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Politics : Liberalism: Do You Agree We've Had Enough of It? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (101562)3/17/2011 4:09:23 PM
From: locogringo5 Recommendations  Respond to of 224750
 
Since you like Gallup Polls,....

TOTALLY INCORRECT.

I did NOT say I liked Gallup. You said it

Nowhere did I say I liked Gallup You said it

I never said I liked or disliked Gallup. You said it

This is a pretty silly conversation, isn't it?

Why do you do this silly crap, and force me to show people how you fabricate and spin?

Personally, I would stop digging today, Kenneth. The hole is getting deep. :--)



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (101562)3/17/2011 11:11:33 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 224750
 
Message 27244497



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (101562)3/18/2011 6:20:53 AM
From: TideGlider2 Recommendations  Respond to of 224750
 
A GLOWING REPORT ON RADIATION
March 16, 2011

With the terrible earthquake and resulting tsunami that have devastated Japan, the only good news is that anyone exposed to excess radiation from the nuclear power plants is now probably much less likely to get cancer.

This only seems counterintuitive because of media hysteria for the past 20 years trying to convince Americans that radiation at any dose is bad. There is, however, burgeoning evidence that excess radiation operates as a sort of cancer vaccine.

As The New York Times science section reported in 2001, an increasing number of scientists believe that at some level -- much higher than the minimums set by the U.S. government -- radiation is good for you. "They theorize," the Times said, that "these doses protect against cancer by activating cells' natural defense mechanisms."

Among the studies mentioned by the Times was one in Canada finding that tuberculosis patients subjected to multiple chest X-rays had much lower rates of breast cancer than the general population.

And there are lots more!

A $10 million Department of Energy study from 1991 examined 10 years of epidemiological research by the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health on 700,000 shipyard workers, some of whom had been exposed to 10 times more radiation than the others from their work on the ships' nuclear reactors. The workers exposed to excess radiation had a 24 percent lower death rate and a 25 percent lower cancer mortality than the non-irradiated workers.

Isn't that just incredible? I mean, that the Department of Energy spent $10 million doing something useful? Amazing, right?

In 1983, a series of apartment buildings in Taiwan were accidentally constructed with massive amounts of cobalt 60, a radioactive substance. After 16 years, the buildings' 10,000 occupants developed only five cases of cancer. The cancer rate for the same age group in the general Taiwanese population over that time period predicted 170 cancers.

The people in those buildings had been exposed to radiation nearly five times the maximum "safe" level according to the U.S. government. But they ended up with a cancer rate 96 percent lower than the general population.

Bernard L. Cohen, a physics professor at the University of Pittsburgh, compared radon exposure and lung cancer rates in 1,729 counties covering 90 percent of the U.S. population. His study in the 1990s found far fewer cases of lung cancer in those counties with the highest amounts of radon -- a correlation that could not be explained by smoking rates.

Tom Bethell, author of the The Politically Incorrect Guide to Science has been writing for years about the beneficial effects of some radiation, or "hormesis." A few years ago, he reported on a group of scientists who concluded their conference on hormesis at the University of Massachusetts by repairing to a spa in Boulder, Mont., specifically in order to expose themselves to excess radiation.

At the Free Enterprise Radon Health Mine in Boulder, people pay $5 to descend 85 feet into an old mining pit to be irradiated with more than 400 times the EPA-recommended level of radon. In the summer, 50 people a day visit the mine hoping for relief from chronic pain and autoimmune disorders.

Amazingly, even the Soviet-engineered disaster at Chernobyl in 1986 can be directly blamed for the deaths of no more than the 31 people inside the plant who died in the explosion. Although news reports generally claimed a few thousand people died as a result of Chernobyl -- far fewer than the tens of thousands initially predicted -- that hasn't been confirmed by studies.

Indeed, after endless investigations, including by the United Nations, Manhattan Project veteran Theodore Rockwell summarized the reports to Bethell in 2002, saying, "They have not yet reported any deaths outside of the 30 who died in the plant."

