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Blackwater behind Pakabooms: Ex-ISI chief
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Page 6: Politix
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-Short Attention Span Theater-
SC first lady files for divorce on grounds of adultery
[Iran Press TV Latest] South Carolina first lady Jenny Sanford has filed for divorce after her husband's public confession to an affair with an Argentine woman he famously called his "soul mate."

The Sanfords have been separated since Mark Sanford in a June news conference confessed to his affair, according to The New York Times. The Sanford's and their four sons had publicly announced that they hoped to save the marriage.

However, Ms. Sanford, 47, a former Wall Street executive who helped launch her husband's political career, said Friday that the marriage could not be repaired.

"This came after many unsuccessful efforts at reconciliation," she said, "yet I am still dedicated to keeping the process that lies ahead peaceful for our family."

Her decision came after a subcommittee of the State Legislature voted on Thursday not to recommend impeachment against the embattled governor who faces a series of ethics violation charges and calls for resignations.

Ms. Sanford's divorce complaint on the grounds of adultery did not mention money, property or custody arrangements, the Associated Press reported.

She appeared on a TV show on Thursday and said that she would have never stood by her husband, confessing to his affair, even if he would have asked her to and also added ,"Certainly his actions hurt me, and they caused consequences for me, but they don't in any way take away my own self-esteem. They reflect poorly on him."
Posted by: Fred || 12/13/2009 00:00 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Tom Maguire at JustOneMinute:

Jenny Sanford, the First lady of South Carolina, is filing for divorce, presumably to pursue a relationship with Tiger Woods.

No way I can top that.
Posted by: Steve White || 12/13/2009 1:46 Comments || Top||

#2  "This came after many unsuccessful efforts at reconciliation," she said, "yet I am still dedicated to keeping the process that lies ahead peaceful for our family."

At lease one of the two people involved in this unhappy event has a bit of dignity.
Posted by: Besoeker || 12/13/2009 5:29 Comments || Top||

#3  ...Mrs. Sanford is a class act - and before she married Governor Dumbjohn, she was a VERY successful business lady. (IIRC she was/is independently wealthy on top of that) She's devoted to her kids and children's causes in general..would make a fine conservative candidate, but I think she's had her fill of politics of any stripe.

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski || 12/13/2009 8:56 Comments || Top||


Home Front: Politix
Rasmussen Daily Presidential Tracking Poll -19
The Rasmussen Reports daily Presidential Tracking Poll for Sunday shows that 23% of the nation's voters Strongly Approve of the way that Barack Obama is performing his role as President. Forty-two percent (42%) Strongly Disapprove giving Obama a Presidential Approval Index rating of -19.

Today is the second straight day that Obamas Approval Index rating has fallen to a new low. Prior to the past two days, the Approval Index had never fallen below -15 during Obamas time in office (see trends).

Though yesterday was a sampling error but today reinforces the drastic drop. I believe the Rasmussen poll is a 3 day running average, tomorrow will likely see the Approval Index break -20.

Date ......... Approval Index
12/13/2009 -19
12/12/2009 -16
12/11/2009 -12
Posted by: ed || 12/13/2009 14:18 || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Way too high given his performance so far. His approval rating should be closer to that of Swine Flu.
Posted by: Iblis || 12/13/2009 16:03 Comments || Top||

#2  Personally I'd prefer swine flu.
Posted by: DMFD || 12/13/2009 16:26 Comments || Top||

#3  Because it's gone within a few days?
Posted by: European Conservative || 12/13/2009 16:27 Comments || Top||

#4 
Posted by: AzCat || 12/13/2009 16:44 Comments || Top||

#5  Note that to stimulate the economy, the IRS withholding tables were changed this year to decrease the amount withheld. More people will owe taxes (and penalties) next April.

Then we get the health care tax increases next year.

Wait till the Bush tax cuts come off in 2011. Good Luck with that Hoaxnchange.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble || 12/13/2009 17:27 Comments || Top||

#6  What is the highest negative number this poll has produced? I'm betting after Copenhagen, it breaks 25.
Posted by: NoMoreBS || 12/13/2009 18:39 Comments || Top||

#7  What are the odds his appearance on 60 Minutes tonight (how many times is it now... 4... 5?) does anything to stop the bleeding?
Posted by: eltoroverde || 12/13/2009 19:16 Comments || Top||

#8  with (my) the Chargers beating Dallas, thoroughly screwing up the NFC East standings, and NYG playing Da Iggles, What are the chances a minority might tune in? I'm thinking zero, as in Preznit Zero
Posted by: Frank G || 12/13/2009 20:32 Comments || Top||

#9  He'll hang in there as long as the MSM carries his water. They do a Bushie on him, he's toast.
Posted by: Procopius2k || 12/13/2009 22:15 Comments || Top||


Today in History
Gore concedes presidential election
December 13, 2000


WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Vice President Al Gore conceded the 2000 presidential election Wednesday night, effectively concluding an election that was supposed to have ended five weeks ago.

