My Top Twenty Favorite Horror Movies Amityville Horror- Madison Style! pt.1 Amityville Horror- Madison Style! pt.2 Page One Book » What moral lesson is being taught in the Urban … Im doing this assignment on urban legends and its asking me what moral lesson is being taught The urban legend i chose was the amityville horror and i cant seem to figure out what the moral lesson is. can someone please help me. … Hans Holzer | GhoST Augustine Blog His extensive involvement in researching the supernatural included investigating The Amityville Horror and some of the most prominent haunted locations around the world. He also worked with well-known trance mediums such as Ethel … My Haunting YA Ghost Tale, GHOST GIRL IN SHADOW BAY, Now in Kindle … If you like Amityville Horror type ghost & haunted house novels and movies, you will love my new YA eBook mystery, GHOST GIRL IN SHADOW BAY. Three years after her father was killed, sixteen-year-old Peyton Delaney, her mother, Melody, … Amityville America – American Hauntings: Amityville Horror … Amityville Horror – Primetime Live – 1 of 3. Halloween Primetime Live special about the infamous Amityville Horror home and it’s history. Posted by Editor at 1:41 PM · Email This BlogThis! Share to Twitter Share to Facebook Share to … Amityville America – American Hauntings: Amityville horror house … Amityville horror house “walk through”. Amityville Horror house Walk through. This is not my own work, it is a simulated version created by youtube user: mcandic. Posted by Editor at 1:37 PM · Email This BlogThis! … TyBaginski says: The amityville horror comin in strange
Continue reading …On Saturday's Early Show on CBS, reporter Jeff Greenfield offered a story from CPAC, but warned that conservatives shouldn't be questioning Obama's belief in American exceptionalism or his war on terrorism. That's apparently a risky scheme. Greenfield ran clips from several presidential contenders questioning Obama and his anti-terror policies and concluded, “This was a theme that was rarely heard last year when Republicans won big victories centered on the unhappiness with the economy. And it's an open question whether it will strike a chord with voters who may not share this view of the President.” Can Greenfield honestly claim that no one running for the House or Senate last year talked about Obama's anti-terror policies or questioned how America now looks in the eyes of the world? Or is Greenfield just trying to tell his audience that conservatives only won because of the economy, so don't listen to them when they run down the other Obama policies? CBS anchor Betty Nguyen preceded the CPAC story with a note on the coming budget battle: “House Republicans, they are calling for deep cuts in hundreds of government programs . The GOP estimates the amount to be about 61 billion dollars in savings. Now they're bowing to last-minute demands of Tea Party-backed conservatives, who said not enough was being done to cut costs. But the proposal stands little chance of becoming law, since Democrats control the Senate.” With 3.5 trillion in spending, how can media outlets call this tiny fraction “deep cuts”? Notice how CBS suggests even this miniscule reduction is completely
Continue reading …Egyptians are coming to terms with the scale of change in their country following the dramatic protests in Cairo that unseated their president Akhem Hassan came so late to the revolution he thought he might have missed it, but on Saturday he discovered that it is far from over. For days, Hassan watched events unfold on television. Or rather, he fumed as the state broadcaster spewed forth a stream of lies about the protests in Cairo’s Tahrir Square. “They said the demonstrators were paid by foreigners and agents of Israel,” said the 41-year-old driving instructor. “They said they only went to Tahrir Square because there was free Kentucky [Fried Chicken]. But we Egyptians were afraid of the government since the day we were born and no one would go against it just for free Kentucky.” It took Hosni Mubarak’s television address, though, to get Hassan down to the square. Like many of his countrymen, he had been expecting the Egyptian president to quit on Thursday night. When he didn’t, it was too much. “I decided that for my sons’ future, I too must be brave,” he said. Hassan arrived in Tahrir Square on Friday morning as the growing crowd seethed with anger at what was widely regarded as the regime’s duplicity after the near euphoria of the day before at statements from the army and politicians that Mubarak was about to quit. Protest organisers were discussing how to ratchet up the pressure with civil disobedience and mass strikes while hundreds of thousands of people, like Hassan, poured in to the square. A few hours later, a spasm of disbelief and stunned silence gave way to a roar that swept Cairo and cities across Egypt as more than 30 years of Mubarak’s rule was ended in a terse 30-second statement. The army was now running the country. The revolution was won. Or perhaps it wasn’t. On Saturday morning Hassan was still in the square with many thousands of others, still not quite believing the emotional rollercoaster of the past 24 hours as he read a paper with a large picture of Mubarak on the front under a contemptuous headline. “I was going to go home now,” said Hassan. “But people here told me to stay. They’re telling everyone to stay. They said