Even the thyroid cancers in people who lived near the reactor were attributed to low iodine in the Russian diet -- and consequently had no effect on the cancer rate.

Meanwhile, the animals around the Chernobyl reactor, who were not evacuated, are "thriving," according to scientists quoted in the April 28, 2002 Sunday Times (UK).

Dr. Dade W. Moeller, a radiation expert and professor emeritus at Harvard, told The New York Times that it's been hard to find excess cancers even from Hiroshima and Nagasaki, particularly because one-third of the population will get cancer anyway. There were about 90,000 survivors of the atomic bombs in 1945 and, more than 50 years later, half of them were still alive. (Other scientists say there were 700 excess cancer deaths among the 90,000.)

Although it is hardly a settled scientific fact that excess radiation is a health benefit, there's certainly evidence that it decreases the risk of some cancers -- and there are plenty of scientists willing to say so. But Jenny McCarthy's vaccine theories get more press than Harvard physics professors' studies on the potential benefits of radiation. (And they say conservatives are anti-science!)

I guess good radiation stories are not as exciting as news anchors warning of mutant humans and scary nuclear power plants -- news anchors who, by the way, have injected small amounts of poison into their foreheads to stave off wrinkles. Which is to say: The general theory that small amounts of toxins can be healthy is widely accepted --except in the case of radiation.

Every day Americans pop multivitamins containing trace amount of zinc, magnesium, selenium, copper, manganese, chromium, molybdenum, nickel, boron -- all poisons.

They get flu shots. They'll drink copious amounts of coffee to ingest a poison: caffeine. (Back in the '70s, Professor Cohen offered to eat as much plutonium as Ralph Nader would eat caffeine -- an offer Nader never accepted.)

But in the case of radiation, the media have Americans convinced that the minutest amount is always deadly.

Although reporters love to issue sensationalized reports about the danger from Japan's nuclear reactors, remember that, so far, thousands have died only because of Mother Nature. And the survivors may outlive all of us over here in hermetically sealed, radiation-free America.

anncoulter.com



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (101562)3/18/2011 10:10:28 AM
From: JakeStraw2 Recommendations  Respond to of 224750
 
President 'Present'
online.wsj.com
Obama dodges the big decisions to keep his approval ratings up.

One knock on Barack Obama in the 2008 election was his record as an Illinois state senator, where he repeatedly ducked tough issues by voting "present." It seems old habits die hard.

If you'd like to know where the leader of the free world stands on those NCAA rankings, just turn on ESPN. ("I think Kansas has more firepower," he explained as he filled out his bracket.) Wondering what the commander in chief thinks about gun laws? Don't worry—he's in favor of those already on the books, according to a recent op-ed.

If, however, you are curious about where the most powerful man in the universe stands on Libya, radiation, a possible government shutdown, the future of Social Security, or rising oil prices, don't look to the White House. Those issues are tough. Those issues risk mistakes. Those issues might mean unhappy voters. And right now, it's approval ratings the White House cares about.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

More proof that Obama is in no way fit to be president!

If Obama can't lead; then he should not be in the leadership position.

Hopefully the voter's will wise up and vote him out of an office that he is not qualified for!



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (101562)3/18/2011 10:19:57 AM
From: JakeStraw5 Recommendations  Respond to of 224750
 
No-drill Democrats are looking wan under the bright light of rising gasoline prices. So what do they do? They retreat to their worst ideas and claim they've brought a fresh set of solutions to the table.
investors.com

They drag out the usual nonsense, such as opening the Strategic Petroleum Reserve — which was not intended to be a tool for market manipulation and does nothing to increase the supply of crude — and pressuring other nations to increase production while the U.S. economy recovers, a guaranteed diplomatic failure.

Other proposals include:

• Enabling the Justice Department to prosecute members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries that collude to increase oil prices. Do they really think the outlaw nations that make up nearly all of OPEC care what a court says?

• Fining oil companies $4 for every acre of public land or water they lease but aren't drilling on. This, of course, is an effort to make the Democrats look like they support drilling. But it's a cynic's game.

