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The Orlando Sentinel has discovered that a “watch list” of Orlando residents handed out at a recent town hall meeting by Rep. Tim Griffin (R-AR) likely originated in the office of Rep. Daniel Webster (R-FL). Griffin’s office told the Sentinel that the watch list was given to them by another member of Congress. A source involved with the scandal confirmed that the Floridians targeted by the watch list had only attended Webster’s town halls, making Webster the only member of Congress to have seen them and the only member of Congress who would’ve had reason to target them. Each of the listed activists is a resident of Webster’s district. The watch lists were distributed not only at the Griffin town hall, but reportedly in in Louisiana, Georgia and South Carolina as well. The handouts included photos of six activists from the Orlando area and a list of questions to ask each of the residents. The questions were clearly designed to undermine the credibility of the activists, painting them as professional operatives out to disrupt conservative town hall meetings. In addition to dozens of spelling and grammatical errors, the handouts imply numerous factual inaccuracies about each of the people targeted. For instance, one of the questions for Organize Now Political Director Michael Cantone is “Were you rated one of the ‘Best’ Progressive Bloggers in the State of Florida by the Florida Progressive Coalition.” Speaking as the primary writer for the Florida Progressive Coalition, I wrote the comment the flier is asking about and I (and FPC) have never “rated” Florida bloggers. The question implies that an offhand remark I made about Cantone’s writing (which he never did much of, anyway) somehow is meant to say that he is a prominent Florida progressive blogger, which is not true. Each page of the handout leads with the following: Are Things Always As They Seem? FOR THE MEDIA Accepting comments offered at face value may not always be the best idea, without engaging just the most basic due diligence into who is doing the speaking. Learning more about what organizations a person represents, supports or is involved may serve to provide more clarity as to the motivation behind what is being said. What also provides more clarity is factual accuracy and living up to the basic standard you set for others. The document does not reveal what organizations it “represents, supports or is involved” with or created by. And the author of the document certainly didn’t engage in basic due diligence when it came to correctly reporting people’s names or what jobs they have held in the past. None of the people in the handout, for instance, worked for “Barak Obama” in 2008, as the document implies. Or Barack Obama. And none of them is a paid MoveOn operative, either. The activists in the flier responded: “It seems clear that the presentation of these materials is intended to encourage harassment of these citizen activists and to intimidate other citizens from speaking out across America by attacking those who have already spoken out,” said Tamecka Pierce, President of Organize Now, who is also profiled in the document. “This behavior is unfitting for any member of Congress or their Congressional staff and represents a threat to the First Amendment rights of all citizens. This type of state sponsored intimidation, is a troubling, direct danger to our democratic process.” “Citizens everywhere should be concerned as to whether or not tax payer dollars and resources were used to profile fellow Americans in an attempt to silence their voices and what role Congressional offices or campaigns played in disseminating state-sponsored intimidation of private citizens,” said Mike Cantone, Political Director for Organize Now, who was also profiled. “These fear tactics are reminiscent of the incendiary “Wanted” posters for Planned Parenthood doctors and activists and Sarah Palin’s crosshairs on Representative Gabrielle Giffords’ district — threats and intimidation tactics that led to real violence and even murder,” said another local activist, who was also profiled in the handout, but is fearful of being quoted directly because of further possible retribution while looking for employment. “The Constitution welcomes and protects open, honest and impassioned speech by the citizenry, no matter the party affiliation, race, ethnicity or socioeconomic status. Unfortunately, it seems that Rep. Webster does not tolerate dissent and has placed constituents who often disagree on some kind of ‘watch list,’ which has been distributed to the public by at least one other Congressional office.” “This action sends a clear message to constituents: If you disagree, keep quiet or face retribution,” says Pierce. “I’m scared to know that if I speak at a public meeting, that the Federal Government will use their vast tax-payer funded resources to spread lies and fear across the country. Big government should not be used to intimidate its citizens.” Much of the handout fails even a basic logic test. Justin Rubin, MoveOn’s executive director said: “It is ridiculous that Republicans think that every constituent that stands up and challenges them at a town hall is a MoveOn member. The fact of the matter is their policies are deeply unpopular with the vast majority of Americans – not just MoveOn members. If Republicans don’t want to take questions from their constituents it is probably time for them to find a new line of work.” Intimidation at Griffin’s town hall went even further. As Huffington Post reports: One local activist in Griffin’s district, who did not want to be named for fear he would “end up in the next handout,” said Griffin’s District Chief of Staff, Carl Vogelpohl, along with two other staffers, were manning the sign-in table where the “watch list” was being distributed, and staffers were instructing attendees that it was their “homework.” One attendee contended that the combination of seeing the handouts and then observing staffers videotaping and photographing the audience created an atmosphere of intimidation at Griffin’s town hall.

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The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad!

