Saturday, February 4, 2012

Re: Texas Flashlight

I wonder what the accuracy of this weapon is, with literally no barrel......Nevertheless,  I want one.
 


 
On Sat, Feb 4, 2012 at 10:31 AM, Travis <baconlard@gmail.com> wrote:






 

 
I think they could sell a lot of them. 
 
 
 
Good for walking the dog, Girls night out, unruly neighbors, etc--- 
 
 
 
Subject: TEXAS FLASHLIGHT 
 
 
I do not think I would worry about walking in the dark with this flashlight. 
 
 
 
This is a must see. Think you'll be amazed. The video is about 
1 1/2 minutes. WOW!!! 
  
 
 
 
 
TEXAS FLASHLIGHT 
 
 
 
http://videos2view.net/texas-light.htm#.TpjYMP3QiMM.aolmail 
 
 
 
 


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Re: Roseanne Barr is running for POTUS

Nothing like a fat chick grabbing her crotch and spitting during the
National Anthem to endear America.

On Feb 4, 10:29 am, Travis <baconl...@gmail.com> wrote:
> **
>            New post on *Fellowship of the Minds*
> <http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/author/dcgere/>  Roseanne Barr is
> running for POTUS<http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/2012/02/04/roseanne-barr-is-ru...>by
> DCG <http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/author/dcgere/>
>
>  <http://fellowshipofminds.files.wordpress.com/2012/02/barr2.jpg>
>
> Presidential...
>
> TMZ<http://www.tmz.com/2012/02/02/roseanne-barr-running-president-green-p...>:
> Roseanne Barr -- who famously butchered the National Anthem -- has filed
> official documents
> <http://www.roseanneworld.com/blog/2012/02/cool.php#comments>to become the
> Green Party's nominee for President of the United States of America.  Barr
> -- who has been waging a Twitter and Facebook grassroots, digital campaign
> -- has just made it official.  She wants to carry the Green Party banner in
> the November election.
>
> *Barr says she's sick of Democrats and Republicans, whom she believes are
> not working in the best interests of the American people. * So what, you
> ask, is Roseanne pushing?  The answer is simple ... pot.  She wants
> marijuana legalized and sold strictly domestically.
>
> Remember she said this
> <http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/2011/10/02/behead-the-rich/>back in
> October of last year:
>
> *"I am for the return of the Guillotine
> <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guillotine>that is for the worst of the worst
> of the guilty. I would allow the guilty bankers the ability to pay back
> anything over  $100 million in personal wealth because I believe in a
> maximum wage of $100 million.  And if they are unable to live on that
> amount  then they should go to the re-education camps and if that doesn't
> help, then be beheaded."*
>
> Course she picks the $100 million mark as her net worth
> <http://www.celebritynetworth.com/richest-celebrities/actors/roseanne-...>is
> only $80 million (wants to give herself room to make a couple more million
> I guess).
>
> But I'm confused...on her Twitter page she retweeted this,
> "@TheRealRoseanne people need to pour their love and energy into the Occupy
> movement, *not waste time voting*."  I'm sure some will waste their vote on
> her.
>
> One thing she did tweet that I can agree with, "*I really think that
> Americans can solve the problems that we have very easily, together, once
> we remove the corruption from our government.*"  Can we start with Skippy,
> Holder, Tim TurboTax and the rest of this administration?
>
> DCG
>
>  *DCG <http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/author/dcgere/>* | February
> 4, 2012 at 6:34 am | Tags: Green
> Party<http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/?tag=green-party>,
> Roseanne Barr <http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/?tag=roseanne-barr> |
> Categories: 2012 Election<http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/?cat=4934384>,
> Idiots <http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/?cat=2909>,
> Liberals/Democrats <http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/?cat=74187125> |
> URL:http://wp.me/pKuKY-chm
>
>   Comment<http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/2012/02/04/roseanne-barr-is-ru...>
>    See all comments<http://fellowshipofminds.wordpress.com/2012/02/04/roseanne-barr-is-ru...>
>
>   Unsubscribe or change your email settings at Manage
> Subscriptions<https://subscribe.wordpress.com/?key=7f89380f46003915c34c2cdd2b126a38...>.
>
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>     Thanks for flying with WordPress.com <http://wordpress.com/>

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Texas Flashlight







 

 
I think they could sell a lot of them. 
 
 
 
Good for walking the dog, Girls night out, unruly neighbors, etc--- 
 
 
 
Subject: TEXAS FLASHLIGHT 
 
 
I do not think I would worry about walking in the dark with this flashlight. 
 
