Could Obama be a 2 time winner of the Nobel Peace Prize?

I doubt he'll win it again, but really, I wouldn't care if they gave it to him every year from now on. At this point, it's about as prestigious as winning Best New Starlet at the AVN Awards.

We should rename the nobel prize, it should be called, " The socialist in Chief prize."
 
It will be awarded the first week of October, any thoughts on who should get it?

I'd bet good money that Abbas is in the front running. The Nobel Peace Prize folks are very pro-Palestine, and giving him the prize would strengthen Abbas bid for Palestinian membership in the UN.
 
Think about it - just the top 25% of students in China outnumber the entire student body in North America...
:eusa_eh:
Asian scientists to topple US run of Nobels: analysts
Mon, Oct 03, 2011 - END OF AN ERA?: During the past decade, nearly half of the science winners and 75% of the economics winners were based in the US, but that trend could change this week
US scientists will again sweep the majority of Nobel prizes at this week’s award announcements in Sweden, analysts have predicted. However, they have also said this dominance might soon come to end. David Pendlebury, a citation analyst who has correctly predicted 10 Nobel winners since 2002, believes that the countries of the east, particularly China, will soon start to rule the awards for science’s greatest prize. “In the first half of the 20th century, the UK, Germany, and France dominated the sciences. The US emerged as the world leader after World War II. Now, I believe we will begin to see as many Nobel Prize winners from Asia as we do from the US and Europe.” Pendlebury, who works for Thomson Reuters, was speaking on the eve of the announcement of this year’s awards.

The prize for medicine will be revealed today; physics tomorrow and chemistry on Wednesday. The peace prize will be announced on Friday; economics next Monday; and literature later this month. A maximum of three individuals will be allowed to share a Nobel, with each prize being worth about £1 million (US$1.5 million). During the past 10 years, 31 out of the 76 individuals who won science Nobels were US-based, while 16 out of the 21 economics winners were from the US. By contrast, the UK — a nation with a fair Nobel reputation — won eight physiology prizes, one for physics and one for economics. However, these overall figures are open to wide interpretation. Many winners hold joint nationalities and are often claimed by both their country of origin and their country of affiliation.

Nevertheless, the figures do give a general indication of the gulf that separates the US from the rest of the world, one that is likely to continue this year, Pendlebury said. He has tipped a number of US teams as possible winners, including Robert Langer and Joseph Vacanti, both based in Boston, for their work on tissue engineering; Sajeev John (Toronto, Canada) and Eli Yablonovitch (Berkeley, California) for work on photonics; and Allen Bard (Austin, Texas) for his work on scanning electrochemical microscopy. However, Pendlebury cautioned against betting on his predictions. “If you only consider the top 0.1 percent of the most cited scientists in the world, that includes more than 1,000 researchers,” Pendlebury said. “You can narrow it down, but it gets harder and harder to differentiate their contributions. In the end, it rests with the individual preferences of Nobel committee members. Nobels are currently dominated by US scientists. However, US investment in the physical sciences is no longer as robust as its investment in biological and medical sciences, so I think in the next decade or so we will begin to see as many more Nobel Prize winners from Asia.”

As to his own hopes for this week’s prizes, Pendlebury admitted to a couple of favorites. One is Sir Alec Jeffreys, the Leicester University biochemist who, in 1984, developed the techniques of DNA fingerprinting and profiling that have transformed forensic science. “Nobels are usually given for theoretical work. However, prizes have been given for applied work, such as fiber optics, and I would really like to see Jeffreys rewarded for a discovery that has had an enormous impact on society,” Pendlebury said.

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