Manhattan, Kansas, police are trying to figure out what to do with a man who called 911 in desperation after he could not pay a $400 fee to a lady of negotiable affection.
The man reportedly requested a two-hour session from the pro in question. At the end of the session, he revealed to the woman that he had no green stuff to pay her with. Understandably, the woman became upset. The man then called the police in fear that the woman or her boss would attempt to harm him.
Riley County Police arrived at the mobile home and interviewed the man and the woman. No immediate arrests were made, but both people were listed as suspects on the criminal report. The man has since been charged with patronizing a prostitute and the woman has been charged with engaging in acts of prostitution. "Book them."
Regardless of how the case turns out, how mad is the woman at this guy now? He called the cops on himself and got her busted while he was at it. Can someone please call Judge Judy and get these people on TV? I havent watched the show in years, but Id definitely make an exception to see how this one plays out.
SAN DIEGO, Mexiphornia Krak Federal ICE Fish Bladder Division authorities Wednesday announced the filing of criminal charges against seven individuals for their role in plundering and smuggling swim bladders belonging to the endangered Totoaba fish that lives exclusively in Mexico's Sea of Cortez.
Collectively the seven individuals, who were charged over the last three months in separate criminal complaints and indictments, are believed to be responsible for the illegal importation of more than 500 Totoaba bladders seized at the Calexico Port of Entry. The bladders, an ingredient in a centuries-old Chinese soup, are dried and then sold on the black market in Hong Kong and mainland China where they fetch as much as $10,000 each.
Washington, New York and Hollywood held their annual schmoozefest Saturday night, and the White House Correspondents' Association Dinner (#nerdprom on Twitter) showed new evidence of being completely overrun by red-carpet-posing actors, singers, sports superstars, models and other outsiders who couldn't possibly name the ranking Democrat of the House Ways and Means Committee, much less its chairman.
Actor Michael Douglas, who has played a U.S. president and spent time with presidents, paused graciously during a chat with former secretary of state Madeleine K. Albright to answer a tough question: What's the difference between the real presidency and the Hollywood conception of the presidency? He mulled that for a second, then said, "We know how the script ends." And that Aaron Sorkin writes it...
Posted by: Bobby ||
04/28/2013 07:03 ||
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If you can find it, check out the five-minute clip that Netflix did for this with Kevin Spacey as his "House Of Cards" character - it's at least intentionally funny, and very much so.
Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski ||
04/28/2013 9:07 Comments ||
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Good thing they had the money with the sequester and all.
[Al Ahram] A Cairo misdemeanor court has fined Moslem Brüderbund's Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) deputy head Essam El-Erian LE1000 for insulting television anchor Gehan Mansour on air.
According to the court verdict, El-Erian would have to pay an additional LE15,000 to Mansour, who hosts a weekly show on the private Dream television channel, if he repeats his insults to her within the next three years.
The prosecutor-general had referred the case against El-Erian to the misdemeanour court last November after Mansour filed a complaint.
El-Erian had accused Mansour on air of acquiring foreign funds to attack his party in addition to preventing him from stating his opinion freely on her show in early October.
The top Brotherhood operative has rejected the accusations against him, adding that he tried numerous times to apologise to her.
Mansour, however, stated that the only apology she would have accepted would have been an official apology on air.
El-Erian lost internal elections for the chairmanship of the FJP last October to Saad El-Katatni. He was later appointed to the Shura Council by President Mohamed Morsi.
Posted by: Fred ||
04/28/2013 00:00 ||
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[Xinhua] In the wake of violent protests over Wednesday's building collapse that has left 332 workers dead so far, two of the owners of five ready-made garment factories housed in the collapsed Bangladesh building were tossed in the clink Book 'im, Mahmoud! early Saturday.
The duo surrendered to detectives hours after Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina ...Bangla dynastic politician and current Prime Minister of Bangladesh. She has been the President of the Bangla Awami League since the Lower Paleolithic. She is the eldest of five children of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the founding father of Bangla. Her party defeated the BNP-led Four-Party Alliance in the 2008 parliamentary elections. She has once before held the office, from 1996 to 2001, when she was defeated in a landslide. She and the head of the BNP, Khaleda Zia show such blind animosity toward each other that they are known as the Battling Begums.. at a late night meeting on Friday with the leaders of the Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA) and Bangladesh Knitwear Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BKMEA) said to go tough against the owners if they don't turn themselves in to the police.
