,0,5466043.column#ixzz30EIO3vfa



Friday, April 25, 2014

The Myth of American Democracy – Money Talks and Those Without Money Have No Voice

from globalresearch.ca


By Margaret Kimberley   Global Research, April 24, 2014

bankster-chess


A new study confirms the obvious: the will of the people carries no weight in the United States. Within the nation’s borders democracy is everywhere proclaimed but nowhere to be found. These truths we hold to be self-evident: “ordinary citizens have virtually no influence over what their government does in the United States.”
Too many Americans love to boast that the United States is a democracy. That idea is accepted uncritically and celebrated as proof of this country’s superiority. Every public activity and event is an opportunity for the false narrative to be repeated and indulged. Events as disparate as elections, holiday celebrations, advertisements, school commencements and religious worship are all used to propagandize and create false belief about the degree of power the average citizen has vis a vis their government.
Of course all evidence shows that this narrative is and always was a lie. Dictionaries define democracy as government representing the citizens through elected representatives, or as majority rule, or a society which provides equal rights to all. The history of this country has rarely lived up to any of those descriptions but in the recent past the notion that this country is a democracy has become openly farcical. We have nothing but meaningless trappings and any power exercised by the people is sadly in short supply.
This state of affairs has been obvious to anyone who has been paying close attention. Americans not only don’t get what they want from the political system, they actually get the opposite of what they want. The pace of the oligarchic state has quickened lately but the dynamic has been evident for quite some time.
Even elite academia is taking notice and has given official imprimatur to a conversation that had been ignored. Professors Martin Gilens of Princeton University and Benjamin Page of Northwestern University are the authors of the study “Testing Theories of American Politics: Elites, Interest Groups, and Average Citizens.” While their work does not as news stories suggest use the word oligarchy, the authors are quite clear about their findings. Professor Gilens gave this brief summary of their conclusions:
“I’d say that contrary to what decades of political science research might lead you to believe, ordinary citizens have virtually no influence over what their government does in the United States [italics mine]. And economic elites and interest groups, especially those representing business, have a substantial degree of influence. Government policy-making over the last few decades reflects the preferences of those groups – of economic elites and of organized interests.”
While this study has however briefly changed public discourse, it is important to note that the disregard of popular will is obvious for all to see. If this were not true, the minimum wage would be higher, there would be no cuts to entitlement programs, and Americans would have a single payer health care system. There would be no NAFTA or TPP free trade agreements which force a race to the bottom for workers, destroy entire eco-systems and violate national and popular sovereignty. If this country were truly democratic, the city of Detroit would not have filed for bankruptcy for the simple reason that voters in Detroit and in the state of Michigan voted to repeal the emergency manager law which brought bankruptcy into being.
Americans don’t want the increasingly frequent interventions abroad forced upon by them by president after president yet that is what they get. We want to address the problems created by human made climate change. We don’t want hydraulic fracturing, or the pollution or earthquakes that come with it, but that is what we have. We don’t want rich people to control the political process but the Supreme Court has said time and again that money equals speech and those decisions prove the point of the study. Simply put, money talks and those without money have no voice.
If that were not the case, American workers would not be poorer than their counterparts in the rest of the world. The so-called middle class workers in this country had the distinction of being better off than their peers around the world. That is no longer the case with stagnating wages and job loss and a country that does not practice income distribution that would keep people out of poverty. In a democratic country, Walmart and its low wages would not be the largest employer. The manufacturing that once dominated the economic landscape would still employ the bulk of the work force with its higher wages and other benefits that provide economic security.
In a democracy, the financial services industry that created the worldwide economic meltdown would not have been bailed out. Workers would be bailed out. Corporations wouldn’t get tax breaks and other government subsidies. Workers would get them. And if the average person had any say in the matter, the big time banksters would now be behind bars.
The myth of American democracy is just one of many that are cherished out of ignorance and suspension of disbelief but that is not a reason to continue the confusion and self-delusion. The only time we get any taste of democracy is when we proclaim that we don’t have it but assert plainly and loudly that we intend to get it.
The phony narrative wears thin as the quality of life diminishes. The United States of America is not a democratic nation if the only right that citizens have is to go to a polling place every few years. It is time to stop fetishizing what clearly does not work for the majority of people and start talking about something new. After all, the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over but expecting a different result. The only result we have to show is rule by the elites and if that is acceptable then the people have gone truly insane.
Margaret Kimberley‘s Freedom Rider column appears weekly in BAR, and is widely reprinted elsewhere. She maintains a frequently updated blog as well as athttp://freedomrider.blogspot.com. Ms. Kimberley lives in New York City, and can be reached via e-Mail at Margaret.Kimberley(at)BlackAgendaReport.com.

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Dr. Jane Goodall on Star ‘Bears’ and the Mysticism of Trees (Video)

from wsj

2:05 pm ET
Apr 16, 2014








Dr. Jane Goodall is known for her pioneering research with chimpanzees, but in two of her latest projects, the primatologist also shows love for bears, wolves and trees.
While on the Alaskan set for the Disneynature film “Bears,” which will be released Friday, Goodall (a Disneynature ambassador) said “getting to meet the star of the show, the bear mother Sky and her two little cubs, the best moment of all was when she just walked past very calmly, really, really close.”
“I think bears and wolves both are symbols of North America,” she said.
Goodall also spoke about her respect for plants and trees — the subject of her book“Seeds of Hope.”
“I think being out in the forest as I was, alone for month after month after month, you get a very strong feeling for the interconnectedness of all life,” she said. “You really feel at one with nature. The trees almost have a beingness, you know, there are individual trees.”


