Two Egyptian men are awaiting trial in Russia after several attempts to burrow their way under various European borders using nothing but shoehorns.
The men - both believed to be in their 20s - started in Belarus and dug a tunnel under the border with Poland.
But once in Poland, they lost their way, ending up where they started - in front of barbed wire.
Thinking they were now looking across the German border, the pair did the trick again.
But instead of getting to Germany, they ended up back in Belarus.
Minutes later, the two men were arrested by Belorussian border guards and later sentenced to 10 days in jail.
Belarus is separated from Europe by kilometres of barbed wire, guard towers, automated sirens and powerful search lights.
Prosecutors say the would-be migrants did not go for the easy option of using a spade - apparently, they thought buying one in a shop would immediately give the game away.
The two Egyptian men travelled to Belarus from neighbouring Russia where they arrived on tourist visas a few months ago
But even the prison term did not stop the pair.
When Belorussian authorities released the men and put them on a train back to Moscow, the officials were hoping that the Egyptians would never return.
But the two men got off the train hundreds of miles away from the Russian capital and decided to have another go.
This time, they chose the border between Russia and Ukraine as their starting point.
But the men clearly ran out of luck. Russian border guards arrested the Egyptians long before they got anywhere near Ukraine.
"I know it all sounds like a really bad joke," Evgeny Petrov from the Bryansk regional prosecutor's office told the BBC.
"But we've checked the story time and again, and it seems to be true! I must say, this is the weirdest way of illegally crossing the border I've ever come across," Mr Petrov said.
The migrants are now in pre-trial detention in Russia, expecting a legal hearing.
If convicted, they will have to pay a fine, and will then be extradited back to Egypt.
This time, police officers will probably escort them all the way to the departure gates of Moscow's Sheremetyevo international airport.
Posted by: john ||
08/23/2006 19:55 ||
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#1
genius!
Posted by: Frank G ||
08/23/2006 23:04 Comments ||
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#2
ROFL!!!
Was it Lucky who said they were happiest when burrowing?
Robert K. Hoffman, one of three founders of the irreverent National Lampoon magazine, has died. He was 59. Hoffman, a noted Dallas philanthropist, died Sunday at an area hospital. He had been suffering from leukemia since December, according to his family.
He was a co-founder and managing editor of the humorous National Lampoon, spawned from the Harvard Lampoon, created while he was a student at the university. Hoffman graduated cum laude in 1970 and received an MBA from Harvard Business School.
The magazine spun off successful films, the best known being "Animal House." "National Lampoon never would have happened, and none of the things that came out of it would have happened, without Robert," Henry Beard, one of the other co-founders of the magazine, said in Tuesday's editions of The Dallas Morning News. "He had an exceptional pair of talents - he was extremely smart, and utterly fearless." The third founder, Doug Kenney, died in the early 1980s.
Hoffman and his partners sold their interest in National Lampoon in 1975. He continued to serve as a trustee of the Harvard Lampoon. Hoffman was named one of Business Week magazine's top 50 philanthropists for 2005.
A longtime art collector, he and his wife, Marguerite, in March gave 224 art objects valued at $150 million to the Dallas Museum of Art. "I now realize the only effective method to travel and connect across time and space is art," Hoffman said in a speech he had a friend read at a March luncheon honoring the couple for their civic contributions.
Survivors include his wife, three daughters, his mother and a brother.
Posted by: Frank G ||
08/23/2006 11:18 Comments ||
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#4
Did you send them a picture of your girlfriend naked with a bucket over her head?
Posted by: Fred ||
08/23/2006 12:59 Comments ||
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#5
It was just the funniest thing I've ever read. I remember a set of pictures of the Kennedy men. Under old man Joe's photo they had the caption "Facist Asshole" under the sons they had "Dead", "Dead", "Dead", "A Bum".
Still makes me laugh thinking about it. I wish they had all the issues online.
MOSCOW - Unidentified gunmen seized a Russian oil tanker and 20 crew off the coast of Sierra Leone and are holding the vessel in the Guinean capital Conakry, Russian rescue officials said on Tuesday. The Luchegorsk refuelling tanker was sailing in Sierra Leones economic zone in the Atlantic Ocean when it was boarded by ten men armed with automatic rifles and dressed in black, the Itar-Tass news agency reported.
