Type: Kitchen Title: Anolon Allure 10-Piece Cookware Set See all customer reviews Product Description: This cookware set is an exceptional value, including all of the pans needed to equip your kitchen with the most used cooking pieces. As the set contains only basic pieces, you’ll really use each and every pan. It includes saucepans for whisking a homemade sauce or cooking your morning oatmeal, a big stockpot for soups, stews or boiling pasta, and skillets (probably the most used pan in any kitchen) that will help you turn out perfect crepes or a simple grilled cheese sandwich. The set also includes a saute pan, a wide, straight-sided pan that can perform many of the functions of a skillet but features deep sides for extra capacity, perfect for one dish meals. Start your dish in this pan by sautéing onions and browning meat, then add your liquid and other ingredients into the same pan to finish on the stovetop or in the oven. Features: Includes; 1.5 Qt, & 3 quart Covered Saucepans, 11 inch/4 quart Covered Saute, 8 quart Covered Stockpot, 8 inch & 10 inch Open Skillets Restaurant Tested Nonstick – Autograph 2 Professionally tested nonstick surpasses all other standard nonstick formulas. Provides maximum food release and easy cleaning. Stain Resistant Marble Finished Hard-Anodized Exterior Five additional manufacturing steps produce this exquisite exterior that resists stains, scratches and chips. Hard-anodized for maximum durability and even heating. Polished stainless steel lids fit tightly to the pan locking in flavor and nutrients. Lid handles have more clearance for safer lifting. Comfortable Handles Stainless steel HollowCore handles fit comfortably in your hand. Oven safe to 500°F See the details
Continue reading …Whoops. If you’ll recall, Sony held what can only be described as an emergency press event in Japan a week ago in order to issue a number of assurances about the resumption of service as it relates to the PlayStation Network and Qriocity. Seven days later, things are still as dead as they were pre-Cinco de Mayo. This evening, the company’s Senior Director of Corporate Communications Patrick Seybold punched out a quick update to let the world know that they could actually leave the house and find something else to entertain ‘em — like it or not, PSN isn’t coming back online today. The reason? On May 1st, Sony was apparently “unaware of the extent of the attack on Sony Online Entertainment servers,” and now, it’s spinning its wheels in order to restore security on the network and “ensure” that user data is safe. Mr. Seybold seems to understand that you’re overly anxious about getting back into the swing of things, and he’s even going so far as to ask your trust that Sony’s doing “everything [it] can” to get the lights blinking once more. Oh, and if you were planning on visiting that source link just to find the new ETA… don’t. Sony’s planning to update you “as soon as it can.” [Thanks, Alex] Sony misses promised PlayStation Network and Qriocity restoration date, begs for more patience originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 07 May 2011 03:18:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …swami ramdev ji jan aandolan video #3 Employment vs. Unemployment – Post Everything Cartoons Spread Betting Market Minute 6th May 2011 Detert: Unemployment comp on 'life support' – Central Florida … Detert said her House colleagues got too caught up on how many weeks of unemployment the state would provide. And even if the two chambers can reach an agreement at the 11th hour, they simply may run out of time to debate the measure on … Switzerland's Unemployment Rate Falls More-than-expected Forex Pros – The rate of unemployment in Switzerland fell more-than-expected last month, official data showed on Friday. In a report, State Secretariat for Economic Affairs said that Switzerland’s unemployment rate fell … Swiss unemployment 3.1%; better than expected. | Forex News and … Bobbys Corner · Video · Training Videos · Webinars · Home » Forex Trading » Swiss unemployment 3.1%; better than expected. Swiss unemployment 3.1%; better than expected. Written May 6, 2011 at 1:55 AM EST by John Teister … Receiving Social Security Disability & Unemployment Compensation … There appears to be a conflict between Social Security Disability and Unemployment Compensation. in order to get Social Security Disability, you have to claim you are “disabled” for any work. however, to obtain Unemployment Compensation … Switzerland's unemployment rate falls more-than-expected By … Switzerland’s unemployment rate falls more-than-expected. theB0ssman says: Looks like unemployment is going to hold at 8.8%. So the stimulus was passed to keep it below 8%… Errrr, never mind.