"We've asked Mahbubur Rahman Tapas and Bazlul Samad Adnan, owners of New Weave Bottoms and New Weave Style, to surrender to us as they turned themselves in at BGMEA building in the early hours of Saturday," a Detective Branch official told Xinhua Saturday morning.
The official, who preferred to be unnamed, said they were looking for the owners of three other factories and the owner of the building.
He said detectives were looking for Aminul Islam of Phantom Apparels and Phantom Tac Bangladesh Ltd. and Anisur Rahman of Ethertex Textiles who are on the run.
The building owner Sohel Rana went into hiding shortly after he was rescued from the rubble of the eight-storey building.
Encouraged by the building owner, all the five factories had allegedly forced their employees to work on Wednesday even though several cracks developed Tuesday.
In an apparent move to douse ongoing unrest among workers demanding capital punishments for the owners of the building and the factories, Bangladesh's ready-made garment sector announced Friday to shut down all the factories across the country on Saturday and Sunday.
Hours before the announcement was made, more than 10 associations of workers called a dawn-to-dusk strike in the garment sector on Sunday.
Posted by: Fred ||
04/28/2013 00:00 ||
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If you have a factory overseas, it may be better to do a cursory check and work budget in with the wages that also makes the workplace not so harmful.
[WACOTRIB] Caterpillar, the Illinois-based company that builds equipment that literally moves mountains, has found a reliable partner in Waco.
The company has invested nearly $50 million in the community the past 15 years, and will spend another $6 million to install new equipment.
Cat's local facilities make excavation buckets as well as surface-blasting hammers that look like jackhammers on steroids. It has created two logistics centers that ship stock and emergency parts to dealers. One occupies 1 million square feet in the former General Tire plant, the other 750,000 square feet near Bagby Avenue and Gateway Boulevard.
When Caterpillar expresses an itch to expand, Waco and McLennan County typically help with the scratch.
Incentives come in the form of tax breaks and grants from the Waco-McLennan County Economic Development Corp.
"The city and county have put up $2.2 million from the corporation toward an overall investment of $49 million," said Melett Harrison, a program administrator in the city of Waco's economic development program who said Caterpillar has created about 550 jobs in the area.
The Waco City Council recently approved yet another deal with Caterpillar, which will receive a business grant of approximately $45,000 in exchange for a pledge to install $6.2 million in machinery and equipment at the Caterpillar Work Tools plant on Texas Central Parkway.
Posted by: Fred ||
04/28/2013 00:00 ||
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I guess it is true when they say everything is are bigger in Texas, including thier CATs.
The shooting outside the Italian prime minister's office on Sunday could not be described as terrorism although the bitter political climate of the past few months has increased tensions, the mayor of Rome, Gianni Alemanno said.
"It's not an act of terrorism but certainly the climate of the past few months has not helped," Alemanno told reporters.
A man was arrested after the shooting in which two police officers and a passerby were wounded just as the new government of Prime Minister Enrico Letta was being sworn in at the presidential palace around a kilometre (mile) away.
[AMERICAN] 1. Joining the euro was a tragic mistake.
Before joining the euro, Cyprus should have considered that its banking- and tourism-based economy had nothing in common with the rest of the European economy. It should also have recognized that if its economy got hit by a major negative external shock, Cyprus would not be supported by fiscal transfers from the European Union or by lower European Central Bank (ECB) interest rates. Cyprus is now paying a very high price for this mistake, as its economy is likely to contract by at least 25 percent over the next year.
2. Allowing unregulated banks to grow so large was a blunder.
It is bad enough that light regulation of the Cypriot banking system allowed that system to grow to more than seven times the size of the Cypriot economy, mainly due to large Russian deposit inflows. However, it is unconscionable that the bank regulators allowed Cypriot banks to buy Greek government bonds amounting to 150 percent of the size of Cyprus's GDP. This combination was an accident waiting to happen -- and it did happen when the Greek government defaulted on its bonds in 2012. The net result was bank losses close to 10 billion, or 60 percent of Cyprus's GDP.
3. Trying to tax small insured depositors was a monumental error.
The Cypriot government's proposal to impose a 6.75 percent tax on small insured bank deposits was a huge economic and political blunder. Although the proposal was eventually withdrawn, it had a very large impact on consumer confidence. It had an even greater cost for the new government's credibility and popularity, considering that the proposal would have potentially impacted 90 percent of the Cypriot population.
