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Politics : GOPwinger Lies/Distortions/Omissions/Perversions of Truth -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Land Shark who wrote (130036)7/28/2008 4:51:20 PM
From: one_less  Respond to of 173976
 
Dude you seem a little freaked out and redundant today.



But then that's the way you come across every day. samo samo



To: Land Shark who wrote (130036)7/28/2008 5:00:46 PM
From: one_less  Respond to of 173976
 
Inside the secretive Bilderberg Group

How much influence do private networks of the rich and powerful have on government policies and international relations? One group, the Bilderberg, has often attracted speculation that it forms a shadowy global government. Every year since 1954 [they have brought] together about 120 leading business people and politicians. At this year's meeting in Germany, the audience included the heads of the World Bank and European Central Bank, Chairmen or Chief Executives from Nokia, BP, Unilever, DaimlerChrysler and Pepsi ... editors from five major newspapers, members of parliament, ministers, European commissioners ... and the queen of the Netherlands. The chairman ... is 73-year-old Viscount Etienne Davignon. In an extremely rare interview, he played down the importance of Bilderberg. "I don't think (we are) a global ruling class because I don't think a global ruling class exists." Will Hutton ... who attended a Bilderberg meeting in 1997, says people take part in these networks in order to influence the way the world works, to create what he calls "the international common sense". And that "common sense" is one which supports the interests of Bilderberg's main participants. For Bilderberg's critics the fact that there is almost no publicity about the annual meetings is proof that they are up to no good. Bilderberg meetings often feature future political leaders shortly before they become household names. Bill Clinton went in 1991 while still governor of Arkansas, Tony Blair was there two years later while still an opposition MP. All the recent presidents of the European Commission attended Bilderberg meetings before they were appointed. Informal and private networks like Bilderberg have helped to oil the wheels of global politics and globalisation for the past half a century.

Note: Why is this meeting of top world leaders kept so secret? Why is there no website? Why, until a few years ago, was there virtually no reporting on this influential group in the major media? (Note that the alternative media has had some good articles and a Google search can be highly informative) For lots more reliable information on powerful, secret groups like this, click here.



To: Land Shark who wrote (130036)7/28/2008 5:05:01 PM
From: one_less  Respond to of 173976
 
Just in...

LOS ANGELES, California (AP) -- Halle Berry said paparazzi went too far to get a shot of her infant daughter, alleging that the shooter trespassed on her private property and snapped them hanging out in the backyard.

Halle Berry is upset at photographers who took pictures of her four-month-old baby.

The Oscar-winning actress was upset when pictures of her holding four-month-old Nahla Ariela Aubry showed up on the Internet and in two celebrity magazines. In a statement, Berry disputes the notion that the photos were taken when she was "out and about in Los Angeles."

Evan Spiegel, an attorney representing Berry, said a criminal complaint has been filed and an investigation is under way. He said there are witnesses who saw the photographers in the middle of a "very blatant and invasive trespass."

A person who answered the phone Friday at Fame Pictures, the agency that distributed the photos, said he had no immediate comment.

"The paparazzi have gone too far," Berry said in a statement to The Associated Press. She vowed to do everything possible to get the photographer prosecuted and protect her infant daughter.

Besides pursuing criminal charges against the photographer, Berry is seeking to get the photos removed from the Web. In her statement, Berry said she will never sell pictures of her children.

"I have long since come to terms with the fact that choosing a career as an actress has made me a public figure, but my baby has made no such choice, and unless and until she does, I will do everything I can ... to keep her out of the public eye," the statement read.

The photos, some of which have blurred leaves in the foreground, show Berry holding her daughter, standing near a table in what appears to be a private backyard. Berry's mother is also in some of the pictures.

Berry said she wants anyone who used the photos to know they were illegally obtained.

In Touch Weekly and Life & Style Weekly both published the photos in editions that landed on newsstands this week. A spokesperson for the magazine's publisher, Bauer Publications, said in an e-mail that the photos were purchased from an "established photo agency."