 
 
This is a must see. Think you'll be amazed. The video is about 
1 1/2 minutes. WOW!!! 
  
 
 
 
 
TEXAS FLASHLIGHT 
 
 
 
http://videos2view.net/texas-light.htm#.TpjYMP3QiMM.aolmail 
 
 
 
 


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How illegals are smuggled into the U.S.



New post on Fellowship of the Minds

How illegals are smuggled into the U.S.

by Dr. Eowyn

These dramatic pics were taken by U.S. Immigration officers at the U.S.-Mexican border.

The UK's Daily Mail reports, Feb. 3, 2012, that customs officers have arrested five men in connection with a people-smuggling ring that used vehicles adapted with ingenious secret compartments to smuggle over 1,000 of illegals into the US.

Illegal migrants paid between $2,000 and $4,000 dollars to cram themselves into tiny spaces next to V8 engines or to be locked into the trunks of cars during some of the hottest times of the year.

In an attempt not to arouse suspicion, the gang used non-Spanish-speaking blacks recruited from poor areas of Los Angeles to drive the vehicles across the border near San Diego. The drivers' inability to communicate with the immigrants also meant they had limited information about the broader smuggling scheme.

The drivers were paid between $300 and $800 for each of the dozens of people they smuggled across the border. Once the illegals were smuggled across the border, they were picked up and transported to Los Angeles.

Immigration officials began investigating in January 2010 when border patrol agents reported seeing a rising number of African-American drivers with illegal immigrants hidden in the trunks of their cars.

+++

Also a "good" way to smuggle terrorists into the U.S.!

~Eowyn
Dr. Eowyn | February 4, 2012 at 5:50 am | Tags: Los Angeles, Mexico, US Customs | Categories: crime, Culture War, Economy, Insanity, United States | URL: http://wp.me/pKuKY-chJ

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Roseanne Barr is running for POTUS



New post on Fellowship of the Minds

Roseanne Barr is running for POTUS

by DCG

Presidential...

TMZ:  Roseanne Barr -- who famously butchered the National Anthem -- has filed official documents to become the Green Party's nominee for President of the United States of America.  Barr -- who has been waging a Twitter and Facebook grassroots, digital campaign -- has just made it official.  She wants to carry the Green Party banner in the November election.

Barr says she's sick of Democrats and Republicans, whom she believes are not working in the best interests of the American people.  So what, you ask, is Roseanne pushing?  The answer is simple ... pot.  She wants marijuana legalized and sold strictly domestically.

Remember she said this back in October of last year:

"I am for the return of the Guillotine that is for the worst of the worst of the guilty. I would allow the guilty bankers the ability to pay back anything over  $100 million in personal wealth because I believe in a maximum wage of $100 million.  And if they are unable to live on that amount  then they should go to the re-education camps and if that doesn't help, then be beheaded."

Course she picks the $100 million mark as her net worth is only $80 million (wants to give herself room to make a couple more million I guess).

But I'm confused...on her Twitter page she retweeted this, "@TheRealRoseanne people need to pour their love and energy into the Occupy movement, not waste time voting."  I'm sure some will waste their vote on her.

One thing she did tweet that I can agree with, "I really think that Americans can solve the problems that we have very easily, together, once we remove the corruption from our government."  Can we start with Skippy, Holder, Tim TurboTax and the rest of this administration?

DCG

DCG | February 4, 2012 at 6:34 am | Tags: Green Party, Roseanne Barr | Categories: 2012 Election, Idiots, Liberals/Democrats | URL: http://wp.me/pKuKY-chm

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Separated at birth



New post on Fellowship of the Minds

Separated at birth

by Dr. Eowyn

The Obama administration's secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, made a rather unfortunate sartorial choice for her appearance at the United Nations on January 31, 2012.

The Hillary lookalike man in a monocle, of course, is the James Bond villain, Ernst Stavros Blofeld, head of the international criminal organization SPECTRE.

But then, sometimes a woman just can't help telegraphing to the world who she really is. LOL

~Eowyn

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Re: Things Southern Boys Don't Say.....

I'm Southern born and Southern bred and when I die I'll be Southern dead.

