Thursday, February 24, 2011

Obama's Mystery Links to Qaddafi Uncovered - Rev. Wright - Fox Nation

JERUSALEM - As pressure mounts on the White House to intervene to stop Moammar Gadhafi's bloody crackdown in Libya, many commentators have been wondering why Barack Obama has been cautious in his criticism of the dictator after the U.S. president so fervently supported the removal from office of U.S. ally Hosni Mubarak of Egypt. But Gadhafi has been tied to Rev. Jeremiah Wright, Obama's spiritual adviser for more than 23 years. The Libyan dictator also has financed and strongly supported the Nation of Islam and its leader, Louis Farrakhan. Obama has ties to Farrakhan and his controversial group... Jeremiah Wright, former pastor of Obama's longtime Chicago church, went with Farrakhan to visit Gadhafi in 1984.


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Wednesday, February 23, 2011

American Legion Children's Home to stay open under new ownership | Tulsa World

American Legion Children's Home to stay open under new ownership | Tulsa World

Instead of closing a children's home in Ponca City and uprooting dozens of foster children, the American Legion will transfer its ownership, officials confirmed Monday. The American Legion had planned to close the home last year, until the state Attorney General's office won a court injunction to keep the facility open temporarily. Now the attorney general and the American Legion have reached a permanent arrangement that will save the home, but under new management.

Details are still being worked out, officials said, but the American Legion has agreed to transfer the home and all of its assets to a new organization created specifically to operate the home. "It's a total victory," said Diane Beekman, a volunteer at the facility who helped set up a Save the Children's Home group. "We were always optimistic that it would work out somehow, we just didn't know how," she said. Established in 1928 for children of World War I veterans, the home now houses 44 foster children. The Oklahoma Legion board voted last fall to close the home, saying state budget cuts were threatening to make the facility a financial burden on the American Legion.

Supporters countered that the home did its own fundraising and received little if any support from the state Legion chapter. In a letter last year asking the attorney general to intervene, Beekman suggested that the American Legion wanted to divert the home's assets toward other causes.


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PressTV - 'Iran, Ecuador revolutionary nations'

PressTV - 'Iran, Ecuador revolutionary nations'

He said the days of the current world order are numbered, and that Iran and Ecuador play a key role in creating a new world order. "Those who ruled the world for 300 years should not be allowed to impose themselves on nations again with a new façade," said the president. The Ecuadorian parliament speaker, for his turn, said the two countries are on the same front when it comes to fighting imperialism and reclaiming their rights, and that Tehran and Quito follow common goals in the international arena.


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PressTV - Iran censures brutality of 4 Arab states

PressTV - Iran censures brutality of 4 Arab states

Members of Iran's Parliament (Majlis) have condemned the recent violent crackdown on pro-democracy protesters by the governments of Libya, Yemen, Bahrain, and Morocco.


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Recent revolts vow declining US power

PressTV - Recent revolts vow declining US power

Senior Iranian lawmaker Alaeddin Boroujerdi has described recent regional developments as a sign of declining US power in the region and the world. The chairman of the Iran's Majlis (parliament) Committee on National Security and Foreign Policy said the deep and strategic developments in the region were in the interest of regional nations.

Boroujerdi made the remarks in a meeting with Ecuador's Parliament Speaker Fernando Cordero on Wednesday, Fars News Agency reported. Following the collapse of the regimes in Tunisia and Egypt, waves of pro-democracy protests are spreading across the Middle East.

At least 1,000 people were killed in Tripoli on Monday by airstrikes conducted by the Libyan military in a desperate effort meant to quell the popular uprising, according to some reports. The International Federation for Human Rights says as many as 400 others have also been killed since the onset of protests in the North African country on February 15.


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EU Parliament seeks Iran Majlis ties

PressTV - EU Parliament seeks Iran Majlis ties

Chair of the European Parliament's Iran delegation Barbara Lochbihler has called for the expansion of ties with Iran and cooperation with Iran's Parliament (Majlis). In a meeting with the Spokesman for the National Security and Foreign Policy Commission of Iran's Parliament (Majlis), Kazem Jalali, the European Parliament official called for the expansion of economic ties with the Islamic Republic as a "stable country in the region," IRNA reported on Tuesday.

Jalali, who is in Germany on a three-day visit, briefed the European officials on Iran's stance toward the recent revolutions in North African and Arab countries. Jalali also recommended that Iran's Parliament and the European Parliament exchange views on important issues such as the latest developments in Afghanistan, Iraq, North Africa, as well as on counter-narcotic strategies, energy security, terrorism, and regional security.

 Lochbihler, who is also the representative of Germany's Green Party in the European Parliament, welcomed the proposal. On Saturday, German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle met with his Iranian counterpart Ali Akbar Salehi in the Iranian capital city, Tehran, stressing the importance of promoting dialogue and cooperation with the Islamic Republic. The German minister also expressed his country's willingness to hold talks with Iran in the future, saying Berlin seeks ways to expand relations with Tehran on international issues.


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Wisconsin Budget Gap: Blame Politicians or Teachers' Unions? - TIME

Wisconsin Budget Gap: Blame Politicians or Teachers' Unions? - TIME

Unions support Tax increases

Budget Shortfall  

Conspiracy?
Share the Pain
Sick Teachers?
Bargaining Rights Poll

How beholden are Democrats to Public Sector Unions? 

Are Democratic elected officials working as hard for Taxpayers as they do for Public Sector Unions?

 Are Public Sector Unions working for Taxpayers, or just the opposite?

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Natural Debt as Budget Cuts Loom - TIME

Environmentalists Warn of Natural Debt as Budget Cuts Loom - TIME

  Ask any Republican — from the Speaker of the House to a local sheriff — what the biggest problem facing the country is today and you're sure to get the same answer: Debt. Conservatives believe a public debt of $14 trillion and growing is crippling the economy and condemning future generations to penury.

In Wisconsin, new Republican governor Scott Walker says that a $137 million deficit leaves him no choice but to force public unions in the state to accept drastic benefits reductions and curtailed bargaining rights — a stance that has brought tens of thousands of protesters to the streets of Madison. In Congress, the Republican-controlled House has passed a budget that would slash $60 billion in government spending, most of it from discretionary programs. "We're broke," Speaker John Boehner told Meet the Press last week. "It's time to get serious about how we're spending the nation's money."


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Tuesday, February 22, 2011

State Approves Detroit Schools' Cuts - WSJ.com

State Approves Detroit Schools' Cuts - WSJ.com

The state of Michigan approved a plan for Detroit to close about half of its public schools and increase the average size of high-school classrooms to 60 students over the next four years to eliminate a $327 million deficit. The plan was submitted in January by Robert Bobb, Detroit Public Schools' emergency financial manager, as a last-ditch scenario if the district couldn't find new revenue sources, which it hasn't so far.

Final approval came after Mike Flanagan, the state superintendent of public instruction, cleared Mr. Bobb's initial plan with some new requirements, including that the district not file for bankruptcy protection during Mr. Bobb's remaining months in office. The state approved the plan in a Feb. 8 letter, which the Detroit public-schools district released Monday.

Mr. Bobb said the deep cuts were necessary if the district hoped to be solvent again without additional state aid. But he said the strategy was ultimately ill-advised because it will likely drive even more students away, depriving the district of needed state funds, which Michigan apportions on the basis of enrollment. "This is the route we're forced to take under state law," Steven Wasko, Detroit Public Schools' assistant superintendent for communications, said Monday. "However we continue to look for longer-term plans so we can avoid this."

Mr. Bobb is now moving to shrink the district to 72 schools from 142, as enrollment is expected to decline to 58,570 students by 2014 from about 73,000 students today.