Tonight, for the sake of our unity of the people and the strength of our democracy, I offer my concession," Gore said in televised address from Washington's Old Executive Building, adjacent to the White House.

With his family and running mate, Connecticut Sen. Joe Lieberman, solemnly watching a few feet from the podium, Gore told the nation that had placed a telephone call to Texas Gov. George W. Bush offering his congratulations.

"I promised him that I wouldn't call him back this time," Gore quipped, referring to his Election Night concession to Bush he retracted an hour later. "I offered to meet with him as soon as possible so that we can start to heal the divisions of the campaign and the contest through which we just passed."

Gore's action came more than a month after the Nov. 7 election, and the inconclusive results triggered weeks of ballot recounting, legal challenges and delays in the traditional presidential transition process.

"Neither he (Bush) nor I anticipated this long and difficult road, certainly neither of us wanted it to happen," Gore said. "Yet it came, and now it has ended. Resolved, as it must be resolved, through the honored institutions of our democracy."

It was Tuesday night's convoluted but crucial ruling by the United States Supreme Court which effectively ended his hopes of being declared the victor and set the stage to make Bush the president-elect.

The nation's highest court halted an order by the Florida Supreme Court mandating a statewide recount of so-called undervotes -- ballots which showed no vote for any presidential candidate during a machine count -- because it failed to provide a fair and uniform standard for tallying the disputed votes.

"Let there be no doubt, while I strongly disagree with the court's decision, I accept it. I accept the finality of this outcome which will be ratified next Monday in the Electoral College," Gore said.

He becomes the third presidential candidate to receive the largest share of the popular vote while losing the electoral vote. Grover Cleveland in 1888, Samuel Tilden in 1876 and Andrew Jackson in 1824 also lost the presidency. Both Cleveland and Jackson went on to win the presidency four years after their electoral defeats.

The historical significance of this year's unprecedented election wasn't lost upon the vice president, who called on his own supporters to follow tradition and unite behind the nation's next leader.

"Almost a century and a half ago, Senator Stephen Douglas told Abraham Lincoln, who had just defeated him for the presidency: 'Partisan feeling must yield to patriotism,'" Gore said. "Well, in that same spirit, I say to President-elect Bush that what remains of partisan rancor must now be put aside, and may God bless his stewardship of this country."

Although gracious in his televised address that lasted less than 10 minutes, Gore sent the unmistakable message that he felt wronged by the Supreme Court ruling.

By a 5-4 margin, the Supreme Court said the Florida Supreme Court decision violated the equal protection clause of the U.S. Constitution. Although the justices also ruled that the Florida high court could set uniform standards for a manual recount of undervotes, it allotted no time for such a scenario to be completed before the state's Dec. 12 deadline for choosing presidential electors.

The end of the road

The Supreme Court's ruling was the latest, but final, turning point in the nation's unbearably close election. The justices' involvement in the dispute -- the second in as many weeks -- was set up by a series of events on Friday.

First, two Florida circuit judges rejected absentee ballot challenges from Seminole and Martin counties. While the Gore campaign was not directly involved in those cases, had those challenges been accepted, thousands of Republican votes in Florida could have been thrown out, potentially tipping the state's vote in Gore's favor.

After the circuit court defeats, Mark Fabiani, a spokesman for Gore, said: "Our focus is where it has been all along: Our case is before the Florida Supreme Court. We frankly had no great hopes based on (the cases in Seminole and Martin counties) and we never joined them. We remain confident in our case before the Florida Supreme Court."

That confidence was affirmed later in the day when the state's highest court ruled 4-3 that Circuit Court Judge N. Sanders Sauls erred when he rejected Gore's petition to overturn the certification of Florida's election results, which declared Bush the winner by 537 votes out of nearly six million cast.

The court ordered Sauls to oversee the manual recount of undervotes, but on Friday night he recused himself. Regardless, the counting of the undervotes was near completion in many Florida counties Saturday afternoon when the U.S. Supreme Court agreed to intervene at the Bush camp's request.