On Sat, Feb 4, 2012 at 7:55 AM, plainolamerican <plainolamerican@gmail.com> wrote:
you're welcome!

ya gotta love the South

On Feb 4, 7:41 am, Keith In Tampa <keithinta...@gmail.com> wrote:
> <Grin>!
>
> Some of these were pretty good!  I'd never seen these before,  thanks for
> sharing PlainOl!
>
> On Sat, Feb 4, 2012 at 8:36 AM, plainolamerican
> <plainolameri...@gmail.com>wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > TOP 31 THINGS THAT YOU WILL HEAR  NORTHERN BOYS SAY:
>
> > 31. When I retire, I'm movin' south.
>
> > 30. I have to because she's only sixteen.
>
> > 29.  I'll take Margaret Mitchell for 1000, Alex.
>
> > 28. Taxes will fix that.
>
> > 27. Come to think of it, I'll have a Heineken
>
> > 26.  We don't keep firearms in this house.
>
> > 25. You can't feed that  to the dog.
>
> > 24. No kids in the back of the pickup, it's just not safe.
>
> > 23. Wrestling is real.
>
> > 22. We're vegetarians.
>
> > 21. Do you think my gut is too big?
>
> > 20.  I'll have grapefruit and grapes instead of biscuits and  gravy..
>
> > 19. Honey we need another dog.
>
> > 18. We won the Civil War
>
> > 17. Give me the small bag of bagels.
>
> > 16. Too many deer heads detract from the  decor.
>
> > 15. I just couldn't find a thing at Macy's today.
>
> > 14. Trim the fat off that steak.
>
> > 13. Cappuccino tastes better than espresso.
>
> > 12. The tires on that truck are too big.
>
> > 11. I've got it all on the C: DRIVE.
>
> > 10.  Unsweetened tea tastes better.
>
> > 9. My fiancĂ©, Northrop, is  registered at Tiffany's.
>
> > 8. I've got two cases of Zima for the  Super Bowl.
>
> > 7. I love unions.
>
> > 6. She's too young to be wearing a bikini.
>
> > 5. Hey, here's an episode of "Seinfeld" that  we haven't seen.
>
> > 4. I hate the SEC teams.
>
> > 3. You Guys.
>
> > 2. Those shorts ought to be a little shorter, Carmel.
>
> > AND THE NUMBER ONE THING THAT YOU  HEAR A SOUTHERN BOY SAY:
>
> > 1. Nope, no more beer for me. I'm  driving a whole busload of us down
> > to re-elect  OBAMA
>
> > --
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Jack in the Box Creates a Bacon Milkshake - Bacon Bacon Bacon


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Re: Senate approves bill banning insider trading by lawmakers, 96-3

Painful?

On Feb 3, 1:43 pm, GregfromBoston <greg.vinc...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> A new feather for Scott Brown.

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Re: What If: Life After Iran Gets The Bomb

 Iran (through a spokeman)  stated early this morning that it will have an "announcement" here very soon.   Maybe they will change their position;  (or attack the U.S.)  so your concerns over our Nation's purported interventionist policy might be all for naught.
 


 
On Sat, Feb 4, 2012 at 9:11 AM, plainolamerican <plainolamerican@gmail.com> wrote:
If the US interventionist regime is prepared to stage military strikes
in Iran when they don't have a
bomb, what will they be willing to do if/when they do have one?

On Feb 3, 7:53 am, THE ANNOINTED ONE <markmka...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Changing just a couple of words we have>>>>>
>
> So here's a
> question to those who want military strikes on Iran: If our regime is
> prepared to stage military strikes in Iran when they don't have a
> bomb,
> what will they be willing to do if/when they do have one? ****
>
> On Feb 3, 5:42 am, Travis <baconl...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> >   ****
>
> > [As the day approaches when Iran finally gets nuclear weapons, we're going
> > to be hearing a lot of "what if" scenarios comparing Iran's present
> > behavior with its future behavior after it gets the bomb. It's not a pretty
> > picture, and day-to-day life on planet earth is bound to grow more tense
> > and less secure - in ways we can't imagine yet - if Iran isn't stopped. df]*
> > ***
>
> >  ****
>
> >  ****
>
> > WSJ editorial, 2/1/12****
>
> > *A warning on Iran*<http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000142405297020474090457719550036471...>
> > ****
>
> > Remember that bizarre story from last fall about an Iranian agent based in
> > Texas who allegedly sought to conspire with Mexican drug gangs to blow up
> > Saudi Arabia's ambassador to the U.S. in a crowded Washington, D.C.,
> > restaurant? The Justice Department insisted the story was true. Yet the
> > Administration's reaction was otherwise muted, and the press corps went out
> > of its way to cast doubt on the story. The Iranians can't be *that *crazy?**
> > **
>
> > Well, yes, they can be, at least according to President Obama's top
> > intelligence adviser. In testimony yesterday to the Senate Intelligence
> > Committee, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper warned that
> > Iran's leadership, including Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, "have changed
> > their calculus and are now more willing to conduct an attack in the United
> > States as a response to real or perceived actions that threaten the
> > regime." ****
>
> > Translation: Not only is Iran prepared to use terrorism in retaliation for
> > any military strikes against it, they're also prepared to get their
> > retaliation in first. "There is more to unfold here," he said. "They're
> > trying to penetrate and engage in this hemisphere."****
>
> > Mr. Clapper, a former Air Force general, is not given to flights of
> > exaggeration. That should give his warnings some weight, especially among
> > those who believe that, for all the aggressive rhetoric, Iranian leaders
> > conduct foreign policy in a prudent and rational way and are amenable to
> > negotiations.****
>
> > Mr. Clapper's testimony comes as Defense Secretary Leon Panetta is warning
> > that Iran is about a year away from having a nuclear bomb. So here's a
> > question to those who oppose military strikes on Iran: If the regime is
> > prepared to stage terrorist strikes in America when they don't have a bomb,
> > what will they be capable of when they do have one? ****
>
> > ###****
>
> > Dan Friedman
> > NYC****

