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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Brumar89 who wrote (736567)9/2/2013 11:17:59 AM
From: joseffy1 Recommendation

Recommended By
DeplorableIrredeemableRedneck

  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 1577893
 
The image John Kerry WON'T want you to see:

U.S. Secretary of State pictured dining with Assad and his wife at Damascus restaurant before war broke out in Syria
  • Kerry pictured around a small table with his wife and the Assads in 2009
  • Assad and Kerry lean in towards each other, deep in conversation
  • Picture taken in February 2009 when Kerry led a delegation to Syria
  • Kerry yesterday compared Assad to Adolf Hitler and Saddam Hussein
By Anthony Bond 2 September 2013
dailymail.co.uk

This astonishing photograph shows U.S Secretary of State John Kerry having a cosy and intimate dinner with Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad.

Kerry - who compared Assad to Adolf Hitler and Saddam Hussein yesterday - is pictured around a small table with his wife and the Assads in 2009.

Assad and Kerry - who was then a senator for Massachusetts - lean in towards each other and appear deep in conversation as their wives look on.

A waiter is pictured at their side with a tray of green drinks - which are believed to be lemon and crushed mint.

Cosy: This astonishing photograph shows the U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and his wife having an intimate dinner with Syrian dictator Bashar al-Assad and his wife in 2009


Relaxed: A waiter carries over a tray of drinks, which appear to look like cocktails


The picture is believed to have been taken in February 2009 in the Naranj restaurant in Damascus when Kerry led a delegation to Syria to discuss ideas and talk about the way forward for peace in the region.

Despite President Barack Obama taking a step back from his threat to launch an attack by putting a vote in Congress, his Secretary of State has been outspoken about the dangers posed by the Syrian regime.



More...
He said that Assad ‘has now joined the list of Adolf Hitler and Saddam Hussein’ in deploying chemical weapons against his population.

He said on Sunday that the U.S. now has evidence that sarin nerve gas was used in Syria and that ‘the case gets stronger by the day’ for a military attack.


Speaking out: US Secretary of State John Kerry last week said the U.S. knows 'with high confidence' the Syrian regime used chemical weapons in an attack




Under pressure: Syrian President Bashar Assad, right, is pictured in a meeting yesterday. Kerry has described him as a 'thug and murderer'

During a passionate speech in Washington last Friday, he also called Assad a ‘thug and murderer’ and urged the world to act as he warned 'history would judge us all extraordinarily harshly if we turned a blind eye to a dictator'.

The U.S. administration put the Syrian chemical weapons death toll on the outskirts of Damascus at 1,429 people - far more than previous estimates - including more than 400 children.

Kerry has said he is confident that Congress will give Obama its backing for an attack against Syria, but the former Massachusetts senator also said the president has authority to act on his own if Congress doesn't give its approval.


Horrific: Hundreds died in the alleged chemical attacks, including many women and children

Awful: Secretary of State John Kerry said images like these contributed to the U.S. assessment that chemical weapons were used in Syria

While Kerry stopped short of saying Obama was committed to such a course even if lawmakers refuse to authorise force, he did say that ‘we are not going to lose this vote.’

Kerry said Obama has the right to take action against Syria, with or without Congress' approval. But he stopped short of saying Obama was committed to such a course even if lawmakers refuse to authorize force.

Congress is scheduled to return from a summer break on September 9.



To: Brumar89 who wrote (736567)9/2/2013 12:05:09 PM
From: joseffy1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Brumar89

  Respond to of 1577893
 
Enviro-lawsuit forces five Indiana coal plants to shut down

...................................................................................
Daily Caller ^ | 8/30/2013 | Michael Bastasch





To: Brumar89 who wrote (736567)9/2/2013 1:21:35 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 1577893
 
Why Liberals Hate Tim Tebow (Many Tebow-bashers really have a problem with God)
...............................................................................................................
Pajamas Media ^ | 08/31/2013 | PAULA BOLYARD

In January 2012, Tim Tebow was the darling of the marketing world — he was marketing gold. Then quarterback of the Denver Broncos, Tebow had led the team to several come-from-behind wins and threw an 80-yard touchdown pass on the first play of an overtime game to beat the Pittsburgh Steelers in a first-round playoff game. The game drew a stunning 49% more viewers than the year-earlier match-up.

