Be INFORMED

Thursday, February 22, 2007

Supermax Facility Gets Thumbs up From Gonzales

  How about this for a story.

U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales and a few union leaders for prison guards and even a few lawmakers took a tour of the ultra- high-security  Supermax prison in Florence, Colorado and Gonzales came out and said that the prison was up to par.  Now, that's a load off my mind!

   The leaders of the guard's union said that more staffing is needed even with all of the high tech bullshit that is installed in these Supermax prisons because the camera's and such things cannot help to much during a riot.

   My whole reason for bringing this up was basically just to be smart-ass and to tell Gonzales that I hope the place met all of his requirements and that maybe he should start looking for a retirement spot within the complex.

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Supermax union president Barbara Batulis, who accompanied Gonzales, said terrorists housed there still are able to communicate with followers in Spain and Iraq.

Union leaders have begun mobilizing a lobbying blitz to demand $500 million from Congress to hire more guards nationwide, said John Gage, president of the American Federation of Government Employees.

U.S. Sen. Ken Salazar, who accompanied Gonzales along with U.S. Sen. Wayne Allard, also raised questions.

Federal prison chiefs "have to do more. They have to recognize ... we need to have much more linguistic capability in Arabic" in order to understand and assess terrorist-prisoner communications, said Salazar, D-Colo.

In Supermax, assaults on guards have increased and convicted terrorists seem to be communicating more by shouting between their cells, while three new interpreters struggle to monitor phone calls and recreation-area communications as well as screen mail, guards and union officials said.

Threats to kill staff members have increased to about 110 last year, double the number in 2005, said chief union steward Bob Snelson, who represented guards last fall before an arbitrator who found dangerous understaffing.

 

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Taliban ' in control ' In Helmand

Al Jazeera   

FEBRUARY 22, 2007
Taliban 'in control' in Helmand

By James Bays, Helmand province, Afghanistan

The Taliban say they operate
unchallenged in many areas

Al Jazeera has uncovered evidence that Taliban fighters are now in effective control of large parts of a key province in southwest Afghanistan, despite recent claims by Nato that their bases had been destroyed.

James Bays spent two days with the Taliban in Helmand and found that the group is running schools and medical facilities, and is travelling armed and unchallenged by Nato-led forces. Here is his report

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Syria Arming Itself For Armageddon?

   In preparation for the big battle of Armageddon in the mid east,  Syria is bulking up it's military with a little help from Russia and Iran, according to an Israeli newspaper. Just to note, I added the " Armageddon " myself. This is what it would seem to be coming to if you listen to the Zionist in the church.

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             AP

Damascus has large numbers of surface-based missiles and long-range rockets, including the Scud-D, capable of reaching nearly any target in Israel, the report said, and the Syrian navy has received new Iranian anti-ship missiles.

Haaretz also said Russia was about to sell Syria thousands of advanced anti-tank missiles, despite Israeli charges that in the past Syria has transferred those missiles to Hezbollah guerrillas in Lebanon.

Syrian officials did not immediately comment on the Israeli reports, but President Bashar Assad said in a television interview immediately after the fighting that Syria was preparing to defend itself.

 

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Hillary Needs To Get With The Program

“If the most important thing to any of you is choosing someone who did not cast a vote [to authorize the war] or has said his vote was a mistake, then there are others to choose from.”    Hillary Clinton

   I do believe that Senator Clinton has dug herself into the ground with the above statement and with her little argument concerning Obam.

    I wasn't to sure if I would support her bid for the Democratic nomination, but I am sure now that I will not. Mrs. Clinton has developed a bad attitude as of late and unless she changes her ways, many other American citizens will not support her either.

 

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Catholics Not Going To Confession So The Ads Are Coming!

    Washington Post

Noting that the number of Catholics taking part in the key rite has plunged, the Archdiocese of Washington is launching its biggest marketing blitz this week, using ads on buses, subway cars, a Route 301 billboard, 100,000 brochures and radio spots in an effort to get people back to the confessional.

The campaign, the first big public endeavor by the new archbishop, Donald Wuerl, is timed to start with Lent, the 40-day period of reflection and penitence that started yesterday, Ash Wednesday. The 100,000 brochures that parishes are distributing lay out rules for the rusty, complete with a pop-out, wallet-size card ("Step 3: Confess all of your sins to the priest. If you are unsure or uneasy, tell him and ask for help."). Starting Wednesday, all 140 churches in the archdiocese will be open for confession from 7 to 8:30 p.m. every Wednesday through Lent.

Parishes have been cutting back the time they set aside for confessions for years; many now allot only 30- or 45-minute blocks or ask for appointments. Years ago, lines at confessionals were long and priests listened for hours.

Also known as the sacrament of reconciliation, confession involves several mandatory steps: being sincerely contrite, articulating to a priest (who stands in the place of Jesus) what was done wrong, apologizing, receiving an assigned penance and being forgiven.

   I'm a non-denominational Christian myself but my parents started me out as a Catholic. The article above is one reason that I do not do organized religion in the first place.

    What do you think is going to happen when the church cuts back on the times it gives for the confessional to be open and then makes you have to get an appointment in some cases?

    The church can claim that less people are confessing because they do not have the time in this day and age to go do these things, but the majority of the fault lies with the church. The church has become more of a business and it has strayed away from it's original reason for being here in the first place. This has happened in all denominations, not just the Catholic.

   On top of that, maybe your flock has gotten tired of going to church and then being made to feel guilty for breathing to hard. One thing that the Catholic church has always been good at is making their people feel guilty about everything.

 

 

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Iraq War A Success For conservatism?

 Wednesday, February 21, 2007 by the Baltimore Sun (Maryland)

How Failure in the War Has Meant Success for Conservatism

by Thomas F. Schaller

Last week, I argued that President Bush's Iraq war has demolished the foundations upon which the Republican Party had, until 2006, built a national majority. Paradoxically, the war has nevertheless been a huge victory for conservatism.

To explain this paradox, we begin with William F. Buckley's famous definition of conservatism as "to stand athwart history, yelling, 'Stop!'"