They accused the captain of entering a foreign economic zone without authorization, impounded shipping documents and the crews passports and demanded 20,000 US dollars in cash. The tanker and its crew of 19 Russians and 1 Chinese interpreter was then taken to Conakry where at least three of the gunmen remained on board.
The Maritime Shipping Company described the seizure as piracy and responded by deploying guards near the moored ship. Russian diplomats were investigating the incident.
The 97-metre, 3,086-ton Luchegorsk is used to fuel fishing boats in the Atlantic.
Its detention was reportedly the second attack on the companys vessels this year. In May, a group of heavily armed men boarded a tanker off Conakry and extorted 3,000 dollars from the crew before leaving.
Posted by: Steve White ||
08/23/2006 00:00 ||
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Gun battles between forces loyal to Congo's president, Joseph Kabila, and those of his main election rival, Jean-Pierre Bemba, broke out for a second day yesterday, with heavy fire reported outside the latter's home as he met senior foreign diplomats inside. A British envoy and William Swing, the head of the United Nations' 17,500-strong peacekeeping mission, were among those in Mr Bemba's residence in the capital, Kinshasa, the UN said. The UN spokesman, Jean-Tobias Okala, said all the envoys were safe after 150 UN troops in 20 armoured personnel carriers took them from Mr Bemba's home hours after they arrived for a meeting. Mr Bemba's political party said his rival's guards had attacked the house in the north-east of the city, drawing return fire, but not before Mr Bemba's helicopter had caught fire inside the compound.
Um. The helo "caught fire." Okaaaaaay...
A military official confirmed that Mr Kabila's special presidential guards had been battling members of the military drawn from Mr Bemba's insurgent ranks for a second day. He claimed Mr Bemba's guards provoked the battle. Mr Kabila, 35, failed to win an outright majority after the first round of Congo's historic elections on 30 July - he had 45 per cent of the vote against Mr Bemba's 20 per cent - but he called the results "a great victory" as the country braced itself for a run-off between the two men on 29 October. The 31 other candidates were eliminated after the first round. The president appeared on television late on Sunday to thank voters and call for calm after the evening's violence. "To all of you who chose me, I say thank you ... it's a great victory," he said.
Congo's first elections in more than four decades are meant to select a legitimate leader to knit together the country's 58 million people and end years of corrupt rule and war that have roiled this vast nation and wider Central Africa. Kofi Annan, the UN secretary-general, whose peacekeeping troops are helping to oversee the voting process, hailed the elections as "a historic milestone in the peace process in the country". He urged the Congolese parties and candidates to "abide by the electoral law in the resolution of any disputes related to the electoral process" and "to accept and respect the final results of the elections".
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HT Tim Blair Two prison officers based at scandal-hit Feltham Young Offenders Institution are under investigation over claims they strapped copies of the Quran to their feet to use as skis in what they called the Muslim Olympics.
The officers face the dismissal if the allegations are confirmed. The pair have been suspended on full pay after fellow officer reported them to the institutions governor while the claims are investigated. The rest is PC victimology blather.
#2
Gee, I wonder why they had this idea??? Could it be that muslims are over-representated among their "guests", and are notorious for making demands regarding their "sensibilities", all the while being an otherwise very difficult population to manage???...
Nah, it couldn't be... everybody knows muslims are a peaceful, law-abiding, respectful segment of european populations.
#6
The pair have been suspended on full pay So all I have to do for a paid vacation is try to ski on the Koran? Cool!
Posted by: 49 Pan ||
08/23/2006 8:17 Comments ||
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#7
This is all just science. The bullshit oozing from the pages of the Koran contains traces of oily residue. The viscosity of this residue makes it an effective lubricant, this reducing the drag coefficient between the pages and the floor. The weight of the prison guards pressing on the book also increases the amount of bullshit residue exuded from the pages, further reducing friction. Add a little forward momentum on a hard surface, and you have 'one heck of a ride'.
#8
and I hear they flushed them down the toilet after they were done skiing on them.