They know those fields aren't being used because oil companies have determined that drilling them is not productive. If Democrats were serious about drilling, rather than trying to force resources from unproductive tracts, they'd let oil companies drill where they know the crude is.

• Cracking down on speculators in the oil markets. This is weak on two levels.

First, scapegoating speculators is clearly a diversionary tactic. Speculators are not evil profiteers — they are merely traders looking ahead and responding rationally to the unfriendly oil-market conditions that the Democrats have brought about.

Second, by driving prices higher in today's market, speculators help prevent shortages at a later date. If they aren't affecting today's prices by weighing the future, then the current price signals can't encourage consumers to self-ration. Without those signals, they will draw down the supply to dangerous levels.

If the Democrats weren't playing politics and truly wanted to bring down gasoline prices, they'd get behind a strong drilling policy. Certain that future supplies will be higher, the market would respond with lower prices today.

But that doesn't fit the green agenda that Democrats have chosen to follow. So they have to bluff their way with insincere proposals, because the only thing they want to drill are taxpayers' wallets.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (101562)3/18/2011 11:29:35 AM
From: locogringo6 Recommendations  Respond to of 224750
 
Good Morning, kenny? How is your day today? Have you dug any holes yet?

Barack H. Obama Elementary to close -- due to low enrollment...

PAPER: OBAMA: THE WEAKEST PRESIDENT IN HISTORY?

Cost of Living Hits Record...

Obama’s OMB nominee admits proposed 2012 budget does not pay down deficit

Such a nice start to a day.................



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (101562)3/18/2011 11:47:37 AM
From: locogringo8 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224750
 
Pew survey finds Fox News was most popular source for 2010 political news

washingtonexaminer.com

BTW, kenny, did you see what this genius wants to do? Where do these Libs get educated? Romper Room?


Rep. Jim McGovern, D-Mass., proposed an amendment to "de-fund" FOX News as well,.......

washingtonexaminer.com



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (101562)3/18/2011 11:53:58 AM
From: JakeStraw5 Recommendations  Respond to of 224750
 
Qadaffi's Chicago Connection
americanthinker.com

Obama's State Department authorized a $400,000 donation to Libyan non-profit organizations run by Aisha and Saif Ghadafi, the dictator's children.

And who can forget the photo of a beaming Obama shaking hands with a starstruck Qadaffi at the G8 summit in Italy in July 2009?



Perhaps the mutual admiration has its roots in Obama's Hyde Park neighborhood replete with old friends Jeremiah Wright and Louis Farrakhan. This is the same Farrakhan who called candidate Obama the "Messiah" and who spoke numerous times at Reverend Wright's church while the Obama family listened for 20 years.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (101562)3/18/2011 12:28:19 PM
From: lorne3 Recommendations  Respond to of 224750
 
ken...wonder if this includes the moslum congress person you are so proud of? ellis?

FBI chief confirms ties cut with U.S. Muslim group
Agency bans outreach due to terrorist links
: March 18, 2011
© 2011 WorldNetDaily
wnd.com

In stunning testimony on Capitol Hill, the head of the FBI explained his agency has cut off ties to the most influential Muslim organization in America due to concerns over its leaders' association with terrorism.

Since the Justice Department linked the Washington-based Council on American-Islamic Relations to a 2008 terror-finance case, the FBI has refused to work directly with the group's national office or any of its 30-plus chapters across the country.

Get "Muslim Mafia: Inside the Secret Underworld That's Conspiring to Islamize America," autographed, from WND's Superstore.

Wednesday's hearing held by the House Judiciary Committee marked the first time FBI Director Robert Mueller has narrowed down the cause of concern to CAIR's "national leadership."

"We have no formal relationship with CAIR because of concerns with regard to the national leadership," Mueller testified.

CAIR's current executive director is Nihad Awad.

Wiretap evidence from the Holy Land Foundation terror-finance case put Awad at a Philadelphia meeting of Hamas leaders that was secretly recorded by the FBI. Participants hatched a plot to disguise payments to Hamas terrorists as charity. Wiretaps also record them stating the need to deceive Americans about their true aims.