Setting aside the dismal implications of this mantra for conservatives - a life where change is inherently bad, new ideas and peoples are threatening, social and technological advances must be resisted, and the future always frightens - conservatism's first principle is that slower is better, particularly in matters of governance.

By this standard, the Iraq war will be remembered as the great conservative triumph, for the focus and fortune diverted to Iraq have stalled so much else on the nation's agenda.

Travel back a moment to the 2000 election, the last of the pre-9/11 era, and recall the critical national issues then under discussion: energy, education and health care, to name just three.

Sure, there has been some progress on these problems, including new teaching standards and a new prescription drug benefit. (I leave it to readers to decide how well No Child Left Behind and the Medicare "Part D" prescription benefit are working, but my sense is that conservatives and liberals alike are eerily unified in their dissatisfaction with both.)

Then came Sept. 11, 2001, our supposed national wake-up call. We reoriented ourselves toward the rest of the world, especially the Islamic and Middle Eastern portions of it. On so many domestic issues, however, we hit the snooze bar.

Energy policy has been mostly an exercise in foot dragging, as America's continued dependence on foreign-produced, nonrenewable sources of energy continues unabated. In fact, U.S. dependence on foreign energy has increased since Mr. Bush took office.

The geopolitical implications of that dependence, especially in terms of blood and booty for the "oil wars" of the Middle East, have generated many essays and ample laments, yet little movement. Movement toward renewable energy use and reduced domestic consumption has brought us not much closer to solving our dependency issues.

Health care reform? The number of uninsured is rising, not shrinking. And even if the rates of uninsured have slowed, the rising costs for those who do have insurance continue to outpace income growth or the inflation rate.

Meanwhile, just as automobile insurance premiums include the costs of covering uninsured motorists, those fortunate enough to be insured are subsidizing, via higher premiums, the health care of the uninsured who show up in emergency rooms. (I often wonder what would happen if insurers line-itemed this cost in their invoices. Would it be a useful reminder to the insured about the costs of inaction?)

As for education, consider that if we removed our troops from Iraq tomorrow, the total cost of the war, including replacement of our military equipment and the future costs for medical and veterans benefits, will be at least $1 trillion. That sum could have provided an average of $20 billion for every state to splurge on new school facilities, new books and new computers.

To turn President Bush's much-ridiculed question back on him, "Is our children learning" any better today they were six years ago?

I seriously doubt it.

Even immigration reform, an issue dear to social conservatives, has generated more talk than action. The U.S.-Mexico border is a bit tougher to cross, but the plucky can find their way to America if they want to badly enough.

Standing athwart history is grueling work. Beating back progress and progressives takes a lot of energy, because people - future-minded Americans, especially - have a habit of welcoming change. History has a similar penchant for never standing still.

The president has done his best these past six years to venerate conservatism. He says his successor will inherit the war. Because Iraq has drained attention and resources away from other issues, the next president will also inherit plenty of other unresolved problems.

And that is how Mr. Bush engineered a conservative triumph and a Republican collapse all at once.

If that sounds like a contradiction, perhaps you're standing too athwart history to appreciate it.

 

Thomas F. Schaller is an associate professor of political science at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, and author of "Whistling Past Dixie."

Copyright © 2007, The Baltimore Sun

 

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Non-Binding Resolution: Is This What You Voted For?

   Here's a good little snip from World Can't Wait, a group which is basically organizing protest against Bush, the war in Iraq, and pushing for the impeachment of Bush.

   This piece, however, takes a shot at the Democrats and their attempts with the non-binding resolutions which they have tried to get passed in the past weeks.

New Congress, Non-Binding Resolution: Is This What You Voted For? 

2/19/07: Under their time honored guise of “supporting the troops”, Congressional Democrats last week pushed through a resolution declaring their support for the war in Iraq.  They also noted their disapproval with the way Bush is waging that war (read resolution below).

In the Senate a couple of days later, a similar measure didn’t come to a vote, because enough Senators support both the war and the way Bush is waging it.

These votes reflect intense differences among the political elite over the way the war is being led, not over the war itself.  They are not intended to, and in no way will, lead to ending the unjust and brutal US military occupation of Iraq.  The resolutions address, as the New York Times accurately wrote, a “specific battlefield tactic proposed by the president”.

How the conflicts within the political power structure will play out in the days and weeks ahead over the best way to pursue the war in Iraq is in great flux and is in no way predetermined.  The widely (and rightfully) despised Senator Joe Lieberman said in a recent speech that the measure for Congressional “micromanaging” a war is a “first step toward a constitutional crisis that we can and must avoid”.

But one thing is eminently clear.  The sentiments of millions of people in this country who want an end to this unjust and immoral war were in no way reflected in the Congressional “debate” or in the resolutions voted on last week.  The suffering of the Iraqi people under an ongoing US military occupation was not a factor in the voting.  Consider what a man in Baghdad said on February 19 after yet another bombing in that city killed at least 60 people: “I hold the American forces responsible for this”.

Multiply this sentiment by the millions, and multiply the Iraqi dead of last weekend by hundreds of thousands.  And ask yourself if you can really go along with this charade of “opposition” that doesn’t even put up a pretense of ending the war, only finding more “efficient” ways of conducting it.  What is needed is, as Molly Ivins wrote in her last column, “people in the streets, banging pots and pans and demanding, ‘Stop it, now!’"         Read More

 

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Two British military Bases Bombed

Al Jazeera

The two British bases, located in central Basra and in the city's Shat al-Arab hotel, were bombed on Wednesday night and early Thursday morning, the source added.
No details of causalities were immediately available.

"They were occupiers and they should have left long ago"
Nour Abdul-Muttalib, teacher

Salam al-Maliki, a senior official in the bloc loyal to radical young cleric Moqtada al-Sadr, which has long opposed a foreign presence in Iraq, said violence in the city would cease once the foreign troops have left.

"The militias and militant groups in these areas only fired their weapons at the occupier and when they go, all of the violence here will end," he said.

