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Somali rebels seize pirate haven of Haradhere
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Page 6: Politix
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2 00:00 Critter Control [3] 
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Page 4: Opinion
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Economy
US inflation up 2% in March
WASHINGTON (AFP) – US inflation rose two percent in March compared to the same month a year earlier, according to the consumer price index published on Monday.
Solid, solid B+ all around for Barack, Bernie and Timmie ...
Posted by: Steve White || 05/03/2010 11:19 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Yesterday I bought 40 lb. of dehydrated cow manure at a local garden store, to mix into the topsoil of my vegetable garden. 40 lb. cost $4.99 plus tax! It used to cost about $1.50. Tomorrow is an Election Day!
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418 || 05/03/2010 13:03 Comments || Top||

#2  And so it begins.
Posted by: bigjim-CA || 05/03/2010 13:16 Comments || Top||

#3  Inflation stats as a whole mean little compared to the breakdown of what is inflating.

" Energy and food costs rose 18.7 percent against March 2009, up almost four percentage points compared with February. Without food and energy spending the inflation level remained stable at 1.3 percent."
Posted by: Anonymoose || 05/03/2010 14:33 Comments || Top||

#4  you will get your manure money back plus some this sumer when veggies, melons, and grains go through the roof because of the $5 gas. There is serious gardening being done out here in fly over. It is like the carter years, also availability of good canning equipment is becoming scarce including bands, flats, and jars.
Posted by: bman || 05/03/2010 14:35 Comments || Top||

#5  Gold is edging up again.
Posted by: JohnQC || 05/03/2010 16:01 Comments || Top||

#6  This wouldn't be a problem if we used more ethanol.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 05/03/2010 16:48 Comments || Top||

#7  It takes energy and petroleum and natural gas to _make_ ethanol.
Posted by: Thing From Snowy Mountain || 05/03/2010 17:39 Comments || Top||

#8  Look at the bright side, great bond buying opportunities are soon to be upon us. Just be sure to start saving now, cuz you won't be able to afford once they're on sale.
Posted by: Mike N. || 05/03/2010 19:15 Comments || Top||

#9  Who needs energy or food??

Flat-screen sandwich anyone?
Posted by: Bright Pebbles || 05/03/2010 19:49 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Politix
Who Is Barack Obama?
Remnick makes effective use of interviews he did have with members of the President's oft-interviewed inner circle. He offers shrewd insights—theirs and, sometimes, his own. You feel you're getting close to understanding something important when you hear Valerie Jarrett, the President's confidante and adviser, say of him: “He knows exactly how smart he is…. He's been bored to death his whole life. He's just too talented to do what ordinary people do.'

I guess that's why so many in his administration full of smart, talented people have problems with the IRS.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 05/03/2010 16:19 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Enter racial exceptionalism, all rise please.
Posted by: Besoeker || 05/03/2010 17:27 Comments || Top||

#2  "He knows exactly how smart he is.... He's been bored to death his whole life. He's just too talented to do what ordinary people do."

Come on Valerie. That's pap for the left-wing base. The rest of us thinks it's so much BS. Your comments come across as the voice of a sucking up sycophant apple-polisher. If he gets rid of TOTUS or it falls and breaks, his speech is doomed.
Posted by: JohnQC || 05/03/2010 17:40 Comments || Top||

#3  Most of the really smart people I've ever met have been able to find stuff to keep themselves occupied, Val baby. They are rarely bored.

Snotty, narcissistic teenagers who think they know it all, on the other hand....
Posted by: Cornsilk Blondie || 05/03/2010 18:01 Comments || Top||

#4  Valerie Jarrett, the President's confidante and adviser, say of him: "He knows exactly how smart he is.... He's been bored to death his whole life. He's just too talented to do what ordinary people do."

Doesn't this say quite a bit more about Ms. Jarrett? Sycophancy is indeed an ugly, dependent trait- in the music industry she'd be called a 'groupie.'
Posted by: Free Radical || 05/03/2010 18:33 Comments || Top||

#5  I've met that type. The *THINK* they are smarter than they are, and too blind to see it. There is no correcting them either, facts be damned.
Posted by: OldSpook || 05/03/2010 18:48 Comments || Top||

#6  did the hyperlink work for anyone? Maybe the WH took it down.
Posted by: Hammerhead || 05/03/2010 18:59 Comments || Top||

#7  Bambi is as smart as most intellectuals. He can quote Greek philosophers, knows most of Shakespeare, knows the "enlightenment" philosophy.... but when it comes to day to day tasks (i.e. common sense), he is as dumb as a bag of hammers.
Posted by: DarthVader || 05/03/2010 20:30 Comments || Top||

#8  Maybe I screwed up Here it is
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 05/03/2010 21:13 Comments || Top||

#9  "He knows exactly how smart he is.... He's been bored to death his whole life/em>

What that says about Barry is that he's a man that has protected his ego by never genuinely challenging himself for fear of failure.
Posted by: Mike N. || 05/03/2010 21:15 Comments || Top||

#10  If I had the entire Fourth Estate acting as a willing Fifth Column for me, I'd look pretty damn smart, too. In fact, this guy's faults and foibles are so often overlooked, we're in danger of escalating the adoration to the level of the North Korean "News" Agency for the "Dear Leader".