the revolution isn’t over yet.” The morning after Mubarak was forced out, Tahrir Square was busy with protesters clearing up the detritus of revolution – neatly piling the stones ripped from the ground to resist any attempt to force the demonstrators from the square and sweeping the road as if this was the first step to building a new Egypt. On the edge of the square, fathers lifted their children on to tanks and clicked away with their phone cameras. Young women in headscarves edged as close as modesty would allow them to the soldiers as their friends took pictures. Older women delivered cakes to the men in uniform. Their husbands hugged the soldiers and thanked them for saving the country. These revolutionaries – ordinary Egyptians, old and young, middle-class and poor, Islamists and secularists, who could never have imagined publicly criticising the government just a few weeks ago – marvelled at the enormity of what they had achieved. Egyptians have surprised themselves with the power and orderliness of their revolution. During 18 days of protest they endured police attacks with live rounds and rubber bullets, a camel charge by pro-Mubarak thugs, and times when it seemed as though their struggle might take months. But the violence that cost more than 300 people their lives all came from the state’s brutal but failed attempt to break the uprising. “The government tried to kill us but it only made us stronger,” said Khalid Mostafa, a worker at a butchery. “They didn’t think we would fight back when they sent the people to beat and shoot us. When they did that, we had the whole country with us and we knew they could not kill us all.” When some of the young men among the hundreds of thousands packed in to Tahrir Square grew belligerent at the army’s attempts to prevent the protest spilling beyond the barricades, others calmed them with pleas that non-violence was their most powerful weapon. Instead, deeply religious men and women in chadors laid themselves down in front of the tanks, their heads resting inside the tracks, to forestall any attempt by the military to move on the square. On Saturday Mostafa was among the clumps of people gathered around speakers as men – it always seemed to be men – took turns to offer their views on what should happen next. Here and there, the arguments turned heated. Some saw ridding the country of Mubarak’s rule as enough and declared the revolution won. The army is with the people, they declared. Others dwelled on the uncertainties of a takeover by the same military that kept Mubarak in power for 30 years. The crowds may have chanted “the army and people are one” as they sought to forestall any attempt to use force to break the protests, but for protesters such as Fawzi Abdul Aleem, a surgeon who left a state hospital in Alexandria to join the demonstrations early on and slept every night in the square, there is reason for concern. “We don’t know the military’s intention. Since the 1952 revolution we have been governed by the military,” he said. “We need a civilian government. We don’t want the military to rule us. They are strict, they are not democratic. It’s not good for us. We are staying here until we get guarantees for the future. We are waiting for the army to accept our demands.” Shortly after taking over, the military called for an end to the protests. It told the demonstrators in Tahrir Square that they had won and it was time to clear the barricades of burned-out cars, railings and metal sheeting and go home. “The army is a bit surprised that we haven’t left,” said Azza Khalil, another doctor at the open-air clinics scattered around the square. “The best thing about this revolution is we broke the fear of talking to our leaders. Now we hope the leaders will be afraid of the masses, the people. I think people realised how powerful they are. I hope the army realises that.” The protest organisers have laid out a series of demands to the army, key to which are the dissolution of the widely discredited parliament, the lifting of the 30-year-old state of emergency imposed after Anwar Sadat’s assassination which has been used to persecute the government’s opponents and suppress political activity, and the establishment of an interim administration to get the country to free elections. The military has agreed to meet some of those, but not all. The demonstrators are pressing for the creation of a five-person interim ruling council of four civilians – all of whom would be barred from running for president when elections are held, so they could not use their position for political advantage – and one military official. While some Egyptians are misty-eyed about the army, there is ample evidence that it has not been neutral during the crisis. It stood back while the regime’s thugs attacked demonstrators in Tahrir Square. Hundreds, possibly thousands, of opposition activists, or people merely carrying political literature, were detained and some severely tortured. Among those picked up was Kareem Amer, a renowned political activist and blogger, who had already served four years in prison. He was arrested on the edge of Tahrir Square on 7 February. Amer told a website, CyberDissidents.org, that he was held in a military prison in the desert in a crowded cell. “People were treated harshly and severely tortured on a daily basis. They were tortured in front of our eyes – water-boarded, beaten with