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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 (131092)4/24/2012 4:10:46 PM
From: locogringo8 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224729
 
Rubio was never a Governor and never ran anything.

Which state did Obama govern, and what business did he run? (other than the shakedown business, nor the state of utter confusion)

I don't want people to think that you are ignorant and talking STOOOOPID .......................AGAIN.

When are you going to answer poor THUG Paul V that questions you over and over for your expertise?



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (131092)4/24/2012 8:12:28 PM
From: Hope Praytochange5 Recommendations  Respond to of 224729
 
better than shithead community organizer



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (131092)4/24/2012 8:23:25 PM
From: Hope Praytochange1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224729
 
"This agent who was kind of ridiculous there in posting pictures and comments about checking someone out," Palin said on Fox News. "Check this out, bodyguard. You're fired! And I hope his wife sends him to the doghouse."

Chaney, a son of a Secret Service agent, has been employed with the agency since 1987, according to his posting on Reunion.com. The posting notes that he is married, has an adopted son and his assignments included a stint protecting former Vice President Dick Cheney.

Stokes supervised the canine training unit at the Secret Service's James J. Rowley Training Center outside Washington, according to PetLife Radio and a career development posting on the University of Maryland's website.

Attorney Lawrence Berger -- general counsel for the Federal Law Enforcement Officers Association, which represents Secret Service agents and others -- said he is not representing all of the agents involved in the Colombia story, but he does have several other clients in the group in addition to Chaney and Stokes.

He would not comment on specifics of the investigation, but complained about leaks that publicly identified Chaney and Stokes and gave details of what allegedly happened in Colombia.

"The concern I have is about illegal leaks coming from apparently rogue elements within the Secret Service of privacy-protected information," Berger said. "It is distorting the review of what happened."

All the employees are accused of bringing prostitutes to Cartagena's Hotel El Caribe ahead of last week's visit by Obama. They'd arrived earlier that morning as a part of the "jump team" that flies in on military transport planes with vehicles in the president's motorcade, said Townsend.

According to sources, the alleged prostitutes -- the youngest of whom were in their early 20s -- signed in at the hotel, where Secret Service members apparently stayed, flashing their local ID cards.

Former Colombian President Alvaro Uribe told CNN on Thursday that the incident was due entirely to "a lack of ethics (on the part of) the Secret Service of the United States."

Members of the U.S. Congress offered similarly biting remarks. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi called the allegations "disgusting," while Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid described the agents' alleged actions as "either really stupid or a total lack of common sense."

The U.S. military is investigating six members of its elite Army Special Forces, or Green Berets, officials said.

The Green Berets' failure to make curfew the night of the incident involving the Secret Service agents led the military to start its investigation, a U.S. official told CNN.

All the military personnel are being investigated for heavy drinking and use of prostitutes while in Colombia as part of the support team for Obama's visit, the official said. They are not likely to redeploy until the matter is resolved, other military officials said.

The military investigation could end with no action, administrative action such as a letter of reprimand or a recommendation to proceed with criminal charges, officials said.

While soliciting prostitution is in most cases legal for adults in Colombia, military law bars service members from patronizing prostitutes, engaging in conduct unbecoming an officer or, for enlisted personnel, conduct "prejudicial to good order and discipline." It is also considered a breach of the Secret Service's conduct code, government sources said.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (131092)4/24/2012 8:34:55 PM
From: Hope Praytochange3 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224729
 
GREENSBORO, N.C. (AP) — John Edwards' first reaction when he learned his mistress may be pregnant was to downplay the chances he was the father, calling the woman a "crazy slut," his former close campaign aide testified Tuesday.

It was the summer of 2007 and Edwards was in the midst of a presidential campaign. Andrew Young testified the former North Carolina senator hatched a plan to funnel money from rich friends to provide the woman a monthly allowance, even though Young said he doubted it was legal.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (131092)4/24/2012 8:35:07 PM
From: Hope Praytochange2 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224729
 
Months later, as word of the candidate's affair began to leak in the run-up to the crucial Iowa caucuses, Young said Edwards asked the aide to falsely claim paternity of the baby. Young has been the lone witness during the first two days of Edwards' criminal trial. The 58-year-old Edwards has pleaded not guilty to six counts related to campaign finance violations involving nearly $1 million in secret payments provided by two wealthy donors as he sought the White House in 2008.

Young said Rielle Hunter told Edwards she was pregnant in June 2007, weeks later than the aide originally claimed in a tell-all book published in 2010. Young said Edwards, told him to "take care of it," meaning the pregnancy.