Wednesday, April 23, 2014

UPDATE 4-U.S. regulators to propose new net neutrality rules in May

from reuters


Wed Apr 23, 2014 8:22pm EDT
(Reuters) - U.S. regulators are expected to vote on May 15 on a new set of so-called "net neutrality" rules aimed at making certain that broadband providers do not slow down or block consumers' access to legal Internet content.
The rules from the Federal Communications Commission, which released its framework in February, are expected to ensure network operators disclose how they manage Internet traffic and do not block any content on the Web.
The proposed rules are also expected to allow Internet providers to negotiate agreements with content providers on delivery of traffic to users as long as the deals they strike are "commercially reasonable," according to an FCC spokesman.
FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler has also said he planned to review the practices adopted by Internet providers on a case-by-case basis.
The rules will propose "that broadband providers would be required to offer a baseline level of service to their subscribers, along with the ability to enter into individual negotiations with content providers," an FCC spokesman said.
Exactly what the baseline level of service and commercially reasonable standard are going to be or how the FCC would resolve disputes will be established after the FCC collects public comment on the proposed rules, according to the spokesman.
Wheeler on Wednesday said he plans to share his proposed rules with other commissioners on Thursday, who may seek changes before the agency votes on May 15 to formally propose the rules and seek public comment.
Consumer advocates criticized the FCC potentially allowing "commercially reasonable" negotiations with content providers, concerned that it could lead to deals that would offer a "fast lane" to content providers who pay up for better traffic delivery to the user.
"This standard allows ISPs (Internet service providers) to impose a new price of entry for innovation on the Internet," Michael Weinberg, vice president at public interest group Public Knowledge, said in a statement.
Virtually all large Internet service providers, such as Verizon Communications Inc and Time Warner Cable Inc , have pledged to not restrict consumers' access to Web content whether the FCC writes new rules or not.
But critics have raised concerns that without a formal rule, the voluntary pledges could be pulled back over time and leave the door open for deals that would give unequal treatment to websites or services.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit in January for the second time struck down the FCC's previous version of the open Internet order, which prohibited discrimination against Web traffic more broadly.
The court said the FCC had improperly treated Internet service providers as regulated public utilities providing telecommunications services, like telephone companies, while they were actually classified as information service providers.
Consumer advocates have called on the FCC to reclassify Internet providers as more heavily regulated telecommunications services, an idea that has faced tremendous pushback from the broadband industry and Republican lawmakers who have urged the FCC to tread lightly.
The new effort to rewrite the Open Internet rules rely on other legal standards, affirmed by the court's ruling that the FCC did have authority to regulate broadband.
The new rules, in line with the FCC's approach to net neutrality in the past, would only regulate deals between businesses on connections in the last leg of the network that reaches the consumer.
Deals on connections that happen before they reach the user, known as interconnection agreements, are outside of their scope.
That issue was recently brought into the spotlight by a tussle between video streaming service Netflix Inc and cable company Comcast Corp.
Comcast, through conditions placed on its 2011 merger with NBC Universal, is the only Internet provider still bound by the earlier FCC net neutrality rules through 2018.

(Reporting by Alina Selyukh; Editing by Ros Krasny, Jonathan Oatis, Lisa Shumaker andCynthia Osterman)




Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Asteroids colliding with Earth cause atomic-scale blasts

from telegraph.co.uk

6:50AM BST 23 Apr 2014










Asteroids hurtling towards the planet threatening to wipe out entire cities are normally the reserve of Hollywood blockbusters like Armageddon.
But now scientists have found that there could be some truth to the hysteria, as minor planets hitting the Earth caused 26 nuclear-scale explosions between 2000 and 2013.
Some were more powerful - in one case, dozens of times stronger - than the 15-kiloton atom bomb blast that destroyed Hiroshima in 1945, according impacts were recorded by the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty Organisation.

The asteroids, which were not detected or tracked in advance by any space or Earth observatory, were big enough to wipe out entire cities, said former astronaut Ed Lu.
Most occurred too high in the atmosphere to cause any serious damage on the ground, but the evidence is said to be a sobering reminder of how vulnerable the Earth is.
Presenting the findings from the global network of sensors which listening for nuclear detonations at the Museum of Flight in Seattle, US, Dr Lu said: “While most large asteroids with the potential to destroy an entire country or continent have been detected, less than 10,000 of the more than a million dangerous asteroids with the potential to destroy an entire major metropolitan area have been found by all existing space or terrestrially-operated observatories."
The most dramatic asteroid impact in recent times was in Tunguska, Siberia, in 1908 when as asteroid exploded with the force of up to 15,000 tons of TNT, flattening an area of remote forest covering 770 square miles.
In 2013, a 600 kiloton meteor explosion above the Russian town of Chelyabinsk caused extensive damage to property.
Asteroid impacts greater than 20 kilotons occurred in South Sulawesi, Indonesia, in 2009, the Southern Ocean in 2004, and the Mediterranean Sea in 2002.