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Re: Obama ... the myth believer

It is my personal obligation to help ease the suffering of the poor
---
the difference is that you are not pointing to abrahamic religious
doctrine for justification

On Feb 2, 5:19 pm, THE ANNOINTED ONE <markmka...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Actually Obama has the idea correct. He just has the players wrong. It
> is my personal obligation to help ease the suffering of the poor and
> infirm, as to Government... he was for complete separation of these
> ideals..."Render unto Caesar the things which are Caesar's, and unto
> God the things that are God's" unless he considers himself and the
> government to be God.
>
> On Feb 2, 5:09 pm, plainolamerican <plainolameri...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > The president told the audience that he is motivated by "the Biblical
> > call to care for the least of these — for the poor, for those at the
> > margins of our society, to answer the responsibility we're given in
> > Proverbs to 'speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves, for
> > the rights of all who are destitute.'"
>
> > He talked of the importance of "living by the principle that we are
> > our brother's keeper, caring for the poor and those in need." He
> > added, "But for me as a Christian, it also coincides with Jesus'
> > teaching that 'for unto whom much is given, much shall be required.'
> > It mirrors the Islamic belief that those who've been blessed have an
> > obligation to use those blessings to help others, or the Jewish
> > doctrine of moderation and consideration for others."
> > ---
> > Do you think the government is be 'obligated' to feed the poor,
> > provide housing and health care ... because their religious doctrine
> > says we should?
>
> > a prime example of why we must keep religion out of the government.
> > let'em fund their own charities w/o our tax dollars.

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Re: What If: Life After Iran Gets The Bomb

If the US interventionist regime is prepared to stage military strikes
in Iran when they don't have a
bomb, what will they be willing to do if/when they do have one?

On Feb 3, 7:53 am, THE ANNOINTED ONE <markmka...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Changing just a couple of words we have>>>>>
>
> So here's a
> question to those who want military strikes on Iran: If our regime is
> prepared to stage military strikes in Iran when they don't have a
> bomb,
> what will they be willing to do if/when they do have one? ****
>
> On Feb 3, 5:42 am, Travis <baconl...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> >   ****
>
> > [As the day approaches when Iran finally gets nuclear weapons, we're going
> > to be hearing a lot of "what if" scenarios comparing Iran's present
> > behavior with its future behavior after it gets the bomb. It's not a pretty
> > picture, and day-to-day life on planet earth is bound to grow more tense
> > and less secure - in ways we can't imagine yet - if Iran isn't stopped. df]*
> > ***
>
> >  ****
>
> >  ****
>
> > WSJ editorial, 2/1/12****
>
> > *A warning on Iran*<http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000142405297020474090457719550036471...>
> > ****
>
> > Remember that bizarre story from last fall about an Iranian agent based in
> > Texas who allegedly sought to conspire with Mexican drug gangs to blow up
> > Saudi Arabia's ambassador to the U.S. in a crowded Washington, D.C.,
> > restaurant? The Justice Department insisted the story was true. Yet the
> > Administration's reaction was otherwise muted, and the press corps went out
> > of its way to cast doubt on the story. The Iranians can't be *that *crazy?**
> > **
>
> > Well, yes, they can be, at least according to President Obama's top
> > intelligence adviser. In testimony yesterday to the Senate Intelligence
> > Committee, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper warned that
> > Iran's leadership, including Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, "have changed
> > their calculus and are now more willing to conduct an attack in the United
> > States as a response to real or perceived actions that threaten the
> > regime." ****
>
> > Translation: Not only is Iran prepared to use terrorism in retaliation for
> > any military strikes against it, they're also prepared to get their
> > retaliation in first. "There is more to unfold here," he said. "They're
> > trying to penetrate and engage in this hemisphere."****
>
> > Mr. Clapper, a former Air Force general, is not given to flights of
> > exaggeration. That should give his warnings some weight, especially among
> > those who believe that, for all the aggressive rhetoric, Iranian leaders
> > conduct foreign policy in a prudent and rational way and are amenable to
> > negotiations.****
>
> > Mr. Clapper's testimony comes as Defense Secretary Leon Panetta is warning
> > that Iran is about a year away from having a nuclear bomb. So here's a
> > question to those who oppose military strikes on Iran: If the regime is
> > prepared to stage terrorist strikes in America when they don't have a bomb,
> > what will they be capable of when they do have one? ****
>
> > ###****
>
> > Dan Friedman
> > NYC****