"He said she was a crazy slut and there was a 1-in-3 chance that it (the child) was his," Young testified. Edwards directed Young to start giving money to Hunter in May 2007, after she threatened to go to the media and expose the affair, the aide said. Edwards suggested asking elderly heiress Rachel "Bunny" Mellon, who had already given generously to the campaign.

Prosecutors showed the jury cancelled checks from Mellon written to her interior designer, who would then endorse them and send them to Andrew and his wife, Cheri. Starting in June 2007, Mellon would eventually provide checks totaling $750,000.

Without telling Mellon what the money would be used for beyond that it was a "non-campaign" expense, Young said she offered to provide $1.2 million over time to help pay for the candidate's personal needs. Under federal law, donors are limited to giving a maximum of $2,300 per election cycle.

"We were scared," Young said. "It was a truckload of money, more money than had ever flowed through our accounts. ... It was crazy." Young said he expressed concern to Edwards, a former trial lawyer, that they might be violating federal campaign finance laws.

"He told me he had talked to several campaign finance experts and that it was legal," Young testified. "It felt and smelled wrong. But he knew more about the law than we did. We believed him." Young said Edwards also directed him to use the money from Mellon to provide a monthly allowance to Hunter of between $5,000 and $12,000. The money would allow her to travel and continue to meet up with the married candidate while he was away from his home and now deceased wife, Elizabeth, who had grown suspicious of the affair.

Young will retake the witness stand Wednesday, when the defense is expected to have their first opportunity to cross-examine him. The baby Edwards fathered, Frances Quinn Hunter, was born in February 2008, right after he suspended his campaign after a series of primary losses. After years of adamant public denials, Edwards eventually acknowledged paternity in 2010. The girl, now 4, lives with her mother in Charlotte.

Prosecutors had phone records showing dozens of calls between Young and Edwards. The candidate often used the phones of campaign staffers to call his trusted aide and mistress to avoid his wife seeing the other woman's number on his bill. Edwards also obtained an extra cellphone his wife didn't know about that they and Hunter called the "Bat Phone," Young said.

In later testimony, Young said in December 2007, Edwards had the idea of Young claiming paternity. It came after reporters from a tabloid tracked Hunter down in the parking lot of a North Carolina grocery store. By that time, non-tabloid media had also started to pick up the trail as the campaign was preparing for the early 2008 primaries.

Edwards said they needed to "give the press something they would understand, an affair between two staffers," Young testified. Hunter had produced several videos documenting life on the campaign trail for Edwards.

Young said Edwards "talked about how this was bigger than all of us," and reaffirmed to the aide he wanted to help the country by getting troops out of Iraq and remaking health care. He also said he didn't want his cancer-stricken wife to have to deal with a scandal before she died.

The Youngs agreed to get the mistress, who was then living in a $2,700-a-month rental home near Chapel Hill, out of North Carolina. They began a cross-country odyssey of travel on private jets and stays in luxury hotels. While they were on the run, the federal indictment alleges that more than $183,000 in bills related to Hunter's care was paid by Fred Baron, a wealthy Texas lawyer who served as Edwards' campaign finance director. Baron has since died.

Young testified that Edwards put him in touch with Baron's people to arrange the details, which included stays at Baron's palatial vacation home in Aspen. As prosecutors highlighted the group's movements, photos of the blue-water resorts and mountain mansion were shown on video monitors around the courtroom.

Baron also sent Young overnight packages stuffed with cash. On included a handwritten note from the wealthy lawyer: "A- Old Chinese saying, use cash, not credit cards!" When asked why he agreed to claim paternity and care for Hunter, Young said power was the lure.

"I wanted my friend to be president," Young said. "Being friends with the most powerful person on earth, there are benefits to that." Edwards has denied knowing about the money provided by Mellon. In opening statements on Monday, his defense lawyer Alison Van Laningham said the Youngs siphoned off the bulk of the money to pay for the construction of their $1.5 million house near Chapel Hill.

The indictment filed by the U.S. Justice Department last year recounts more than $933,000 in unreported payments from the two campaign donors who had already given the maximum contributions allowed by law.

Defense attorneys say even if Edwards knew about the secret payments from Mellon and Baron, they don't fit the legal definition of political contributions because they were not meant to influence the election. Instead, they say, the payments were gifts meant to hide Edwards' affair from his wife, not voters.

If convicted on all six counts, Edwards faces a maximum penalty of 30 years in prison and as much as $1.5 million in fines. Edwards sat silently in the courtroom Tuesday as prosecutors played several voicemails he and Baron had left on Young's cellphone in December 2007 and January 2008. At that time, Edwards was in the heat of the presidential primaries and was constantly in the public eye.

