SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : How Quickly Can Obama Totally Destroy the US? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: simplicity who wrote (15)11/8/2012 2:59:08 PM
From: joseffy1 Recommendation  Respond to of 16547
 
Lockheed is starting to send out Work Area Reduction Notices (WARN)



To: simplicity who wrote (15)11/8/2012 2:59:48 PM
From: joseffy3 Recommendations  Respond to of 16547
 
It's beyond amazing how four years of political loyalty can go up in flames when the pocketbook, and family security, are involved. This man had no time for conservative political commentary until the spectre of a pink slip reared its ugly head



To: simplicity who wrote (15)11/8/2012 3:32:43 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
 
Lessons of the Battle of Benghazi
Our enemies will learn them. Will we?



By Clifford D. May ]November 8, 2012 12:00 A.M.
nationalreview.com
The U.S. Consulate in Benghazi burns following the attack of September 11, 2012.


Now that the election is behind us, perhaps we can put politics aside and acknowledge a hard fact:

On September 11, 2012, America was defeated by al-Qaeda in the Battle of Benghazi.

About this battle many questions remain. The media and Congress have a responsibility to get answers — not only because we should know the truth, not only to assign blame, but, more important, to learn from failure. At the least, we should try to understand what lessons our enemies have learned — because they will apply those lessons in the future.

It is possible to lose many battles and still win a war. It is possible to win many battles and still lose a war. What is perilous is to misunderstand your enemies and underestimate the threats they pose.

On September 11, 2012, Peter Bergen, a director of the New America Foundation and CNN’s national-security analyst, had been saying for months that al-Qaeda was “defeated,” a thesis endorsed by, among others, Lieutenant Colonel Thomas Lynch III (retired), a distinguished research fellow at the National Defense University. President Obama made this claim a central theme of his reelection campaign. Post-Benghazi, in his final stump speech in Des Moines, he reassured voters that “the war in Iraq has ended, the war in Afghanistan is ending. Osama bin Laden is dead!”

But, in Afghanistan, we have not broken the Taliban; in Iraq, al-Qaeda has been increasing the tempo of its suicide attacks; in Syria, al-Qaeda is playing an increasingly significant role in the civil war; in Yemen, al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula is far from beaten; in Mali, al-Qaeda has taken control of vast territories; in Iran, a regime whose ideology is no less anti-American than al-Qaeda’s continues to develop nuclear weapons despite tightening sanctions.

According to the New York Times, in the months leading up to the “attacks on the American diplomatic mission in Benghazi, the Obama administration received intelligence reports that Islamic extremist groups were operating training camps in the mountains near Benghazi and that some of the fighters were ‘Al-Qaeda leaning.’”

That’s an oddly tentative way to refer to al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, an al-Qaeda affiliate; Ansar al-Sharia, recently described by U.S government researchers as a group that “has increasingly embodied al-Qaeda’s presence in Libya”; and the Muhammad Jamal network, which openly defends al-Qaeda and, to quote Jamal himself, “all jihad movements in the world.” These three groups were primary participants in the Benghazi attacks, American officials have said.

AFRICOM, the American regional combatant command for Africa, established in 2007, had drones monitoring the terrorist training camps. But those drones were unarmed, as were the drones at the Sigonella naval air station in Sicily, a short flight from Benghazi. Had there been armed drones to deploy, would it have made a difference? Perhaps: According to Fox News’ Jennifer Griffin, who has done some of the best reporting on this story, former Navy SEALs Tyrone Woods and Glen Doherty had laser rangefinders on the roof of the building where they were attempting to hold out against the terrorists. Using those rangefinders, they had pinpointed the coordinates of the mortars firing at them and requested air support. That support never arrived, and, eventually, mortars struck the roof, killing both men.

Benghazi has been a battlefield at least since June, when the British closed their mission in the city after their ambassador’s convoy was hit by a rocket-propelled grenade. About the same time — following two additional attacks — the Red Cross shut down its Benghazi operations.

What’s to stop “al-Qaeda leaning” groups from replicating the Benghazi model elsewhere? What can be done to prevent jihadist training camps from springing up like weeds across North Africa and the broader Middle East and training wave after wave of bomb makers, suicide-bombers, and guerrillas? Are these threats being taken seriously?

I’m not confident. In last Sunday’s Washington Post, Greg Jaffe, a longtime military-affairs correspondent, contends that “the United States — and the world — have never been safer.” He points out that since 9/11/01 more Americans have been crushed “by falling furniture or televisions” than killed by terrorists, and that there are “fewer wars now than at any time in decades.”