sticks, and electrocuted,” he said. Amer was only released on Friday as Mubarak fell. “Thousands of prisoners were released, even those who had killed soldiers,” he said. Still, even amid the debate over what the military is really up to, there is a new confidence in the power of ordinary people to make a difference and a determination that, if the army doesn’t deliver, Egyptians will be back on the streets. “We are the example to the world,” said Abdel Massri, a 25 year-old IT specialist. “All over the Arab world they are celebrating our freedom. In America, in Israel, they say Egyptians are not ready for democracy, Arabs don’t know how to use democracy. But that is just their excuse for supporting Mubarak. He was good for them, not for us.” Mubarak may be gone, but people have not stopped talking about him. They debate how to get back the money they believe he has stolen. They disagree about whether he should be allowed to retire in peace in Egypt or be called to account for the many crimes people tick off. But they generally agree on one thing in Tahrir Square – that Mubarak colossally misjudged Egyptians. “Mubarak, this man is so stupid,” said Khalil with a laugh. “Everything he did managed to get more people on the streets. His speech made every single person hate him because they discovered he doesn’t love Egypt, he loves himself.” Egypt Hosni Mubarak Middle East Chris McGreal guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media After NRA lobbyist Wayne LaPierre attacked MSNBC’s Lawrence O’Donnell at this year’s CPAC, O’Donnell responded in his Rewrite segment and pretty well ripped LaPierre to shreds for his part in contributing to the number of deaths after that tragic shooting of Congresswoman Gabby Giffords in Tucson, Arizona. O’DONNELL: Time for tonight’s Rewrite. In Washington during the Conservative Political Action Committee better known as CPAC, I actually made an appearance of sorts. It happened while Washington’s lobbyist in favor of murderers’ rights to always use the gun of their choice, Wayne LaPierre, the Executive Vice President of the NRA, was speaking about the calls for gun and ammunition control in the aftermath of the Tucson massacre. (cut to video) You just heard the NRA’s lie, now some facts. A Justice Department study on the federal assault weapons ban, which was law for 10 years found “Gun murders declined 10.3 percent in states without preexisting assault weapons bans.” 10.3 percent. Another study by the Justice Department in 2004 concluded “If the ban is lifted, gun and magazine manufacturers may reintroduce assault weapons models and large capacity magazines, perhaps in substantial numbers.” And that is exactly what the merchants of death did; reintroduced assault weapons and the high capacity magazines that allowed Jared Loughner to take 31 shots, 31, before he had to stop and reload. On the NRA’s web site, gun violence cheerleader Wayne LaPierre says “It’s time to acknowledge what we know in our hearts to be true.” That “The best way to stop a bad guy with a gun, is a good guy with a gun.” Wayne, there was a good guy on the scene that day, in Tucson with a gun, but there wasn’t anything he could do. It was too dangerous to fire. He could have hit an innocent bystander. A good guy with a gun did not stop Jared Loughner. It was the moment that Loughner had to reload that he became stoppable and he was stopped by a 61 year old woman who wrestled another high capacity magazine out of his hand as he tried to reload, and an unarmed 74 year old man, who had already been grazed by one of Loughner’s bullets. The second, the second Jared Loughner had to stop and reload, he became an unarmed man. Wayne LaPierre wants that reloading moment to come after crazed gunmen fire as many shots as the desires of high capacity magazines will allow them to. If Jared Loughner had tried to do this in 2003 when those magazines were illegal, he would have had to reload after firing 10 bullets. That means he would have been stopped, stopped, after firing ten bullets and Tucson would have seen fewer funerals. People in Tucson were shot and killed thanks to the relentless lobbying work of Wayne LaPierre and his blood-drenched organization. Wayne LaPierre has devoted his adult life, every day of his adult life since 1977, every working day, to making sure madmen in America can fire as many bullets as they want without having to reload. Wayne LaPierre runs an organization that is devoted to expanding the profits of the merchants of death. Gun manufacturers pay his salary so he can pretend to be representing the rights of hunters who in fact have absolutely no use for the kind of high capacity magazine Jared Loughner used. Wayne LaPierre is not your run of the mill lobbyist. Oh no. Most lobbyists are good and decent people in fact. Some are every bit as sleazy as you might imagine. And some are criminals, like Jack Abramoff, but none, none, have done more harm to America, than Wayne LaPierre. He more than any individual law maker is responsible for this country’s insane gun laws that allow insane people to mow down Congresswomen and nine year old girls in Safeway parking lots. Wayne LaPierre is morally guilty of being an accessory before the fact of Jared Loughner’s shooting spree in Tucson. And every member of Congress who welcomes him into the office for a little lobbying session, is taking one step closer to the devil.
