harold camping family radio Why You Mad – Doyin Bernie Mac Gets Angry In Soul Men Bernie Mac | CNNConsumerNews.com Hes being a good friend and speaking about how amazing Bernie Mac was. This entry was posted on May 16 2011. The shower curtain was closed but all of … Break Free with Bernie Mac | World News – Russian opinion The comedian born Bernard Jeffrey McCollough had been hospitalized in Chicago for over a week being treated for. Bernie Mac one of the Original Kings… Bernie Mac The shower curtain was closed but all of a. Bernie Mac one of the Original Kings of Comedy died earlier this morning of complications from. Stress Free Bernie Mac . | Home Improvement Bernie Mac one of the Original Kings of Comedy died earlier this morning of complications from pneumonia reports CNN. This is a part from The Original… Bernie Mac | Hot New Music TV Bernie Mac one of the Original Kings of Comedy died earlier this morning of complications from pneumonia reports CNN. The shower curtain was closed but all of. The other day I went to use the facilities in the house. … CookieeMonsta_ says: He cussed in front of the kids and they jumped when he yelled it out..haha Bernie Mac was so hilarious!! miss him
Continue reading …Nine police officers among the dead after 10 bombs explode in and around Iraqi capital A series of explosions in and around Baghdad have killed 16 people, including 10 who died when a suicide bomber blew himself up in a crowd of police officers. At least nine of the dead were police. It was the third major attack this month in which security personnel were targeted and took the most losses. In total, at least 10 bombs exploded. The worst single attack came near Taji, 12 miles north of Baghdad, where police had gathered after a roadside bomb targeting a passing US military convoy blew up. When the police arrived on the scene, a suicide bomber walked into the crowd and blew himself up, police and hospital officials said. Seven police and three civilians died and 19 people, including 15 police, were injured. Earlier a car bomb exploded in Sadr City , injuring five people. Namiq Khazal, who lives nearby, said: “We woke up to a big blast nearby and the glass windows in front of the house were smashed. My young brother was injured by glass.” Minutes later in Sadr City, a bomb hidden in a pile of garbage exploded, killing one person and wounding five more. Another roadside bomb, this time targeting a police patrol, injured three policemen and four bystanders. Five explosions in the south-western Baghdad neighbourhood of Bayaa killed five people, including two policemen, and injured 15. There was no immediate claim of responsibility. The attacks came hours before British military operations in Iraq were due to come to an end with the completion of a Royal Navy mission to train Iraqi sailors. Most British forces pulled out of the country in 2009. The defence secretary, Liam Fox, paid tribute to the 179 British personnel who lost their lives in the eight-year deployment. He said of the last mission: “Royal Navy personnel have used their formidable skills and expertise to bring about a transformation in Iraq’s naval force. The Iraqi navy has a key role to play in protecting Iraq’s territorial waters and the oil infrastructure that is so vital to Iraq’s economy, and I am proud of the role British forces have played in making it capable of doing that job.” Iraq guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Former president George W. Bush is earning major money on the speaking circuit in his post-presidential life. According to iWatch News, Bush has made an estimated $15 million since leaving the White House. The former president reportedly boasts a speaking fee between $100,000 and $150,000. Bush has largely shied away from the public spotlight since leaving office. One month prior to the release of his memoir Decision Points last fall, President Barack Obama’s predecessor said, “I have zero desire, just so you know, to be in the limelight.” He added, “I’m going to emerge then submerge.” Earlier this month, Bush declined an invitation from Obama to join him at a ceremony being held at Ground Zero in the wake of Osama Bin Laden’s death. His spokesman, David Sherzer, said the former president appreciated the offer, but wanted to remain outside the public eye in his post-White House life. Sherzer told iWatch News that Bush has given nearly 140 paid speeches since the end of his term as president. According to the outlet, nearly all of Bush’s speaking engagements are closed to the press. Click here to read more about the speeches delivered by Bush since leaving office and the millions the former president has taken in with the talks.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Why is it every time we hear the word “serious” it always means sticking it to the working class and the poor? David Brooks takes his turn throwing Newt Gingrich under the bus during this segment on the PBS Newshour for daring to call Paul Ryan’s plan to turn Medicare into a voucher system “right-wing social engineering” on Meet the Press last week. While Brooks admits that a lot of Republicans are running scared now after voting for Ryan’s budget plan, he pretends his problem with Gingrich isn’t so much what he said, but the manner in which he said it. I hate to break it to David Brooks, but all the talk in the world of how “serious” that plan is from you and your fellow Villagers isn’t going to make the voters like the idea of getting rid of Medicare. And the problem with what Gingrich said is not how he said it. It’s that he dared to tell the truth. And now that almost every Republican in the House of Representatives has hitched their wagons to Ryan’s plan by voting for it, we can’t have any of that, now can we? Transcript via PBS below the fold. JIM LEHRER: Now, do you agree? I mean, is he damaged beyond repair? DAVID BROOKS: I have always thought he was damaged. I think I mentioned… JIM LEHRER: Sure, before. DAVID BROOKS: … that he — I wouldn’t trust him to run a 7-Eleven. And there’s sort of the reason. Somebody made the point, you have to — always have to use the Newt Gingrich translator for everything he says. So, when he says something is world historical, that means it is sort of moderately important. When he say it is fundamental, that means it is tangential. So, you got to — the bombast meter always has to be ratcheted down six levels. And — but — so, this was just bombastic out of control. But there was a serious element. He is not the only one in the Republican Party who is worried about what Paul Ryan stands for. JIM LEHRER: Yes. DAVID BROOKS: And I happen to think… JIM LEHRER: You mean the Medicare thing. DAVID BROOKS: The Medicare thing. And he has been involved in Medicare in the past when he was speaker. JIM LEHRER: Sure. DAVID BROOKS: And I happen to think one of the important things Ryan did was, he said, if we’re going to be serious, we have to be serious about entitlements. We can’t just be for expanding Medicare coverage forever. But there are people in the party on talk radio and also people like Gingrich who have said, we should never, never touch this. JIM LEHRER: Yes. DAVID BROOKS: And so he was speaking to something serious. He did it in the most damaging way to his party possible.