Mr. Bobb was appointed emergency financial manager for the district two years ago to help close what was then a $218 million deficit, and moved quickly to close schools and root out waste. But the deficit deepened during his tenure, weighed down by salary, pension and health-care obligations. The longtime municipal manager said that without the cuts and cost-savings measures he has made since 2009, the district would face a deficit of more than $500 million today. Meanwhile, many of his efforts to restructure the district's academics and finances were derailed by clashes with unions and with the elected school board, which recently won a court fight to control academics and select the next superintendent.

Anthony Adams, the chairman of the school board, didn't respond Monday to a request for comment. The school board has sought an infusion of funds from the state and an end to outside control of the district. Mr. Bobb has agreed to stay a few more months beyond his appointed term, through the end of June. A spokeswoman for Republican Gov. Rick Snyder said Monday that he was considering appointing another emergency manager to succeed

Mr. Bobb, which would keep the elected board of education largely sidelined on financial matters for the near future.

Organized labor is fighting back. The Detroit Federation of Teachers called for an emergency lobbying day Tuesday in Lansing, the state capital, to protest bills granting emergency financial managers broad power over cities and school districts in financial crisis. Under those bills, emergency managers could toss out union contracts, dissolve school boards and set wage and benefit levels without collective bargaining. Mr. Bobb is generally supportive of the bills, said Mr. Wasko, the assistant superintendent.

Calls to union officials weren't immediately returned Monday.


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Rising Gas Prices

Monday, February 21, 2011

Graham: Obama role in Wisconsin standoff has been 'inappropriate' - The Hill's Blog Briefing Room

Graham: Obama role in Wisconsin standoff has been 'inappropriate' - The Hill's Blog Briefing Room

"When the president talks about Wisconsin I think that really is inappropriate," he said. "The governor of Wisconsin is doing what he campaigned on ... there was an election on his proposals and he won." Obama said last week that the collective bargaining reform proposal "seems like more of an assault on unions." His campaign arm Organizing for America has also helped coordinate protests in Wisconsin. Graham said that Gov. Scott Walker (R) was open about his plans to reform collective bargaining while campaigning and now should be allowed to fulfill that mandate. "He didn't take anybody by surprise," he said. Senate Majority Whip Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), though, said that assuming the Wisconsin standoff was about budget austerity was like believeing that United Farm Workers leader Cesar Chavez was just trying to wrangle a few more pennies per pound on grapes.


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Major Reforms To Entitlements Can't Be Put Off - Investors.com

Major Reforms To Entitlements Can't Be Put Off - Investors.com: "Procrastination is rarely a cost-free strategy. That is true when it comes to fixing Social Security — as much as the Obama administration and, even more forcefully, its allies on the left may wish to believe otherwise.

Their 'what's the big rush?' message goes like this: The retirement program isn't really contributing to deficits in the short run.

Indeed, its finances are healthy enough so that it can continue paying all promised benefits for more than two decades, until 2037.

Even then, if absolutely nothing is done, Social Security would be able to pay about 75% of promised benefits.

So where's the fire? Here it is. Last year, for the first time in its history, Social Security paid out more in benefits than it received in payroll taxes.

The recession caused this shortfall: Seniors who lost their jobs chose to start collecting benefits earlier, while payroll tax collections fell because of high unemployment and lower wages.

As a general matter, it's true — although less than previously — that Social Security is not a cause of short-term deficits.

In fact, until last year, the surplus in the Social Security trust fund masked the true size of the current deficit. But the 2010 experience is a hint of things to come — soon.

By 2015, Social Security will be increasing the deficit every year, not obscuring it.

Still, that's not the real problem, or the strongest argument against thumb-twiddling. The reason is that making changes now will make it easier to protect the very people that the 'Social Security's not a problem' brigade say they care about.

Need To Act Now

The Social Security trustees make this point every year in their annual report about the system's finances: 'If action is taken sooner rather than later, more options will be available and more time will be available to phase in changes so that those affected have adequate time to prepare.'

The challenge isn't huge, but it is significant. As a useful paper by Charles Blahous and Robert Greenstein for the Pew Fiscal Analysis Initiative explains, when the trust funds run out, the gap between Social Security revenues and benefit payments will be 1.3% of the gross domestic product — about one-fifth of the projected deficit then.

Yes, Medicare and Medicaid present a bigger challenge, but the Social Security shortfall represents a significant slice of the deficit.

Unlike the health programs, whose solvency ultimately depends on the uncertain enterprise of slowing cost growth, the potential fixes to Social Security are both obvious and reliable.

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Life, Liberty, & the Pursuit of Happiness

Obama and Unions

US must be removed from Islamic world: Khamenei | The New Age Online

US must be removed from Islamic world: Khamenei | The New Age Online: "Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Sunday called on Muslims to 'remove' the US from the Islamic world.

'The main problem in the Muslim world is the presence of the United States. It is the biggest problem. We need to address that,' he told a gathering of Shiite and Sunni scholars in Tehran for an international conference on Islam.


'It is necessary to remove the US from the Islamic world,' the all-powerful cleric and Islamic republic's commander-in-chief said, adding that the country's arch-foe was currently weak.

Khamenei urged Muslims worldwide to preserve the 'people's movement in Egypt,' saying it was the duty of both the people and dignitaries of Arab nations and the entire Islamic community.

He reiterated that the Arab revolts were 'Islamic' and must be consolidated.

'The enemies try to say that the popular movements in Egypt, Tunisia and other nations are un-Islamic, but certainly these popular movements are Islamic and must be consolidated,' he said.

Khamenei also urged that 'the conspiracy of enemies to create differences between Sunnis and Shiites' be confronted.

On February 4, in his Friday prayer sermon, Khamenei called for an Islamic regime to be installed in Egypt, a week before that country's strongman Hosni Mubarak was ousted.

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Life, Liberty, & the Pursuit of Happiness

Muslim Cleric Plans White House Protest in Attempt to Spread Sharia Law in America - FoxNews.com

Muslim Cleric Plans White House Protest in Attempt to Spread Sharia Law in America - FoxNews.com: "A Muslim cleric who called Americans “the biggest criminals” during a recent interview has announced he will hold a protest outside the White House, according to the Daily Mail.

Anjem Choudary, who once said “the flag of Islam will fly over the White House,” says he will lead a demonstration rallying Muslims to establish Sharia law across the United States.

Choudary, 43, called Americans “the biggest criminals in the world today” during an interview with Fox News’ Sean Hannity this month.

Choudary, who is the former leader of the outlawed British-based group Islam4UK, says the March rally at the White House is being organized by the extremist group Islamic Thinkers Society, which is based in New York.

“The event is a rally, a call for the Sharia, a call for the Muslims to rise up and establish the Islamic state in America,” Choudary told London’s Daily Mail in an interview.

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Life, Liberty, & the Pursuit of Happiness

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Breitbart.tv » Doctors Continue to Fraudulently Hand Out ‘Sick Notes’ to Help AWOL Union Members Play Hooky

Breitbart.tv » Doctors Continue to Fraudulently Hand Out ‘Sick Notes’ to Help AWOL Union Members Play Hooky: "- Sent using Google Toolbar"






Life, Liberty, & the Pursuit of Happiness

Lost kids: When foster children reach adulthood | StarTribune.com

Lost kids: When foster children reach adulthood | StarTribune.com: "Teens stuck in foster care rarely forget the day they become adults.

For Jibe Young, it was the day he turned 18 and his foster parents said he had to move out -- but that his little brother could stay because the state was still paying for him. Destiny Helfrich shoved her foster mother on the day she was told to leave home -- and was arrested and jailed for two nights. Her next stop was a homeless shelter.