Ad Age reported at the time, “The game on CBS averaged a 25.9 household rating/43 share, according to Nielsen, the highest-rated first-round NFL playoff game in 24 years.”

They said that Tebow ranked among the top 85 celebrities in the world in the Trendsetter attribute, “on par with George Clooney, Rihanna, and Justin Timberlake.” According to Ad Age, “In terms of influence, Mr. Tebow is now in the top 40 of 3,000 celebs in the DBI, on par Tom Hanks, Lady Gaga, Taylor Swift, Jennifer Aniston and Steven Spielberg.”

Darin David, account director at The Marketing Arm, Dallas, said that Tebow was then likely at the $10 million a year level in marketing potential. “As a marketer, you want somebody like that.”

Now you’d think that any team with half a brain, or even a modicum of greed, would have seen the potential — a decade of Tebwomania with the accompanying marketing bonanza. Jerseys, posters, shoes, ticket sales, TV viewers — dollar signs. They would have immediately put a team of the best coaches, trainers, and former quarterbacks on Team Tebow to do whatever it takes to transform his Heisman Trophy college skills into NFL-worthy abilities. But the media had to have its say.



Despite Tebow’s tremendous marketing potential, even before he was cut loose from the Broncos, the whisper campaign began about how he was “polarizing” and he had “baggage” — that teams wouldn’t want the “distraction.” Ross Bentley at Bleacher Report called Tebow “ the most polarizing figure in sports.” A Business Insider headline blasted “How He Became the Most Polarizing Athlete in Sports,” citing Tebow’s homeschooling and Christian faith. (It should be noted that Michael Vick was also at one time considered “the Most Polarizing Man in Sports,” but you know, he killed and tortured innocent puppies and spent time in prison for illegal dog fighting.)

As Tebwomania grew, the supposed “polarization” also grew with liberal sports writers like The Nation’s Dave Zirin weighing in and, while blaming Tebow’s questionable quarterback skills, also opining that Tebow is “a religious figure in a country that is uncomfortable talking [about] religion.” On ESPN this past June, Zirin added, “When you do a Super Bowl ad for Focus on the Family before you’ve played one down in the NFL, you’re going to be polarizing.”

As news of his release from the New England Patriots was announced on Saturday, the internet exploded with stories about the “polarizing quarterback,” including one at Huffington Post that by Saturday night had accumulated more than 5000 comments.

Tebow, as always, was classy in his response, thanking the Patriots owners and coaches for the opportunity and quoting 2 Corinthians 12:9:

And He has said to me, “My grace is sufficient for you, for power is perfected in weakness.” Most gladly, therefore, I will rather boast about my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may dwell in me.

That was all the Tebow-haters at Huffington Post needed to pounce on Tebow. Some examples of comments:

“Awwwwwwwww. I bet this makes the Baby Jesus weep. Tim should have prayed more.”

“Hey Tim, are you getting the message now? Nothing fails like prayer.”

“If Tim Tebow spend as much time concentrating on playing football as he did worrying about promoting his religion, he might not be getting cut.”

“We’re all going to hell and we’re excited about it. Don’t be jealous.”

“It would have been different for him had he kept his religion home and just been a regular ball player.”

“Where’s your god now, Tebow?”

On and on it went for over 100 pages of comments.



The truth is, many of these Tebow-bashers really have a problem with God — Tebow is just a convenient conduit for their anger. When they see Tebow unashamedly discussing his faith, praying — Tebowing — on the sidelines of a football game, or hear about him preaching in a church, it makes them confront the fact that they are not right with God. John, the “disciple whom Jesus loved,” described it this way:

The light has come into the world, and people loved the darkness rather than the light because their works were evil. For everyone who does wicked things hates the light and does not come to the light, lest his works should be exposed. But whoever does what is true comes to the light, so that it may be clearly seen that his works have been carried out in God.(John 3:19-21, ESV).