Jaffe quotes Harvard psychology professor Steven Pinker,
who suggests that those who do not see it that way are deluded. Pinker tells Jaffe: “A historical peculiarity of the U.S., compared to Europe, is a ‘culture of honor,’ in which a man has to defend himself against threats and insults.”

Oh, right — you see that macho culture all over such places as Cambridge and Berkeley, and what a stark contrast it is with those live-and-let-live, turn-the-other-cheek types one encounters in Egypt, Turkey, Prussia, and Sicily!

I’m reminded of the New York Times op-ed by Larry C. Johnson, a former CIA and State Department counterterrorism official, asserting — two months before 9/11/01 — that terrorism was not “becoming more widespread and lethal. Also wrong, he said, was the “impression that extremist Islamic groups cause most terrorism.” Around the same time, former Illinois congressman Paul Findley called Osama bin Laden “one of the preeminent heroes of Afghans, occupying a role similar to the Marquis de Lafayette” during the American Revolution.

The controversy over Benghazi initially focused on the mischaracterization of the September 11, 2012, attacks as a protest against “Islamophobia” that spun out of control.

Next, it became a debate over who should be blamed for what was clearly an inadequate response.

Increasingly, however, it appears that insufficient preparation made impotence inevitable. And the cause of that may be this simple:

Too many otherwise smart and powerful people can’t come to terms with the reality that a serious, if unconventional, war is being waged — a war that has not ended and will not end any time soon.

— Clifford D. May is president of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, a policy institute focusing on national security.





To: simplicity who wrote (15)11/8/2012 3:37:49 PM
From: PROLIFE  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 16547
 
Yes, but all those wishing to get on ANY safety net will soon find the net broken down and unable to sustain them..and I mean the big pensions too, because dollar to a doughnut they have been gutted.



To: simplicity who wrote (15)11/8/2012 3:57:50 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
 
Benghazi documents available to senators only when they are out of town

by Josh Rogin Thursday, November 8, 2012
thecable.foreignpolicy.com


Under pressure from senators, the State Department is allowing some lawmakers to look at cables and other documents related to the Sept. 11 attack on the U.S. mission in Benghazi, but only today and tomorrow, when most senators are not in Washington.

Congress is gearing up for a full week of Benghazi-related hearings next week, including a Nov. 13 hearing behind closed doors of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, led by Chairman John Kerry (D-MA). Kerry has written two letters to the State Department requesting congressional access to information and documents related to the circumstances leading up to and during the attack that killed Ambassador Chris Stevens. Several sensitive documents have already been leaked to congressional offices and the media, so the State Department has decided to let some senators view Benghazi documents but not take them home.

"We are currently in the process of gathering and reviewing record responsive to Congressional requests. Our efforts have already identified a large volume of potentially responsive records that address the security situation leading up to the attack," State Department Assistant Secretary for Legislative Affairs David Adams wrote to Kerry on Nov. 2 in a letter obtained by The Cable.

"To facilitate your committee's work, we want to offer you and other members of the committee the opportunity to review these cables and memoranda. This set of material contains classified and other sensitive information... Mindful of these concerns, the Department is prepared to make copies of these documents available for the committee's in camera review."

One senior GOP Senate staffer told The Cable that State is only making the documents available for senators and committee staff to view today and tomorrow, which won't actually allow the members to prepare for the hearing. Staffers for committee members are also not allowed to see the material.

"Funny since no member is in town," the aide said. "The timing and limited access clearly demonstrates the administration cares more about playing politics with the tragedy than accepting responsibility."

Committee members Bob Corker (R-TN) and Johnny Isakson (R-GA) sent Clinton a letter Nov. 2 asking that the documents be sent to the committee, not just made available for viewing on a limited basis.

"Over the past several weeks, cables, emails and other communications regarding the security situation in Benghazi prior to and since the attack on our consulate have been leaked to some Congressional offices and media outlets, resulting in conflicting reports in the press. We have also called for the official transmittal of these documents and are still awaiting your response," Corker and Isakson wrote. "On September 25, 2012 and again on October 3, 2012, we sent you letters requesting that all communications between the diplomatic mission in Libya and the State Department related to the security situation be transmitted to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee without delay. We respectfully ask for an update on the status of our requests for these documents."



To: simplicity who wrote (15)11/8/2012 4:42:50 PM
From: joseffy2 Recommendations  Respond to of 16547
 
Obama Lost in Every State with a Voter Photo-ID Law


Was the election stolen?

Remember all those lawsuits by Democrats demanding that any voter identification laws be repealed? Well, now we know why they filed them. They needed to steal the vote in certain key states so that Obama could be reelected.

Curiously, Obama lost in every state that requires a photo ID to be produced before voting.