Continue reading …White House says US is being ‘extremely vigilant’ after al-Qaida declares Bin Laden’s death a curse on the US Al-Qaida has vowed to carry out revenge attacks on the US and its allies over the killing of Osama bin Laden, warning that celebrations in the west would be replaced by sorrow and blood. The statement on a jihadist website was the first by al-Qaida since Bin Laden’s death, which it said would become “a curse that hunts the Americans and their collaborators, and chases them outside and inside their country”. The 11-paragraph statement, dated Tuesday, confirmed that Bin Laden was dead, damping down conspiracy theorists who refuse to believe he has been killed. The White House spokesman, Jay Carney, said of the al-Qaida statement: “We are aware of it. What it does, obviously, is acknowledge the obvious, which is that Osama bin Laden was killed on Sunday night by US forces. “We’re being extremely vigilant. We’re quite aware of the potential for activity and are highly vigilant on that matter for that reason. “US security, both at home and at embassies and bases overseas, has been on high alert since Sunday.” The department of homeland security (DHS) has warned US train operators to be especially careful after officials said that among computers, hard discs and other material taken from the Abbottabad compound they found a vague plan to attack the US rail network on the 10th anniversary of 9/11. One proposal was to demolish part of a rail track so that a train would fall into a river or valley, according to US officials. The White House spokesman said: “One of the things we saw, I think, was the notice that DHS put out with regard to the information collected about the consideration at least of a terrorist plot against American railways back in February of 2010. The fact that the world’s most wanted terrorist might have been considering further terror plots against the United States is not a surprise, but it reminds us, of course, that we need to remain ever vigilant.” Carney was accompanying Barack Obama on a trip to Fort Campbell, Kentucky, home of fast-response special operations teams, where he was to meet the men who carried out the Abbottabad raid. Carney was guarded on the details of what the White House said would be a private meeting. “What I can say is that he is meeting with special operators, some special operators who were involved in that. But that is all I can say.” In its statement, al-Qaida said: “We stress that the blood of the holy warrior sheikh Osama bin Laden, God bless him, is precious to us and to all Muslims and will not go in vain. We will remain, God willing, a curse chasing the Americans and their agents, following them outside and inside their countries. “Soon, God willing, their happiness will turn to sadness their blood will be mingled with their tears.” It said Bin Laden’s death would not deflect al-Qaida from its war against the US and its allies, who include the Pakistan government. It called on Pakistan to rise up against the “traitors”. The discovery of Bin Laden’s hideaway so close to the capital, Islamabad, has strained relations between the US and Pakistan. Carl Levin, chairman of the Senate armed services committee and a Democrat, ordered an investigation into whether the Pakistan government and intelligence services knew of his whereabouts. “We need these questions about whether or not the top level of the Pakistan government knew or was told by the ISI, their intelligence service, about anything about this suspicious activity for years in a very, very centralised place,” Levin said. Levin, who is usually guarded in his public statements, hinted that he believed some senior figures in Pakistani intelligence knew where Bin Laden was hiding – comments that will further inflame the Pakistan government. “I think at high levels – high levels being the intelligence service – they knew it,” Levin said. “I can’t prove it. I just think it’s counter-intuitive not to.” He raised doubts about continuing the billions of dollars in aid to Pakistan, which requires congressional approval. The Obama administration so far has been reluctant to criticise the Pakistani government and has opted instead to stress the positive aspects of their ties. The strategy seems to be to try to use Pakistan’s embarrassment to prise out other al-Qaida or Taliban figures who may be living in Pakistan, such as the Taliban leader Mullah Omar and Bin Laden’s deputy Ayman al-Zawahiri. United Nations human rights investigators have called on Washington to disclose whether there had been any plan to capture Bin Laden. While they acknowledged the difficulties involved in such terrorist-related missions, they raised questions about the legality of the killing. The UN’s special rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions, Christof Heyns, and the special rapporteur on the promotion and protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms while countering terrorism, Martin Scheinin, said the US “should disclose the supporting facts to allow an assessment in terms of international human rights law standards”. “For instance, it will be particularly important to know if the planning of the mission allowed an effort to