'If she's not getting paid, I guess she doesn't love me anymore,' said Helfrich, now 20. 'That's how I felt.'

Every year, 500 to 600 foster children in Minnesota reach adulthood without any parents -- despite the state's efforts to reunite them with their birth families or place them for adoption. Compared to other states, Minnesota has a high rate of children who, like Helfrich and Young, 'age out' of the system after three years or more.

The problem is gaining attention from state and federal authorities, because the consequences are severe. One-third of the youths who age out of foster care are homeless within four years, according to University of Chicago research, and nearly half of the young men spend time in jail.

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Life, Liberty, & the Pursuit of Happiness

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Neither US Party Serious About Cutting Deficit: Roubini - CNBC

Neither US Party Serious About Cutting Deficit: Roubini - CNBC

Neither US political party is willing to make the choices needed to bring down the crippling US budget deficits, economist Nouriel Roubini told CNBC.


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Opinion: In the name of James Madison - Roger Hodge - POLITICO.com

Opinion: In the name of James Madison - Roger Hodge - POLITICO.com

It is high time that American liberals rediscovered the Founding Fathers. This suggestion may come as a surprise, because for many on the left, Madison and the other Founders are an embarrassment. Appeals to their authority are often dismissed as reactionary or inherently conservative. The republican principles of Madison and his great ally Thomas Jefferson usually receive little more than condescension or caricature — as an obsolete agrarianism at best, pro-slavery apologetics at worst.


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Even Democrats are not pleased with Obama

Dems join GOP criticism of budget - TheHill.com

Democrats joined Republicans on Tuesday in criticizing President Obama's budget request for doing too little to bring down the national debt. Senate Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad (D-N.D.) faulted Obama for not taking on entitlement reform, and during testimony by Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Director Jack Lew, suggested the administration was not being serious enough about reducing the deficit.


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Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Gaddafi tells Palestinians: revolt against Israel

UPDATE 1-Gaddafi tells Palestinians: revolt against Israel | News by Country | Reuters

TRIPOLI, Feb 13 (Reuters) - Palestinian refugees should capitalise on the wave of popular revolts in the Middle East by massing peacefully on the borders of Israel until it gives in to their demands, Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi said on Sunday. Gaddafi is respected in many parts of the Arab world for his uncompromising criticism of Israel and Arab leaders who have dealings with the Jewish state, though some people in the region dismiss his initiatives as unrealistic.


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Monday, February 14, 2011

Obama is not providing any Leadership!

Obama unveils $3.73 trillion budget for 2012 - Yahoo! News

Obama's new budget projects that the deficit for the current year will surge to an all-time high of $1.65 trillion. That reflects a sizable tax-cut agreement reached with Republicans in December. For 2012, the administration sees the imbalance declining to $1.1 trillion, giving the country a record four straight years of $1 trillion-plus deficits.


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Sunday, February 13, 2011

Man charged with 3 counts of murder in Va. attacks - Yahoo! News

Man charged with 3 counts of murder in Va. attacks - Yahoo! News

MANASSAS, Va. – A Salvadoran man who was ordered deported nearly a decade ago but never left has been charged with three counts of first-degree murder in a series of shootings and a knife attack in a Virginia suburb of Washington, authorities said Friday. Jose Oswaldo Reyes Alfaro, an illegal immigrant, was charged in the pair of attacks blocks apart Thursday night that left three people dead and three others injured, Manassas Police Chief Doug Keen said.


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Meet Wyoming’s Anti-Shari’ah Crusader | Religion Dispatches

Meet Wyoming's Anti-Shari'ah Crusader | Religion Dispatches

In an interview, State Rep. Gerald Gay (R-Casper), sponsor of a resolution in the Wyoming legislature which would, if passed, amend the state's constitution to "forbid courts from using international law or sharia law when deciding cases," said his motivation was "I don't want our laws having origins in other places, foreign religions or foreign countries."

When I asked him whether he considered Islam to be a "foreign religion," Gay hedged: "It's not that it's a foreign religion," he said, "but we do believe very strongly in the separation of church and state which many, many Islamic believers do not believe that to be true. People who believe in shari'ah – shari'ah is church and state under one aegis." That, of course, is simply not true; as Haroon Moghul has written here and explained in this bloggingheadstv episode, shari'ah is a process of engaging with sacred texts, an ongoing conversation, not a set of concrete rules or laws that must be followed.


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Saturday, February 12, 2011

American Thinker: Top ten reasons why sharia is bad for all societies

American Thinker: Top ten reasons why sharia is bad for all societies

Generally, sharia restricts women's social mobility and rights, the more closely sharia is followed. For example, in conservative Saudi Arabia women are not allowed to drive cars. In Iran, the law oppresses women. For example, women's testimony counts half that of men, and far more women than men are stoned to death for adultery.


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Crisis Puts White House in Disarray - WSJ.com

Crisis Puts White House in Disarray - WSJ.com

WASHINGTON—The defiant tone taken by Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak—and widespread confusion about the meaning of his speech—had White House officials stumbling for their next step in a crisis that was spinning out of their control. 

 Egyptian officials said Mr. Mubarak gave the Obama administration much of what it wanted: the delegation of presidential powers to the vice president, Omar Suleiman. They said Mr. Mubarak had all but been rendered a figurehead leader, precisely the formulation set out by U.S. officials over the weekend. But Mr. Mubarak's language and refusal to yield to what he called the intervention of foreigners left protesters furious, the scene in Cairo precarious and the White House seemingly unable to influence events.

After a extended meeting with his national security team, President Barack Obama released the longest statement of the Egyptian crisis, making it clear the appearances of Messrs. Mubarak and Suleiman on Egyptian state television had muddled the transition process, not clarified it.


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My Way News - Ariz. governor countersues federal government

My Way News - Ariz. governor countersues federal government

PHOENIX (AP) - Gov. Jan Brewer sued the federal government Thursday for failing to control Arizona's border with Mexico and enforce immigration laws, and for sticking the state with huge costs associated with jailing illegal immigrants who commit crimes. The lawsuit claims the federal government has failed to protect Arizona from an "invasion" of illegal immigrants. It seeks increased reimbursements and extra safeguards, such as additional border fences. Brewer's court filing serves as a countersuit in the federal government's legal challenge to Arizona's new enforcement immigration law. The U.S. Justice Department is seeking to invalidate the law.


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Weather Changes Man-Made?

The Weather Isn't Getting Weirder - WSJ.com

We do know that carbon dioxide and other gases trap and re-radiate heat. We also know that humans have emitted ever-more of these gases since the Industrial Revolution. What we don't know is exactly how sensitive the climate is to increases in these gases versus other possible factors—solar variability, oceanic currents, Pacific heating and cooling cycles, planets' gravitational and magnetic oscillations, and so on. Given the unknowns, it's possible that even if we spend trillions of dollars, and forgo trillions more in future economic growth, to cut carbon emissions to pre-industrial levels, the climate will continue to change—as it always has.