   I'm wondering if this is the Iraqi version of a going away party.

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Another Rape Accusation In Iraq, Coalition Count:3143 Confirmed Deaths Of Our Troops

       A 50 year old Sunni woman has accused four Iraqi soldiers of raping her and trying to rape two of her daughters.

   This rape has supposedly occurred about ten days ago in the city of Tal Afar while soldiers were looking for weapons and insurgents.

    This kind of mess could become a bad habit.

                    * * **

U.S. Deaths Confirmed By The DoD:
3143

Reported U.S. Deaths Pending DoD Confirmation:
7

Total
3150

Latest Coalition Fatality: Feb 20, 2007

                 * * * *

Bush May Send Nat'l Guard To Iraq Early For Troop Buildup

By DAVID S. CLOUD

The Pentagon is planning to send more than 14,000 National Guard troops back to Iraq next year, shortening their off-duty time to meet the demands of President Bush's buildup, Defense Department officials said Wednesday.

National Guard officials told state commanders in Arkansas, Indiana, Oklahoma and Ohio last month that while a final decision had not been made, veteran units from their states could be designated to return between January and June of next year, the officials said.

                * * **

Pentagon Plans To Cut Leave Time For 14,000 Guard Troops

By DAVID S. CLOUD

The Pentagon is planning to send more than 14,000 National Guard troops back to Iraq next year, shortening their off-duty time to meet the demands of President Bush's buildup, Defense Department officials said Wednesday.

National Guard officials told state commanders in Arkansas, Indiana, Oklahoma and Ohio last month that while a final decision had not been made, veteran units from their states could be designated to return between January and June of next year, the officials said.

 

    

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Wednesday, February 21, 2007

Balanced Budget By 2012? Bush's Numbers Don't Add Up

    Here's a look at Resident Bush's proposed " Balanced Budget " plan for 2012. As we have all known since he came out with this sham, his budget doesn't hold water.

Citizens For Tax Justice

In his fiscal 2008 budget proposals, President Bush claims to have a plan to balance the federal budget by fiscal 2012. The truth is, he doesn’t.

First of all, to “balance” the 2012 budget, the President would spend the entire Social Security surplus, estimated at $248 billion that year, on other government programs. According to the President’s own figures, the regular government budget, outside of Social Security, would still have a deficit of $187 billion in 2012.

But that’s only the beginning of the President’s budget chicanery. Even to lower the regular budget deficit to $187 billion (from $434 billion last year), the President posits the following:

# 1
In 2012, outlays for defense and homeland security as a share of the gross domestic product (GDP) will be 22 percent lower than in fiscal 2006.

# 2
Other appropriations (mostly domestic programs) will be slashed by 29 percent as a share of the GDP.

The President characterizes these huge real cuts in outlays as a budget “freeze,” by which he means that he would keep appropriations at their 2006 level in nominal dollars. But using nominal dollars as a measuring stick doesn’t make sense. Most federal spending on appropriations reflects employee salaries and purchases of services. The costs of these generally must keep up with the growth in overall wages and population to avoid real reductions. So, comparing outlays as a share of GDP is a reasonable way to make year-to-year comparisons meaningful. In contrast, adjusting outlays solely for inflation is quite inadequate. And comparing outlays from one year to another in nominal, unadjusted dollars, as the President suggest, is totally misleading.

The President offers a few, albeit very broad details about where his enormous program cuts will supposedly occur. For example, from fiscal 2006 to 2012:

# 3
Community and regional development outlays are to fall by 85% as a share of the GDP.

# 4
Education and related programs: down 45%.

# 5
Agriculture: down 42%.

# 6
Environmental protection and natural resources: down 30%.

# 7
Transportation: down 21%.

“History makes clear that such implausible budget cuts would be highly unpopular, and extremely unlikely—not to mention ill-advised,” noted Robert S. McIntyre, director of Citizens for Tax Justice. “Yet once you discount these phony program cuts and count Bush’s egregious diversion of Social Security money, the President’s so-called balanced-budget plan is a hoax.”

Here’s the arithmetic for fiscal year 2012:

# 1
The President claims his program produces a budget surplus of $61 billion that year.

# 2
From that, subtract the projected Social Security surplus of $248 billion. That leaves a projected 2012 deficit in the regular budget of $187 billion (as the President admits).

# 3
Finally, adjust appropriations to keep up with the growth in the economy, as they have historically done. That adds another $382 billion to the 2012 deficit.

# 4
This revised fiscal 2012 deficit totals $569 billion. At 3.2% of the GDP, that’s about the same as in fiscal 2006.

 

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Dick Cheney's Stand On Some Issues

    I'm singling out on government official at a time to let you see how they voted and/or feel about certain issues. The votes may go back some years so keep this in mind as the person may have changed their mind since.

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Vice President Dick Cheney  Former Republican Representative (WY)

From VoteMatch

Opposes topic 1:
Abortion is a woman's right
(2 points on Social scale)
Supports stem-cell research: Favors topic 1
Exemptions for rape, incest or woman�s life now OK: Favors topic 1
In Congress: No exceptions in the case of rape or incest: Strongly Opposes topic 1
Against abortion rights: Opposes topic 1
Co-sponsored �Preborn Children�s Civil Rights Act of 1985�: Strongly Opposes topic 1

Opposes topic 2:
Require companies to hire more women & minorities
(7 points on Economic scale)
Voted against ERA in 1983: Strongly Opposes topic 2
Co-sponsored bills for equal rights for women in education: Favors topic 2
Voted for anti-busing Amendment: Neutral on topic 2

Favors topic 3:
Sexual orientation protected by civil rights laws
(7 points on Social scale)
"Freedom means freedom for everyone," including gays: Favors topic 3
People should be free to enter into any kind of relationship: Favors topic 3
Stopped military academies from banning gays: Favors topic 3
Kept ban on gays in military; and ban on women in combat: Opposes topic 3

Strongly Favors topic 4:
Teach family values in public schools
(0 points on Social scale)
Supports school prayer: Strongly Favors topic 4
Character education; community service; pay restitution: Favors topic 4
More obscenity enforcement; more character education: Strongly Favors topic 4