capture Bin Laden.” There has been relatively little debate in the US so far about the legality of the raid. Osama bin Laden al-Qaida Obama administration Global terrorism Barack Obama United States US politics Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Human rights chiefs want to know if US operation ever considered capturing al-Qaida leader alive Two United Nations human rights watchdogs have asked the US to provide details about the operation that killed Osama bin Laden, in particular whether it ever included the possibility that he could be captured alive. A series of questions have arisen about the potential legality of the mission after it emerged that four of the five people killed when US Navy Seals raided the house in Abbottabad, Pakistan, were unarmed, Bin Laden among them . Pentagon officials initially talked of “a great deal of resistance” from inside the compound, but it was revealed that American forces only came under fire in the first few minutes of the operation. In a statement released in Geneva , the UN’s special rapporteur on extrajudicial, summary or arbitrary executions, Christof Heyns, and the special rapporteur on the promotion and protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms while countering terrorism, Martin Scheinin, said the US “should disclose the supporting facts to allow an assessment in terms of international human rights law standards”. They added: “For instance it will be particularly important to know if the planning of the mission allowed an effort to capture Bin Laden. It may well be that the questions that are being asked about the operation could be answered, but it is important to get this into the open.” Their call follows a demand by the UN’s high commissioner for human rights, Navi Pillay , for “a full disclosure” of the facts connected to Bin Laden’s death. In their statement, Heyns and Scheinin acknowledged that such issues were difficult to gauge during anti-terrorism operations. “Acts of terrorism are the antithesis of human rights, in particular the right to life. In certain exceptional cases, use of deadly force may be permissible as a measure of last resort in accordance with international standards on the use of force, in order to protect life, including in operations against terrorists. “However, the norm should be that terrorists be dealt with as criminals, through legal processes of arrest, trial and judicially decided punishment. Actions taken by states in combating terrorism, especially in high profile cases, set precedents for the way in which the right to life will be treated in future instances.” Both rapporteurs are law professors. Heyns specialises in human rights law at the University of Pretoria in South Africa and Scheinin is professor of public international law at the European University Institute in Florence. Osama bin Laden United Nations Human rights US military United States Pakistan Peter Walker guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Conservationists warn blazes may have affected some of the UK’s most threatened ground-nesting birds such as the twite The spate of wildfires in parts of Britain is threatening ground-nesting birds, including the only English population of a species of finch called the twite , the RSPB has warned. It said many of the 100 pairs that nest in small colonies in the southern Pennines might be affected. The bird used to occur much more widely in England – there are greater numbers in western Scotland, The seed-eating bird – a relative of the linnet – has clung on in the area because of the relative abundance of seed-rich hay meadows. Fires have struck both its nesting and feeding sites, said the RSPB. Peter Robertson, its northern regional director and a member of the multi-agency England Twite Recovery Project , said: “Even before these fires, the twite was one of England’s most threatened birds. But blazes have possibly affected more than a third of the English population. “This could be a devastating setback for this bird. We have been working hard with farmers to help retain landscape features, like hay meadows, which are crucial to the bird. But inevitably England’s most threatened finch has been hit hard by these fires. We hope that the bird will have a future in England.” Heathland that is important for other threatened birds, including the nightjar, woodlark and Dartford warbler, has been damaged across southern England. And the fires in other parts of the UK will undoubtedly have affected ground-nesting birds, according to the RSPB. Nick Phillips, a policy officer, said: “Some of the most threatened birds in the UK nest on the ground. We are currently in the middle of the nesting season, with many birds incubating eggs or tending to chicks. Fire is a considerable risk to these birds, and other threatened wildlife, such as reptiles. “A break in the dry weather may bring a brief respite, but we are still urging people to guard against any risk of wildfire.” Birds Wildlife Conservation Animals Wildfires James Meikle guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Files seized in raid that killed Bin Laden reveal his role in planning potential terror attacks, including one on US rail system Osama bin Laden