When a certain segment of the American culture sees Tim Tebow, they get angry at him because they hate the light — they hate God, and more specifically, they hate Jesus Christ. It seems counterintuitive that vocal atheists would hate someone they believe does not exist, but spend time reading the comments thread of any blog post that mentions God or Jesus or Christianity and you’ll see the virulent hatred directed toward something they allegedly don’t believe exists.

Paul tells the Romans that men suppress God’s truth by their unrighteousness. “For what can be known about God is plain to them, because God has shown it to them. For his invisible attributes, namely, his eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly perceived, ever since the creation of the world, in the things that have been made. So they are without excuse” ( Romans 1:18-20).

We are all born with a conscience and an innate ability to understand God at a basic level — to know that he exists and we are accountable to Him. Some, despising God (and his laws and requirements), ignore — and even suppress — that truth.

Aldous Huxley, the brother of the atheistic evolutionist Sir Julian Huxley, gave the reason for his anti-Christian stance:

I had motive for not wanting the world to have a meaning … the philosophy of meaninglessness was essentially an instrument of liberation, sexual and political.

For many, it’s easier to attack Tim Tebow than it is to confront the fact that they are living apart from God. They understand that turning to God would mean giving up their right to live however they please and instead submitting to God’s will and desires.

Fair enough. As long as they know that “they are without excuse” and that “each of us will give an account of himself to God” (Romans 14:12, ESV).

The good news is something that Tebow has been bold to proclaim. The disciple John also said,“Whoever believes in [Jesus] is not condemned, but whoever does not believe is condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of the only Son of God” (John 3:18). For those who repent — ask forgiveness and turn from their sins — and trust Christ to save them, “There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus” (Romans 8:1, ESV). Hating Tim Tebow, or your Christian co-worker, or the church you grew up in will not solve your fundamental problem that you are separated from God by your sin. Christians believe that only in the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ can that separation be bridged.



To: Brumar89 who wrote (736567)9/2/2013 2:41:05 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 1577893
 
Bad Batch Of Synthetic Marijuana 'Spice' Behind Dozens Of Hospitalizations In Denver...



To: Brumar89 who wrote (736567)9/2/2013 2:43:34 PM
From: joseffy  Respond to of 1577893
 
Agony of ecstasy at killer NYC rave *

2 OD at Randall’s Island.

By KIRSTAN CONLEY, LARRY CELONA and BOB FREDERICKSLast September 2, 2013

A Syracuse grad and a Rhode Island co-ed died after popping ecstasy pills at the wild Electric Zoo music fest — prompting officials to shut down the megaparty, which drew 100,000 ravers to Randall’s Island over the weekend.

“I just took six hits of Molly,’’ tragic 20-year-old Olivia Rotondo told an EMS worker on Saturday, referring to the drug’s street name — before suddenly collapsing in a seizure and dying.

Organizers abruptly canceled yesterday’s revelry just hours before it was scheduled to begin, under pressure from the city.

The deaths of Rotondo, a University of New Hampshire junior from North Providence, RI, and Jeffrey Russ, a 23-year-old Syracuse University graduate from Rochester, took place during a weekend of mayhem that included:


PARTY OVER: Rave-goers crowd the stage at the Electric Zoo bash at Randall’s Island over the weekend (above) before its cancellation after drug deaths and multiple arrests.


DEADLY DOSES: Olivia Rotondo, 20, told EMTs she was on six hits of ecstasy at the Electric Zoo music fest on Randall’s Island before her death yesterday. Jeffrey Russ (above), 23, also OD’d.


FilmMagic
DEADLY DOSES: Olivia Rotondo (above), 20, told EMTs she was on six hits of ecstasy at the Electric Zoo music fest on Randall’s Island before her death yesterday. Jeffrey Russ, 23, also OD’d.


* A 16-year-old girl found under a van with her pants down and taken to a hospital, where tests showed she was sexually assaulted, according to a city parks advocate.

* At least four people hospitalized in critical condition after apparent drug overdoses.

* Thirty-one arrests, mostly for drug possession but also for disorderly conduct and resisting arrest.