The secret meeting, held in the 1990s at a Courtyard by Marriott hotel, was called to order by CAIR founding chairman Omar Ahmad. Both he and Awad launched CAIR not long after the meeting.

Mueller acknowledged the wiretap evidence during the House Judiciary Committee hearing.

The Justice Department designated Ahmad and CAIR as unindicted co-conspirators in the Holy Land trial, the largest terror-finance case in U.S. history. A federal jury convicted Holy Land's leaders on all 108 counts.

Ahmad stepped down from CAIR's board of directors shortly after his federal designation.

Among other evidence collected by the FBI, the names of both Ahmad and Awad – who remains at CAIR's helm and regularly appears on Fox News and other media – appear in a secret phone book alongside key Hamas leader Mousa Abu Marzouk, whom the government says directed and coordinated Hamas terrorist attacks on civilians in Israel. Hamas also has murdered more than 17 Americans and has been listed as a U.S.-designated terror group since the 1990s.

During the Holy Land trial, U.S. prosecutors alleged that CAIR's ties to Hamas are "ongoing." In a letter to the Senate Judiciary Committee, FBI Assistant Director Richard Power suggested Ahmad and Awad remain under federal scrutiny.

Last year, federal prosecutors subpoenaed boxes of internal CAIR records uncovered by the authors of the "Muslim Mafia: Inside the Secret Underworld That's Conspiring to Islamize America." The bestselling book exposes the inner workings and finances of CAIR and other front groups for the radical Muslim Brotherhood in America. The Brotherhood, a worldwide jihadist movement based in Egypt and funded by Saudi Arabia, is the parent of both Hamas and al-Qaida.

This month, for the first time, both the Associated Press and Washington Post published stories confirming CAIR's links to terrorism and its federal designation as an unindicted co-conspirator.

House Judiciary Committee member Rep. Louie Gohmert, R-Texas, said he was dismayed FBI headquarters only recently cut off outreach to CAIR, when its case agents had gathered evidence of the tax-exempt group's terrorist ties years earlier.

"I'm just surprised that it took the evidence that the FBI had being introduced at trial in order to sever the relationship with CAIR," Gohmert said.

In a 2009 letter to Mueller, Democrat Sen. Charles Schumer of the Senate Judiciary Committee requested that the ban on CAIR be enforced "government-wide."



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (101562)3/18/2011 12:35:33 PM
From: lorne4 Recommendations  Respond to of 224750
 
hey kenny..do you agree with one of your kind??

Files link JFK to 'communist sympathizer'
Claims in declassified paperwork 'should at least be investigated'
: March 18, 2011
By John Rossomando
© 2011 WorldNetDaily
wnd.com

Ted Kennedy


Recently released FBI files have uncovered a link between the famously anti-communist President John F. Kennedy and a "communist sympathizer."

The "sympathizer" was his brother, Sen. Edward Kennedy, who died in 2009.

The files on Ted Kennedy reveal positions in stark contrast to those of his brother. JFK fought communist expansion, whether it was defending South Vietnam from what he called communist aggression or working to contain Fidel Castro's Cuba from fomenting communist revolution in Latin America.

"In Latin America, communist agents seeking to exploit that region's peaceful revolution of hope have established a base on Cuba, only 90 miles from our shores. Our objection with Cuba is not over the people's drive for a better life," John F. Kennedy said in his first State of the Union Address in 1961. "Our objection is to their domination by foreign and domestic tyrannies.

"Communist domination in this hemisphere can never be negotiated."

The younger Kennedy, however, is shown to have had a fascination with the far left. At the same time John F. Kennedy was fighting communists, his brother sought to dine with them.

Among the allegations from the documents is a claim muckraking journalist Drew Pearson had planned to publish a story suggesting Ted Kennedy was denied the right to attend school at Ft. Hollabird, Md., in 1954 while he was in the Army because "an adverse FBI report linked him to a group of 'pinkos' (i.e., communist sympathizers)."

Kennedy's influential father, Ambassador Joseph P. Kennedy Sr., then threatened Pearson with a libel lawsuit if he printed the column, the documents show.