Sheesh - and the MSM is running with this before it is confirmed? Journalists are no longer what we once considered to be journalists, reporters of facts. Now they are just sensation whores.
#9
Hahahahah ! Other than wiping your ass with it, an outstanding use of the blather from Muhamass. Where is the f**king troll from London ? See this fool ? This is what the Brits think about you scumbags.
#10
Too funny. After I read my Koran, I ripped it up, burned it, dumped the ashes in the back yard, and pissed on it. But these officers were truely more inventive. They may have found a practical use. Promote them immediately.
#11
Not bright, a book, no matter what its contents does not make for a very good pair of skies as the binding will roll and the pages will tear and you'll bite very quickly.
#12
This is all just science. The bullshit oozing from the pages of the Koran contains traces of oily residue. The viscosity of this residue makes it an effective lubricant, this reducing the drag coefficient between the pages and the floor. The weight of the prison guards pressing on the book also increases the amount of bullshit residue exuded from the pages, further reducing friction. Add a little forward momentum on a hard surface, and you have 'one heck of a ride'.
Why is it that the word "tribology" springs to mind? Must have something to do with the bullshit's actual source.
On a misty, moonless night, the group scurried down the canyon wall, their feet slipping in the ankle-high mud. The sirens grew louder as their guide, clad in a ski mask and known only as Poncho, urged them to run faster. "Hurry up! The Border Patrol is coming!" A couple in matching designer tennis outfits loped awkwardly along, the boyfriend clutching a digital video camera and struggling to keep the pop-out screen steady.
The 20 or so people fleeing the Border Patrol aren't undocumented immigrants - they're tourists about 700 miles from the border. Most are well-heeled professionals more likely to travel to the United States in an airplane than on foot. They've each paid 150 pesos - about $15 - for what is perhaps Mexico's strangest tourist attraction: A night as an illegal immigrant crossing the Rio Grande. Advertising for the mock journey, which takes place at a nature park in the central state of Hidalgo, tells the pretend immigrants to "Make fun of the Border Patrol just like our government does!" and to "Cross the Border as an Extreme Sport!"
As craven as the advertising sounds, the organizers say they are trying to build empathy for migrants by putting people in their shoes.
And the organizers, members of a Hnahnu (pronounced nyah-nyoo like Mork from Ork) indigenous community, speak from experience. Leaders estimate as many as 90 percent of the 2,500-person community have made the journey to the United States, most ending up in the boomtown of Las Vegas. Can't wait for them to claim the right to form a reservation, and to open their own casino....ah, the American dream....
The trip also seeks to educate participants on Hnahnu culture and represents a source of income for the community, leaders said. The Mexican government helped finance the creation of the Eco Alberto nature park, which is communally-owned.
Until almost 2 a.m., the group scaled walls, hid in tunnels, jumped on the back of pickup trucks and followed a path through a cornfield. The trip ended with a blindfolded ride to a Hnahnu holy place where Poncho, whose real name is Alfonso Martinez Flores, asked the group for more money to be more honest and sincere in their lives.
Word of the tourist attraction has provoked much head scratching among immigrant advocates in the United States and real life immigrants who have made the trek across the border. Some called the risk-free adrenaline rush insulting. Others said it could improve the often-conflicted attitudes of Mexicans toward their compatriots who migrate.
"Anything that encourages more of our citizens to leave and send back dollars raises awareness in Mexico of the plight of undocumented immigrants is welcome," said Jorge Bustamante, special Mexican representative to the United Nations for human rights of migrants. "But the indifference is very strong, and it's greater as you ascend in social class." "Not to mention the rich ones living large back here in Mexico are less likely to leave and send back money! We need dollars, not pesos, dammit!!"
The trip starts with a rousing rendition of the Mexican national anthem and a meandering speech by Poncho, who bears an uncanny resemblance to Mexican Zapatisa rebel leader Subcomandante Marcos, in his black ski mask. Poncho tells his charges that they will not only be retracing the steps of migrants, but embarking on a personal spiritual journey. So it's not simulated lawbreaking, it's a New Age retreat?
"Through this we are going to create the bonds of brotherhood that we've forgotten as a people," he says.