A list of closely contested state elections with no voter ID, which narrowly went to Obama include: Minnesota (10), Iowa (6), Wisconsin (10), Nevada (6), Colorado (9), New Mexico (5) and Pennsylvania (20).

This amounts to a total of 66 electoral votes. When added to Romney’s total of 205 electoral votes, that would give Romney 271 electoral votes, enough votes to win even without Ohio or Florida Romney also likely had the states of Florida and Ohio stolen from him, which don’t require photo IDs.


Ohio requires a non-photo ID. Would a library card do? Florida “requests” a photo ID, but doesn’t require it. So what happens if they request a photo ID and the illegal alien Haitian doesn’t have one? Do they just count the vote anyway?


reaganiterepublicanresistance.blogspot.com




American 3rd Position Whistleblower Newswire h/t Jan






To: simplicity who wrote (15)11/8/2012 5:34:34 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
 
Nearly 200 'family-sustaining' jobs lost as HarperCollins closes warehouse

James Haggerty November 7, 2012
thetimes-tribune.com

HarperCollins Publishers will close its warehouse and distribution operation in Throop next summer and put close to 200 people out of work.

“The industry is changing,” said Erin Crum, spokeswoman for HarperCollins, a book publisher based in New York. “It just makes sense for us to go this route as we shift to a more digital industry.”

Ms. Crum would not disclose how many people will be laid off when the warehouse at the Keystone Industrial Park closes.

However, Craig Pawlik, principal officer of Teamsters Local 229 in Scranton, said 192 people will be furloughed. The union represents maintenance and warehouse workers at the facility.

“They are stunned,” Mr. Pawlik said. “Their last day in Dunmore will be sometime in September 2013.”

About 230 people work in an adjoining office at the HarperCollins’ complex, including information technology, accounting, credit and collection and customer-service operations, said Austin Burke, president of the Greater Scranton Chamber of Commerce. None of the office workers will be affected by the warehouse closing, Ms. Crum said.

HarperCollins also reported it will close a warehouse in Nashville, exit the distribution field and hand off its warehousing and distribution functions to RR Donnelly, a Chicago-based printer. Donnelly prints most of HarperCollins’s books. The move will save money and streamline distribution operations, according to HarperCollins.

The warehouse’s demise illustrates the impact of e-reading devices, such as Kindle, on the publishing field.

Print book sales dropped by more than 9 percent in 2011 from the preceding year, according to the Nielsen Co., a New York media and information concern. In August, a publishing industry survey showed paperback book sales had decreased by 14 percent since 2008.

“The economy is constantly evolving,” Mr. Burke said. “Nationally, we see bookstores closing. We see publishers merging and we see logistics being consolidated and outsourced.”

Unionized workers at the warehouse earn between $19.91 and $20.87 an hour, plus benefits, Mr. Pawlik said.

“Those are family-sustaining jobs,” he said. “They are non-existent in this area at this point.”


The chamber developed the Throop site for Harper & Row in 1964, Mr. Burke said. In 1985, Harper & Row added an $8 million, 125,000-square-foot addition to its 325,000-square-foot warehouse.

Media mogul Rupert Murdoch acquired Harper & Row for $300 million in 1986 and merged it in 1987 with a British publisher, William Collins & Sons. HarperCollins is a subsidiary of News Corp., a New York-based media and entertainment conglomerate.

“This is a real hardship for those warehouse workers,” Mr. Burke said. “They are excellent warehousing jobs. They have been a real foundation stone of our logistics economy here.”

The 30-acre property housing HarperCollins’ operations was acquired by a Chicago corporation for $11.7 million in 2007, according to Lackawanna County property records.



To: simplicity who wrote (15)7/17/2013 12:27:33 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
 
A Pile of Romanian Ash May Be Stolen Picasso, Matisse, and Monet Masterpieces
...................................................................................................................................................
news.yahoo.com



To: simplicity who wrote (15)8/17/2013 12:52:31 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 16547
 
REPORTED LIST OF CHURCHES AND CHRISTIAN INST ATTACKED IN EGYPT WILL ASTONISH YOU

The Blaze ^ | August 16, 2013 | Erica Ritz


A wave of devastating violence swept through Egypt Wednesday as the government attempted to disband the supporters of ousted president Mohamed Morsi from their sit-ins. According to the Associated Press, 638 people have now been confirmed killed, and nearly 4,000 are injured.

The fighting is far from limited to the Islamists and the military, however. Since Wednesday’s violence began, there have also been a wave of attacks on churches and Christian institutions.