"This suggests Ted had some sort of a security clearance problem," author and columnist Paul Kengor said.

Declassified FBI documents also show that Ted Kennedy met with people described as "leftists" and "communist sympathizers" within months of his brother's inauguration in 1961.

A cable, dated July 20, 1961, indicates Ted Kennedy was curious about why the leftists in Latin America thought the way they did and set about meeting with them.

"Approximately eight Mexicans to be present," the cable said of those slated to meet with Ted Kennedy at the U.S. embassy in Mexico City. "Embassy discouraged invitation to … collaborator in publication of anti-U.S., pro-communist magazine 'Politica' and well-known as communist sympathizer. Included in group are … [members] known as communist sympathizer and … reported leftist intellectual."

The papers also show Kennedy made a similar request while he was staying in Peru.

This episode appears nowhere in any of Kennedy's authorized biographies.

"He even dined with Lauchlin Currie, the infamous FDR adviser, who at that time was in Latin America," Kengor said. "The file raises some serious questions."

Currie was implicated by the Venona decrypts in numerous Soviet spy rings and fled to Bogata, Colombia, following World War II. The documents show "the first person [in Colombia] [Ted Kennedy] wanted to meet was Lauchlin Currie."

Communist-turned-conservative activist Ron Radosh told WND Ted Kennedy likely met the suspected Soviet spy at the suggestion of Arthur Schlesinger Jr., who served as President Kennedy's White House point man on Latin American affairs.

"Arthur once told me he knew these people and couldn't believe they were Soviet agents. It would make sense that this leading Kennedyite was the one who told Teddy to look up Currie. Right?" Radosh said.

Kengor also found revelations in the documents that Kennedy rented a brothel in Santiago, Chile, during this trip particularly disturbing because it occurred between the time of the Bay of Pigs invasion in April 1961 and the October 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis.

"July 1961 is one week before the Berlin Wall goes up, and it doesn't help the president of the United States to have his brother reportedly heading down to Latin America to rent a brothel," Kengor said.

Kengor similarly was appalled by a March 2, 1967, report suggesting that Kennedy and his brother, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, had planned to parade 100 Vietnamese children who had been horribly maimed in American napalm bombings through the streets of America. The aim would have been to "embarrass" Lyndon Johnson, according to the file.

Kennedy also later worked with the KGB in an attempt to subvert both Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan and portray both as being to blame for heightened tensions between the United States and the Soviet Union, according to Soviet records.

And KGB documents from the Mitrokhin archive, brought to the West in 1992 by KGB defector Vasili Mitrokhin, describe a March 5, 1980, meeting Sen. John Tunney, D-Calif., Kennedy's longtime friend, had on the senator's behalf with the KGB in Moscow.

Kennedy had Tunney praise Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev's "peace-loving ideas" and commitment to détente in the wake of the December 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. At the same time, he sought to negatively portray the Carter administration as distorting Brezhnev's ideas.

The senator was challenging Carter for the Democratic presidential nomination at the same time he was working with the Soviets behind the scenes to subvert his opponent.

Tunney also served as an intermediary with the Soviets in 1983 when Kennedy sought to offer his assistance to then-Soviet leader Yuri Andropov, who previously had served as head of the KGB, to help undermine Ronald Reagan.

According to a KGB document written by Andropov's successor as head of the KGB, Viktor Chebrikov, Kennedy sought Soviet assistance in building opposition to Reagan's policies. Kennedy hoped to have Andropov manipulate the American media to sway the American people to the Soviets' side.

The document specifically suggests that Kennedy wanted to have the board of directors at ABC, Barbara Walters or Walter Cronkite come to Moscow to interview the Soviet leader to show how the Reagan administration had distorted the Soviet position in the arms race.

"All … of these things should be looked into by people who have more access to the Kennedys or who knew Ted Kennedy," Kengor said. "They all should at least be investigated … but they are afraid to investigate it because they are afraid to find the truth that they don't like."

No one could be reached who would provide a comment from the Kennedy family.