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


To: zax who wrote (906157)12/8/2015 10:43:24 AM
From: jlallen1 Recommendation

Recommended By
locogringo

  Respond to of 1577833
 
While the court issued no ruling and set no precedent when it acted,


LOL!!! From your article, Mr. Zux.


There could be a myriad of reasons why the case was not accepted...don't get too excited.. Heller is still good law.



To: zax who wrote (906157)12/8/2015 10:45:37 AM
From: locogringo1 Recommendation

Recommended By
TideGlider

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1577833
 
Must be that ruling at the supreme court. Wow, what a spectacular failure for the gun lobby.

You really are out of touch, aren't you? How's that ban doing in Chicago? Are you really this stupid, or are you just trolling?

Maybe their death rate will drop to 448 like Chicago's.

Also: Jan. 1, 2015 - Dec. 7, 2015= 2,787 shooting victims, and they didn't have white asses.

IOW, just like with Planned Parenthood............who the hell cares...........this is a great service being rendered by the law abiding gangbangers, doncha agree?



To: zax who wrote (906157)12/8/2015 10:49:36 AM
From: jlallen  Respond to of 1577833
 



To: zax who wrote (906157)12/8/2015 10:50:33 AM
From: jlallen  Respond to of 1577833
 
European fighters in Syria more than double, posing terror threat as they begin to return home
A new report warns that Western governments have been unable to stem the flow in either direction
By Michael Isikoff
9 hours ago 12/8/15
Yahoo News

.
The number of fighters from Western Europe pouring into Syria has more than doubled since last year, swelling the ranks of the Islamic State and other extremist groups by more than 30,000 despite efforts by the U.S. and other Western countries to cut off the flow, according to a new report by an international security firm.

“All of our assumptions about our ability to monitor these people have been proven faulty,” said Patrick Skinner, a former CIA counterterrorism officer and one of the authors of the report prepared by the Soufan Group.

“When you look at France or Belgium — they have a massive problem,” Skinner added. “It’s clear they haven’t been able to stop people from going — and it’s painfully clear they haven’t stopped people from coming back. It’s the round-trip nature of this that is really worrisome.”

The report also suggests that the motivation for those joining the fight is often more personal than political, and may well be immune to the “countering radical extremism” messaging that U.S. and other officials have touted as a potential solution to the problem.

“A search for belonging, purpose, adventure and friendship appear to remain the main reasons for people to join the Islamic State, just as they remain the least-addressed issues in the international fight against terrorism,” the report states.

Flash Points: Why the West is worried about foreig …Play video
The report — with detailed, country-by-country breakdowns on the flow of foreign fighters — offers a sobering and in some cases more downbeat perspective on the state of the war against ISIS than the one President Obama offered the country in a nationally televised speech Sunday night.

Before U.S. officials began calling attention to the problem, the Soufan Group was among the first to highlight the threat posed by foreign fighters in Syria and Iraq in a major report it released in June 2014. Basing its figures on open-source reporting, official government estimates and private interviews with U.S. and allied intelligence officials, the consulting firm estimated at the time that about 12,000 foreign fighters from 81 countries had flocked to Syria and Iraq.

The new report puts the figure at between 27,000 and 31,000 from at least 86 countries. That is consistent with current U.S. intelligence estimates, updated in just the last few weeks, of about 30,000.

The Soufan Group accepts official U.S. estimates that about 250 of these have come, or attempted to come, from the United States, up from about 120 last year. (A U.S. intelligence official told Yahoo News that about two dozen Americans are also now believed to have died after traveling to Syria to join the conflict.)

The numbers from Western Europe, Russia and the former Soviet Republics are far more pronounced — and rapidly accelerating. It estimates, for example, that about 5,000 fighters from European Union countries have flocked to the conflict, up from 2,500 in June 2014, with more than two- thirds of them coming from just four countries. The number from France is estimated at 1,700 (up from 700 last year); from the U.K. 760 (up from 400 last year); from Germany, 760 (up from 270 last year; and from Belgium, 470 (up from 250 last year.)

One huge source of the flow has been Russia — a major reason cited by Russian President Vladimir Putin’s recent decision to begin military strikes in Syria. The report estimates that about 2,400 fighters have come from Russia, up from 800 last year. The largest sources, however, remains Tunisia — about 6,000 (twice the estimate from last year); Turkey, between 2,000 and 2,200 (up from 400 last year); and 2,500 from Saudi Arabia (the same number as last year.)

In his talk from the Oval Office Sunday night, President Obama promised an intensification of air strikes and special operations forces against the ISIS. But he offered no major change in U.S. strategy and again vowed to avoid sending a large influx of U.S. ground troops to dislodge ISIS from the territory it now holds.

But Skinner of the Soufan Group said it is increasingly clear that the flow of fighters will not stop until the ISIS suffers a decisive defeat on the ground. “Until the Islamic State is demonstrably defeated, militarily — until they get toppled from Mosul and Raqqa, they will continue to be a magnet,” he said. “They need to have an undeniable loss.”