Opposes topic 5:
More federal funding for health coverage
(7 points on Economic scale)
Limiting medical lawsuits keeps healthcare affordable: Opposes topic 5
Prescription drug benefits for Medicare recipients: Favors topic 5
Fund Medicare psychologists; self-employees; & organ donors: Favors topic 5
Voted against 1979 hospital cost control plan: Opposes topic 5
YES on funding GOP version of Medicare prescription drug benefit: Opposes topic 5

Favors topic 6:
Privatize Social Security
(7 points on Economic scale)
End earnings test; allow retirement income under SSI: Favors topic 6
Raise annual IRAs to $2,500; more cost-of-living increases: Favors topic 6

Strongly Favors topic 7:
Parents choose schools via vouchers
(10 points on Social scale)
Co-sponsored bill for parental choice within public schools: Strongly Favors topic 7

Favors topic 8:
Death Penalty
(2 points on Social scale)
Death penalty OK for espionage & treason: Favors topic 8

Strongly Favors topic 9:
Mandatory Three Strikes sentencing laws
(0 points on Social scale)
Mandatory penalties to fight for a drug-free America: Strongly Favors topic 9
Co-sponsored bills for stricter & mandatory sentencing: Strongly Favors topic 9

Favors topic 10:
Absolute right to gun ownership
(7 points on Social scale)
Now might outlaw plastic guns & cop-killer bullets: Neutral on topic 10
Trigger locks OK, and tougher enforcement: Opposes topic 10
Opposed 7-day waiting period for buying guns: Favors topic 10
Voted against banning plastic bullets & cop-killer bullets: Strongly Favors topic 10
Voted in Congress to weaken gun control laws: Strongly Favors topic 10

Strongly Favors topic 11:
Decrease overall taxation of the wealthy
(10 points on Economic scale)
The Bush tax cuts are working: Strongly Favors topic 11
Tax cuts are crucial to getting recovery underway: Strongly Favors topic 11
We need to make sure that tax relief is permanent: Strongly Favors topic 11
Co-sponsored bills to maintain charity & mortgage deductions: Opposes topic 11
No tax increases; deduct R&D and local taxes: Strongly Favors topic 11
Opposed Reagan�s tax overhaul as sellout to Dems: Strongly Favors topic 11
YES on $350 billion in tax breaks over 11 years: Strongly Favors topic 11

Opposes topic 12:
Illegal immigrants earn citizenship
(2 points on Economic scale)
Toughen deportations; soften on USAF children immigrants: Opposes topic 12

Opposes topic 13:
Support & expand free trade
(2 points on Economic scale)
Worldwide market thrives only with peaceful stability: Favors topic 13
Sponsored bills limiting trade & allowing import fees: Opposes topic 13
Voted against textile import limits: Opposes topic 13
Supported export promotion & import tax relief: Opposes topic 13

No opinion on topic 14:
The Patriot Act harms civil liberties
(5 points on Social scale)
(No votes on which to base response)

Favors topic 15:
More spending on armed forces
(2 points on Economic scale)
Need to spend more, but spend it wisely: Favors topic 15
Cautious cuts: A-12, V22, F14D, Seawolf, 500,000 troops: Opposes topic 15
In Congress, consistently voted to raise military spending: Strongly Favors topic 15
Downsized military while protecting �people programs�: Opposes topic 15

No opinion on topic 16:
Stricter limits on political campaign funds
(5 points on Economic scale)
(No votes on which to base response)

Strongly Favors topic 17:
Replace US troops with UN in Iraq
(0 points on Economic scale)
Voted to support foreign aid programs: Strongly Favors topic 17
Include former Soviet states in NATO for stability: Favors topic 17
Critical of Israeli policy which opposes US interests: Neutral on topic 17
Supported foreign aid to Latin America & Africa: Strongly Favors topic 17

Opposes topic 18:
Replace coal & oil with alternatives
(7 points on Economic scale)
Energy plan focuses on production: Strongly Opposes topic 18
Voted against Clean Water Act and air pollution sanctions: Opposes topic 18
OK to hunt, trap, & ski in National Parks & Forests: Opposes topic 18
User fees in National Parks & Forests; drill ANWR: Strongly Opposes topic 18
Sponsored numerous bills for flood control & dams: Neutral on topic 18
Tax credits & more funding for renewable energy research: Favors topic 18
Open small fraction of ANWR for regulated production : Strongly Opposes topic 18

Strongly Favors topic 19:
Drug use is immoral: enforce laws against it
(0 points on Social scale)
Post federal rewards for snitching on drug sales: Strongly Favors topic 19
Request media participation in War on Drugs: Strongly Favors topic 19
More federal and foreign cooperation in fighting drugs: Strongly Favors topic 19

Strongly Favors topic 20:
Allow churches to provide welfare services
(0 points on Social scale)
Supported family services being provided by private groups: Strongly Favors topic 20
Co-sponsored bills for workfare; for local farmer control: Favors topic 20

 

Gonzales And The Justice Department Are In The Crosshairs

Robert Novak:

House Democrats, led by Caucus Chairman Rahm Emanuel, are targeting Attorney General Alberto Gonzales and the Justice Department under him in a wide-ranging congressional investigation.

The point of the Democratic attack is dismissal of seven U.S. attorneys, all involved in probes of public corruption. On Thursday, Emanuel sent Gonzales his second letter demanding the appointment of Carol Lam, fired as U.S. attorney in San Diego, as an outside counsel to continue her pursuit of the Duke Cunningham case.  MORE BELOW

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  Caucus Chairman Rahm Emanuel  started the attack a little while back after Carol Lam, who headed the Duke Cunningham investigation while U.S. Attorney in California, was dismissed from her post.

"To remove the cloud of politics over Ms. Lam’s dismissal, and to ensure there are no delays in the investigation of the Cunningham matter, I call on you to immediately name Carol Lam as outside counsel with all necessary resources to continue her excellent work on the Cunningham case and related matters," Emanuel wrote.