"The magazines are not aware that there was anything improper in the taking of this image," the statement said.

Berry gave birth to Nahla, her first child, in March. Nahla's father, model Gabriel Aubry, was not seen in the photos.

Berry's pushback against the paparazzi comes at a time when their tactics are coming under increased scrutiny.

A pair of photographers were arrested in Los Angeles this week near Britney Spears' home because they refused to leave a fire access road. Their hilltop vantage point offered them views of Spears' exclusive gated community, which is also home to Ed McMahon.

A regional task forces is scheduled to convene in Los Angeles next week to discuss the paparazzi, and Berry's statement was issued the same day a pair of photographers scuffled in France with security personnel for Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie



To: Land Shark who wrote (130036)7/28/2008 5:06:37 PM
From: one_less  Respond to of 173976
 
Did you know?

Man deposits millions, one tattered bill at a time

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The businessman arrived at the Treasury Department carrying a suitcase stuffed with about $5.2 million in petrified, nearly unrecognizable bills. He asked to swap it for a cashier's check.

The money brought in by Franz Felhaber was nearly unrecognizable, like the water damaged money here.

Money like this normally arrives after a bank burns or a vault floods. It doesn't just show up at the visitor's entrance on a Tuesday morning.

But Franz Felhaber's banking habits had stopped making sense to the government long ago.

For years, authorities say, he and his family have popped in and out of U.S. banks, looking to change about $20 million in decaying $100 bills for clean cash, offering ever-changing stories:

• It was an inheritance.
• Somebody dug up a tree and there it was.
• It was found in a suitcase buried in an alfalfa field
• A relative found a treasure map.

That buried treasure stands to make someone rich. It could also send someone to jail.

Felhaber's is a customs broker. His company, F.C. Felhaber & Co., navigates the customs bureaucracy in El Paso, Texas, where tens of billions of dollars in Mexican goods enter each year.

Discrete deposits

If discretion were the goal, Felhaber went about it all wrong. Rather than making one exchange at the Treasury, Felhaber allegedly began trying to exchange smaller amounts at El Paso-area banks, raising suspicion every time.

In 2005, authorities say he arranged a $120,000 exchange at the Federal Reserve Bank in El Paso, with the money being wired to an account belonging to his uncle, Jose Carrillo-Valles.

Banks normally refer such requests to the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, an arm of the Treasury. The $120,000 exchange was an exception. Investigators say Felhaber wasn't so lucky elsewhere.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials say he unsuccessfully tried to get a Bank of America armored truck dispatched to the Mexican border to retrieve the money. Weeks later, they say he gave a fake name at two banks while inquiring about exchanging millions.

Once, the explanation was that he discovered the money while excavating a tree in Chihuahua, Mexico. Another time, the story was that it had been buried in an alfalfa field, investigators say.

Felhaber denies nearly all of this, including giving a fake name. But he is tough to pin down on details. At times he acknowledges helping exchange a $20 million inheritance. Minutes later, he contradicts himself and says there's nowhere near that much. And he has no idea where the money came from.

It's unclear what first caught investigators' attention. Most of the thousands of mutilated money exchanges each year are routine. Natural disasters create lots of inquiries. Children of the Depression have discovered their attic savings shredded by rodents. Greeting cards stuffed with money are accidentally shredded.

But Leonard R. Olijar, the chief financial officer of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing, said there are warning signs that will trigger investigations. A series of small exchanges, for instance. Or money coming from abroad.

ICE agents questioned Felhaber in October 2005. According to a government summary of that interview, Felhaber said he believed the money came from a Mexican land deal. It was buried in a coffin, he said, until Saenz-Pardo -- who brought him the money in the first place -- discovered a treasure map.

He now says he was mistaken in his interviews with investigators.

Unanswered questions

"They take you to your word like you're supposed to remember every single thing every si

Maybe it was the visit from federal agents or perhaps someone realized the bank visits weren't working. But the strategy apparently changed.