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Republicans Seek Spending Cuts In Debt Ceiling Fight - Investors.com

Republicans Seek Spending Cuts In Debt Ceiling Fight - Investors.com

News the federal deficit will hit a record in 2011 pushed Congress one step closer Wednesday to its first major battle of the year: raising the debt ceiling. The national debt stands at just over $14 trillion and will soon hit the statutory limit of $14.3 trillion. If Congress doesn't raise it soon, the Treasury won't be able to issue debt above that ceiling, which would lead to substantial spending cuts and the eventual possibility of default. Many Republicans are insisting on major spending cuts in return for raising the ceiling. Democrats scoff at the idea. Meanwhile, Tea Party activists are gearing up to fight over the issue. Red Ink Is Expensive

The budget deficit will hit a record $1.48 trillion in fiscal 2011, the Congressional Budget Office predicted Wednesday. Over the next decade, an additional $6.7 trillion in red ink is expected. Meanwhile, the unfunded liability for Social Security and Medicare is $19.1 trillion in present-value terms. With the long-term fiscal picture looking dire and anti-deficit fervor among voters stronger than ever, many GOP lawmakers are demanding major cuts in exchange for voting to raise the debt limit. "We can't afford to kick this can down the road any longer," said Rep. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz. "We need both spending cuts and spending caps in any deal to raise the debt ceiling." The GOP-led House will likely do just that. But Democrats still control the Senate and White House. It's unclear how a standoff would play out politically.

Meanwhile, Tea Party activists oppose any debt-limit increases. "We think voting for the debt ceiling is a dangerous thing to do," said Mark Meckler, co-coordinator of the Tea Party Patriots. "It's time to cut up the credit card." A few Tea-infused members, such as Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., are steadfastly refusing to vote for a debt-limit hike. But more Republicans, like Flake, see a chance for driving a hard bargain. Rep. Frank Wolf, R-Va., recently said in a speech on the House floor: "When Congress is asked to increase the statutory debt limit, which will likely happen in the next few months, I will vote no, unless — and let me be completely clear here — there is a firm commitment to deal with the larger issue or the vote itself is tied to a plan to put America on a path to financial responsibility."


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Paul gets CPAC crowd on their feet

Paul gets CPAC crowd on their feet – CNN Political Ticker - CNN.com Blogs

"There is truly a revolution going on in this country. We live in a time where we don't just need a change in attitude and a change in ideas," Paul also said.

"We need to change our philosophy about what this country is all about. " Paul, who ran a quixotic presidential bid in 2008 that caught fire with many fiscal conservatives and libertarians, added the crisis in Egypt is further proof American needs to disentangle from its foreign engagements.

"We need to do a lot less, a lot sooner, not only in Egypt, but around the world," he said. "The people don't like us propping up our dictators no more than we would like it if a foreign country propped up a dictator here."


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New York Stock Exchange Gone?

Merger Could Take NYSE Out of American Control | NBC New York

 A German company is in high-level talks to acquire the New York Stock Exchange, Wall Street's most recognizable institution. According to reports published in both the German and American financial press, Deutsche Borse, a Frankfurt-based stock exchange is seeking to take a 60 percent ownership interest in the NYSE. The merger would create the world's largest financial exchange.

News of the deal sent both NYSE and Deutsche Borse stock soaring Thursday.

If US and European regulators sign off on the plan, the new parent company would have dual headquarters in Germany and America. The merger is not expected to result in major layoffs in New York. However, the ranks of face-to-face stock traders have already thinned considerably on Wall Street in recent years.

"Stock trading is a commodity business. There's just no money in it anymore," said Greg David, director of Business & Economics Reporting at the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism.


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Obama likens budget to family pocketbook choices - Yahoo! News

Obama likens budget to family pocketbook choices - Yahoo! News

WASHINGTON – Portraying his fiscal choices as kitchen table budgeting, President Barack Obama says he is making difficult cuts to allow needed spending increases in education, technology and basic infrastructure like roads and bridges. In a broad preview of his administration's budget for fiscal 2012, Obama says the combination of cuts and new spending will result in an overall freeze in annual domestic spending for the next five years.

"This budget asks Washington to live within its means, while at the same time investing in our future," the president said Saturday in his weekly radio and Internet address. The White House plans to release his budget on Monday. With public opinion turning against increased spending, Obama is making a concerted sales pitch to cast his initiatives as fiscally prudent. But the dual goal of taming deficits while adding dollars to selected projects comes as the government faces a projected $1.5 trillion deficit this budget year, which ends in September. Republicans are demanding greater deficit reduction efforts and members of the House GOP say they want to cut the current 2011 budget year by $61 billion.


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400 arrested in Algeria at rally demanding reforms - Yahoo! News

400 arrested in Algeria at rally demanding reforms - Yahoo! News

ALGIERS, Algeria – A human rights activist says more than 400 people have been arrested during a pro-democracy protest that brought thousands of people onto the streets of the Algerian capital. Ali Yahia Abdenour says women and foreign journalists were among those arrested during Saturday's demonstration, which came a day after mass protests toppled Egypt's autocratic leader.

Abdenour, who heads the Algerian League for the Defense of Human Rights, said some 28,000 security forces were deployed in Algiers to block the march and disperse the crowds.


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Tea Party Express Names Snowe as Its Next Moderate Republican Target : Roll Call

Tea Party Express Names Snowe as Its Next Moderate Republican Target : Roll Call

The Tea Party Express, which raised and spent millions of dollars to knock off moderate Republicans in Alaska, Colorado and Delaware in the 2010 election cycle, is now going after Olympia Snowe in Maine.

The conservative group, arguably the most organized and best funded campaign tool in the tea party movement, announced Thursday afternoon that it plans to fight the moderate Republican's 2012 re-election effort. Snowe enjoys tremendous popularity across the political spectrum in her home state, but she has irritated Maine's small and disjointed tea party movement for her willingness to work with Democrats.

Pine Tree State conservatives have already dubbed "Snowe removal" a top priority for 2012, when Maine's senior Senator will seek her fourth term. But they have struggled to rally around a single challenger. "Olympia Snowe dishonors the notion that the Republican Party is supposed to be the fiscally conservative, constitutionalist political party in America,"

Tea Party Express Chairwoman Amy Kremer said in a statement. "She voted for the bailouts, the failed stimulus plan, the repeal of tax cuts and showed her disdain for the constitution by voting in favor of the nominations of Elena Kagan and Sonia Sotamayer to the Supreme Court," Kremer said in the statement, which misspelled Sotomayor's last name.


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The Dollar is no longer King!

IMF discusses plan to replace dollar as reserve currency - Feb. 10, 2011

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- The International Monetary Fund issued a report Thursday on a possible replacement for the dollar as the world's reserve currency.


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When Humans, Machines Merge - TIME

Singularity: Kurzweil on 2045, When Humans, Machines Merge - TIME

Kurzweil believes that we're approaching a moment when computers will become intelligent, and not just intelligent but more intelligent than humans. When that happens, humanity — our bodies, our minds, our civilization — will be completely and irreversibly transformed. He believes that this moment is not only inevitable but imminent. According to his calculations, the end of human civilization as we know it is about 35 years away.


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Al-Jazeera is the Muslim Brotherhood Channel | US Opinion and Editorial Right Side News

Al-Jazeera is the Muslim Brotherhood Channel | US Opinion and Editorial Right Side News

"Al Jazeera makes a living blaming most problems in the Middle East on the USA and Israel," Bill O'Reilly of Fox News has pointed out. "And any Arab leader who supports America is barbecued on the network, while those who hate America are praised." He added, "Any fair-minded person who follows Al Jazeera knows it is anti-American and anti-Semitic. Only on the far left can it find acceptance." But now, as a result of what is happening in Egypt, Al-Jazeera and its media allies are leading a "Demand Al-Jazeera in the U.S.A." campaign, as if the channel's coverage is somehow objective and worthwhile.

Newsweek gave valuable column space to Wadah Khanfar, director-general of Al-Jazeera, to argue that U.S. cable and satellite providers should make a special allowance for Al-Jazeera English to be carried in more media markets so that "alternative viewpoints" can be presented about "the human realities of war" in the Middle East. He complained about the Egyptian government-owned satellite company having blocked Al-Jazeera's broadcast signal after turmoil emerged in that country without noting that Al-Jazeera is itself owned and financed by an Arab regime in Qatar that is just as authoritarian as Egypt's. The channel is notorious for sparing Qatar's ruling monarchy the scrutiny it selectively applies to other Arab regimes.