   The seven firings for no good reasons are getting plenty of attention and so is the role in  which the White House may have played in the dismissals.

    I think that before the entire Bush Crime Family is indicted, we will need a bigger prison. The future inmate list grows longer by the day.

 

Cheney Riles The Democrat Iraq Plan

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi:

"You cannot say as the president of the United States, 'I welcome disagreement in a time of war,' and then have the vice president of the United States go out of the country and mischaracterize a position of the speaker of the House and in a manner that says that person in that position of authority is acting against the national security of our country."

   This was said after Vice President Cheney had nothing good to say about the Democratic leaders strategy for Iraq. I take it that the moron doesn't like the idea of our troops actually getting the armor that they need nor the correct training. 

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Cheney told ABC News:

"I think if we were to do what Speaker Pelosi and Congressman Murtha are suggesting, all we will do is validate the al-Qaida strategy," the vice president told ABC News. "The al-Qaida strategy is to break the will of the American people ... try to persuade us to throw in the towel and come home, and then they win because we quit."

   He also still had the nerve to say that the British removing some of their troops was a positive step." I look at it and see it is actually an affirmation that there are parts of Iraq where things are going pretty well."

As for Cheney's assertion that the partial British pullout is a sign that things are going well in Iraq, Pelosi said: "If it's going so well, we'd like to withdraw our troops as well."

    This man is another idiot who should be sharing a prison cell with his George Bush puppet.

 

Truck With Chlorine Blown Up In Iraq.

  Iraqi Insurgents blew up  another truck carrying chlorine gas containers on Wednesday making this the second time in two days.

   Those darned insurgents are getting mighty crafty as of late and I'll bet that their resolve is leaving a bad taste in Bush's mouth. Wait a minute. What was I thinking here? Bush and the rest of the Bush Crime Family probably like this mess happening as it gives the clan another reason to come up an excuse for staying the course. I can hear it now:

   "We must stay committed to the citizens of Iraq so that we can not only help them form a Democracy, but to help them to become chemically free and independent!"                                                          

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  AP

Military officials worry extremists may have recently gained more access to firepower such as shoulder-fired anti-aircraft rockets and heavy machine guns — and more expertise to use them. The Black Hawk would be at least the eighth U.S. helicopter to crash or be taken down by hostile fire in the past month.

The gas cloud in Baghdad, meanwhile, suggests possible new and coordinated strategies by bombers trying to unleash toxic — and potentially deadly — materials. "Terrorists are using dirty means," said Brig. Gen. Qassim Moussawi, an Iraqi military spokesman.

Lt. Col. Christopher Garver, a U.S. military spokesman, said initial reports indicated the chopper was brought down by "small arms fire and rocket-propelled grenades" north of Baghdad, but gave no further details. All nine aboard were taken away on a rescue helicopter, he said.

  

More illegal Immigrants Attacked In Arizona

    It looks as if another vehicle loaded with illegal immigrants has been attacked in the outskirts of Tucson, Arizona.

    It is reported that 3 gunmen not only attacked the car but that they also took the driver with them when they left. This is the fourth time in about a month that something like this has happened.

   These attacks are also getting closer and closer to Tucson as this last one was in Chandler, Arizona. 

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Tucson Citizen      02.21.2007

The kidnapped man, José Guzmán, is in his early 20s and from Mexico.

Guzmán, the driver of a red car with five passengers, pulled off westbound Interstate 10 early Wednesday to get gas somewhere near Maricopa when two pickup trucks began to follow them, Chandler police said.

Guzmán continued from I-10 to the eastbound Santan Freeway in Chandler and the trucks followed, forcing the vehicle onto the shoulder of the road shortly after they entered the Santan.

Occupants of the trucks opened fire with handguns and at least one round hit the car, police said.

...passengers are in custody with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement because they are illegal immigrants. The passengers, whose names police have not yet released, were interviewed and are cooperating but are apprehensive because of their immigration status, Griner said.

 

Taliban Preparing For Spring Attack

       The Taliban military commander,Mullah Dadullah, in an interview with

Al Jazeera said that more than 6,000 fighters are deployed and preparing for a spring offensive against the Afghan government and their allies. I guess that would be the United States, in particular.

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"The attack is imminent," he told Al Jazeera's Arabic channel in an interview aired on Wednesday.

"The number of Taliban mujahidin who are ready to launch the spring battle has reached 6000," he told Ahmed Zeidan, the Kabul bureau chief of Al Jazeera's Arabic channel.
Dadullah said that the fighters were concealed in tunnels and elsewhere in preparation for launching their attack.

He said he might even be able to deploy even more volunteers if Nato troop increases continued to prompt more Afghans to take up arms. "It may rise to 10.000," he said.
"The more the number of Jewish and Christian soldiers who fight us increases, the more the Afghan people will be encouraged to join us."

   But wait, there's more!

Taliban commanders also told Al Jazeera that they had obtained new weapons suitable for use against helicopters.
Although they provided no further details, the Taliban provided footage of the burning wreckage of an aircraft which they said was a US helicopter which they had shot down near Kandahar two months ago.

The US military depends on its helicopters to reach remote parts of Afghanistan [AFP]

Eight US soldiers were killed and 14 were wounded when their Chinook helicopter crashed in Kabul province on Sunday

   George Bush's war on terror just keeps getting better and better, doesn't it?

                                IMPEACH! INDICT! IMPRISON!

Bush Is Losing The 'War On Terror'

   I'm still trying to play catchup on the days events since I missed most of the day having to fix somebody's Dell.

   Here is a good piece from Consortium News on why were are losing the war on terror. We all know who's to blame for that, don't we?

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Consortium News   By Robert Parry
February 20, 2007

Despite the sacrifices in lives, treasure and liberties, the painful reality is that the United States is losing the “war on terror” – in large part because too many people in the Middle East and across the globe view George W. Bush as a bully and a hypocrite.Share this article

Bush has become the ugly face of America, mouthing pretty words about freedom and democracy while threatening other nations and bludgeoning those who get in his way. Perhaps even worse, Bush has shown himself to be an incompetent commander, especially for a conflict as complicated and nuanced as this one.