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Re: Ron Paul: Reactionary or Visionary

the days coming when smart Americans will not vote for interventionist
repubs and over-taxation dems

On Feb 3, 2:51 pm, MJ <micha...@america.net> wrote:
> Ron Paul: Reactionary or Visionaryby Patrick J. BuchananAfter his fourth-place showing in Florida, Ron Paul, by then in Nevada, told supporters he had been advised by friends that he would do better if only he dumped his foreign policy views, which have been derided as isolationism.
> Not going to do it, said Dr. Paul to cheers. And why should he?
> Observing developments in U.S. foreign and defense policy, Paul's views seem as far out in front of where America is heading as John McCain's seem to belong to yesterday's Bush-era bellicosity.
> Consider. In December, the last U.S. troops left Iraq. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta now says that all U.S. combat operations in Afghanistan will end in 18 months.
> The strategic outposts of empire are being abandoned.
> The defense budget for 2013 is $525 billion, down $6 billion from 2012. The Army is to be cut by 75,000 troops; the Marine Corps by 20,000. Where Ronald Reagan sought a 600-ship Navy, the Navy will fall from 285 ships today to 250. U.S. combat aircraft are to be reduced by six fighter squadrons and 130 transport aircraft.
> Republicans say this will reduce our ability to fight and win two land wars at once -- say, in Iran and Korea. Undeniably true.
> Why, then, is Ron Paul winning the argument?
> The hawkishness of the GOP candidates aside, the United States, facing its fourth consecutive trillion-dollar deficit, can no longer afford to sustain all its alliance commitments, some of which we made 50 years ago during a Cold War that ended two decades ago, in a world that no longer exists.
> As our situation is new, said Abraham Lincoln, we must think and act anew.
> As Paul argues, why close bases in the U.S. when we have 700 to 1,000 bases abroad? Why not bring the troops home and let them spend their paychecks here?
> Begin with South Korea. At last report, the United States had 28,000 troops on the peninsula. But why, when South Korea has twice the population of the North, an economy 40 times as large, and access to U.S. weapons, the most effective in the world, should any U.S. troops be on the DMZ? Or in South Korea?
> U.S. forces there are too few to mount an invasion of the North, as Gen. MacArthur did in the 1950s. And any such invasion might be the one thing to convince Pyongyang to fire its nuclear weapons to save the hermit kingdom.
> But if not needed to defend the South, and a U.S. invasion could risk nuclear reprisal, what are U.S. troops still doing there?
> Answer: They are on the DMZ as a tripwire to bring us, from the first day of fighting, into a new land war in Asia that many American strategists believe we should never again fight.
> Consider Central Asia. By pushing to bring Ukraine and Georgia into NATO, and building air bases in nations that were republics of the Soviet Union two decades ago, the United States generated strategic blowback.
> China and Russia, though natural rivals and antagonists, joined with four Central Asian nations in a Shanghai Cooperation Organization to expel U.S. military power from a region that is their backyard, but is half a world away from the United States.
> Solution: The United States should inform the SCO that when the Afghan war is over we will close all U.S. military bases in Central Asia. No U.S. interest there justifies a conflict with Russia or China.
> Indeed, a Russia-China clash over influence and resources in the Far East and Central Asia seems inevitable. Let us get out of the way.
> But it is in Europe that America may find the greatest savings.
> During the Cold War, 300,000 U.S. troops faced hundreds of thousands of Soviet troops from northern Norway to Central Germany to Turkey. But not only are there no Russian troops on the Elbe today, or surrounding West Berlin, they are gone from Germany, Hungary, the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Bulgaria, Romania, Moldova, Poland, Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia. Between Russia and Poland lie Belarus and Ukraine. Moscow no longer even has a border with Turkey.
> Why, when NATO Europe has two nuclear powers and more than twice the population of a Russia whose own population has shrunk by 8 million in 20 years and is scheduled to shrink by 25 million more by 2050, does Europe still need U.S. troops to defend it?
> She does not. The Europeans are freeloading, as they have been for years, preserving their welfare states, skimping on defense and letting Uncle Sam carry the hod.
> In the Panetta budgets, America will still invest more in defense than the next 10 nations combined and retain sufficient power to secure, with a surplus to spare, all her vital interests.
> But we cannot forever be first responder for scores of nations that have nothing to do with our vital interests. As Frederick the Great observed, "He who defends everything defends nothing."http://buchanan.org/blog/