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President Obama Invited Muslim Brotherhood; What About Coptic Christians? - Yahoo! News

President Obama Invited Muslim Brotherhood; What About Coptic Christians? - Yahoo! News

Coptic Christians in America, with the support of other Americans, are concerned for their counterparts living in Egypt. Also in danger could be people of other faiths, including Muslims of unpopular sects. A Coptic Christian is an Egyptian, living in Egypt or abroad, who believes in Jesus Christ. "Coptic" means Egyptian. Coptic Christians follow either the Orthodox, Catholic or Protestant form of Christianity.

Coptics are concerned that while President Barack Obama invited the Muslim Brotherhood to participate in forming a new Egyptian government, neither he nor others in his administration specifically invited Egypt's Christian population or other religious groups to the table. Although White House spokesman Robert Gibbs' Jan. 31 speech called for "nonsecular" participation in discussion of a new Egyptian government, the only religious group invited by name was the Muslim Brotherhood.

Voice of the Copts is a representative body of Coptic Christians in the USA. Its website criticizes Obama's refusal to admit the Muslim Brotherhood is not a threat while he himself states the Brotherhood is well-organized with anti-American ideas. Voice of the Copts informs that there are many kinds of people in Egypt and all must be considered.


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Friday, February 11, 2011

Will Radical Islam Come to Power in Egypt?

Will Radical Islam Come to Power in Egypt? - World - CBN News - Christian News 24-7 - CBN.com

Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., say the United States has to stop the spread of radical Islam in Egypt. Many Mideast experts worry that Islamic extremists could gain power in the Arab country. One group known as the Muslim Brotherhood is active in Egypt and its writings have revealed that it wants to establish Islamic states. Hundreds of thousands of Egyptians continued their call for political change on Wednesday. Egyptian Vice President Omar Suleiman has begun talks with opposition leaders including members of the Muslim Brotherhood.

The brotherhood's participation in decision-making about Egypt's future has become a political issue in the U.S. "I think the primary goal should be to stop the spread of radical Islam," said House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va. during a news conference on Tuesday. "That is where our focus should be." Many analysts in the U.S. and abroad have been concerned about the Muslim Brotherhood gaining influence in a new Egyptian government.

A brotherhood text titled "Jihad is the Way" details support for the establishment of an Islamic regime. "Jihad for Allah," Mustafa Mashhur, the reported leader of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt from 1996 until 2002, wrote, "is not limited to the specific region of the Islamic countries, since the Muslim homeland is one and is not divided. The banner of jihad has already been raised in some of its parts, and shall continue to be raised, with the help of Allah, until every inch of the land of Islam will be liberated, and the state of Islam established."


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Abdel Moneim Abou el-Fotouh - Democracy supporters should not fear the Muslim Brotherhood

Abdel Moneim Abou el-Fotouh - Democracy supporters should not fear the Muslim Brotherhood

Contrary to fear-mongering reports, the West and the Muslim Brotherhood are not enemies. It is a false dichotomy to posit, as some alarmists are suggesting, that Egypt's choices are either the status quo of the Mubarak regime or a takeover by "Islamic extremists." First, one must make a distinction between the ideological and political differences that the Brotherhood may have with the United States.

For Muslims, ideological differences with others are taught not to be the root cause of violence and bloodshed because a human being's freedom to decide how to lead his or her personal life is an inviolable right found in basic Islamic tenets, as well as Western tradition. Political differences, however, can be a matter of existential threats and interests, and we have seen this play out, for example, in the way the Mubarak regime has violently responded to peaceful demonstrators.


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Iraqi Al-Qaeda Group Calls For Holy War In Egypt - MyStateLine.com

Iraqi Al-Qaeda Group Calls For Holy War In Egypt - MyStateLine.com

(Dubai) -- An Iraq-based al-Qaeda group is calling for holy war and jail breaks in Egypt. In a statement posted on Islamist websites Tuesday, the Islamic State of Iraq urged Egyptian Muslims to topple Egypt's government as punishment for not imposing strict Islamic law.

The terror group said, quote, "If the people of Islam die trying to reach this goal, it is better for them than having a tyrant who rules them with laws other than God's Sharia law." It added, quote, "the doors of martyrdom have opened." The statement came out the same day Egyptian Vice President Omar Suleiman revealed al-Qaeda-linked militants are among the many prisoners who have broken out of Egypt's jails since the uprising against President Hosni Mubarak's 30-year rule began more than two weeks ago.

The Iraqi al-Qaeda group told Egyptian Muslims not to rest until all prisoners are turned loose and all the prisons are destroyed.


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'Al-Qaida on brink of using nuclear bomb'

'Al-Qaida on brink of using nuclear bomb'

Al-Qaida is on the verge of producing radioactive weapons after sourcing nuclear material and recruiting rogue scientists to build "dirty" bombs, according to leaked diplomatic documents. A leading atomic regulator has privately warned that the world stands on the brink of a "nuclear 9/11". Security briefings suggest that jihadi groups are also close to producing "workable and efficient" biological and chemical weapons that could kill thousands if unleashed in attacks on the West. Thousands of classified American cables obtained by the WikiLeaks website and passed to The Daily Telegraph detail the international struggle to stop the spread of weapons-grade nuclear, chemical and biological material around the globe.


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Thursday, February 10, 2011

Egyptians Face Soaring Food Prices by Day, Looters by Night Amid Upheaval - Bloomberg

Egyptians Face Soaring Food Prices by Day, Looters by Night Amid Upheaval - Bloomberg

Shattered glass fills the streets of Cairo as pedestrians are forced to avoid army tanks that guard banks and government buildings vulnerable to looters. Banks are closed, making it difficult for Cairenes to get cash to buy staples. For those that have money, food prices are skyrocketing as consumers flood the few open stores.

Street demonstrations and night-time riots have left the Arab world's biggest city largely paralyzed, as protester fill the city's main square and looters and neighborhood groups armed with clubs take over at night. "We have to protect our homes and children at night from the looters and in the morning we have to go to work," said Saed Ragab, a café owner from Cairo's Bab El Louq area. "The shops are at a standstill. It's very difficult." Protesters are gathering in the city for an eighth day. Today's march is aimed at drawing a million people onto the streets and forcing President Hosni Mubarak from power after 30 years. The military promised not to fire on marchers and said it recognized "the legitimacy of the people's demands."

At the same time, citizens are trying to continue their lives as best they can, faced with inflated prices since the protests started escalating on Jan. 28. Pricier Bread "Since Friday everything started to be expensive," said Om Massad, a door lady handling deliveries in Bab el Louq, who said 5 piester bread is not available anymore and 50 piester bread has jumped in price to 60 piesters. One Egyptian pound is made up of 100 piesters, or about 17 U.S. cents. "Shops are taking advantage of these conditions," she said.

Shelves at many of Cairo's supermarkets are emptying quickly with businesses failing to keep up with demand as panicked shoppers seek to stockpile in the event of further unrest. Carrefour SA has closed all seven of its Egyptian stores after looting at an outlet in a Cairo suburb, a spokesman for the company said today. Tourists are abandoning the country. TUI Travel Plc, Europe's largest tour operator, said about 40 percent of planned departures from Germany to Egypt were changed or annulled yesterday after it let vacationers cancel their bookings or change destinations without paying a penalty.