What next, Kim versus Obama in golf?
Posted by: Dash Riprocker || 05/03/2010 21:37 Comments || Top||

#11  Bambi is as smart as most intellectuals. He can quote Greek philosophers, knows most of Shakespeare, knows the "enlightenment" philosophy.... but when it comes to day to day tasks (i.e. common sense), he is as dumb as a bag of hammers.

No. The gentleman is a pseudo-intellectual. He knows key quotes from various philosophers, recognizable bits of Shakespear, and the 2-3 key sentences from a variety of writers on different subjects to underline the points he makes in every conversation. Bartlett's Quotations, unabridged is about enough to cement a pseudo's reputations in the kind of undiscerning circle our beloved president is accustomed to wafting through. I once raised a friend's estimation of my intelligence by a good 25 points by asking, when he mentioned Einstein's theory of relativity, "General or Special?" As he was in a small way of being a brilliant physicist, he understood exactly what I was asking, even if I didn't. That's how it's done.

Mike N. has the man nailed to a wall. Well said, sir!
Posted by: trailing wife || 05/03/2010 22:33 Comments || Top||

#12  you can tell an ass by the sound of his voice
Posted by: 746 || 05/03/2010 23:15 Comments || Top||


Release and Cover up
The most transparent administration in history withholds national security information
BY Stephen F. Hayes

On May 1, 2009, Republican senator Christopher Bond wrote to President Obama with questions about the handling of detainees from Guantánamo Bay. Bond, vice chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, was concerned about reports that an increasing number of transferred detainees were going “back to the battlefield to kill American soldiers.' He asked a series of specific questions about the detainees and the process for releasing or transferring them.

Almost a full year later, on April 19, 2010, Bond received a response from the Justice Department, which Obama had designated as the lead agency on the detainee task force. Assistant Attorney General for the Office of Legislative Affairs Ronald Weich wrote offering a vague description of detainee review process and promising that the detainee task force made its decisions only after a “careful examination of the available and relevant information pertaining to each detainee.'

Blah, blah, blah.

For more than a year, Obama officials, with the Justice Department in the lead, have hidden crucial information on detainees from the public. They have refused to discuss the decisions of the Guantánamo Bay task force or to identify the 60 individuals who serve on it. They have declined to provide information on the detainees that have been transferred or released. And they have ignored repeated requests for specifics on the growing number of former detainees who have returned to jihad—terrorists that the U.S. military is now fighting in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq, and beyond.

The recidivist group is growing. The Weekly Standard has learned that the Pentagon has an updated version of its “Return to the Battlefield' report, which tracks Guantánamo Bay recidivism. The percentage of known or suspected recidivists is now “north of 20 percent,' according to a source familiar with the latest data.

In June 2008, when the Pentagon released its first report, the estimated number of recidivists was just 37. In January 2009, that figure had climbed to 61. By April 2009, it was 74. In February 2010, following reports in this magazine and other media outlets that the number of recidivists had spiked, White House counterterrorism chief John Brennan acknowledged that the recidivism rate had reached 20 percent. A stunning 112 of the 560 detainees who had been transferred or released had returned to jihad. In just a year and a half, the estimated number of Gitmo recidivists tripled.
Posted by: ed || 05/03/2010 00:02 || Comments || Link || [3 views] Top|| File under:

#1  The unspoken reality of "release" is clear. In spite of the Geneva Convention, signatories or non-signatories, the current administration no longer desires or intends to take prisoners. Prisoners are only taken in war...right? Any attempt at rehabilitation of these, for a moment let me call them captured people is clearly out of question and moreover harmful, as it simply leads one to the obvious conclusion and politically forbidden acceptance of 'hate and Islam' as core causes and central themes of a much, much larger, global struggle. As we have often been told, we can never be "at war with Islam."

The trial of these prisoners, either civil or military, to include sentencing, possible execution by the current administration is now clearly unthinkable. Dead yes, but certainly not at the hands of someone throwing the switch from the White House possessing an Islamic name and childhood upbringing. So it's back into the fish pond for these buggers and a distant, far removed death via recidivism and martyrdom, all as the profit wills. Let the dirty work and risk be accepted by the soldiers, airmen, and Marines. With that gutless, politically motivated reality comes the apparent intended political dividend of not having to deal with interrogations, claims of "torture" or actionable (but possibly faulty or flawed) intelligence and other nastiness. The equation goes something like ....no prisoners, no "torture", no risk taking through potentially faulty intelligence. Soon we'll have emptied GITMO and voila..... no more bad news. Problem solved.