"Real progress was being made," said spokesman Chris Lehane.

The high court's intervention hit 23 hours after the Florida Supreme Court granted the recounts, abruptly ending the Gore camp's most hopeful of the 35 days since the election.

"Years from now, we'll be telling our grandchildren about this," Gore told reporters outside the official vice president's residence on Saturday.

His presidential prospects swinging from low to high to low, the final four days of the election dispute were a replay of a raucous and unpredictable Election Night for Gore.

Gore's decision to concede Wednesday was a particularly painful moment of political deja vu. He had come within minutes of publicly conceding the presidential election in the early morning hours of Nov. 8. Based on information from network exit polls and his own aides, the vice president thought he had lost Florida by approximately 50,000 votes, called Bush to offer a private concession, and was taken to the site of a post-election rally to make a concession speech.

But Gore aides reached campaign Chairman William Daley and told him that the actual count in Florida had closed to within a few hundred votes. As thousands of Gore supporters waited in the early morning rain in Nashville, it became clear that something was happening within the Gore campaign.

It was. The vice president telephoned Bush to retract his earlier words of concession, which he delivered to Bush when most major news organizations declared Bush the winner. Bush was reportedly not pleased to take the second call.

"Let me make sure I understand," protested Bush, his victory speech in hand. "You're calling me back to retract your concession?"

"You don't have to get snippy about this," Gore protested.

"Let me explain something," Gore continued. "Your younger brother is not the ultimate authority on this." Jeb Bush, the Florida governor and brother of the GOP nominee, had reportedly assured the Texas governor in the wee hours of Wednesday morning that Florida was a done deal.

The Nashville crowd, still waiting for word, was greeted by Daley instead of Gore. "Without being certain of the results in Florida, we simply cannot be certain of the results of the national election," Daley announced shortly after 4 a.m. EST. "I've been in politics a long time, and I don't think there's ever been a night like this one."

But that night was just the beginning of an electoral process that has been unprecedented in more than 100 years. The nation's attention turned to Florida and a month of recounts, ballot challenges, special legislative sessions and lawsuits -- including one that reached the U.S. Supreme Court. But Gore gained few victories along the way, and none of the recounts gave the vice president the votes he needed to overtake Bush.
Posted by: Beavis || 12/13/2009 09:44 || Comments || Link || [4 views] Top|| File under:


From Awful to Worse
For most of this year, the liberal Holy Grail has been the so-called "public option"--a new government-run insurance program offered to working age people and their families, much as Medicare is available to senior citizens. But, despite a full-court press by liberal activists, the idea has foundered on its complete lack of sense.

The only plausible reason to put more people in government-run insurance would be cost control, but no one believes the federal government now knows how to control costs sensibly. Liberals say a new insurance bureaucracy should be given the power to use Medicare's price-setting and regulatory structure to cut costs. But that structure has never successfully controlled Medicare spending because price-setting doesn't address volume--and so creates an incentive for more and more spending. Indeed, the Obama administration admits that Medicare's current arbitrary bureaucratic payment systems are a prime source of the inefficiency and inequity throughout the entire health sector, driving up costs for everyone. That's why the president and his team are proposing to set up an independent Medicare commission to straighten out the mess. They know they don't know how to do it and can only hope someone else does. So if Medicare is a big part of the problem, how is its model the solution?
The whole objective of this year's healthcare pie fight has been to get that public option in place, which then gives the opportunity to grab the entire 17 percent of the economy -- and still growing -- healthcare boodle. That much money represents one hell of a lot of sweetheart contracts and a lot of fine-detail control of the lives of us hoi polloi. If they really wanted to extend healthcare to the masses it'd be cheaper and set up a network of Public Health Service hospitals to provide care to the indigent. But we don't do charity hospitals anymore, unlike our brutish forebears, who had them up until the mid-20th century.
Posted by: Fred || 12/13/2009 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I find it ironic, and all too telling, that the single biggest problem with healthcare related insurance is not touched anywhere.

Where is government control and cost cutting proposals for MALPRACTICE INSURANCE????? Why don't we relieve the medical community of the onerous costs of this?

Oh, that's right, tort lawyers are the Dems biggest money pit.
Posted by: AlanC || 12/13/2009 8:12 Comments || Top||

#2  Why don't we relieve the medical community of the onerous costs of this?