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Wednesday, February 09, 2011

Napolitano, Muslim Brotherhood Affiliates Met Secretly

Napolitano, Muslim Brotherhood Affiliates Met Secretly

Last year, U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano and her senior staff secretly met with a select group of Muslim, Arab, and Sikh organizations. Among the mix were three organizations directly associated with an outlawed terrorist entity - the Muslim Brotherhood, who are involved in the current uprising in Egypt. Walid Phares, director of the Future Terrorism Project at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, criticized the partnership concept: "Through the so-called 'partnership' between the Jihadi-sympathizer networks and U.S. bureaucracies, the U.S. government is invaded by militant groups."


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Tuesday, February 08, 2011

Muslim Brotherhood: ‘Prepare Egyptians for war with Israel'

Muslim Brotherhood: 'Prepare Egyptians for war with Israel'

    A leading member of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt told the Arabic-language Iranian news network Al-Alam on Monday that he would like to see the Egyptian people prepare for war against Israel, according to the Hebrew-language business newspaper Calcalist. Muhammad Ghannem reportedly told Al- Alam that the Suez Canal should be closed immediately, and that the flow of gas from Egypt to Israel should cease "in order to bring about the downfall of the Mubarak regime." He added that "the people should be prepared for war against Israel," saying the world should understand that "the Egyptian people are prepared for anything to get rid of this regime."

Ghannem praised Egyptian soldiers deployed by President Hosni Mubarak to Egyptian cities, saying they "would not kill their brothers." He added that Washington was forced to abandon plans to help Mubarak stay in power after "seeing millions head for the streets."

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Shariah Takes Precedence over U.S. Constitution

Hizb Ut-Tahrir: Shariah Takes Precedence over U.S. Constitution: Imam Promises to Fight "Until Islam Becomes Victorious or We Die in the Attempt" :: The Investigative Project on Terrorism

According to Hizb ut-Tahrir, the world's social and economic problems will not be fixed until the world is governed by Shariah and the government controls all major industries. Lenders would no longer be able to charge interest, which one speaker decried as a "poisonous concept." Charity, or zakat, was advertised as the way to alleviate "economic inequality." "Secular capitalism has made me devalue my skin" and "has kept my family in ghettos," said one speaker, an African-American who went on to blame it for the fact that he smoked marijuana and his grandmother played the lottery. Capitalism, he added, is a form of economic "terrorism" and "causes us to be sent to mental hospitals."

Barack Obama's presidency, he said, "is only a scheme or con" to trick people into thinking that things will get better under capitalism. But time and again on Sunday, Hizb ut-Tahrir officials seemed to be playing slippery rhetorical games of their own - particularly when it came to the behavior of despotic Muslim regimes and terrorists. When a few skeptical audience members pressed speakers over the fact that Islamic governments in Iran and Saudi Arabia are despotic, conference speakers claimed those weren't "authentic" Muslim governments and that the CIA (and by implication, the capitalist U.S. government) was to blame for the problems in those countries.

In an interview with WBBM-TV in Chicago, HT deputy spokesman Mohammad Malkawi refused to specifically condemn Al Qaida and the Taliban. Hizb ut-Tahrir has not been designated a terrorist group by the U.S. government and it insists it is only interested in instituting radical change by nonviolent means. But HT's alumni include 9/ll mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the late Iraqi terrorist leader Abu Musab Zarqawi and would-be Hamas suicide bombers, and the group's pro-jihadist rhetoric has led critics to label it a "conveyor belt for terrorists."

One Muslim American group issued a statement in advance of the conference condemning Hizb ut-Tahrir's radical ideology and challenging others to follow suit. "Hizb ut-Tahrir preaches an ideology that calls for the destruction of the principles that America is founded on," said Zuhdi Jasser, president of the American-Islamic Forum for Democracy. "While their words are protected by our First Amendment, their actions and movement must not be allowed to take hold.

The silence of American Islamist organizations like [the Council on American-Islamic Relations] CAIR and [the Islamic Society of North America] ISNA in condemning the ideologies of Hizb ut-Tahrir and their agenda of insurgency in America speaks volumes to their own, albeit, more camouflaged Islamist agenda." HT's efforts to rehabilitate its image won't be helped by the menacing tone on display Sunday.

One late-afternoon panelist suggested that modern industrial powers could fall to Muslims the way Mecca fell to Mohammed nearly 1,400 years ago. A speaker identified by conference organizers as Imam Jaleel Abdul Adil said that "if they offer us the sun, or the moon, or a nice raise, or a passport, or a house in the suburbs or even a place to pray at the job, on the condition that we stop calling for Islam as a complete way of life - we should never do that, ever do that - unless and until Islam becomes victorious or we die in the attempt." 

Later, the following dialogue ensued between the imam and a member of the audience over whether Shariah or the Constitution should be the supreme law of the land in the United States (click here to see the clip): Audience member: "Would you get rid of the Constitution for Shariah, yes or no?" Imam: "Over the Muslim world? Yes, it would be gone." Audience Member: And so if the United States was a Muslim world, the Constitution would be gone?" Imam: "If the United States was in the Muslim world, the Muslims who are here would be calling and happy to see the Shariah applied, yes we would." Audience Member: "And the Constitution gone. That's all." Imam: "Yes, as Muslims they would be long gone."

While Hizb ut-Tahrir's controversial message attracted demonstrators and some media attention, the group at least is open about its ambitions. It not only is determined to destroy capitalism -- it would shred the United States Constitution as well in favor of Shariah law.

Thanks to our immigration laws we have gone from 150,000 muslims in america in 1970 to 2.5 million of them now. So get ready to continue hearing more spewing and belching of islamic rhetoric in this regards. If nothing is done to stop current patterns of immigration - islamic influence culturally, politically, and socially will continue to increase here in America. That is what various cultures do - as they grow, they exert more dominance, power, and influence over the land in which the live - this also will include acts of terrorism. the problem with this website.


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House seen blocking healthcare funds | Reuters

House seen blocking healthcare funds | Reuters

(Reuters) - The U.S. House of Representatives is likely to vote to block funding for President Barack Obama's signature healthcare overhaul when it takes up a budget plan next week, House Republican Leader Eric Cantor said on Tuesday. "I expect to see one way or other the product coming out of the House to speak to that and to preclude any funding to be used for that," Cantor said at a news conference, referring to an effort to block implementation of the health-care law.

House Republicans aim to pass a spending measure next week that would immediately cut at least $32 billion from the government's $3.7 trillion budget in an effort to trim budget deficits that could hit an estimated $1.5 trillion this year. Details of the Republican spending-cut package will be made public on Thursday ahead of a wide-ranging debate on the House floor next week.

Cantor's office said the language blocking funding for the healthcare law is expected to be offered as an amendment during the House debate next week. Republicans, trying to make good on a campaign pledge for a more open legislative process, plan to debate a number of amendments to the spending bill.


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Hizb Ut-Tahrir

Hizb Ut-Tahrir: Shariah Takes Precedence over U.S. Constitution: Imam Promises to Fight "Until Islam Becomes Victorious or We Die in the Attempt" :: The Investigative Project on Terrorism

Oak Lawn, Illinois - Hizb ut-Tahrir (HT), the international movement to re-establish an international Islamic state ­ or Caliphate - kicked off a new campaign to win American recruits Sunday afternoon in this Chicago suburb. Nearly 300 people packed the Grand Ballroom of the Hilton Hotel for its Khalifah Conference on "The Fall of Capitalism and the Rise of Islam" to listen to HT ideologues blame capitalism for World War I and World War II; the U.S. subprime mortgage meltdown; the current violence in Iraq and Afghanistan; world poverty and malnutrition and inner-city drug use.

A speaker identified as Abu Atallah even blamed capitalism for the late singer Michael Jackson's decision "to shed his black skin." Hizb ut-Tahrir aims to restore the Caliphate that existed during the Ottoman Empire in Turkey. Turkish leader Kemal Ataturk abolished it in 1924 in an effort to create a secular, Europeanized state.