As the group sets off down the muddy road, high-pitched sirens pierce the night and the group begins the first of what will be many forced gallops through the woods. Coming into a clearing, the group crouches down as Hnahnu community members pretending to be U.S. Border Patrol agents shine a spotlight.
The mock agents try to lure the people out with food and water and warn them of the dangers of the desert. "We're here to help you," they call out in accented English.
#1
"Through this we are going to create the bonds of brotherhood that we've forgotten as a people," he says.
So the one thing that unites all Mexicans is a burning desire to get the hell out of Mexico? How nice.
I see a franchise here. The Cindy Sheehan crowd would sign up. And how about a simulated night in a crack house, followed by a simulated bust and a simulated night in jail, complete with simulated sexual assault by a giant simulated cell mate?
Or, spend a wild night of simulated car-jacking, complete with a simulated toddler to run over.
All in the name of greater empathy with the downtrodden, of course.
#2
how quaint, the privillaged "Mexicans" going to visit the "other half" ( more like the other 99%),
and see what life is like for them as they escape The Failed Country that these same aristocrats ancestors set up as a Nation of the Privillaged.
Mexico is just that , mexico...
Posted by: bk ||
08/23/2006 12:23 Comments ||
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The following item appears in a trade publication:
Air America will switch its flagship station, WLIB (1190 AM), to a 24/7 black gospel music station as of September 1. The station, under its new "Praise and Inspiration" format, will air only gospel music for its first month and then intersperse the format with new hosts. WLIB chose this format over two others, oldies and country.
I thought the Air America types hated religion....oh well, you've got to pay the bills....
All that praise and worship; it'll send the moonbats 'round the bend for sure.
Posted by: Mike ||
08/23/2006 16:49 ||
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"I thought the Air America types hated religion...."
I believe "black gospel" is viewed more as a cultural curiousity than a religion. Which is why movies and such seem to concentrate more on the dancing and "acting-up" than on the actual preaching.
Nearly all non-Mexican illegal immigrants caught sneaking into the United States are being held until they can be returned to their home countries, the Bush administration said Wednesday. Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said this marks the end of the so-called "catch-and-release" policy that for years helped illegal immigrants remain in the United States unhindered.
The new policy, dubbed "catch-and-detain" generally does not apply to Mexicans who are almost immediately returned to Mexico after being stopped by Border Patrol agents. "Although we're not ready to declare victory – we've got a lot more work to do – it is encouraging and it is something that ought to inspire us to continue to push forward," Chertoff told reporters in Washington.
He credited the crackdown, aided this summer by National Guard troops, with deterring thousands of immigrants from trying to illegally enter the U.S. over the southwest border. Border Patrol data provided Wednesday shows a drop of about 20,000 illegal immigrants caught crossing from Mexico this summer, compared to last year.
#1
Oh, I see. The "Mexican" illegal immigrants caught sneaking in still fall under the "catch and releaase" program. How thoughtful. The fence Michael, how is the fence coming?
ISLAMABAD, Aug 22: In a rare show of urgency and consensus in one house, both houses of parliament passed a private bill on Tuesday to allow what the draft called one-dish but actually up to six-items meals at wedding ceremonies.
It was the first private members bill passed by the present parliament and will become law after a formal, mandatory consent by President Gen Pervez Musharraf.
A near unanimity in the National Assembly, where the bill originated, came only a day after chaos rocked the house when the government tabled a controversial bill seeking to protect women from misuse of Islamic Hudood laws and precedes potentially more stormy proceedings after the opposition brings a no-confidence move against Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz on Wednesday.
Immediately after it was passed, the government took the Marriage Functions (prohibition of ostentatious displays and wasteful expenses (Amendment) Bill to the Senate, which endorsed it without debate when the opposition was boycotting the house to protest on another issue.
The bill, authored by two National Assembly members of the Muttahida Majlis-i-Amal (MMA) alliance, had been lying on the house agenda since January.
But it suddenly won an unexpected support from the treasury benches in early June after the Supreme Court ordered a strict enforcement of the Marriage Functions (prohibition of ostentatious displays and wasteful expenses) Ordinance 2000 that allowed only hot and cold drinks at wedding ceremonies and cancelled a Punjab provincial law that allowed one-dish meals.