Indeed, it is hard to envision how the United States can win the crucial battles for the hearts and minds of key populations if Bush remains President. Arguably, Bush has become a “clear and present danger” to the interests of the American people – yet he still has almost two years left in his term.

This predicament – the desperate need for new U.S. leadership and the difficult fact of being stuck with Bush – was underscored by the Feb. 19 lead article in the New York Times describing the revival of al-Qaeda as a worldwide terror network operating out of new bases in remote sections of Pakistan.

“American officials said there was mounting evidence that Osama bin Laden and his deputy, Ayman al-Zawahiri, had been steadily building an operations hub in the mountainous Pakistani tribal area of North Waziristan,” the Times reported.

“As recently as 2005, American intelligence assessments described senior leaders of al-Qaeda as cut off from their foot soldiers and able only to provide inspiration for future attacks. But more recent intelligence describes the organization’s hierarchy as intact and strengthening,” the Times wrote.

The Times quoted one American government official as saying “the chain of command has been reestablished” and that al-Qaeda’s “leadership command and control is robust.” [NYT, Feb. 19, 2007]

 

In the face of this al-Qaeda comeback, the Bush administration is reportedly debating whether to launch military strikes inside Pakistan. But that would risk destabilizing the dictatorship of Gen. Pervez Musharraf and conceivably provoking the nightmare scenario of Islamic fundamentalists gaining control of Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal.

In other words, more than five years into the “war on terror,” Bush has overseen a strategy that has simultaneously alienated world public opinion – with scandals over Guantanamo Bay, Abu Ghraib and secret CIA prisons – while fueling Islamic extremism and giving new life to the 9/11 masterminds.

The bipartisan Iraq Study Group described the situation in Iraq as “grave and deteriorating.” But the same description would fit for the broader strategic position of the United States in the Middle East.

The U.S. military is facing a worsening crisis in Iraq; the Taliban is on the rise again in Afghanistan; Hezbollah is gaining strength in Lebanon; Iran is defying international pressure over its nuclear program; and now al-Qaeda – having resettled in Pakistan – is rebuilding its capability to strike targets beyond the Middle East.

Bush’s Mistakes

Much of today’s crisis can be traced to Bush’s arrogance and impatience. In 2001, even before the 9/11 attacks, Bush insisted on a “unilateralist” approach toward the world, asserting U.S. global hegemony under a strategy laid out by the neoconservative Project for the New American Century.

At the center of this grandiose scheme was the belief that the oil-rich Middle East could be remade through violent “regime change” in hostile countries like Iraq. Bush later broadened his target list to the “axis of evil,” tossing in Iran and North Korea and making clear that other lesser enemies included the likes of Syria, Cuba and Venezuela.

While this neoconservative plan wrapped itself in the noble language of “democracy,” the concept was always less about respecting the will of indigenous populations than in restructuring their economies along “free market” lines and ensuring compliant leaders.

In all of this, there was little room for compromise or negotiation with the “bad guys.” It was as if the macho rhetoric of AM talk radio and Fox News had swallowed U.S. foreign policy. Real men don’t negotiate with people who get in the way; you jail or kill them.

Bush also grew enamored with his “gut” instincts about war, especially after U.S.-backed forces ousted Afghanistan’s Taliban leaders more quickly than many expected. Even after he let top al-Qaeda leaders slip away from Tora Bora in late 2001, Bush ignored warnings that he needed to finish the job there before turning America’s attention elsewhere.

Instead, Bush redirected U.S. military assets to Iraq, a country that wasn’t involved in 9/11 and actually had served as an important bulwark against Islamic fundamentalism, both the strains from Shiite-ruled Iran and Sunni-dominated al-Qaeda.

But Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein was something of a Bush family obsession since he defied President George H.W. Bush in the Persian Gulf War of 1990-91. In March 2003, Bush launched an invasion of Iraq and toppled Hussein’s government in three weeks.

After basking again in public adulation as the victorious “war president,” Bush stubbornly refused to acknowledge the growing seriousness of an Iraqi insurgency that rose up to challenge U.S. forces.

The U.S. occupation of Iraq – combined with abuse scandals at U.S.-run prisons – also fed popular anger across the Middle East. Thousands of young jihadists rallied to the cause of ousting the Americans from Muslim lands.

As the body counts grew – thousands of U.S. soldiers and tens of thousands of Iraqis – Bush dug in his heels deeper. When Iraq slid into chaos and then civil war, Bush again refused to acknowledge the facts in a timely fashion.

Bush also encouraged Israel to wage an ill-conceived war in southern Lebanon in summer 2006, further alienating the Muslim world. That was followed by the grisly execution of Hussein in December and new military tensions with Iran in early 2007.

In short, Bush appears determined to stampede the United States into a Middle Eastern box canyon – after offending most Muslim allies and offering little more than military solutions to essentially political and diplomatic problems.

Al-Qaeda’s Favorite President

Over the past six years, the wily and ruthless leaders of al-Qaeda also came to understand that Bush was their perfect foil. The more he was viewed as the “big crusader,” the more they could present themselves as the “defenders of Islam.” The al-Qaeda murderers moved from the fringes of Muslim society closer to the mainstream.

After the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003, al-Qaeda’s leaders transformed the conflict into both a rallying cry and a training ground. Bin Laden and Zawahiri believed the longer the Iraq War lasted the better it was for al-Qaeda.

So, in fall 2004, with Bush fighting for his political life against Democrat John Kerry, bin Laden took the risk of breaking nearly a year of silence to release a videotape denouncing Bush on the Friday before the U.S. election.

Bush’s supporters immediately spun bin Laden’s tirade as an “endorsement” of Kerry and pollsters recorded a jump of several percentage points for Bush, from nearly a dead heat to a five- or six-point lead. Four days later, Bush hung on to win a second term by an official margin of less than three percentage points. [See Consortiumnews.com’s “The Bush-Bin Laden Symbiosis.”]

