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As recently as last March, the FBI taught its agents that mainstream Muslims are likely to be violent and radical, according to training materials obtained by Wired’s Spencer Ackerman. The training materials portray “the Islamic practice of giving charity as no more than a ‘funding mechanism for combat,’” and feature a chart that shows that

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As recently as last March, the FBI taught its agents that mainstream Muslims are likely to be violent and radical, according to training materials obtained by Wired’s Spencer Ackerman. The training materials portray “the Islamic practice of giving charity as no more than a ‘funding mechanism for combat,’” and feature a chart that shows that

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We’ve been hearing a lot lately about America’s struggles: rising joblessness, increasing poverty, growing inequality, and an education system that’s falling behind those of other developed countries. But it’s worth keeping in mind that even as things seems to get worse by some measures, they’re getting by others. And perhaps the most obvious area for

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We’ve been hearing a lot lately about America’s struggles: rising joblessness, increasing poverty, growing inequality, and an education system that’s falling behind those of other developed countries. But it’s worth keeping in mind that even as things seems to get worse by some measures, they’re getting by others. And perhaps the most obvious area for

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WaPo Changes AttackWatch.com-Related Post Title to Make It About ‘Conservative’ Instead of General Ridicule

The Obama administration and the Obama campaign aren't the only ones who should be embarrassed by the AttackWatch.com snitch site Obama for America recently created. As demonstrated last night in a series of Associated Press searches (not in quotes) which resulted in nothing relevant and still don't ( here on “attackwatch.com”;

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Peter King Praises Gitmo As Better Than Any US Prison and Justifies Torture to Parliament

Click here to view this media Rep. Peter King was asked by the UK Parliament what kind of facility Guantanamo Bay is. This was after describing it as a vacation destination for prisoners. He was asked to justify how America could torture them and then call enhanced interrogation. It was just a little bit uncomfortable. He shrugged it off and said it wasn’t really that bad because our military trains with it and hey, if torture saved lives it was all worth it. Usually that’s the type of justification that you might hear someone from the Pinochet regime i nvoke. You can see why he was so eager to go to the UK and impart his wisdom on how we combat Muslim radicalization. King: I’ve Been to Guantanamo, it’s it’s modern facility. There’s one medical person for every two prisoners. (Gitmo has an excellent health plan) King: They are taught language, arts… (Forget about getting student loans for college, Gitmo has an education system that Michele Rhee would be proud of.) King: They are out playing soccer or football as you call it. (The MLS might find some untapped talent there) Have you visited? On how many occasions? King: Once. (That many?) Q: As you’re concerned the treatment is appropriate? King: Better than almost any American prison. Certainly better than any Army or Marine Corp training facility. MP Winnick: Water-boarding one hundred and sixty times of one prisoner. One hundred and sixty times. If that’s not torture Congressman King, what on earth is it? (After the first 150 times, what’s a few more?) King: To me it’s enhanced interrogation. I’ve Khalid Sheik Mohammad in person since then and he’s not all the worse for wear over it and he did provide information. Again, if you’re’ talking about moral equivalency here, you’re talking about a type of interrogation which was extremely uncomfortable, painful, I wouldn’t want to go through it. No permanent damage, at the same time if that led to the savings of 5, 6, 700 hundred people that didn’t have to jump through buildings or were burning to death, it’s a price I’ll pay. Enhanced interrogation isn’t torture to the Liz Cheney torture apologists because I guess they weren’t given the Children of Mengele treatment or weren’t just killed. No, it’s a price the prisoner paid and there is no evidence that they got any useful intelligence from the dissolving of our moral fiber, Congressman.