Type: Movie Title: The Naked Gun: From the Files of Police Squad! See all customer reviews Actors: Leslie Nielsen George Kennedy Priscilla Presley Ricardo Montalban O.J. Simpson See the details

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Naegleria Fowleri

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Naegleria Fowleri

Deadly amoebic infection claims second victim Amoeba infection blamed for Florida teen death Amoeba Awarenes Video Part 1-2 HD ChEnected says: Just What is the Brain-Eating “Amoeba” Naegleria fowleri ? http://ow.ly/66wmm

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In ’06 Bachmann Staffer Was Arrested in Uganda on Terrorism Charges

enlarge Credit: The Atlantic Peter Waldron is a Bachmann staffer Uganda has been a hot bed of extreme religious view points against gays for years and Rachel Maddow has been coverin g that story relentlessly. Christian organizers have been traveling around the world to spread their word on their religious views. It’s one reason why recently deposed leader Gbagbo of the Ivory Coast was being supported by Pat Robertson and his merry men . Now it’s being revealed that he helped organize Bachmann’s win of the Ames Iowa straw poll: Garance Franke-Ruta The evangelical organizer who helped Michele Bachmann win the Ames Straw Poll in Iowa Saturday was previously charged with terrorism in Uganda after being arrested for possession of assault rifles and ammunition in February 2006, just days before Uganda’s first multi-party elections in 20 years. Peter E. Waldron spent 37 days in the Luriza Prison outside Kampala, where he says he was tortured, after being arrested along with six Congolese and Ugandan nationals for the weapons, which were described variously in news reports as having been found in his bedroom or a closet in his home. The charges, which could have led to life in prison, were dropped in March 2006 after a pressure campaign by Waldron’s friends and colleagues and what Waldron says was the intervention of the Bush administration. He was released and deported from the east African nation, along with the Congolese. On Saturday, Waldron told The Atlantic in Ames that he was a staffer for Bachmann and responsible for her faith-based organizing both in Iowa and South Carolina. But he also declined repeatedly to give his name. Asked about Waldron’s role and background, Alice Stewart, the press secretary for the Bachmann for President campaign, replied in an email: “Michele’s faith is an important part of her life and Peter did a tremendous job with our faith outreach in Iowa. We are fortunate to have him on our team and look forward to having him expanding his efforts in several states.” And the Uganda story just gets weirder and weirder. Waldron, a Republican operative since the late 1980s, had been in Uganda since 2002 and was at the time of his arrest working for the “Africa Dispatch” newsletter and, according to reports in 2006, working on a pilot study of a new health-care information technology management system. One Ugandan paper alleged he was working with Congolese rebel militia members to capture Joseph Kony, the leader of the Ugandan guerrilla group the Lord’s Resistance Army, and claim a $1.7 million bounty on his head being offered by the International Criminal Court in The Hague, but that planning for the operation was botched, leading police to Waldron’s house and the guns. But the Kampala Monitor reported that the inspector general of police “told a news conference Waldron was suspected of links to a group in neighboring Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and ‘planned to set up a political party here based on Christian principles.’” Waldron, a Republican operative since the late 1980s, had been in Uganda since 2002 and was at the time of his arrest working for the “Africa Dispatch” newsletter and, according to reports in 2006, working on a pilot study of a new health-care information technology management system. One Ugandan paper alleged he was working with Congolese rebel militia members to capture Joseph Kony, the leader of the Ugandan guerrilla group the Lord’s Resistance Army, and claim a $1.7 million bounty on his head being offered by the International Criminal Court in The Hague, but that planning for the operation was botched, leading police to Waldron’s house and the guns. But the Kampala Monitor reported that the inspector general of police “told a news conference Waldron was suspected of links to a group in neighboring Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and ‘planned to set up a political party here based on Christian principles.’” And as usual, when there’s state and federal money available for the taking we are finding out that Conservatives, who now have become total anti-government zealots like Bachmann always seem to have their hands out begging for gov’t cash. From 1995 to 1999 he ran the Rising Stars Education and Sports Foundation in Florida, according to The St. Petersburg Times , taking in $600,000 from state and local governments, and he later had an affiliation with “the Rocky Mountain Technology Group, a Montana software development company,” according to the paper. This year’s was his third Ames Straw Poll organizing campaign, Waldron said Saturday. On his website, he says he also has worked for the Reagan/Bush; Bush/Quayle; Bauer; McCain; and Bush/Cheney presidential campaigns. Oh look, Jesus General makes an appearance in the article . He can do that to people.