The intervention by bin Laden – essentially urging Americans to reject Bush – had the predictable effect of driving voters to the President. After the videotape appeared, senior CIA analysts concluded that ensuring a second term for Bush was precisely what bin Laden intended.

“Bin Laden certainly did a nice favor today for the President,” said deputy CIA director John McLaughlin in opening a meeting to review secret “strategic analysis” after the videotape had dominated the day’s news, according to Ron Suskind’s The One Percent Doctrine, which draws heavily from CIA insiders.

Suskind wrote that CIA analysts had spent years “parsing each expressed word of the al-Qaeda leader and his deputy, Zawahiri. What they’d learned over nearly a decade is that bin Laden speaks only for strategic reasons. … Today’s conclusion: bin Laden’s message was clearly designed to assist the President’s reelection.”

Jami Miscik, CIA deputy associate director for intelligence, expressed the consensus view that bin Laden recognized how Bush’s heavy-handed policies were serving al-Qaeda’s strategic goals for recruiting a new generation of jihadists.

“Certainly,” Miscik said, “he would want Bush to keep doing what he’s doing for a few more years.”

As their internal assessment sank in, the CIA analysts were troubled by the implications of their own conclusions. “An ocean of hard truths before them – such as what did it say about U.S. policies that bin Laden would want Bush reelected – remained untouched,” Suskind wrote.

Even Bush recognized that his struggling campaign had been helped by bin Laden. “I thought it was going to help,” Bush said in a post-election interview about the videotape. “I thought it would help remind people that if bin Laden doesn’t want Bush to be the President, something must be right with Bush.”

Bin Laden, a well-educated Saudi and a keen observer of U.S. politics, appears to have recognized the same point in cleverly tipping the election to Bush.

Prolonging the War

Al-Qaeda’s leaders understood that a U.S. military withdrawal from Iraq might mean a renewed assault on them as well as the loss of their cause celebre for recruiting new jihadists. With Bush ensconced for a second term, that concern lessened but didn’t entirely disappear.

According to a captured July 9, 2005, letter, attributed to Zawahiri, al-Qaeda leaders still fretted over the possibility that a U.S. withdrawal from Iraq could touch off the disintegration of their operations, as jihadists who had flocked to Iraq to battle the Americans might simply give up the fight and go home.

“The mujahaddin must not have their mission end with the expulsion of the Americans from Iraq, and then lay down their weapons, and silence the fighting zeal,” said the “Zawahiri letter,” according to a text released by the office of the U.S. Director of National Intelligence.

In another captured letter, dated Dec. 11, 2005, a senior al-Qaeda operative known as “Atiyah” wrote that “prolonging the war [in Iraq] is in our interest.” [For details, see Consortiumnews.com’s “Al-Qaeda’s Fragile Foothold.”]

Now, it appears al-Qaeda’s “Bush-second-term” strategy is paying big dividends. Bush is stretching U.S. forces even thinner by escalating the American troop commitment in Iraq while also deploying military assets to threaten Shiite Iran, another enemy of the Sunni fundamentalists in al-Qaeda.

Meanwhile, al-Qaeda’s Taliban allies are on the offensive against embattled NATO contingents in Afghanistan, and new al-Qaeda units are undergoing training in Pakistan. In Iraq, al-Qaeda still makes up only a small percentage of the armed insurgency – probably less than five percent – but it benefits from the arrival of new recruits and the opportunity to test out military tactics against the Americans.

Overall, time and momentum appear to be on al-Qaeda’s side. As long as Bush remains America’s leader and al-Qaeda’s poster boy, there seems little chance for a more effective U.S. counterinsurgency strategy.

Unlike the Iraqi insurgents who are proving to be highly adaptive in the field, Bush can’t seem to get beyond his tough-guy rhetoric and his obsession with military force. He remains bin Laden’s favorite President.

According to one recent Newsweek poll, 58 percent of Americans wish the Bush administration were over. But there is a long way between wishing for a desperately needed change and the slow process of the electoral calendar.

The trickier questions are: Can the United States afford 23 more months of Bush in the White House? Does his incompetence in the face of today’s fast-moving crises demand extraordinary action to remove him from office through impeachment?

If impeachment is impossible, given the sizable Republican minorities in both the House and Senate, is there at least some hope for legislative remedies that can begin to correct Bush’s many errors? Could patriotic Republicans confront the President and Vice President about resignations?

Or must the American people wait two more years as today’s “clear and present danger” grows only more acute?

Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories in the 1980s for the Associated Press and Newsweek. His latest book, Secrecy & Privilege: Rise of the Bush Dynasty from Watergate to Iraq, can be ordered at secrecyandprivilege.com. It's also available at Amazon.com, as is his 1999 book, Lost History: Contras, Cocaine, the Press & 'Project Truth.'

 

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Parents Suing Over DUI Crash That Murdered A Couple

  In Charlotte, NC. we have an interesting story going on about the parents of a young couple that was killed in a drunk-driving accident accident last February,

   The parents are suing the teenager who killed their children ( Eddel Rivera, 23, and Richard Charles Bryant, 22 who had planned on getting married. The wrongful-death lawsuits were filed on Monday

     The one who did the drinking and driving got a whole 12 years in prison for his deeds when the punk should have gotten at least 12 years for each victim! I have no sympathy for any body who drives after drinking alcohol and my opinion is that they should be tossed into a place like Gitmo and kept there! Teenager or adult!  If you can't use enough common sense to not stay off of the road after a party at which you've indulged, then you have no business running around as a free individual in any circumstances.

                                MORE BELOW

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   Charlotte Observer

Brock Franklin,19, a former Myers Park High School student, pleaded no contest in December to two counts of second-degree murder. He is serving a prison sentence of at least 12 years.

The lawsuits accuse three convenience stores of selling alcohol to teenagers who attended a party where Franklin and other teenagers were drinking on the night of the fatal wreck. They also accuse teenagers of using fake IDs to buy alcohol that was taken to the house where the party was held.

The families of Rivera and Bryant are each seeking in excess of $10,000 in compensatory and punitive damages.