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Frank Lucas

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Frank Lucas

Matt Marcus Frank Lucas’ Mobile Money Machines (Awesome review!) – YouTube.flv Mobile Money Machines -Massive Affiliate Marketing Traffic From Mobile Phones Part 3 Mobile Money Machines -Massive Affiliate Marketing Traffic From Mobile Phones Part 2 mazudi says: #Book :Original Gangster: The Real Life Story of One of America’s Most Notorious Drug Lords by Frank Lucas http://t.co/7JJVXsio

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Twilight Breaking Dawn Trailer

VIDEO – New Twilight Breaking Dawn Trailer Bella Pregnant & Dying WATCH Breaking Dawn – Part 1 trailer (FULL) VIDEO — Dramatic new Twilight Breaking Dawn trailer!! STOPOUTADVERTS says: stopoutadverts : Twilight : Breaking Dawn Trailer Proves Once and For All That Humans Shouldn’t Have Vampire Babi… http://t.co/EHnmZWij

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I’m not seeing a lot of buzz about this, but there should be. The Congressional Progressive Caucus has unveiled their framework for jobs, which augments and expands upon the President’s American Jobs Act. The CPC’s Rebuild The American Dream Framework has six parts to it. Specific policy proposals will be forthcoming, but here is the high level overview: Make it in America Again – focus on bolstering U.S. manufacturing Rebuild America – focus on infrastructure as a larger part of the jobs policy than the White House proposal Lead the Green Industrial Revolution – blending the first two elements into a focus on green industries and products Jobs for the Next Generation – Job training and education for young people Not Just Jobs – Good Jobs – Reinforcing Americans’ right and access to collective bargaining, promoting jobs that provide wages, benefits and security that will preserve the middle class Fair Taxes – Shared Sacrifice – Pay for the program by taxing the wealthy in this country At a time when poverty in this country has risen to one in six Americans, where joblessness among young people is at its highest level since the Great Depression, and jobs are the single biggest issue on the table, this framework is most welcome. It’s the product of discussions caucus members had during the summer as they toured the country and spoke to people about what most concerned them. While I haven’t heard all of the specifics yet, I think there are some cues to be taken from progressives’ budget proposal released earlier this year, which proposed a 45 percent tax rate on the wealthiest earners in this country, ending the wars, and preserving the social safety net for generations to come. It’s important to recognize that progressives are not trying to compete with the American Jobs Act, but instead have offered proposals which dovetail and augment his. I interpret that message as one of support not just for his plan, but for a larger vision of what can be done with the support of the American people. It’s that support part that’s a challenge. Progressives’ voices seem to be a focus in the mainstream media only when they are opposing the President, not when they’re stepping up alongside and strengthening what has been proposed. I would love to see a movement to get behind every one of their proposals with full-throated force, in the hopes of widening the benefits of whatever jobs package ultimately squeaks through this crazy Congress. Most importantly, the CPC proposal reflects what the majority of people in this country not only want, but need. It reflects a value system that doesn’t applaud dead uninsured people, but seeks to put an end to a situation where people die from lack of access to health care. It reflects a value system where every citizen of this country is given the same opportunity to succeed and improve their lot in life. It reflects the greater good a government should be doing for the governed. Reality may dictate that this Congress offers no hope for getting any of these proposals through. But we have an opportunity to rally around it anyway, and begin to change the narrative away from the right-wing cynical, selfish world view to one that’s centered around real people and real struggles. My hat is off to the CPC, and I’m looking forward to writing more about their specific bills as they emerge.