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You have Got to Be Kidding!

Buzz Kill: LA County Wants You To Take Ecstasy Safely « CBS Los Angeles

LOS ANGELES (CBS) —The glow-stick industry may be buzzing over the latest public service announcement from Los Angeles County, but some say it amounts to an backhanded endorsement of illicit drug use. Amid ongoing debate over safety and security measures at rave dance parties held at the Los Angeles Coliseum, county health officials have quietly launched a campaign to offer guidelines for safe use of MDMA, more popularly known as "ecstasy".


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ACLU Blasts Chicago’s Network Of Cameras « CBS Chicago

ACLU Blasts Chicago’s Network Of Cameras « CBS Chicago: "CHICAGO (CBS) – Are Chicago’s blue-light police cameras crime fighters or invasions of privacy?

As CBS 2’s Susanna Song reports, some activists say the cameras are an excuse for Big Brother to keep an eye on people in Chicago.

Blue-light cameras have been strategically placed in high-crime areas since 2003. As a whole, Chicago Police have praised the initiative, and Mayor Richard M. Daley has said it has helped authorities respond more quickly to crimes and helped make thousands of arrests.


When the program first began, many city residents were also praising the blue-light camera system. However, the main complaint for some was that gangs and criminals had transferred their activity from major streets with cameras to side streets without them.

The system has been called the most extensive and integrated camera network of any U.S. city by former Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff.

In the Bucktown neighborhood Tuesday morning, some people still said the cameras are helpful for fighting crime.

“I actually think they keep us safe,” one man said. “So long as no one’s dong anything private in the corner, no one’s invading your privacy. So as long as it’s not in my living room window, it’s OK.”

“There’s no invasion of privacy because it’s obvious that the camera is there,” another man said. “So if everybody knows that the camera is there, why don’t you operate is if the camera is there and don’t do anything illegal.”

But now, the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois called for a full review of the cameras – which number at least 10,000 and are at locations from skyscrapers to utility poles – saying city officials won’t release basic information like the exact number, cost and any incidents of misuse.

Those concerns, along with city officials’ plans for expansion, put Chicago a step closer to a Big Brother invasion of privacy, the ACLU alleged.

“Chicago’s camera network invades the freedom to be anonymous in public places, a key aspect of the fundamental American right to be left alone,” the report states. “Each of us then will wonder whether the government is watching and recording us when we walk into a psychiatrist’s office, a reproductive health care center, a political meeting, a theater performance, or a bookstore.”

The network includes private cameras and those installed by city agencies, like the Chicago Transit Authority. While many of the cameras are visible – like those with flashing blue lights affixed to street poles – countless others are unmarked.

City officials have been tight-lipped about how many cameras Chicago has in place, but no one has disputed that there are at least 10,000, including more than 4,000 installed by Chicago Public Schools and at least 1,000 at O’Hare International Airport.

In its report, the ACLU outlined three specific technologies that exceed the powers of ordinary human observation and increase the government’s power to watch the public: zoom, facial recognition capacity and automatic tracking.

“Chicago’s growing camera network is part of an expanding culture of surveillance in America. Combined with other government surveillance technologies, cameras can turn our lives into open books for government scrutiny,” the report says.

“Chicago’s camera network chills and deters lawful expressive activities protected by the First Amendment, like attending a political demonstration in the public way.”

ACLU officials said the city declined to give the group information on the cameras, including a tour of its operation center, statistics on crime and cost estimates. According to the report, surrounding communities have paid hefty sums for cameras; suburban Cicero has 30 cameras which cost $580,000.

The group said that money could be better spent on adding more police officers to Chicago streets, among other things. It added that there has been little research showing the cameras deter crime.

In addition to the moratorium, the agency recommended more public input, regular audits, rules and regulation on who can view the images, public notice before installing a camera and disclosure of any abuse. The report cites cases in other cities where “male camera operators have ogled women.”

Public complaints about the cameras haven’t been widespread and are generally limited to those who get caught for a minor offense or if the cameras fail to record a violent attack.

Authorities say cameras played a prominent role in several high-profile cases. Footage from a city bus camera helped persuade a suspected gang member to plead guilty to shooting a 16-year-old high school student in 2007. Cameras helped police determine that the 2009 death of a school board president was a suicide.

Chicago Police spokeswoman Lt. Maureen Biggane said she had not seen the ACLU report. “The Chicago Police Department is committed to safeguarding the civil liberties of city residents and visitors alike,” she said in a statement.

Only an idiot would expect “privacy” outside of their home these days. The ACLU is a useless group of people with nothing better to do than attack anything that rubs them the wrong way. Why doesn’t the ACLU help out those neighborhoods riddled with crime and gangs?

I’d like to know the arrest conviction rate per dollar spent on the camera program. It’s just another indication that officials aren’t really concerned with the safety of the public, for these cameras do not deter crime. they are only of use following the commission of a crime. More officers on the streets is the better option, and while a uniform certainly can’t be there to stop all crimes, the odds are far better than that of a fixed object.


Over 181,000 arrests in 2009 alone with about 11,500 CPD uniforms. Well over 10,000 cameras and a mere 4,500 arrests in over 4 years. You do the math.

Deterrent?
I know where the cameras on the stoplights in my hometown. I can say with certainty that it is a deterrent for me when the light is yellow… I don’t push that light. I don’t want a ticket in the mail.
Just like a patrolling police officer… their presence is known. The drug dealers and thieves know they stand a higher chance of getting caught with the lights around. Chicago is mainly putting the cameras in higher crime areas… probably areas that police officers (who want to go home to their wives after their shift) are reluctant to patrol due to their safety.
Did the ACLU consult the law-abiding citizens who are affected by the cameras before they got the lawyers involved costing the city much more money than the cameras to begin with? Nope…



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Life, Liberty, & the Pursuit of Happiness

Amid Unrest, Egyptian Christians Fear for Their Future - FoxNews.com

Amid Unrest, Egyptian Christians Fear for Their Future - FoxNews.com

Christians in Egypt increasingly live in fear of discrimination and persecution, and political change may not be a change for the better. Some Christian demonstrators were seen praying peacefully with Muslims, as protests gripped Tahrir Square in Cairo. But with an uprising in the streets and upheaval in the government, Egypt's Christians, who make up about 10 percent of the population, aren't likely to end up with someone in power as tolerant of them as even President Hosni Mubarak has been.   "I don't believe Mubarak is a good man, but he's at least ten times better than the Muslim Brotherhood is," a popular tweeter named Maged told FoxNews.Com. "Imagine if they took control with American approval." The Muslim Brotherhood is a radical Islamic group that in recent years has tried to tone down its extreme image in search of a greater role in the Egyptian social and political structure, but some argue that the group never really shed its extremist past.

Maged described an ascendant Muslim Brotherhood as the "mother of all fears," a nightmare for Christians: "About 90 percent of the population here believes that slitting our throats is their way to heaven."   A church in Rafah, near Egypt's border with Gaza, was hit with a firebomb, but the church was empty and no one was injured. Two days later, not far from Cairo, 11 members of two Christian families were killed in a brutal attack in which four others were wounded.


 That attack, which has not been widely reported in the mainstream media, apparently took place because of the lax security situation at the time. Egypt has the largest Christian community in the Mideast. But life has not been easy for Egyptian Christians under Mubarak, as they complained of discrimination and at times persecution. The new year began with a bombing at a Coptic Christian church in Alexandria that left 23 dead.