The damaged interior of the Saint Moussa Church is seen a day after it was torched in sectarian violence following the dispersal of two Cairo sit-ins of supporters of the ousted Islamist President Mohammed Morsi, in Minya, south of Cairo, Egypt, Thursday, Aug. 15, 2013. (Photo: AP)

Amira Mikhail at Nile Revolt compiled a shocking list with the help of Mai El-Sadany, Amir Beshay, “aggregating information that was shared online about attacks on churches and their institutions around Egypt.”

“Please note that this is a work-in-progress and information so far is unverified although most is backed up with tweets and photos,” she wrote. “We are hoping to continue the efforts to verify details. If you have any corrections or updates to church names, photos, or details, please reach out to am.mikhail@gmail.com or my twitter.”

Though there may be some changes made to the list, what has been assembled so far is staggering.

List courtesy of Amira Mikhail:

Churches

Alexandria


  1. Father Maximus Church
Arish

  1. St George Church | Burned | Source
Assiut

  1. Good Shepherds Monastery | Nuns attacked
  2. Angel Michael Church | Surrounded
  3. St George Coptic Orthodox Church | Photo, Photo, Photo, YouTube
  4. Al-Eslah Church| Burned | Source
  5. Adventist Church | Pastor and his wife kidnapped | Photo
  6. St Therese Church | Photo
  7. Apostles Church | Burning | Source
  8. Holy Revival Church | Burning | Source
  9. Qusiya Diocese | MCN


Beni Suef

  1. The Nuns School | Photo
  2. St George Church | al-Wasta
Cairo

  1. St Fatima Basilica | Heliopolis | Attempted Attack
  2. Virgin Mary’s Church | Hakim Village | Burned | Photo
Fayoum ( Five churches)

  1. St Mary Church | El Nazlah | Gallery
  2. St Damiana Church | Robbed and burned
  3. Amir Tawadros (St Theodore) Church | EgyNews (Arabic), Twitter
  4. Evangelical Church | al-Zorby Village | Looting and destruction
  5. Church of Joseph | Burned | Source
  6. Franciscan School | Burned | Source
Gharbiya

  1. Diocese of St Paul | Burned | Source
Giza

  1. Father Antonios
  2. Atfeeh Bishopric
Minya ( Around twelve churches)

  1. Church of the Virgin Mary and Father Abram | Delga, Deir Mawas | Source
  2. St Mina Church | Abu Hilal Kebly, Beni Hilal | Source, photo
  3. Baptist Church | Beni Mazar | Source
  4. Monastery | Deir Mawas | Ahram (Arabic)
  5. Delga Church | Attacked (Previously attacked with fire)
  6. The Jesuit Fathers Church | Abu Hilal district
  7. St Mark Church | Abu Hilal district
  8. St Joseph Nunnery | Photo, photo
  9. Amir Tadros Church | Photo, photo, photo, album, photo, photo
  10. Evangelical Church | Photo
  11. Anba Moussa al-Aswad Church | Photo
  12. Apostles Church | Source
Qena

  1. St Mary’s Church | Attempted Burning
Sohag

  1. St George Church | Photo album, photo, photo, video, source, source, video
  2. St Damiana | Attacked and burned | Source
  3. Virgin Mary | Attacked and burned | Source
  4. St Mark Church & Community Center
  5. Anba Abram Church | Destroyed and burned | Source
Suez

  1. St Saviours Anglican Church | Source
  2. Franciscan Church and School | Street 23 | Burned | Photo, photo, source/photos, photos
  3. Holy Shepherd Monastery and Hospital | Photo
  4. Good Shepherd Church (molotov cocktail thrown)- Relationship with Holy Shepherd Monastery unknown.
  5. Greek Orthodox Church | Photo, Photo
Christian Institutions

  • House of Father Angelos (Pastor of Church of the Virgin Mary and Father Abram) | Delga, Minya | Burned | CBN News, Ahram (Arabic)
  • Properties and Markets of Copts | al-Gomhorreya Street, Assiut
  • Seventeen Coptic homes | Delga, Minya | Burned | Source, Source
  • YMCA | Minya| Burned | Photo
  • Coptic Homes | Qulta Street, Assiut | Attacked
  • Offices of the Evangelical Foundation & Oum al-Nour | Minya
  • Coptic-owned shops, pharmacy, and hotels | Karnak and Cleopatra Streets, Luxor | Attacked and Looted
  • Dahabeya Nile Boat | Minya| Church-owned | Source, Photo, Photo
  • Bible Society bookshop | Cairo | Burned | Photo
  • Bible Society | Fayoum | Photo
  • Bible Society | al-Gomohoreya Street, Assiut | Photo, Photo
  • Ezbet el Nekhl | Source, source, source (Arabic)


Click here to read the entire post.