The original draft, submitted by MMA members from Karachi Mohammad Laeeque Khan and Mohammad Hussain Mehanti had proposed provision for serving an unexplained one dish meal in addition to hot and cold drinks.
But the houses Standing Committee on Religious Affairs, Zakat and Ushr defined the one dish to mean four items: one salan (curry), roti, rice and one sweet dish, which actually comes to a total of six items including hot and cold drinks.
The bill was taken up for discussion on August 8 the first private members day of the present session of the National Assembly when Speaker Chaudhry Amir Hussain deferred further debate after the main ruling and opposition parties supported the move, but some of their members voiced concern that it would deprive the poor an excuse to escape what had traditionally become compulsory expenses on large meals.
During the brief debate on Tuesday, when the bill was taken up again, Raja Pervez Ashraf, secretary-general of the Peoples Party Parliamentarians, and Rai Mansab Ali and Mehnaz Rafi of the ruling Pakistan Muslim League (PML) supported the move as being in conformity with the local traditions and Islamic injunctions about serving meals at weddings and beneficial for the poultry industry and commercial wedding halls.
The sole discordant voice came from PMLs Farooq Amjad Mir who said passing the bill would mean submitting to those who violated the earlier law and wishes of the poultry industry rather than of the common man.
The bill was not on the Senate agenda for the day, but immediately after the NA vote, Law and Justice Minister Mohammad Wasi Zafar took it to the upper house
Posted by: john ||
08/23/2006 14:47 ||
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Some context for the above report
Pakistan's Supreme Court has upheld a ban on serving food at wedding receptions held in public places.
The court ruled the ban was not against Islamic teachings and should remain in force as it discourages extravagant displays of wealth.
The ban on serving food at wedding functions held in public places was imposed by the government in 1997.
The Supreme Court also described the practice of giving dowry by the bride's family as an evil and exploitative custom, and said the state should do everything to stop it.
The court bench then went a step further to criticise some of the most popular customs linked to South Asian weddings, including the colourful rituals of mayun and mehndi (where the bride is decorated and prepared for the wedding) and baraat (a procession by the groom's friends and family to the bride's house), which are dominated by dance and music.
The bench said these customs and even the giving of large dowries were all of Hindu origin and have nothing to do with the Islamic concept of marriage.
Describing them as social evils, the court said the state should take steps to eradicate them.
Posted by: john ||
08/23/2006 15:01 Comments ||
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#4
The islamization of curricula continues. If these kids had been educated in a madrassa, instead of the top english medium private schools and the best university in Pakistan, they could hardly be less intolerant...
From a report on the graduating class of Punjab University...
"Top scorers in BA/BSc Annual Examination 2006 slammed Punjab Universitys (PU) decision to hire the National Testing Service (NTS) for entry tests. They were dissatisfied with Pakistans political system and demanded that Islamic law be implemented in the country.
Shahzadul Haq, who stood first in BA, condemned dictatorship and said a democratic government based on Islamic values was inevitable for Pakistans development.
Saba Arooj, who stood second in BA, said she did not support secularism. Pakistan should have Islamic law, she said, because the country was made in the name of Islam.
Mehwish Rashid, who secured the third position in BA slammed the entry test system and said it should be abolished. She called for the implementation of Islamic law in the country.
Ayesha Zahid, who stood first in BSc, also demanded the implementation of Islamic law. She said she would take the PU vice chancellors offer of free education, and would become a physicist after a PhD in physics.
Saleha Qayyum (third position in BSc) said she had proved that it was possible to score well without taking tuition. She demanded fundamental changes in the examination system. She said she had no interest in politics but wanted to spend her life in line with the teachings of Islam. Saleha said she wanted to be a mathematician in future."
Posted by: john ||
08/23/2006 16:03 Comments ||
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#5
So the legislative branch just told the judiciary to jump, eh?
#6
"I went to a Hindu wedding (in the US). It was loads of fun."
I was in a Hindu wedding (groom) in New Delhi, it was loooooooong (three days, which is short by Indian standards)and baffling! I just did as I was told.