While I too support tore reform, it must be matched by effective and open accountability in the medical community in cleaning their own house of incompetent and dangerous practitioners. Tort has become an alternative that never would have reached this parasitic level if the community had policed itself in the view of the public which are the arbitrators in tort jury trials.

IF the government had run Indian Health, Veterans and Military medical, and Medicare effectively and efficiently, do you really believe that there would be major objections to this national health care? The reality is that the government has failed on both counts to deliver. Maybe the lib/left should grasp that little concept. The government is as imperfect as any non-government agent in delivering health care.
Posted by: Procopius2k || 12/13/2009 9:10 Comments || Top||

#3  "The Plan" does nothing to solve any of the alledged problems.

It does not address costs - in fact it vastly increases it with a huge, expensive, government bureaucracy which adds nothing to the delivery of healthcare. My guess is that it would be far cheaper to go out and buy - at market rates - Congressonal-class insurance for those who don't have it.

It is not 'universal coverage'. About half of those who don't have insurance now - still won't have insurance. And don't forget that it _will_ decrease availability - dumping a whole bunch of people on the system while 30% (and up to half) the Doctors quit practicing isn't going to help.

Unfortunately there will be 'Death Panels' - only they will be hidden, impersonal, and hidden by a vast bureaucracy (that's what its really there for isn't it?) and unchallangable 'polices', 'guidelines', and 'regulations' will be their means. The 'false' claims the Democrats (and Zero) are making about insurnace companies will seem tame by comparison.

And once in place the Democrats will use this to keep the peasants (that's you and me folks) on a short leash.

That is the true goal of this 'universal healthcare' they are imposing on us.

Posted by: CrazyFool || 12/13/2009 9:31 Comments || Top||

#4  Tort has become an alternative that never would have reached this parasitic level if the community had policed itself in the view of the public which are the arbitrators in tort jury trials.

Very well said and while I partially agree it's very important to note that in practice juries are overwhelmingly likely to err on the side of fleecing the apparent deep pocket in order to ensure that the poor(er) party is not overly burdened. Until and unless we can erase this bias in the jury pool the only workable tort reform that will be possible will, unfortunately, merely cap damage awards and/or allow some of the medical profession's bad apples to skate.
Posted by: AzCat || 12/13/2009 12:31 Comments || Top||

#5  If more and more doctors bail out of medicine, there will be fewer doctors to practice. Service will most likely be poorer. It is likely that lawsuits will increase as a result. The trial lawyers will love this health care bill if it passes.
Posted by: JohnQC || 12/13/2009 15:03 Comments || Top||

#6  You wanna straighten out MediCare? SCRAP IT!!!
Posted by: Abu Uluque || 12/13/2009 16:54 Comments || Top||


GOP: Copenhagen could 'destroy millions of American jobs'
Rep. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) slammed Democratic climate-change legislation Saturday just as President Barack Obama prepares to trek to an international conference in Copehnagen.

In the weekly Republican address, Blackburn said the Copenhagen summit could result in emissions mandates that "would destroy millions of American jobs and damage our economic competitiveness for decades to come."

The EPA and Democrats in Congress, she argued, would heed those mandates by imposing new regulations on American businesses.

"With Americans already facing double-digit unemployment, there could not be a worse time to unilaterally disarm our engines of job creation and economic growth," she said.

Environmentalists hope that the conference in Copenhagen will result in a political agreement to work toward broad emissions reductions across the globe. Democrats say cap-and-trade legislation will create "green jobs" while reducing greenhouse-gas levels.

Blackburn said the "Climate Gate" e-mails show that scientists have fudged the evidence on global warming in order to "bully citizens and lawmakers into supporting job-killing energy tax schemes."

"This scandal raises serious questions about Democrats' climate control plans, questions that deserve a transparent investigation -- not a rush to judgment -- by the bureaucrats in Copenhagen," the Tennessee Republican said.
Posted by: Fred || 12/13/2009 00:00 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  That is entirely the point of Copenhagen, to cripple America and the West.
Posted by: gromky || 12/13/2009 4:40 Comments || Top||

#2  there are millions of jobs left in America?
Posted by: chris || 12/13/2009 13:04 Comments || Top||

#3  Word, gromky. >:-(
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut || 12/13/2009 13:13 Comments || Top||

#4  there are millions of jobs left in America

Fixed
Posted by: European Conservative || 12/13/2009 13:29 Comments || Top||

#5  Climate change legislation will not elevate poor peoples standard of living but it will lower American citizens standard of living. Indeed if such legislation passes it will make poor people poorer.
Posted by: JohnQC || 12/13/2009 15:07 Comments || Top||

#6  This is insanity, based on failed science, bound to do nothing actually about climate, and dooming what is left of American industry and manufacturing to Luddite-like status.
And even if all this is actually true, whci I know it is not, do you actually believe the Russiams, Indians and CHINESE, are going to abide by the rules?