 

Iranians Speak Out

    From the BBC we have an interview with four Iranians dealing with Iran's nuclear program and how their president is handling the international concerns over the program.

Wednesday, 21 February 2007

DO YOU APPROVE OF IRAN'S NUCLEAR PROGRAMME?

Reza Noroozpour, journalist, Tehran: Yes, absolutely. I think Iran deserves to have a peaceful nuclear programme; and this doesn't mean it is going to have a nuclear bomb. Iran doesn't need a bomb. What it does need is a clean and endless source of energy. We know that Iran's oil and gas resources will be finished within 50 years, so we shouldn't sit back and watch ourselves get gradually poorer and weaker.

Eftekar Hashemi, teacher Isfahan: Yes. Absolutely. Not only do I approve of it; I am proud of it. It is based on the nuclear non-proliferation treaty and it is for peaceful purposes only. We need to win the trust of the international community over the peaceful nature of the programme, then obstacles against it will disappear.

Ali Reza, financial consultant, Tehran: No, as a matter of fact I don't trust Iran's ambitious regime. I am sure they don't want it for the country's development. They want to have a bomb to create the kind of atmosphere that existed in the Cold War.

Shirin Soltani, school teacher, Shiraz: Yes, but under international supervision.          More Questions here

 

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No Post Till 1 P.M. EST

   Commitments will leave me away from my desk today so there will be nothing here until 1 this afternoon.

   Sorry readers but I have to make the cash for the bills.

    Have a great day!

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U.N. Report On Iran Nuclear Activities Due Out

    The International Atomic Energy Agency is due to issue its report on the nuclear activities of Iran and of course the report will confirm that Iran is still indulging in uranium enrichment activities. the report is due out today or on Thursday.

Once it is ready,the report will be sent to the agency's 35-nation board and to the Security Council. The council set a 60-day deadline on Dec. 23 for such a freeze and said continued Iranian defiance past that ultimatum, which runs out Wednesday, could lead to sanctions additional to those it imposed last month.

"The enemy is making a big mistake if it thinks it can thwart the will of the Iranian nation to achieve the peaceful use of nuclear technology," Iranian state TV's Web site quoted President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as saying Wednesday.

On Tuesday, he said his country was ready to stop its enrichment program, but only if Western nations do the same — something the United States and others with similar programs are unlikely to even consider.

"Do you believe that's a serious offer?" White House press secretary Tony Snow asked. "It's pretty clear that the international community has said to the Iranians, `You can have nuclear power but we don't want you to have the ability to build nuclear weapons.' And that is an offer we continue to make."

 

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Iraq Carnage Continues With 11 Deaths, So Far

   A suicide bomber hit a police checkpoint just outside the Shiite city of Najaf on Wednesday killing 11 people. This is right in the heart of factions ran by cleric Muqtada al-Sadr.

   In Baghdad the political climate is getting shakier after a Sunni woman claimed that she was raped  while in custody of the Shiite controlled police department.

Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki fired the head of the influential Sunni Endowment, who had called for an international investigation into the rape allegations

A statement by al-Maliki's office gave no reason for the dismissal of Ahmed Abdul-Ghafour al-Samaraie, who directed the state agency overseeing Sunni mosques and seminaries. But suspicion fell on his harsh criticism of the government's handling of the rape allegations.

The government's quick rejection of the woman's claims have outraged many Sunnis, who accused al-Maliki of a high-level cover-up. The Association of Muslim Scholars, a militant Sunni group known to have links with insurgent groups, called it a "moral genocide" and warned of more fallout ahead.

  It would seem that al-Maliki has learned one thing from Bush and that is to get rid of those who say things that you do not like. Democracy at its finest!

 

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Man Comes Home From Vacation and Falls Over A Corpse

   This is the kind of junk you find in the middle of the night and you're really bored! I remember when this used to be National Enquirer material.

   Good night all!! See you in the later A.M.!

    Charlotte Observer

Posted on Tue, Feb. 20, 2007

Man returns from visit, trips on corpse

Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO - A Haight-Ashbury man returning home from an extended vacation tripped and fell on a corpse in his bedroom after finding his apartment had been ransacked, police said.

Authorities have not released the name of the resident or the victim, identified only as a white male, but are treating the death as suspicious, said Sgt. Neville Gittens.

The resident had just come back from a two-week visit in Humboldt County when he made the grisly discovery Monday, Gittens said.

"That is really sad, just terrible," said Kiersten Frey, who has lived on the block for more than 10 years. "It's usually pretty mellow around here."

The resident's orange-and-white tabby cat seen prowling the investigation scene was taken away by animal control officials but was unharmed, said Animal Care and Control Lt. Le-Ellis Brown.


Information from: San Francisco Chronicle, http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle

 

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Cardiac Defibrillators In Texas Schools

    This could only happen in Texas! I may have to check around to see what Sen. Juan "Chuy" Hinojosa has in common with the company that will be providing this equipment. I should note that some schools already have this equipment on the premises

El Paso Times

Bill requires Texas schools to put in cardiac defibrillators

By Mark Muecke / Austin Bureau

Article Launched: 02/21/2007

AUSTIN -- Schools in Texas would have to install devices that could save the lives of cardiac arrest victims under a bill filed Tuesday.

The proposal, filed by state Sen. Juan "Chuy" Hinojosa, is part of Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst's "Texas Children First" plan. It would also require nurses, coaches, some students and other school employees at Texas' 8,000 public schools to become certified to use the devices, called automatic external defibrillators.

"The bottom line is that AEDs save lives," Dewhurst said.

Hinojosa, D-McAllen, said chances of surviving a cardiac arrest when a defibrillator is used are 75 percent, but when one is not used the chance of survival drops to 5 percent.

Putting the devices in schools statewide would cost about $16 million, which would come from a combination of federal and state funds and private contributions, Dewhurst said.

The University Interscholastic League passed a new rule in October 2006 that requires every high school to have at least one defibrillator by Aug. 1, 2007, said league spokeswoman  

 

 

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