Posted by: Analog Roam ||
08/23/2006 19:21 Comments ||
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August 23, 2006: Modern combat aircraft are built to take damage, but repairing that damage is very expensive. This is the case even when you were trying your best to avoid damage. Case in point is the incident last April when a new F-22 fighter encountered a problem with the cockpit canopy. It would not open. And the pilot was still inside. After over four hours of air force and contractor technicians fussing with the mechanical, electronic and software aspects of the problem, to no avail, a couple of airmen with a chainsaw were called in. The cockpit canopy was made of 19mm thick polycarbonate. The chainsaw cut through it.
Finally, after about five hours, the pilot was free. Then the bookkeepers got to work. Replacing the cut up canopy cost $286,000. But the most expensive damage done was to the special (stealthy) skin of the F-22. This was all scuffed up by the folks trying to get the pilot out. Scuffing this special, stealthy, material makes it less stealthy, and more likely to have the F-22 show up on enemy radar. So the scuffed portions of the aircraft exterior had to be replaced, at a cost of about a million dollars. Then there was the cost of the dozen or so air force and contractor personnel who labored for five hours on the problem. That cost about $10,000. Total cost for the stuck cockpit canopy, about $1.3 million. Not counting the cost of research and development work on making sure it doesn't happen again.
Posted by: Steve ||
08/23/2006 13:56 ||
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#1
Can't they get Lockheed Martin to pay for it? Sheesh, even my cheap car came with a 3 year warranty.
#3
No mention that the reason the canopy wouldn't open was because some brilliant individual had used the wrong length of screw, which had worked slightly out of its hole.
The FOB was to replace every one of those screws in every aircraft.
N.B.: these may be ordinary screws, or they may be made of amazingly peculiar alloys.
(CBS) In just a couple of weeks, the new season of "Survivor" takes 20 castaways to the Cook Islands in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. They will be split into four tribes, but how they will do that is guaranteed to be a talking point. For the 13th installment of the series, producers have yet another controversial way to begin the game: 20 people, four tribes each divided by race.
African-American Tribe:
Make-up artist, Rebecca Borman, 34, from Laurelton, N.Y.
Jazz musician and recording artist Sekou Bunch, 45, of Los Angeles
Nursing student Stephannie Favor, 35, of Columbia, S.C.
Retail salesman Nathan Gonzalez, 26, of Los Angeles
Sundra Oakley, 31, an actress from Los Angeles
Asian-American Tribe:
Nail salon manager Anh-Tuan "Cao Boi" Bui (pronounced Cowboy), 42, from Christianburg, Va.
Attorney Becky Lee, 28, of Washington, D.C.
Management consultant Yul Kwon, 31, of San Mateo, Calif.
Real estate agent Jenny Guzon-Bae, 36, of Lake Forest, Ill.
Fashion Director Brad Virata, 29, of Los Angeles
Hispanic Tribe:
Heavy metal guitarist Billy Garcia, 36, of New York
Professional volleyball player J.P. Calderon, 30, of Marina Del Rey, Calif.
Police officer Cristina Coria, 35, of Los Angeles
Waiter Oscar "Ozzy" Lusth, 25, of Venice, Calif.
Technology risk consultant Cecilia Mansilla, 29, of Oakland, Calif.
White Tribe:
Copier salesman Adam Gentry, 28, of San Diego, Calif.
Writer-producer Jonathan Penner, 44, of Los Angeles
Boxer-waitress Parvati Shallow, 23, of Los Angeles
Performer-roller girl Jessica Smith, 27, of Chico, Calif.
Pre-med student Candice Woodcock, 23, of Fayetteville, N.C.
When one of the African-American Tribe is voted off the island, will they blame Diebold and call Jesse Jackson to intervene?
Posted by: Steve ||
08/23/2006 12:59 ||
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What is a performer-roller girl?
Posted by: john ||
08/23/2006 13:54 Comments ||
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I would put my money on the white tribe because they have a better balance of skills if the occupations account for anything.
Business owners frustrated by lax enforcement of immigration laws are taking their fight to court, accusing competitors of hiring illegal workers to achieve an unfair advantage. The legal action is an attempt by business and anti-illegal-immigration groups to create an economic deterrent against hiring illegal employees.