stayed in touch with his al-Qaida network from his Pakistan safe house and continued to plot potential terrorist attacks, including one against the US railway system, according to early analysis of files seized when he was killed. The special forces team who shot Bin Laden in the early hours of Monday took away a mass of digital information on computers, hard drives and storage discs, as well as paper documents. An initial trawl through the files indicate Bin Laden was not a mere figurehead for the militant group but remained closely involved in nuts-and-bolts planning, according to various US reports. As late as February last year he seemingly took part in drawing up a previously unknown plot to attack a US commuter rail network, possibly on the 10th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks or another landmark date such as Christmas or New Year, intelligence officials told US newspapers. While the plot, apparently involving an attempt to derail a train by tampering with tracks, appeared to be only speculative, the seized documents seem to show Bin Laden was in regular contact with al-Qaida operatives from his house close to Pakistan’s capital, Islamabad. Before the raid some analysts speculated that he had become an increasingly marginalised figure during his long presumed exile in remote tribal regions along the Afghan border. Details have also emerged about the painstaking surveillance operation which preceded the raid on Bin Laden’s hideout in Abbottabad, in which a CIA team spied on the house for months from a property they rented nearby. The officers scanned the compound using telephoto lenses and infrared imaging equipment, and attempted to listen in on conversations inside, anonymous US officials told the New York Times. The surveillance team regularly spotted a tall man walking through the compound’s courtyard, although they never confirmed whether this was Bin Laden. Such was the cost of the operation that the CIA requested tens of millions of dollars in extra funding from Congress in December last year, officials told the Washington Post . Staff at an FBI lab at the marine corps base in Quantico, Virginia, have been poring over the trove of data as quickly as possible in case they describe any imminent attacks, but as yet there have been no specific alerts. “He (Bin Laden) wasn’t just a figurehead,” one unnamed US official told the New York Times . “He continued to plot and plan, to come up with ideas about targets and to communicate those ideas to other senior al-Qaida leaders.” The department of homeland security has ordered additional security at airports and other transport hubs, and issued a precautionary note about the railway plot. “As of February 2010, al-Qaida was allegedly contemplating conducting an operation against trains at an unspecified location in the United States on the 10th anniversary of 11 September, 2001,” it said. “As one option, al-Qaida was looking into trying to tip a train by tampering with the rails so that the train would fall off the track at either a valley or a bridge.” A department spokesman told the Washington Post that the plot appeared speculative: “We have no information of any imminent terrorist threat to the US rail sector.” The documents might prove more fruitful in leading the US to other senior al-Qaida figures, including Ayman al-Zawariri, al-Qaida’s deputy leader. “We have lots of information on him,” Mike Rogers, the Republican congressman who chairs the House intelligence committee, told the Washington Post . “I can’t say it’s imminent, but I do believe we’re hot on the trail.” A day after laying a wreath to the victims of 11 September during a largely subdued visit to New York, Barack Obama is to meet the US Navy Seals who raided Bin Laden’s compound at their base at Fort Campbell, Kentucky. Further reports have emerged confirming that the gun battle to secure the compound and kill Bin Laden was considerably more one-sided than initially presented by US officials. “We expected a great deal of resistance and were met with a great deal of resistance,” White House spokesman Jay Carney said on Tuesday, adding that there were “many other people who were armed” beyond Bin Laden. Now, further anonymous briefings to the US media have confirmed that only one of the five people killed in the operation was armed, and that the shots he fired came very early in the operation. According to NBC News, the fighting was relatively brief and the Seals spent most of their time in the compound gathering computers and other data sources. Osama bin Laden al-Qaida US national security United States US military Global terrorism Pakistan Peter Walker guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Illinois Concealed-Carry Proposal Will Resurface in Legislature DRTV Weekly 031710 Lex Green – Concealed Carry is STILL Asking Government’s Permission HB 148 for Illinois | Black Man With A Gun Today is the last day to pass the bill HB-148 that could give the law abiding gun owner in Illinois concealed carry . To do it you will need a super majority vote of the legislature, beginning with the House. That’s 71 votes, 3/5ths of … zcolman says: #Illinois concealed carry #gun bill being debated in the House.