In January 2006, the Bureau of Engraving and Printing received a package containing about $136,000 from Jose Carrillo-Valles, Felhaber's uncle. A letter explained the money had been stored in a basement for 22 years.

There was no evidence of a crime, just unanswered questions. So the Treasury mailed a check, which Carrillo-Valles deposited. Yet when authorities followed the money, he and his wife denied knowing about it, according to a government affidavit.

And the $120,000 wired to Jose's account a year earlier from the Federal Reserve? The couple said it was an inheritance.

Authorities don't believe that. They traced a wire transfer from Jose's account to someone named Saenz-Pardo, suggesting that Carrillo-Valles was an intermediary who took a cut of the money and sent the rest to Mexico.

Twice, reporters called Carrillo-Valles. First, he said he spoke no English. When a Spanish-speaking reporter called, he said he could not hear her and he hung up.

The case became a criminal investigation in April 2007. ICE agents called the Justice Department, saying Felhaber had just arrived at the Bureau of Engraving and Printing with $1.2 million.

Finding money is not a crime, but there are rules about its importation. Import documents identified Jose Carrillo-Valles as owning the $1.2 million. Authorities believe that was a lie -- a violation carrying up to five years in prison.

But federal prosecutor William Cowden sat on his hands, in case Felhaber tried to exchange even more money.

He did.

This April, Felhaber returned with $5.2 million. Investigators found no import documents this time, a smuggling violation that also carries up to five years in prison.

Prosecutors moved in. Felhaber's Treasury visits gave them probable cause to seize a combined $6.4 million. Authorities told a federal magistrate they suspected it was buried drug money.

Stephen A. Schneider, an ICE investigator, dismissed every other explanation as "conflicting and cockamamie stories."

$6.4 million seized

Prosecutors don't accuse him of involvement with drugs. Court documents leave open the possibility that somebody stumbled across a cache of abandoned drug money in the Mexican desert.

Prosecutors plan to seek forfeiture of the seized $6.4 million, giving Felhaber and his family the opportunity to ask for the money back. If they do, a judge will ask them to sort through the inconsistent stories.

Felhaber bristles at the suggestion there have been inconsistencies.

"The story has never changed," he says.

Cowden, the federal prosecutor, doesn't know what to expect. Sometimes, nobody shows up.

If so, the money will become government property.

Or at least some of it. Perhaps there is $14 million still out there, waiting to be exchanged.

Does Felhaber know if there is?

On that, it's hard to get a straight answer.



To: Land Shark who wrote (130036)7/28/2008 5:08:07 PM
From: one_less  Respond to of 173976
 
Dang cheaters...

COPENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) -- Danish mountain bike champion Peter Riis Andersen has been barred from the Beijing Olympics after testing positive for EPO, Denmark's Games committee said Monday.

Peter Riis Andersen is reportedly the first Danish Olympic athlete involved in a doping case.

A Jamaican track and field athlete has also tested positive for a banned substance and will be removed from the country's Olympic team, officials said.

Mike Fennell, the president of the Jamaica Olympic Association, declined to name the athlete whose sample tested positive from Jamaica's national athletics trials held last month, but said it wasn't a "major" member of the Beijing-bound team.

"I have instructed that the athlete in question be withdrawn from the team. He will not compete at the Olympics," Fennell said.

The developments come less than two weeks before the start of the Aug. 8-24 Summer Olympics.

Riis Andersen admitted at a televised news conference in Copenhagen that he had taken the banned blood booster and said he would quit professional cycling.

"I am sorry for what I have done," the 28-year-old rider said, wiping away tears. "Until Tuesday last week, I had the idea that I had done nothing wrong. I (then) realized how gross a violation it was."

Riis-Andersen tested positive after a pre-Olympic doping control on June 25, the Danish Olympic committee said. His German mountain bike team, Alb-Gold, said it had fired the rider after both the "A" and "B" samples confirmed that he had used EPO.

