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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 (149059)11/16/2012 12:42:28 PM
From: Farmboy4 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224866
 
And that suits you just fine, right?



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (149059)11/16/2012 1:04:03 PM
From: Ann Corrigan8 Recommendations  Respond to of 224866
 
Obama changed CIA's report of 9/11 terrorist attack in Bengazi, then sent Rice out to parrot his lie. You can ask General Petraeus for more truth about the incident. As O said "now that the election is over we can find out what really happened in Libya."

cbsnews.com



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (149059)11/16/2012 1:06:51 PM
From: Hope Praytochange2 Recommendations  Respond to of 224866
 
November 16, 2012 Abandoned boy meets Texas fireman who saved him



Photo: AP In this undated photo provided by the Arlington, Texas, Fire Department, Koregan Quintanilla is shown the day he was left at the station. A Texas boy abandoned at a fire station as an infant has received his wish for his 10th birthday: to meet the firefighter who saved him. On Thursday evening, the boy was to celebrate his recent birthday by meeting Arlington firefighter Wesley Keck, riding on a fire truck and touring the station.


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Photo: APKoregan Quintanilla, 10, of Watauga, Texas, gets a tour around Arlington Fire Department station No. 12 from firefighter Wesley Keck Thursday, Nov. 15, 2012, in Arlington, Texas. Quintanilla, who was abandoned at a fire station as an infant, celebrated his recent birthday by meeting Keck, the firefighter who saved him, riding on a fire truck and touring the station.


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Photo: APIn this undated photo provided by the Arlington, Texas, Fire Department, Koregan Quintanilla is shown the day he was left at the station. A Texas boy abandoned at a fire station as an infant has received his wish for his 10th birthday: to meet the firefighter who saved him. On Thursday evening, the boy was to celebrate his recent birthday by meeting Arlington firefighter Wesley Keck, riding on a fire truck and touring the station.


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Photo: APKoregan Quintanilla, 10, of Watauga, Texas, left, talks to firefighter Wesley Keck as they prepare to take a short trip around the neighborhood on a fire truck Thursday, Nov. 15, 2012, in Arlington, Texas. Quintanilla, who was abandoned at a fire station as an infant, celebrated his recent birthday by meeting Keck, the firefighter who saved him, riding on a fire truck and touring the station.


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Photo: APRebecca Quintanilla, center left, wipes tears from her face as her adopted son Koregan, 10, hugs Arlington Fire Fighter Wesley Keck, center right, as the two meet Thursday, Nov. 15, 2012, in Arlington, Texas. A Texas boy abandoned at a fire station as an infant got his wish for his 10th birthday: to meet the firefighter who saved him. On Thursday evening, the boy was to celebrate his recent birthday by meeting Arlington firefighter Wesley Keck, riding on a fire truck and touring the station.


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Photo: APKoregan Quintanilla, 10, of Watauga, Texas, looks out the passenger window of a Arlington Fire Department fire truck as firefighter Wesley Keck, rear, prepares to take him on a short trip around the neighborhood Thursday, Nov. 15, 2012, in Arlington, Texas. Quintanilla, who was abandoned at a fire station as an infant, celebrated his recent birthday by meeting Keck, the firefighter who saved him, riding on a fire truck and touring the station.


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Photo: APKoregan Quintanilla, 10, of Watauga, Texas, gets a tour around Arlington Fire Department station No. 12 from firefighter Wesley Keck Thursday, Nov. 15, 2012, in Arlington, Texas. Quintanilla, who was abandoned at a fire station as an infant, celebrated his recent birthday by meeting Keck, the firefighter who saved him, riding on a fire truck and touring the station.


Show moreShow less



Photo: APIn this undated photo provided by the Arlington, Texas, Fire Department, Koregan Quintanilla is shown the day he was left at the station. A Texas boy abandoned at a fire station as an infant has received his wish for his 10th birthday: to meet the firefighter who saved him. On Thursday evening, the boy was to celebrate his recent birthday by meeting Arlington firefighter Wesley Keck, riding on a fire truck and touring the station.


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More Photos (1 of 5)

ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — When fourth-grader Koregan Quintanilla was talking with his classmates about where they wanted to go more than anyplace else in the world, his answer wasn't an amusement park, sporting event or kids restaurant. It was "his" fire station.

Koregan was abandoned in 2002 at an Arlington fire station when he was just a few hours old. Texas' Baby Moses law allows a parent to leave an unharmed infant up to 60 days old at a fire station or hospital with no questions asked. Child Protective Services then takes custody of the babies.


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On Thursday evening, Koregan got his wish for his 10th birthday. He met the Arlington firefighter who saved him, rode on a fire truck and toured the station. He hugged Arlington firefighter Wesley Keck and said he was "very nice."