Continue reading …BOSTON — A Texas woman whose 6-year-old son was found dead last weekend in Maine stands accused of killing the boy and dumping his body alongside the dirt road where it was discovered, authorities said. Julianne McCrery, 42, of Irving, Texas, was charged with second-degree murder Wednesday in the death of her son, Camden Hughes. The police apprehension of her earlier in the day set off a rapid-fire chain of events in which jurisdiction shifted from Maine, where the boy’s body was discovered, to Massachusetts, where McCrery was found and questioned, and finally to New Hampshire, where authorities believe the boy died and the formal charges were ultimately filed. McCrery was due to be arraigned Thursday morning in Concord, Mass., on a charge of being a fugitive from justice stemming from the murder charge, said New Hampshire Attorney General Michael A. Delaney. Preliminary autopsy findings showed that the cause of Camden’s death was asphyxiation and the manner of death was homicide, according to Maine’s chief medical examiner. The homicide remains under investigation. Texas public records show that McCrery was arrested at least twice on prostitution charges and once for possession with intent to distribute drugs. In 2009, she was sentenced to one year in prison for a misdemeanor conviction of prostitution. In 2004, she was sentenced to three years of probation for a felony conviction of possession of a controlled substance. The voicemail for a Texas phone listing for McCrery was full. Her son died Saturday, the same day his body was discovered by a local resident in South Berwick, Maine, near the state line with New Hampshire, officials said. He had not been reported missing, and amid several frustrating days seeking his identity, Maine State Police had released a computer-generated image showing a boy with dirty blond hair and blue eyes. Christian von Atzigen, of Irving, Texas, said he told police he recognized the boy as the son of McCrery, a woman he and his wife have been close friends with since she and his wife met in school 15 years ago. “We didn’t want to believe it,” von Atzigen said. “Julie’s a good person. If you would ever ask me if she would harm a hair on that precious little boy’s head, I would say never,” he told The Associated Press. “She loves that boy.” Von Atzigen said that after McCrery and her husband divorced, he and his wife remained friends with both of them. He said Camden was a happy boy, and he never heard McCrery raise her voice to him. “I never even saw her discipline him,” he said. “He was just a great little boy, just fun, a good kid, smart as a whip,” he said. Von Atzigen said he last saw McCrery on Easter, when she came to his house to get a part to fix her hot water heater. While she was there, she dropped off some of Camden’s toys for his 2-year-old son, he said. He said he doesn’t know why McCrery was in Maine. “My wife talked to her a couple of days ago and everything seemed OK,” he said. “There was no mention of her going anywhere.” Maine State Police had enlisted the help of the Naval Criminal Investigative Service after a witness noticed naval insignia on a truck being driven by a woman near where the body was found. McCrery was taken into custody at a highway rest stop in Massachusetts after police got a tip she was there. She was in a truck that matched the description of the vehicle, authorities said. It’s extremely unusual for a missing child to go unreported. Similar cases happened only twice over the past two years, said Ernie Allen, president of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. “In the vast, vast majority of these, there’s someone, a parent or grandparent, searching for that child,” Allen said. In Maine, the case has led to an outpouring of emotion. Several hundred people attended a candlelight vigil in the boy’s memory Tuesday night in front of the South Berwick town hall. Near where the boy was found, people have placed three crosses, dozens of stuffed animals, candles, flowers, a baseball and other children’s items. A framed piece of paper says, “God Bless This Little Boy.” Bruce and Laurie Ralph, who live down the street from where the body was found, placed a stuffed animal on the site. “The whole community has come together and has feelings for this boy, who nobody seems to know who he is,” Laurie Ralph said Wednesday as she and her husband visited the site. “You hear of missing children all the time, but when it happens in your hometown – and on your own street – it’s scarier.” if(typeof AOLVP_cfg===’undefined’)AOLVP_cfg=[];AOLVP_cfg.push({id:’AOLVP_60976185001′,’codever’:0.1, ‘autoload’:true, ‘autoplay’:false, ‘playerid’:’81512831001′, ‘videoid’:’60976185001′, ‘width’:480, ‘height’:339, ‘stillurl’:’http://pdl.stream.aol.com/pdlext/aol/brightcove/ap/5184737001/5184737001_949583101001_0518dv-me-boys-roadside-body-400×300.jpg?pubId=5184737001′, ‘playertype’:’inline’,’videotitle’:’Police Arrest Texas Mother in Maine Boy’s Death’,’videodesc’:’AP latest news’,’playlist’:true,’featured’:’949571551001′}); Contreras reported from Concord, Mass. Associated Press writers David Sharp in Portland, Maine; Clarke Canfield in Alfred, Maine; and Kathy McCormack in Concord, N.H.; contributed to this report.