The Chinese telling the truth? Please folks...

Heavens, how fricking stupid can Washington be?
Posted by: NoMoreBS || 12/13/2009 17:48 Comments || Top||

#7  The stupidity in Washington is a reflection of the stupidity in the electorate. The Zero is not a cause of the problem, but he is a symptom of the problem.

"Example is the school of mankind, and they will learn at no other." Edmund Burke
Posted by: SR-71 || 12/13/2009 18:05 Comments || Top||


Senate Dems Defeat GOP Attempt to Filibuster $1.1T Spending Bill
The Democratic-controlled Senate on Saturday turned back a Republican effort to block a final vote on a huge end-of-year spending bill that rewards most federal agencies with generous budget boosts.

The $1.1 trillion measure combines much of the year's unfinished budget work -- only a $626 billion Pentagon spending measure would remain -- into a 1,000-plus-page spending bill that would give the Education Department, the State Department, the Department of Health and Human Services and others increases far exceeding inflation.

The 60-34 vote largely along party lines met the minimum threshold to end the Republican filibuster, a legislative maneuver to delay a final vote on a bill. A final vote on the spending package was set for Sunday afternoon to send the measure to President Barack Obama to sign.

Independent Sen. Joe Lieberman of Connecticut wore a black wool overcoat and brilliant orange scarf -- as well as a wide grin -- as he provided the crucial 60th vote.
Independent Sen. Joe Lieberman of Connecticut, an Orthodox Jew who walks miles to the Capitol when voting on the Sabbath, wore a black wool overcoat and brilliant orange scarf -- as well as a wide grin -- as he provided the crucial 60th vote an hour after the tally started.

The measure combines $447 billion in operating budgets with about $650 billion in mandatory payments for federal benefit programs such as Medicare and Medicaid, which provide health coverage for the elderly, disabled and poor. It wraps together six individual spending bills and also contains more than 5,000 home-state projects sought by lawmakers in both parties.

The measure provides spending increases averaging about 10 percent to programs under immediate control of Congress, blending increases for veterans' programs, the NASA space agency and the FBI with a pay raise for federal workers and help for car dealers.

It bundles six of the 12 annual spending bills, capping a dysfunctional appropriations process in which House leaders blocked Republicans from debating key issues while Republican lawmakers dragged out debates.

Just the $626 billion defense bill would remain. That's being held back to serve as a vehicle to advance must-pass legislation such as a plan to allow the government's debt to swell by nearly $2 trillion. The government's total debt has nearly doubled in the past seven years and is expected to exceed the current ceiling of $12.1 trillion before Jan. 1.

Saturday's bill would offer an improved binding arbitration process to challenge the decision by General Motors and Chrysler to close more than 2,000 dealerships, which often anchor fading small town business districts. It also would renew for two more years a federal loan guarantee program for steel companies.
Posted by: Fred || 12/13/2009 00:00 || Comments || Link || [0 views] Top|| File under:

#1  The Senate GOP needs to grab a pair, and come out fighting. A good "how to" primer is posted at: http://www.redstate.com/erick/2009/12/12/fight/
Posted by: Lone Ranger || 12/13/2009 12:21 Comments || Top||

#2  Joe had a chance and blew it.
So any talk he has made about the healthcare and his opposition is now just so much hot air. I thought he had the makings of a stateman as opposed to just another politician.
Dammit, something about big cats and spots i guess......
Posted by: USN, Ret. || 12/13/2009 1:20 Comments || Top||

#3  Lieberman the sensible, moderate, ethical Senator? Always remember, there's a reason why he started out Democrat and ran with Al Gore.
Posted by: Abu Uluque || 12/13/2009 17:00 Comments || Top||


Tyranny of the EPA
Get ready for the tyranny of the Environmental Protection Agency, because if Congress balks at passing cap-and-trade legislation to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, this bureaucratic behemoth will strike, mangling industry and further damaging a recession-plagued economy.