NYPD detectives launched a homicide probe into the deaths of Rotondo and Russ, police sources said. The duo were not believed to have attended the event together.

Just hours before her death, Rotondo tweeted her excitement about attending the fifth annual Electric Zoo. “The amount of traveling I’ve done today is unreal. Just get me to the damn zoo,” she tweeted Saturday.

Her grieving grandfather Henry Rotondo, 73, told The Post, “She was a great kid — that’s all I can tell you.”

Lauren Pezzelli, who lives across the street from the family, called her “a lovely, beautiful young girl inside and out.”

“They’re devastated,” added Pezzelli of Rotondo’s parents, whom she visited earlier in the day. “It’s not meant to be this way.”

Russ’ aunt Patti Fanto-Holdaway said she and other relatives rushed to New York City when they got the grim news.

“We drove down in the middle of the night after we got the call that he was in the hospital,” she her voice trembling. “We lost him before we got there.”

Russ had been staying with a friend in New Jersey since Thursday.

“He loved going to those things and meeting up with his friends,” Fanto-Holdaway told The Post. “One of his [frat] brothers on his Facebook page said, ‘He lit up every room he walked into.’ He was that kid,” she said.

She said the family was told that Russ had taken ecstasy.

Law-enforcement sources said he also had crystal meth in his pocket when he died.

“He had an extremely high fever when he hit the hospital,” Fanto-Holdaway said.

Russ was pronounced dead at Harlem Hospital at 3 a.m. yesterday, and Rotondo passed away at 10:45 p.m. Saturday at Metropolitan Hospital, officials said.

Both thought they were taking ecstasy, the street name for the euphoria-inducing club drug MDMA, but toxicology reports are still pending.

Sometimes, bogus pills peddled as Molly contain no MDMA at all but instead more harmful drugs such as amphetamines or powerful tranquilizers.

“Especially at concerts, when people are buying from strangers, you have no way of knowing what the hell you’re putting down your throat or up your nose,” the source said.

One source said it was unlikely that the duo got the drug from the same dealer given its widespread popularity, adding they may have brought it with them.

Erin Mulvey, a spokeswoman for the US Drug Enforcement Administration, said much of it is shipped here in bulk powder from overseas and then fashioned into pills.

“The DEA is targeting large-scale distributors for bringing quantities of the drug over from China, India and Canada,” she said.

Many Zoo fans, who paid up to $180 a day to attend, were furious to learn yesterday’s performances — slated to include Zedd, Laidback Luke, Armin Van Buuren, Steve Aoki and Sebastian Ingrosso — wouldn’t go on.

“If you cared about your patrons then you wouldn’t disappoint the tens of thousand RESPONSIBLE concertgoers who LIVE for the music at these festivals,” fumed David Eli on the event’s Facebook page.

Some fans blamed the victims.

“If people take drugs, that’s their own fault,” said Dayna Marce, 19, of upstate Highland Falls. “You’re going to sit here and take drugs and die because of it — how’s that my fault that you died? I know that sounds mean, but it’s not fair to me.

“I’ve been looking forward to this for so long. I’m so angry,

“I was looking forward to this all summer. I wanted to see Zedd. I never saw him live before,” Marce griped.

Last night, hundreds of angry ticket-holders tried to restart the party when they showed up for a surprise deejay performance at The Tribeca Grand in Manhattan. Police were called to disperse the crowd, who were raving mad over the cancellation.

“I’m very disappointed. I spent $400 for tickets,” said Maralynn Lopez, who traveled from Chicago.



To: Brumar89 who wrote (736567)9/4/2013 12:53:17 AM
From: RMF  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1577893
 
Oh, yeah, you probably listened to Cheney tell us how all the Shiites would greet our troops with bouquets of flowers.

Bush seemed to think that "democracy" would somehow be a panacea for all the hundreds of years of religious and tribal hatreds.

I believe that if Mississippi were given TOTAL independence from the United States we'd be seeing the hanging of Gays and Blacks there within 6 months. Abortion doctors would probably be first...

It's not just Muslims that have their problems accepting people.