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Liberals are on their high horses about a single audience member at CNN's Republican debate whom they believe wanted a hypothetical man without health insurance in a hypothetical coma to die — hypothetically. (Democrats want people in comas to die only when they are not hypothetical but real, like Terri Schiavo.) I concur with the audience member who shouted “Yes!” This has nothing to do with any actual people in comas — the people Democrats want to kill — it's just a big “screw you” to the moderator. Following up on Brian Williams' showboating questions at last week's Republican debate about the execution of the innocent and starving children with distended stomachs, this week, CNN's Wolf Blitzer launched his question about an imaginary comatose man without health insurance. As Rep. Ron Paul began to discuss the pitfalls of collectivism, Blitzer kept interrupting him, concluding with, “But Congressman, are you saying that society should just let him die?” That's when an audience member yelled out “Yes!” — allowing liberals to luxuriate in self-righteousness, the likes of which we have not seen since the Jersey Girls demanded a Homeland Security Department be created because their husbands died. Normal people are sick of liberals' emotional stories that play to soccer moms, but always seem to pave the way for disastrous social policies that benefit only left-wing special-interest groups. Whenever liberals start loftily insisting on our obligation to our fellow man with these tear-jerkers, you know some heinous public policy is coming. As soon as the dust settles, you won't see any innocent victims being helped, only trial lawyers, government employees and other Democratic constituencies. Obama campaigned for his national health care bill with a sad story about a campaign supporter who died of breast cancer soon after his election because — he said — she couldn't afford health insurance, so she didn't get a breast cancer scan in time to stop the disease. He somberly told embarrassed audiences: “She insisted she is going to be buried in an Obama T-shirt.” (As it looks like we all will, unless we get a new president next year.) Apart from the fact that free breast cancer screening was available right in his supporter's hometown of St. Louis, she undoubtedly would have been able to afford excellent health insurance … except the government outlawed affordable health insurance. Thanks to accumulated government mandates on insurance companies at that time, imposed by both the state and federal government, Obama's Missouri supporter was allowed to buy health insurance only provided it covered: chiropractors, speech therapists, hearing therapists, psychologists, dentists, optometrists, podiatrists (Missouri), as well as mental health benefits, unlimited hospital stays for newborns and mothers, and reconstructive surgery after mastectomy (federal). When starting her own business and struggling to make ends meet, the Obama supporter might have been better served by a cheaper policy that covered only, say, actual medical problems. But the government didn't permit her that option. Obama's poster-child for government-run health insurance was a victim of government-micromanaged health insurance. It would be as if the government prohibited us from buying cars unless they were Lexus SUVs, fully loaded with every possible option. Then, when most Americans couldn't afford to buy a car, the Democrats could demand we pass “ObamaCar.” Wolf could have asked: “A healthy 30-year-old young man decides, 'I'm not going to spend $100,000 or $200,000 for a car because, you know, I don't need it.' But something terrible happens, all of a sudden he needs it. Who's going to pay if he needs a car to escape a hurricane, for example? Who pays for that?” Why are the only two options always a behemoth government program or the guy dies? The subject is a baby kitten, but the real beneficiaries are the people with great government jobs, fantastic pensions, long vacations, and self-paced and self-evaluated working environments. As for Brian Williams' grandstandy question to Gov. Rick Perry about Texas' execution rate (“Have you struggled to sleep at night with the idea that any one of those might have been innocent?”): There is no credible evidence that a single innocent person has been executed in this country since at least 1950. There is, however, a lot of evidence that innocent people have been killed when murderers were not executed. Indeed, one of the most infamous cases of a former death row inmate being released and then killing again comes from Texas. Kenneth McDuff had been given three death sentences for kidnapping and murdering three teenagers, repeatedly raping one. But he was sprung from prison after the Supreme Court invalidated the death penalty in 1972 and then Texas began releasing inmates to relieve prison overcrowding. McDuff went on to kill more than a dozen people, provably eight more. He was finally executed by Gov. George Bush in 1998, two decades after his post-death row rape and murder spree began. Someone ought to calculate the carnage liberals foisted on this country beginning in the late-'60s with their “compassionate” approach to rapists and serial killers like McDuff — consequences that liberals were fully immunized from in their safe, ivory tower neighborhoods. Let's ask Michael Dukakis to run the numbers. Regarding Williams' baby seal question about starving children in Texas with distended stomachs: No one is starving in this country. The only bloated stomach problem affecting America's poor is a medical condition known as “obesity.” According to the General Accounting Office, in 2008, the federal government had 18 separate food programs that spent $62.5 billion each year to feed the poor. And that was before the Food Stamp President assumed office. I would venture to guess that the only children in America who have ever suffered from kwashiorkor, the condition that causes distended bellies, were victims of child abuse — at the hands of the sort of monsters Williams is so opposed to executing. People aren't buying the left's emotional appeals about imaginary victims anymore. The audience member's “Yes!” was a way of laughing in the moderators' faces for trying to pull that crap.

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