Continue reading …enlarge “I have that fire in my belly,” Sarah Palin told Fox this week . Apparently she is locked and loaded to defeat “Obama” for the presidency. Or maybe not. Who knows? How much money is in it? How much money is in not being in it? It is easy to conclude that running for president, much less being president, is way too much work for the eternally bellyaching Palin. An 18-month slog on the campaign trail is potentially way too embarrassing (Is Turkey Asian or European or for Thanksgiving only?) and damaging to her brand (see Donald Trump). And it doesn’t pay all that great. Teasing the media while coaxing new donations from her easily duped minions seems a far more believable sled run for a woman who has already quit her actual government job for the riches of a TV somebody or other. But what if…. The Republican Party has all but conceded the presidency to the Man who got Bin Laden? What if they realize, like Trump, Christie, Barbour, Jeb and Huckabee obviously have, that no matter whether it’s Romney or Daniels or Bachmann or Pawlenty who carries their Medicare-killing flag, a second term for President Obama looms virtually unavoidable? There yet will remain a slew of down-ballot races: preserving the GOP House majority, taking the Senate, winning or losing state government majorities all over the nation. The GOKochs understand that all of this matters. Enormously. And a flawed Romney who doesn’t ignite the GOP’s angry evangelical and Tea Party zealots could hand the House back to Democrats, who likely will turn out in desperate droves to stave off hell by reelecting the president. A bureaucratic Bush soldier like Mitch Daniels, who has spurned Grover Norquist’s “no taxes” pledge, would likely embed a similar ennui into the wild purists and could leave Harry Reid in charge of the Senate. enlarge Enter the crazy conspiracy. Enter the Abominable Snow Snooki. She avoids the GOP dog & pony show for months and months, flinging barbs and “refudiations” from her million dollar throne on Fox. And then, when Romney or Daniels or the logo of Exxon or Anthem Blue Cross sews up the nomination, Palin swoops in as the first Tea Party candidate ever to run for president. She’d stride onto the big stage for an easy few months, spewing venom at President Obama and bathing in the adoration of Valentino blazers and her ardent devotees. Yes she’d lose. Yes it would be wildly fun and horrifying and entertaining. And yes she’d return to Fox more feisty and popular than ever. So it might work famously for Palin, but a third party candidate? Wouldn’t that gift-wrap electoral college victories to President Obama in Georgia, Montana, perhaps even Texas? How could the Republican powerbrokers stand for it? Because they know that she’ll electrify the zanies, Aynsteins, anti-taxers, secessionistas and Born Again Dominionists, who drawn to the booth to vote for their Alaskan Idol would likely then proceed to mark Xs for the regular GOP anti-abortion, Medicare killers elsewhere on the ballot. Even if she swiped 15% of the total from the top of the GOP ticket, all those extra Republican votes she draws to the polls could keep Boehner banging his giant gavel and install a couple more Scott Walkers, Rick Scotts and Dan Snyders in governor’s mansions across the land. Yes, it’s a Democrat’s dream. President Obama would be safe to parry the extremists in the GOP for four more years. But if this double the GOP vote on the rest of ballot costs his party elsewhere, Sarah Palin could again prove to be every Democrat’s nauseating nightmare. Maybe I shouldn’t give them any ideas. In the words of that other great SNL parodist, “Never mind.” enlarge
Continue reading …(AP) DENVER — It would be a “moral disaster” if the United States were to default on its debts and become unable to pay its obligations, JPMorgan Chase & Co. CEO Jamie Dimon said at an appearance in Colorado Thursday evening. The U.S. is the financial linchpin of the world, and the economic effects of the U.S. defaulting could be “potentially catastrophic,” he said at a dinner for the University of Colorado Denver Business School. “It will dwarf Lehman,” Dimon said, referring to the 2008 collapse of the investment bank Lehman Brothers, which contributed to the beginning of a global financial crisis. Dimon’s comments came in response to a question about the federal deficit from moderator Tom Petrie, a vice chairman of Bank of America Merrill Lynch. Congress is debating raising the country’s $14.3 trillion borrowing limit. White House officials say the government will run out of cash to pay expenses Aug. 2, but lawmakers have said they want spending cuts before they agree to raise the debt ceiling. Dimon got a standing ovation at the dinner, a marked contrast to JPMorgan’s annual meeting in Ohio on Tuesday, when more than 400 demonstrators shouted outside. The protests were organized by a coalition of clergy and unions, which is pushing