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The Most Beautiful Sound I Ever Heard

At the end of every day, I throw myself on top of my bed and stare at the water spot on my ceiling while trying to exorcise all the KardashianLohanStoddenFishsticks foolishness from my head so it doesn’t follow me from my daymares into my nightmares. While I was in the middle of doing this last night, I felt a tingling on my lobes travel up to my ear holes like a feather fairy wearing glitter skates… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Dlisted Discovery Date : 18/08/2011 14:57 Number of articles : 4

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Raw Video: Storm Kills 3 at Belgian Festival

A storm swept through an open air music festival in eastern Belgium on Thursday killing at least three people and injuring over 70 others, an official said. (Aug. 18)

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After his role in the John Ensign scandal I’m not sure why he’s still in Congress, but yesterday he turned into an AM hate talk radio host and attacked Congress, Obama and Medicare: Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.) ripped his colleagues during a tour of northeast Oklahoma, calling them “career elitists,” “cowards” and said, “It’s just a good thing I can’t pack a gun on the Senate floor.” Coburn’s gun-on-the-floor comment comes less than a month after Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-Ariz.) made a triumphant return to the Capitol and the House floor following her shooting in the head in January outside a Tucson supermarket. OK, threatening to shoot members of Congress is never a good thing. Maybe there should be a bill that forbids this kind of thing being said in DC. You know, if Louie Gohmert’s crazy bill which wanted to arm these Congressman was passed maybe they could have had an old fashioned shoot out — OK Corral style right in the Capitol. But he was on a roll that Rush Limbaugh would have been proud of. Next up, he made up the claim that health care for seniors was better before Medicare ever came along. He said the nation’s health care system was better before Medicare existed, even as he noted that some people received poor care at the time and doctors often accepted baked goods or chickens in partial payment. “You can’t tell me the system is better now than it was before Medicare,” he said. He said the nation’s health care system was better before Medicare existed, even as he noted that some people received poor care at the time and doctors often accepted baked goods or chickens in partial payment. “You can’t tell me the system is better now than it was before Medicare,” he said. My doctor has been telling me that he’ll trade kittens and frogs for service. Why stop now, he was rocking: Without specifying what he meant, Coburn said President Barack Obama has an “intent is to create dependency because it worked so well for him.” The World’s caption below a photo of Coburn reads the understated: “Disagrees with Obama’s politics.” “As an African-American male,” Coburn said, Obama received “tremendous advantage from a lot of these programs.” The programs were not identified in the World report There is no evidence as far as I can tell that Obama was an affirmative action recipient , but it’s the good and decent racist thing to say and it falls in line as just your basic conservative spin about the program, but he does equate getting Medicare as being a crack addict I think. UPDATE: David from Video Cafe catches a response from Coburn on local radio: “It’s just a good thing I can’t pack a gun on the Senate floor,” he said, according to The Tulsa World . Coburn’s remarks came less than a month after Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-AZ), who had suffered a gunshot wound to the head in January, briefly returned to Congress. Conservative radio host Pat Campbell gave Coburn a chance to defend his remarks Thursday. “You think that’s going to come back to haunt you?” Campbell asked. “Oh, I don’t know,” Coburn said. “I don’t care. The problems are so big. What I was trying to do was be funny. They know that.”

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Why Music Matters Takes On The Beatles

Paul and Ringo are the latest musicians to throw in with Why Music Matters , the year-old campaign intended to shame you from BitTorrenting. In WMM’s quest to get artists paid, they’ve pushed out animated videos featuring bands as dissimilar as Iron Maiden and Stevie Wonder, and now they shabash their most powerfully-coiffed subjects yet. Animator Lee Gingold ended up writing himself into the story,… Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Huffington Post Discovery Date : 17/08/2011 17:51 Number of articles : 3

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US, Allies Demand Assad Exit in Syria

President Barack Obama, the leaders of Britain, France and Germany and the European Union joined Thursday to demand that Syrian President Bashar Assad resign. ( Aug. 18)

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All You Need to Know About John Boehner Summed Up in One Tweet

enlarge Credit: The Tweeters It’s not just a tweet – it’s a re-tweet of the Heritage Foundation that showed up on the Speaker of the House’s feed. Yes, the Heritage Foundation – you know the people who scored the first Bush Tax Cut and reported they would : 1) Effectively pay off the federal debt; 2) Reduce the federal surplus by $1.4 trillion; 3) Substantially increase family income; 4) Save the entire Social Security surplus; 5) Increase personal savings; 6) Create more job opportunities. Wrong. Wrong. Wrong. Wrong. Wrong. And wrong. Nice credible people to associate with, Boehner. Even better people to have your aide parrot on Twitter. I’ve yet to see 140-characters sum up a person better than this tweet. Amazing. And of all the CEOs in the world who could be kvetching about the Affordable Care Act – they quote one from a fast food chain?! “I’m very concerned that in the coming years we’ll be unable to create as many jobs as we would like due to the increased expenses necessitated by laws such as the PPACA [Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act],” Andy Puzder testified . Oh no! Fewer burger flipping jobs?! In America? Right. Let us not forget that when we’re talking about minimum wage jobs – we’re talking about jobs you can’t live on so you’re forced to rely on food stamps and Medicaid to survive. When we talk about minimum wage jobs – we’re talking about government subsidized workers . Andy Puzder CEO of Carls Jr. is a McJobs creator. Hey Boehner – where are all those taxpayer-funded McJobs?

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