It's the rage, you know, this religious-like dogma about a global warming apocalypse in the absence of turning everything upside down. There's a world summit on the issue in Copenhagen, and even the U.S. Supreme Court got on board two years ago, saying the EPA should regulate carbon dioxide and other suspected greenhouse gases if they were hammering human health.

The EPA has now said it is doing just that, although EPA knows no such thing, cannot in fact begin to know any such thing. There is a swarm of uncertainties around this matter - endless atmospheric variables, computer models that can't seem to predict much of anything, the consequent ignorance about how much warming might occur and how quickly, questions about how much harm warming might actually cause and (considering some e-mails recently released by hackers) puzzles abut the scientific integrity of some true-believing alarmists.

Even if you skip over all of that, insisting that we do know enough to recognize some sort of human-caused peril far down the road, you will still have to figure out what to do. This much is clear - you could shut down a sizeable hunk of America's productive power tomorrow and still do precious little to avert rising temperatures if the rest of the world did not cooperate.

But the world is not going to cooperate, and what we therefore have is an extraordinarily dubious reading of the Clean Air Act by both the agency and the court. Essentially, they are contending the law's purpose was for the government to behave futilely to address a distant problem having nothing to do with pollution.

The futility, of course, is just half of it. The other half is the cost of the futile action. A reported statement of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce pretty much tells the tale. It says of the EPA decision that there could be "a top-down command-and-control regime that will choke off growth by adding new mandates to virtually every major construction and renovation project." Some utilities are already making plans to shut down plants, it is reported. America's businesses could turn out to be one endangered species the EPA doesn't much care about.

Part of the scariness here is that, through connivance of unelected judges and bureaucrats, accompanied by pushes from the White House, we're getting rule by executive fiat. Congress could, of course, intervene through passage of measures clarifying the Clean Air Act but almost certainly won't because of extremely high political risks. And such measures would also almost certainly face vetoes.

Because of likely Democratic defections on top of Republican resistance, Congress had seemed unlikely to pass the cap-and-trade measure that President Obama wants, but now that EPA is threatening regulation anyway, that could change. Some might suppose cap-and-trade the kinder, gentler approach, although some analyses suggest trillions more wasted than any money saved from staving off long-term, fractional temperature reductions.

What is going on here is just barely democracy, and just barely sane. New technologies such as bioengineered trees could avert a far-out warming crisis, as reputable a scientist as Freeman Dyson has argued. Meanwhile, there are any number of much more certain problems on which the dollars could better be spent, such as doing more about the near certainty that one of these days terrorists are going to hit us with a biological weapon of mass destruction. To keep from losing hundreds of thousands of lives, we need means of containment that are only partially in place.

WMD - that's a real apocalyptic possibility, and one more deserving of immediate, intense concern than global warming.
Posted by: Fred || 12/13/2009 00:00 || Comments || Link || [1 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Every company should start a defense fund in order to sue the EPA for lost revenues over an unprovable pollutant.

The EPA needs to be put in check early if at all possible.
Posted by: newc || 12/13/2009 1:02 Comments || Top||

#2  "What is going on here is just barely democracy, and just barely sane."

Welcome to the EU, comrade.
Posted by: European Conservative || 12/13/2009 1:11 Comments || Top||



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Bright Pebbles
trailing wife
Gloria
Fred
Besoeker
Glenmore
Frank G
3dc
Skidmark

Two weeks of WOT
Sun 2009-12-13
  Blackwater behind Pakabooms: Ex-ISI chief
Sat 2009-12-12
  Hariri government wins Lebanon parliament vote
Fri 2009-12-11
  Houthis stop Saudi offensive. Saudis stop Houthis offensive
Thu 2009-12-10
  Clashes on the Streets of Khartoum
Wed 2009-12-09
  Baghdad bomb attacks kill 127, wound 450
Tue 2009-12-08
  Peshawar blast kills 10, injures 45
Mon 2009-12-07
  Explosions rock market in Lahore
Sun 2009-12-06
  Little resistance on day 2 of US-Afghan offensive
Sat 2009-12-05
  Attack temporarily shuts Herat airport
Fri 2009-12-04
  Russian Police find car packed with explosives near train station
Thu 2009-12-03
  14 dead in suicide bomber attack in Somalia
Wed 2009-12-02
  Obama: 30,000 more troops to Afghanistan by summer
Tue 2009-12-01
  At least 61 militants killed in Khyber tribal region
Mon 2009-11-30
  Air strike kills 30 Taliban in Khost
Sun 2009-11-29
  Russia train disaster was terrorist attack


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