Continue reading …I love these little white board demos that Austan Goolsbee does on a fairly regular basis. It’s such a nice, sane, intelligent version, especially in comparison to some of the bat-$#!% crazy ones we’re forced to watch while monitoring Fox News. In this one, Goolsbee talks up the National Wireless Initiative . I don’t know if our generally myopic world view makes the fact that we have such slow internet speeds (compared to other countries) something that is well-known. I suspect not. But the Obama administration does want to address that and extending internet connectivity to far more people in the hopes of stimulating job growth and thereby, the economy : As the President explained today, his plan would expand wireless coverage to 98% of Americans, while reducing the deficit by nearly $10 billion by making more government spectrum available: For our families and our businesses, high-speed wireless service, that’s the next train station; it’s the next off-ramp. It’s how we’ll spark new innovation, new investment, new jobs. And you know this here in Northern Michigan. That’s why I showed up, in addition to it being pretty and people being nice. (Laughter and applause.) For decades now, this university has given a new laptop to every incoming student. Wi-Fi stretched across campus. But if you lived off-campus, like most students and teachers here, you were largely out of luck. Broadband was often too expensive to afford. And if you lived a bit further out of town, you were completely out of luck, because broadband providers, they often won’t build networks where it’s not profitable, just like they wouldn’t build electrical lines where it wasn’t profitable. So this university tried something new. You partnered with various companies to build a high-speed, next-generation wireless network. And you managed to install it with six people in only four days without raising tuition. Good job. Good job, Mr. President. (Applause.) By the way, if you give me the name of these six people — (laughter) — there’s a whole bunch of stuff in Washington I’d like to see done in four days with six people. (Laughter.) So today, this is one of America’s most connected universities, and enrollment is near the highest it’s been in 30 years. And what’s more — and this is what makes this special — you told nearby towns that if they allowed you to retrofit their towers with new equipment to expand your network, then their schools, their first responders, their city governments could use it too. And as a result, police officers can access crime databases in their cars. And firefighters can download blueprints on the way to a burning building. And public works officials can save money by monitoring pumps and equipment remotely. And you’ve created new online learning opportunities for K-12 students as far as 30 miles away, some of whom — (applause) — some of whom can’t always make it to school in a place that averages 200 inches of snow a year. (Laughter and applause.) Now, some of these students don’t appreciate the end of school [snow] days. I know Malia and Sasha get really excited about school [snow] days. Of course, in Washington things shut down when there’s an inch of snow. (Laughter.) But this technology is giving them more opportunity. It’s good for their education, it’s good for our economy. In fact, I just came from a demonstration of online learning in action. We were with Professor Lubig and he had plugged in Negaunee High School — (applause) — and Powell Township School in Big Bay. (Applause.) So I felt like the guy in Star Trek. I was being beamed around — (laughter) — across the Upper Peninsula here. But it was remarkable to see the possibilities for these young people who are able to, let’s say, do a chemistry experiment, and they can compare the results with kids in Boston. Or if there’s some learning tool or material they don’t have immediately accessible in their school, they can connect here to the university, and they’re able to tap into it. It’s opening up an entire world to them. And one of the young people who I was talking to, he talked about foreign policy and what we were seeing in places like Egypt. And he said, what’s amazing especially for us is that now we have a window to the entire world, and we can start understanding other cultures and other places in ways that we could never do without this technology.
Continue reading …Switzerland’s gun laws are closer to America’s than those of most other European countries, but a referendum this weekend may curb the centuries-old tradition of armed households. Most Swiss males under 50 are military reservists and usually take their military-issue rifles home with them, but the initiative being voted on…
Continue reading …The man convicted of killing DC intern Chandra Levy in 2001 was sentenced to 60 years in prison today, CNN reports. Ingmar Guandique, a 29-year-old illegal immigrant from El Salvador, also got a dressing down from Levy’s mother in court. “How could you take my daughter’s life?” asked Susan Levy,…
Continue reading …Arianna Huffington's crazy left-wing, pro-Democrat website gets bought out by AOL for $315 million. Professional Angry Man Keith Olbermann follows up by joining Al Gore's deservedly unknown Current TV effort. Before that, decrepit Newsweek was absorbed by one of the lesser liberal lights of the blogosphere – Tina Brown's Daily Beast. To journalists desperate for a direction – any direction – turning left seems an easy way to go. Forget MSNBC's brief propaganda attempt to “lean forward.” That is going nowhere. Old-style, supposedly neutral journalism is collapsing. Out of the rubble, we are seeing more and more journalists declare themselves to be what we've always known they were – liberal, left-wing, progressive or even ” socialist ,” as MSNBC's Lawrence O'Donnell admitted late last year. Faster than a congressman can take off his shirt, journalists have proven every complaint about media bias conservatives have leveled for decades. Yes, journalists are liberal. Yes, they blatantly spin stories to benefit both liberals and Democrats. Yes, hosts like Chris Matthews play ” Hardball ” with conservatives and play a thrill-ing game of slo-pitch softball with their Democrat buddies.
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