Keck said he was excited about seeing the boy for the first time since finding a baby carrier outside the station on a cold November morning. He said he did a double take before rushing outside. He moved the blanket aside and saw a sleeping baby, then gently picked up the carrier and walked inside to tell his colleagues the shocking news, he said.

"I announced that somebody had left us a gift," Keck said Thursday. "I checked him out, and he seemed fine. I don't remember him crying. I held him, and he slept a lot. I have four kids, and some of the other firefighters are fathers, so taking care of babies wasn't new to us."

Koregan's mother, Rebecca Quintanilla, said her son, who turned 10 last week, always has known he was adopted and has watched TV news footage from when he was found at the fire station. This year, when Koregan began showing more interest in meeting the firefighter, she tracked Keck down and planned a reunion.

"He's a very good kid, kind, shy and he's always giving things away to people," Quintanilla said. "After talking to Mr. Keck, I think he's like that. I do believe Koregan has some traits from Mr. Keck, although he just spent a few hours with him."

Since 2009, 43 babies have been dropped off at fire stations and hospitals in Texas, said Marissa Gonzales, a spokeswoman for the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services. All states have similar laws, but Texas was the first to create the Baby Moses law, signing it into law in 1999. It took effect in 2001.

Quintanilla, who has five other children, all adopted, said she is grateful for the Baby Moses law — although it means Koregan never will have a way of finding his biological mother or his medical history unless she comes forward.

"It's amazing, because there are terrified women who have no idea what to do," she said. "There's a window of time when they can make a choice." Keck, a firefighter for 26 years, agreed. "I'm happy the way it turned out," he said. "I didn't do anything special. I happened to be in the right place at the right time."



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (149059)11/16/2012 1:34:21 PM
From: lorne1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224866
 
philips....."Farm Boy, we will all be dead and gone by the time those records are opened."....

WHY?!



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (149059)11/16/2012 5:16:10 PM
From: longnshort7 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224866
 

Obama said if you attack Susan Rice I'm coming after you because susan rice is just a helpless woman that needs men to protect her, she can't defend herself. What a sexist Obama is



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (149059)11/17/2012 7:26:55 PM
From: Jack of All Trades5 Recommendations  Respond to of 224866
 
Transparent my a$$
Congress demands EPA’s secret email accounts

A House committee has launched an investigation into whether EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson used an email alias to try to hide correspondence from open-government requests and her agency’s own internal watchdog — something that Republican lawmakers said could run afoul of the law.

The science committee has asked Ms. Jackson to turn over all information related to an email account under the name of “Richard Windsor,” which is one of the aliases identified by a researcher looking into the EPA.

The committee has also asked the White House’s lawyer and EPA’s inspector general to look into the matter and report back by the end of this month, saying that the secret email accounts could have been used to keep key information from official watchdogs as well as the public.

EPA did not respond Friday night to a request for comment.

The researcher who uncovered the “Richard Windsor” alias email, Christopher Horner, has repeatedly battled the administration over its global warming efforts.

Earlier this year he his colleagues at the Competitive Enterprise Institute sued to demand the release of emails from “secondary” accounts from EPA, and cited a memo saying the practice began during the Clinton administration under then-administrator Carol Browner.

Mr. Horner uncovered the existence of the secret emails while researching a book, “The Liberal War on Transparency,” published last month. Mr. Horner said after the book came out, two former EPA officials told him about the “Richard Windsor” email and said it was “one of the alternate email addresses she used.”

He said he has also discovered some EPA employees setting up private gmail accounts using their first and last names and the word EPA as a standard formula.

“They’ve been moving government over to private email,” Mr. Horner told The Washington Times. “In the book, I reveal private servers the White House had universities and pressure groups set up so they can conduct discussions.”

Federal open-records laws are designed to make information available to the public now, and to posterity at the National Archives, which collects official correspondence. There are strict rules on the use of email addresses, and the rules prohibit using private emails to try to circumvent open-records laws.

But news reports have revealed several instances where the White House and departments have used private emails to do business, including at the Department of Energy, where Jonathan Silver, the department’s loan officer, “explicitly directed others to keep loan guarantee communications secret by not linking public and private email accounts, and sent emails detailing official government business using his private email account,” according to the Science Committee.

In his letters to Ms. Jackson and three inspectors general, Science Committee Chairman Ralph Hall said at the very least the actions violate President Obama’s vow to run a transparent administration.

“Unfortunately, time and again, actions by the administration on transparency have fallen far short of the president’s rhetoric, in many instances trending away from transparency and toward greater secrecy,” Mr. Hall wrote in a letter signed by five other lawmakers.

Read more: Congress demands EPA's secret email accounts - Washington Times washingtontimes.com
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