"I got it through criminal channels because this cannot be provided legally without a receipt," Riis Andersen told reporters. "I joined the club of sinners."

He said he had turned to doping because of "bad results in the early season this year."

"I was scared that I would be knocked off the (Olympics) team although there was not immediate danger it would happen," he said.

It is the first known doping case involving the Danish Olympic team but only the latest in a string of scandals for Danish cycling.

In last year's Tour de France, race leader Michael Rasmussen was kicked out just days before the end for lying about his whereabouts to avoid pre-Tour doping tests. He has maintained he raced clean and never tested positive.

Also last year, former cyclist Bjarne Riis, who is not related to Riis Andersen, admitted that he used EPO to win the 1996 Tour.

"Of course we regret this situation," Tom Lund, president of the Danish Cyclist Union, said of Riis Andersen's announcement. "However, it is a big help that Peter steps forward and tells what he has done."

The 28-year-old Riis Andersen, who also is a medical student, won the Danish mountain bike championships on July 20 for the second consecutive time.

He competed at the 2004 Athens Olympics, finishing 18th. His goal was to finish in the top 10 in Beijing, according to the Danish Olympic committee Web site.

Riis Andersen was one of 16 Danish cyclists who qualified for the Beijing Games. After his departure, the Danish Olympic team consists of 83 athletes competing in 16 disciplines at the August 8-24 games.

Riis Andersen said his professional cycling career was over. "I cannot imagine that I will come back," he said.

Cyclist Marta Bastianelli, who is scheduled to compete for Italy in the Beijing Olympics, has tested positive for a banned substance, Italian news reports said Monday.

Bastianelli tested positive for a banned stimulant during a screening conducted July 5 by the International Cycling Union during the under-23 European championships in northern Italy, the ANSA news agency reported.

The cycling union said it could not comment on the report.

The 21-year-old cyclist won the road race at the world championships in Stuttgart, Germany, in September.

The Italian Olympic Committee said that if the positive test were confirmed she would be automatically excluded from the team



To: Land Shark who wrote (130036)7/28/2008 5:08:30 PM
From: one_less  Respond to of 173976
 
Think it'll rain today?



To: Land Shark who wrote (130036)7/28/2008 5:09:12 PM
From: one_less  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 173976
 
They say cat litter can cause sterility and other stuff.



To: Land Shark who wrote (130036)7/28/2008 5:11:01 PM
From: one_less  Respond to of 173976
 
Did you know, Automatonophobia is a fear of ventriloquist's dummies, animatronic creatures, wax statues or anything that falsly represents a sentient being.



To: Land Shark who wrote (130036)7/28/2008 5:12:06 PM
From: one_less  Respond to of 173976
 
Not only that, in Athens, Greece, a driver's license can be lifted by the law if the driver is deemed either 'poorly dressed' or 'unbathed'.



To: Land Shark who wrote (130036)7/29/2008 1:31:13 PM
From: one_less  Respond to of 173976
 
You still bored? Here is some breaking news to alleviate your problem.

i-am-bored.com



To: Land Shark who wrote (130036)7/29/2008 1:45:44 PM
From: one_less  Respond to of 173976
 
Do you ever go to the gym to exercise? The ancient Greek term "gymnos" means nude, and the original olympic games were in the nude in Athens. Hence the term "gymnasium"...



To: Land Shark who wrote (130036)7/29/2008 1:47:56 PM
From: one_less  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 173976
 
Sealand was built during World War II as British outpost to defend the mainland. After being abandoned by the British, a family took possession of it in 1969 and filed all the paperwork to make this outpost a sovereign country. Sealand now has its own flag, currency, passports, and ruling Prince and Princess!

It is the only man made country in the world.



To: Land Shark who wrote (130036)7/29/2008 1:50:25 PM
From: one_less  Respond to of 173976
 
Try this one three times really fast...

"The sixth sick sheik's sixth sheep's sick"