for action and legislation around banking practices that hurt troubled homeowners. Along with all the major banks in the country, JPMorgan Chase has been criticized for its handling of mortgage foreclosures. After Petrie noted The New York Times recently called him America’s least hated banker, Dimon quipped he never expected to be in a business where he’d be on the receiving end of so much anger. “Our people work hard, they give a damn, they help their communities,” he said. During the crisis, JPMorgan Chase bought Bear Stearns Cos. and what was left of Washington Mutual Inc. after it failed. It also accepted aid from the federal government’s Troubled Asset Relief Program, even though it didn’t need to, Dimon said. Dimon has said government officials told him that taking the aid would boost the health of the financial system and reduce the stigma of only a few banks accepting aid. At the time, Dimon called TARP money a scarlet letter. Once JPMorgan repaid the aid, Dimon said he was tempted to include a note to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner that said, “P.S. During the whole time you were lending us $25 billion, we were loaning you $200 billion” in the form of Treasury instruments the company holds.
Continue reading …There is mounting concern about the impact of government policies on women – and furious debate over the language used Labour MPs are attempting to set up a powerful parliamentary committee to vet government policy for discriminatory effects on women, claiming that the coalition has a “blind spot” when it comes to equal opportunities. Yvette Cooper, shadow home secretary, said the justice secretary Kenneth Clarke’s controversial comments on rape this week betrayed a lack of understanding of gender issues across the government, and that there needed to be a democratic institution to act as a safeguard for women’s rights. Cooper and Fiona Mactaggart, the shadow minister for women and equalities, will meet voluntary organisations to unveil the plans. The idea is attracting support from both sides of the house. It comes amid mounting concern about the impact of government policies on women, and a furious debate over some of the language used by senior Conservatives in recent weeks, not least the prime minister’s now infamous “Calm down dear” comment. The Home Office, which includes the government equalities unit, said that the government was achieving progress for women, citing a £10m fund for rape crisis centres announced in January as an example. Theresa May, the home secretary and minister for women and equalities, is known to have been annoyed by Clarke’s comments on rape this week, describing them privately as unhelpful. Clarke’s remarks came in the week that government statisticians put the number of women claiming unemployment benefits at a 15-year high, as public sector job cuts accelerate. Research published on Thursday by Coventry Universitysuggested that cuts to other benefits will cost women £30m, compared with just under £12m for men. Cooper said that the coalition had a blind spot on women. “This is not just about revealing remarks – be it from the justice secretary or the prime minister. Women are losing out every time from government policies,” she said. “There is a toxic mix of paternalistic Toryism and laissez-faire liberalism at the heart of the government which hits women hard. Some still subscribe to the traditional Tory view of women and family life, and there is a deep and widespread hostility to state or public sector action – from tax credits to childcare – which help women get on. The result is that for the first time in generations, the clock is being turned back on women’s equality.” The idea of a women and equality audit committee has already been aired in the house this year, when some coalition MPs spoke out in favour. Jo Swinson, the Liberal Democrat MP for East Dunbartonshire, said such a committee would ensure women’s issues were high on the agenda. Claire Perry, the Tory MP for Devizes, said it sounded “extremely sensible”. The MPs behind the plans are confident that if put it to a vote it would pass with a majority. But first they must convince the Commons authorities of the necessity for another select committee, particularly when budgets are stretched. In a statement, May insisted the deficit was being reduced even-handedly. “Decisions to increase spending on health and child tax credits, as well introducing flexible parental leave and extending the right to request flexible working, will all benefit women. We are also taking 880,000 of the lowest-paid workers out of income tax all together, the majority of whom are women,” she said. “There is absolutely nothing fair about running huge budget deficits and burdening future generations with the debts we cannot afford to pay.” Women Women in politics Feminism Gender Equality Polly Curtis guardian.co.uk
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