In the first of a series of lawsuits, a temporary employment agency that supplies farm workers sued a grower and two competing companies on Monday. Similar cases claiming violations of federal anti-racketeering laws have yielded mixed results. The California lawsuit is thought to be the first based on a state's unfair-competition laws, legal analysts said.
Santa Monica, Calif.-based Global Horizons claimed in the lawsuit that Munger Brothers, a grower, hired illegal alien workers from Ayala Agricultural Services and J&A Contractors. All the defendants are based in California's farm-rich Central Valley. The suit claims that Munger Brothers had a contract with Global Horizons to provide more than 600 blueberry pickers this spring, but nixed the agreement so it could hire illegal aliens.
Continued on Page 49
That's good for keeping everyday Americans' wages up with cost of living in the US. If not, expect living standards to start dropping towards Mexico's. Won't that be scenic.
Posted by: Jules in the Hinterlands ||
08/23/2006 12:46 Comments ||
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#2
"It's to the point that doing business legally isn't worth it."
Because the US government refuses to enforce existing laws, principled businesses have to contemplate breaking current laws just to stay competitive. Perhaps surprisingly, its not the fear of apprehension that has prevented most from already making that decision. Their deliberate hesitation is due to ethics. Even if there were concerns of modest government enforcement, in most cases, the penalties would pale in comparison to their potential profits. Indeed, whats driving ethical companies to comply with the regulations is their refusal to compromise their integrity. If the pending US Senate/Administration legislation on Comprehensive Immigration Reform passes in its current language listen for more and more businesses to say Well yes techniquely its against the law but
#3
"If not, expect living standards to start dropping towards Mexico's"
I have been told that here in Los Angeles some 30 to 40 years ago, wages for janitors (who were predominantly black) were relatively good, or at least not poverty-level. I do not think that is the case today.
Just the top ten of 75...
Beloit College has released its latest Mindset List, to help academics understand what freshmen know and what they dont have a clue about. This list has been prepared each August since 1998 and past lists are available online. Here is this years list, for the Class of 2010:
1. The Soviet Union has never existed and therefore is about as scary as the student union.
2. They have known only two presidents.
3. For most of their lives, major U.S. airlines have been bankrupt.
4. Manuel Noriega has always been in jail in the U.S.
5. They have grown up getting lost in big boxes.
6. There has always been only one Germany.
7. They have never heard anyone actually ring it up on a cash register.
8. They are wireless, yet always connected.
9. A stained blue dress is as famous to their generation as a third-rate burglary was to their parents.
10. Thanks to pervasive head phones in the back seat, parents have always been able to speak freely in the front.
#1
I love this list becasue it really makes one think about history and how we perceive the past ourselves. But in this case, number 9 will be number 1.
#4
When my grandparents were children, most people still got around on horse or by foot. Powered aircraft flight was unknown. Most of the US was not wired for electricity. Healthy people looked fat. The US Navy had actually gone to the other side of the world and come back.
The US was "bogged down in the quagmire" of a 14-year-long war in the Philippines.
Against Moslems.
When their grandparents, my grandparents' grandparents, were children, the US had finally built a ship big enough so that we could tell the Barbary Pirates to "bugger off".
#5
3. For most of their lives, major U.S. airlines have been bankrupt.
And this matters to them...how?
4. Manuel Noriega has always been in jail in the U.S.
Who? (I know who Noriega is, but they probably won't.)
5. They have grown up getting lost in big boxes.
Whuh?
7. They have never heard anyone actually ring it up on a cash register.
They've never dialed a telephone, either.
9. A stained blue dress is as famous to their generation as a third-rate burglary was to their parents.
I gotta tell ya, I vaguely knew what the whole Watergate thing was about, but I really wasn't paying that much attention. And I paid far more attention than most kids my age. Of course, Watergate wasn't about sex, either. That might make a difference.
#9
A couple summers ago, I was riding in a car with my buddy Dan and his oldest boy Andy, who's best friends with my oldest. Dan mentioned that his first job was delivering telegrams in downtown Cleveland.
Andy, innocent as newfallen snow, asks, "What's a telegram?"
"It's prehistoric e-mail."
"Oh."
Posted by: Mike ||
08/23/2006 23:12 Comments ||
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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.