Though none of the voicemails played for the jury contained evidence that was in itself damning, it illustrated that Edwards was in frequent contact with Young and Hunter while they were on the run. Young said Edwards expressly told him not to inform him of their exact location, because the candidate "didn't want to have to lie if he was asked about it."

Asked by a prosecutor why he began keeping the voicemail and notes now being used as evidence against his former boss, Young replied: "If I didn't have these, nobody would have believed me."


Follow AP writer Michael Biesecker at twitter.com/mbieseck



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (131092)4/25/2012 9:02:25 AM
From: longnshort5 Recommendations  Respond to of 224729
 
Wikileaks – Democratic Voter Fraud Won Pennsylvania & Ohio in 2008

April 23, 2012
By Sara Noble



Wikileaks hacked Stratfor, the private intelligence gathering firm in Texas. Emails they uncovered claim they presented proof positive to John McCain that Democrats in Pennsylvania and Ohio used voter fraud to win those states and committed other disturbing crimes. McCain refused to act on the information.

One email, as seen below, is dated November 7, 2008 under the subject line “ Insight – The Dems & Dirty Tricks ** Internal Use Only – Pls Do Not Forward **,” was sent by Fred Burton, Stratfor’s V.P. of Intelligence. It said in part, The black Dems were caught stuffing the ballot boxes in Philly and Ohio as reported the night of the election and Sen. McCain chose not to fight. The matter is not dead inside the party. It now becomes a matter of sequence now as to how and when to “out”.



McCain’s Response -

Insight – McCain #5 ** internal use only – Pls do not forward ** Email-ID Date From To
347043
2008-11-05 14:40:28
burton@stratfor.com
secure@stratfor.com

Further –After discussions with his inner circle, which explains the delay in his
speech, McCain decided not to pursue the voter fraud in PA and Ohio,
despite his staff’s desire to make it an issue. He said no. Staff felt
they could get a federal injunction to stop the process. McCain felt the
crowds assembled in support of Obama and such would be detrimental to our
country and it would do our nation no good for this to drag out like last
go around, coupled with the possibility of domestic violence.My guy said many were shocked, but after reflecting upon his decision,
thought he put the country first. [Wikileaks]
Burton also says in the email, in point number two, that the Dems made a six-figure donation to Rev. Jesse to buy his silence on Israel. Is it true? On October 14, 2008 Jackson told attendees at the World Policy Forum in Evian, France that ‘President Obama’ would “remove the clout of Zionists who have controlled American policy for decades.”

Point number three: Burton continued in the email above with an explosive charge that sleezy Russian money went into Obama’s campaign coffers. He said a smoking gun had already been found.

This allegation makes some sense of Obama’s reassurances to Russian President Dmitry Medvedev caught by an open mic. Obama said “….but it’s important for him [Putin] to give me space.”

Remember this recent exchange -

Medvedev responded: “Yeah, I understand. I understand your message about space. Space for you …”

Obama: “This is my last election. After my election, I have more flexibility.”

Medvedev: “I understand. I will transmit this information to Vladimir [Putin]…”

Fred Burton is well-known and respected in the highest Intelligence circles. He has been Deputy Chief of the Department of State’s counterterrorism division for the Diplomatic Security Service (DSS).

Stratfor has acknowledged that last December its internal communications system was hacked and the group “Anonymous” has taken credit for the sabotage . WikiLeaks started to publish Stratfor’s stolen emails last month. Startfor will neither confirm nor deny whether the communiqués attributed to its staff are real or fabrications.

WikiLeaks has published 973 out of what it says are 5 million internal Stratforemails (dated between July 2004 and December 2011) obtained by the hacker Anonymous in 2011.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (131092)4/25/2012 9:35:19 AM
From: locogringo4 Recommendations  Respond to of 224729
 
Yo, wrong-way-kenny_troll, is this good news? (It's good in that it will keep you off of the boards today out of embarrassment of your LOSER president.)

Biggest drop in 3 years..............YEP.........we're really improving..............tell it to Greece.................

Weak durables orders cast shadow on U.S. recovery

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Demand for long-lasting manufactured goods was the weakest in three years in March and a gauge of business spending plans fell, suggesting the economy lost momentum as the first quarter drew to a close. Durable goods orders dropped 4.2 percent, the largest decline since January 2009, the Commerce Department said on Wednesday after a downwardly revised 1.9 percent increase in February.

finance.yahoo.com