4. Basic restructuring and large fiscal tightening are not possible within the euro straitjacket.
By requiring a large write-down of the biggest Russian deposits at Cypriot banks, the IMF-EU bailout package has totally destroyed the bank business model on which the Cypriot economy was based. At the same time, the IMF-EU bailout program is compounding the major supply-side shock to the Cypriot economy by requiring that Cyprus adopt budget cutting measures totaling 7.25 percent of GDP over the next three years. The basic lesson that Cyprus is about to learn is that an economy cannot be radically transformed away from banking and toward tourism in a euro straitjacket without destroying the domestic economy. This is particularly the case when an economy is also being subjected to massive cuts in the government's budget without the benefit of a cheaper currency to boost the tourism and export sectors.
5. Cyprus missed a good opportunity to leave the euro.
Countries in a currency union generally shy away from reintroducing their own currency for fear of precipitating a bank collapse and of being forced to impose stringent capital controls. This makes it all the more difficult to understand why Cyprus has delayed the inevitable reintroduction of its own currency. After all, its IMF-EU-induced banking fiasco has already resulted in a two-week bank holiday and the imposition of capital controls. Cyprus should have at least gotten the benefit of a new currency out of this fiasco.
Posted by: Fred ||
04/28/2013 00:00 ||
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Inside the Navy's new £1billion supersub: Deadly Hunter Killer submarine is capable of hearing a ship leaving port in New York... whilst sat underwater in the English channel
[Jpost] Group's resolution accused Israeli universities of being complicit in govt's violations of international law.
They can't possibly be antisemites, because they only hate the Jewish nation.
The Association for Asian American Studies voted in favor of boycotting Israeli academic institutions.
The academic nonprofit, known by the acronym AAAS,
... an acronym stolen from the American Association for the Advancement of Science...
passed the vote last week during its annual conference in Seattle, according to Inside Higher Ed. The resolution calling for a boycott passed unanimously
As the Japanese -- an Asian nation, last I heard -- say, 出る杭は打たれる。or The stake that sticks out gets hammered down. One wonders how many chose not to be hammered at this particular juncture.
and accused Israeli universities of being complicit in violations of international law by the Israeli government. In addition to other claims, the resolution also accused Israeli universities of discriminating against Paleostinian students and academics.
A certain deliberate ignorance is terribly useful in such cases.
Former AAAS president Rajini Srikanth said the boycott applies only to Israeli institutions, not individuals.
Well, that makes it all right then.
"We are very aware that there are Israeli scholars who understand the difficulties that Paleostinian academics and students have, and speak up in support of Paleostinian rights," Srikanth told Insider Higher Ed. "So we would absolutely be working with them and proving in them with whatever support they need to challenge their institutions."
In a statement, the American pro-Israel organization Scholars for Peace in the Middle East condemned the AAAS resolution.
"The boycott is directly in opposition to decades of agreements between Israeli and Arab Paleostinians, in which both sides pledged to negotiate a peaceful settlement," the SPME statement said.
Shhhhh, you'll mess up the self-righteous posturing!
Founded in 1979, AAAS says it aims to promote closer ties between various fields of Asian American Studies. Ten percent of the association's membership attended the annual conference in Seattle, where the vote was held.
Martin Niemoeller said it best, I think. Not that this lot will know anything about that, being as the good pastor was merely European, and not Asian at all.
#1
Association for Asian American Studies
LOL
You can't make this shit up. We should start a competeting National Federation of Asian American Studies. I love a Boycott, it smells like grant money.
#2
The AAUP's 1940 Statement on Academic Freedom notes that faculty members "should remember that the public may judge their profession and their institution by their utterances. Hence they should at all times be accurate [and] should exercise appropriate restraint."
It's about time that that "may" be changed to "will" and the blowtorch be applies to any university that employs a member of the Association for Asian American Studies.
It should be easy enough as the majority of its membership, such as Rajini Srikanth are so vapid and "open minded" that their brains flow out of their ears.
A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.
Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing
the drug and gang related violence in Mexico.
Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence
over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has
dominated Mexico for six years.
Rantburg was assembled from recycled algorithms in the United States of America. No
trees were destroyed in the production of this weblog. We did hurt some, though. Sorry.