Continue reading …Information found at scene shows ‘aspiration’ to attack American trains, says Department for Homeland Security The first intelligence from the treasure trove of computers and hard drives found during the raid on Osama bin Laden’s Pakistani hideaway has prompted a warning that al-Qaida wanted to attack the US rail network. The Department of Homeland Security sent a warning on Thursday to American law enforcement officials that material dating back to February 2010 had detailed an al-Qaida aspiration to derail trains in the US by damaging the rails at a valley or bridge so they would crash, the Associated Press and NBC news reported. Other material suggested a desire to attack mass transit hubs; a fact long known by terror experts. The idea was apparently at the “aspirational” stage and had not developed into anything concrete. The information appears to be the first widely circulated intelligence pulled from the 1 May raid on Bin Laden’s secret compound. After killing Bin Laden, Navy Seals took computers, DVDs and documents from his house. Intelligence experts are combing through the material searching for any signs of current or future al-Qaida activity. Security officials in the Obama administration have repeatedly warned of the ongoing threat posed by al-Qaida in the wake of the death of its leader as well as the prospect that it could be plotting revenge attacks for his demise. One of the reasons behind the decision not to publish a photo of Bin Laden’s body was the idea that it could provoke retaliation from Islamist militant sympathisers. But officials have also stressed that they have no knowledge of any specific imminent plot or threat. “We have no information of any imminent terrorist threat to the US rail sector, but wanted to make our partners aware of the alleged plotting. It is unclear if any further planning has been conducted since February of last year,” said Matthew Chandler, a spokesman for the Department of Homeland Security. Osama bin Laden Global terrorism al-Qaida United States Paul Harris guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Information found at scene shows ‘aspiration’ to attack American trains, says Department for Homeland Security The first intelligence from the treasure trove of computers and hard drives found during the raid on Osama bin Laden’s Pakistani hideaway has prompted a warning that al-Qaida wanted to attack the US rail network. The Department of Homeland Security sent a warning on Thursday to American law enforcement officials that material dating back to February 2010 had detailed an al-Qaida aspiration to derail trains in the US by damaging the rails at a valley or bridge so they would crash, the Associated Press and NBC news reported. Other material suggested a desire to attack mass transit hubs; a fact long known by terror experts. The idea was apparently at the “aspirational” stage and had not developed into anything concrete. The information appears to be the first widely circulated intelligence pulled from the 1 May raid on Bin Laden’s secret compound. After killing Bin Laden, Navy Seals took computers, DVDs and documents from his house. Intelligence experts are combing through the material searching for any signs of current or future al-Qaida activity. Security officials in the Obama administration have repeatedly warned of the ongoing threat posed by al-Qaida in the wake of the death of its leader as well as the prospect that it could be plotting revenge attacks for his demise. One of the reasons behind the decision not to publish a photo of Bin Laden’s body was the idea that it could provoke retaliation from Islamist militant sympathisers. But officials have also stressed that they have no knowledge of any specific imminent plot or threat. “We have no information of any imminent terrorist threat to the US rail sector, but wanted to make our partners aware of the alleged plotting. It is unclear if any further planning has been conducted since February of last year,” said Matthew Chandler, a spokesman for the Department of Homeland Security. Osama bin Laden Global terrorism al-Qaida United States Paul Harris guardian.co.uk
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