And so it goes, multiculturalism and the 'friend making' of all things Islam continues and will continue by an administration who's leader bears the names of Islam.

"Then again you could say that a horse with wings can't really be a horse."
- Pegasus


Yes indeed, not taking prisoner is a win for the administration, but unfortunately not for the ranker and the man and woman at the pointy end of the spear. Those who voted for him should acknowledge the fact young soldiers, airmen, and Marines are being put at risk and will die from his policy of release. As Americans, they should care about the consequences of this policy. The cowardly, empty suited emposter they voted for certainly does not.
Posted by: Besoeker || 05/03/2010 4:52 Comments || Top||

#2 
"Transfer" the subject from one facility to another. Shift him from one location at Gitmo to another.
Take him out of the general population to another "facility". Camp Delta has him. He is no longer at Camp Alpha.
And make it appear he is in the fast track process for "release". Do all the paperwork, keep it complex and and involving. Bureaucratic and mucho ladida. Just like last time with the last guy who was "released". He is to be sent back to (name a country) and turned over to the native security personnel there for their security processing.

Except he is never going to ever get there. You can pay somebody off to make a file of paperwork but that's all it is: paperwork.( everything appears to be in order).
No one in Goombah goes to meet the delivery for good old Abu Butkis. We deliver a big bribe instead and a years subscription to Playboy magazine. Sign here. If any Journalists want to check on it after that they can talk to the sweaty guard in the Turban with the toothpick in his mouth and garlic goat on his breath down at the "facility. Sign the guestbook and we give you your shoes back.

And it will be assumed by them that Abu Butkiss yes indeedy was sent ( it must have been the nightshift crew)that signed off on this... and simply disappeared very quickly back among his friends. Make a false trail.( hell make a couple of false trails) Leave the door open.

If anybody checks...then muddy the water and show them the "papers"( signed here and here). Yup he was "released" it says so right here. Goombah has him. Go and see what you can find in Goombah. Make it happen.

What really happened was he was put in the Gitmo Van and in transit to the next stop he was injected with an industrial strength animal tranquilizer. Then the first van passed his comatose body to a second van midway on highway Camino Reale...(or whatever is feasible and believable)..and the second van puts him in a large heavy locked canvas Mail Bag and he gets driven with the other mail to the airport.

The Mail is delivered to West Africa but that one particular bag is thrown out at 35,000 feet (choose someone reliable and pay him well) somewhere a thousand miles south of the Azores in the mid Atlantic. A flight did land in Goombah and somebody did get a delivery of ( see the paperwork says so) and the native Security people did put something in a van and take it to their "facility". Its all in the file.

( If you are a Journalist and a staunch Democrat) You can go check on the paperwork in Goombah too, ask for Captain Hajimullah. Try the monkey stew and see the local color in the capitol. Be sure and get a souvenir.
Posted by: Critter Control || 05/03/2010 7:52 Comments || Top||



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A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.

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Steve White
Seafarious
tu3031
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sherry
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Bright Pebbles
trailing wife
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Two weeks of WOT
Mon 2010-05-03
  Somali rebels seize pirate haven of Haradhere
Sun 2010-05-02
  Pakistani Taliban claim credit for failed NYC Times Square car bombing
Sat 2010-05-01
  Explosions inside a Somali mosque kill at least 30
Fri 2010-04-30
  Two New York men charged with trying to help al Qaeda
Thu 2010-04-29
  Hakimullah Mehsud no longer dead
Wed 2010-04-28
  Egypt court convicts 26 men of links to Hezbollah
Tue 2010-04-27
  French cops seize five jihad suspects
Mon 2010-04-26
  Izzat Ibrahim al-Douri Nabbed?
Sun 2010-04-25
  AQI confirms death of Abu Omar al-Baghdadi and Abu Ayyub al-Masri
Sat 2010-04-24
  DR Congo: Lord's Resistance Army Rampage Kills 321
Fri 2010-04-23
  50 killed, 85 wounded in series of Baghdad blasts
Thu 2010-04-22
  First Navy Seal tried in Baghdad found innocent
Wed 2010-04-21
  Algeria sez Qaeda in North Africa emir ''cornered''
Tue 2010-04-20
  Iraq announces killing of another senior al-Qaida leader
Mon 2010-04-19
  Abu Ayub al-Masri, Abu Omar al-Baghdadi: dead again


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