 While the Copts and other Christians may not have gotten the protection they needed under Mubarak, the situation will almost certainly be worse if the Muslim Brotherhood takes control of the country. "The Muslim Brotherhood has a long-term commitment to establishing an Islamic state under Shariah rule in Egypt," Nina Shea, Director of the Center for Religious Freedom at the Hudson Institute, told FoxNews.Com. "The Copts and other Christians should be worried.

They would be reduced to 'dhimmi' status – denied the right to celebrate Christmas and weddings or otherwise publicly display their faith." Shea continued: "Christians would be defined by the state to be a dangerous fifth column." And she predicts there would be a mass exodus of Christians, similar to the one in Iraq. Given the size of the Christian population in Egypt, Shea noted "this would be tantamount to the end of religious diversity and pluralism in the Middle East and would inevitably lead to a deepening of Islamic radicalization."


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Monday, February 07, 2011

Iran Sees 'Islamic Awakening' In Arab World Uprisings - Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty (c) 2011

Iran Sees 'Islamic Awakening' In Arab World Uprisings - Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty © 2011

On Friday, Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei described the uprisings in Egypt, Tunisia, and other Arab countries as an Islamic awakening. Khamenei said the uprisings, if successful, would lead to the failure of U.S. policies in the region. The Iranian leader praised the protesters in Egypt and called President Hosni Mubaraka a traitor and America's servant. Khamenei accused the United States of backing corrupt leaders in the region in order to protect its own interests.

Khamenei said the 1979 revolution that led to the fall of the shah served as a model for the Arab revolt. He said, however, that the 2009 protests in Iran against the disputed reelection of President Mahmud Ahmadinejad were planned by foreign countries. "I've said many times the planner, organizer, and the executive producer was and is outside of these borders," he said. "Inside the country some cooperated with them -- some intentionally, other unknowingly." Iranian officials have linked the protests in Egypt and other Arab countries to the 1979 revolution in Iran that led to the fall of the shah. Others, including members of Iran's opposition movement, see similarities with the 2009 unrest that shook the Iranian establishment.

In Washington, the White House reacted to Khamenei's comments by pointing to the 2009 street protests in Iran. "It is remarkable that Iran would make a statement given their actions when it came to their people exercising the same rights that people are exercising now in Cairo," White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said on February 4.

 Many comparisons have been made between the methods Tehran used to crush the Green Movement and the tactics Egypt has used to silence the protest movement, including shutting down the Internet and SMS services. Some Iranian opposition activists who took part in the mass protests in Tehran and other cities have said the Iranian crackdown was tougher. One Iranian journalist who was jailed in the postelection crackdown and released on bail wrote on Facebook: "While in Egypt journalists are being attacked and detained a week after the anti-Mubarak protests, in Iran journalists were targeted from Day One."


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O’Reilly interview: Obama’s Muslim Brotherhood support questioned - National public safety | Examiner.com

O'Reilly interview: Obama's Muslim Brotherhood support questioned - National public safety | Examiner.com

"The Obama administration is bending over backward to cater to radical Muslim organizations in the name of political correctness. This is a dangerous political game that could put American citizens at risk. Some of these meeting participants have no business helping Janet Napolitano establish our homeland security policies," said terrorism expert and Fox News contributor Walid Phares. Phares warned last year that this policy embraced by the Obama administration "is how American national security policy has been influenced" by Muslim groups, who are duping administration officials. The program requires bringing in Muslim groups as "partners" in a two-way information sharing program. He went on to say that the Obama administration current posture is "how American national security policy has been influenced by Muslim groups, who are duping administration officials."


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Life, Liberty, & the Pursuit of Happiness

Wednesday, February 02, 2011

GM says its US sales rose 23 percent in January - Yahoo! Finance

GM says its US sales rose 23 percent in January - Yahoo! Finance

DETROIT (AP) -- General Motors Co.'s U.S. car and truck sales rose 23 percent in January, a strong start to what the auto industry hopes will be a continuation of last year's recovery. Analysts were expecting overall U.S. auto sales to rise 15 to 17 percent in January, even with lower sales to rental car fleets and East Coast snowstorms that kept some buyers at home. Fleet sales spiked to unusually high levels in January 2010 as businesses started buying again after the recession. This January, consumers were back.


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Tuesday, February 01, 2011

MSNBC’s Maddow Reports Internet Spoof Story as Fact

Breitbart.tv » MSNBC’s Maddow Reports Internet Spoof Story as Fact:




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Life, Liberty, & the Pursuit of Happiness

Climate Change Claims Melt Away - Investors.com

Climate Change Claims Melt Away - Investors.com

In 2007, the U.N. said the Himalayan glaciers will be gone by 2035 due to man-made global warming. Yet four years later, some are advancing. What's retreating is the global warming narrative. Global warming alarmists felt a tingle in their legs when the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change issued a report claiming "Glaciers in the Himalayas are receding faster than in any other part of the world and, if the present rate continues, the likelihood of their disappearing by the year 2035 and perhaps sooner is very high if the earth keeps warming at the current rate." The announcement was enough to set off celebrations by greenshirts everywhere. Turns out, though, that the claim was nonsense. It was not based on scientific research but on one scientist's guesswork, which was lifted from a telephone interview. It was carelessly — or intentionally? — included in the report. Despite its mistakes and clear political bias, the IPCC survives.


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Huge Winter Storm Threatens Wheat, Cattle - FoxBusiness.com

Huge Winter Storm Threatens Wheat, Cattle - FoxBusiness.com

A major winter storm sweeping across the U.S. Plains could wreak havoc on agricultural operations, threatening the dormant winter wheat crop, cattle herds and grain deliveries.

The key farm states of Oklahoma, Kansas and Missouri were being hammered Tuesday by what forecasters said could be a record-setting combination of frigid conditions and snowfall of a foot or more in some areas. "This is a big storm," said Pat Slattery, spokesman for the National Weather Service central region. The storm is set to move into the Midwest region later on Tuesday and is forecast to dump up to two feet of snow on Chicago, home of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and the Chicago Board of Trade.


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State of the State: Brown cites unrest in Egypt to make his case for budget vote| PolitiCal | Los Angeles Times

State of the State: Brown cites unrest in Egypt to make his case for budget vote| PolitiCal | Los Angeles Times
  Jerry brown Citing the pro-democracy unrest in Egypt and Tunisia, called it "unconscionable" that GOP legislators are vowing to block his attempt to ask voters to extend tax hikes to balance the budget. "When democratic ideals and calls for the right to vote are stirring the imagination of young people in Egypt and Tunisia and other parts of the world, we in California can't say now is the time to block a vote of the people," Brown said in his first State of the State address in nearly 30 years. He said the budget has tough choices but that the people "have a right to vote" on the package. He challenged both parties to take the difficult votes necessary to balance the budget.


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Record Food Prices Causing Africa Riots Stoking U.S. - Businessweek

Record Food Prices Causing Africa Riots Stoking U.S. - Businessweek

Jan. 18 (Bloomberg) -- The same record food prices causing riots in Algeria and export bans in India are allowing President Barack Obama to combine the biggest-ever U.S. farm exports with the tamest inflation since the 1960s. Global food costs jumped 25 percent last year to an all- time high in December, according to the United Nations. Countries probably spent at least $1 trillion on imports, with the poorest paying as much as 20 percent more than in 2009, the UN says. 

In the U.S., the largest exporter, retail food rose 1.5 percent last year and will gain as little as 2 percent in 2011, the Department of Agriculture estimates. Governments from Beijing to Belgrade are boosting imports, limiting sales or releasing stockpiles to curb food inflation. Higher prices will push U.S. agricultural exports up 16 percent to a record $126.5 billion this year, according to a USDA forecast. 


Muslim Brotherhood