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Re: Things Southern Boys Don't Say.....

you're welcome!

ya gotta love the South

On Feb 4, 7:41 am, Keith In Tampa <keithinta...@gmail.com> wrote:
> <Grin>!
>
> Some of these were pretty good!  I'd never seen these before,  thanks for
> sharing PlainOl!
>
> On Sat, Feb 4, 2012 at 8:36 AM, plainolamerican
> <plainolameri...@gmail.com>wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > TOP 31 THINGS THAT YOU WILL HEAR  NORTHERN BOYS SAY:
>
> > 31. When I retire, I'm movin' south.
>
> > 30. I have to because she's only sixteen.
>
> > 29.  I'll take Margaret Mitchell for 1000, Alex.
>
> > 28. Taxes will fix that.
>
> > 27. Come to think of it, I'll have a Heineken
>
> > 26.  We don't keep firearms in this house.
>
> > 25. You can't feed that  to the dog.
>
> > 24. No kids in the back of the pickup, it's just not safe.
>
> > 23. Wrestling is real.
>
> > 22. We're vegetarians.
>
> > 21. Do you think my gut is too big?
>
> > 20.  I'll have grapefruit and grapes instead of biscuits and  gravy..
>
> > 19. Honey we need another dog.
>
> > 18. We won the Civil War
>
> > 17. Give me the small bag of bagels.
>
> > 16. Too many deer heads detract from the  decor.
>
> > 15. I just couldn't find a thing at Macy's today.
>
> > 14. Trim the fat off that steak.
>
> > 13. Cappuccino tastes better than espresso.
>
> > 12. The tires on that truck are too big.
>
> > 11. I've got it all on the C: DRIVE.
>
> > 10.  Unsweetened tea tastes better.
>
> > 9. My fiancé, Northrop, is  registered at Tiffany's.
>
> > 8. I've got two cases of Zima for the  Super Bowl.
>
> > 7. I love unions.
>
> > 6. She's too young to be wearing a bikini.
>
> > 5. Hey, here's an episode of "Seinfeld" that  we haven't seen.
>
> > 4. I hate the SEC teams.
>
> > 3. You Guys.
>
> > 2. Those shorts ought to be a little shorter, Carmel.
>
> > AND THE NUMBER ONE THING THAT YOU  HEAR A SOUTHERN BOY SAY:
>
> > 1. Nope, no more beer for me. I'm  driving a whole busload of us down
> > to re-elect  OBAMA
>
> > --
> > Thanks for being part of "PoliticalForum" at Google Groups.
> > For options & help seehttp://groups.google.com/group/PoliticalForum
>
> > * Visit our other community athttp://www.PoliticalForum.com/
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> > * Read the latest breaking news, and more.

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Re: Ninety-Nine Years of Evil

Frank Chodorov once described the income tax as the root of all evil
---
and he would know as he was jewish

he also said that the American conservative movement came to be a
bastion of interventionist foreign policy supporters

On Feb 3, 4:29 pm, MJ <micha...@america.net> wrote:
> "Tax debates are always about "reform" -- which always means a slight shift in who pays what, with an eye to raising ever more money for the government. A far better solution would be to forget the whole thing and return to the original idea of a free society: You get to keep what you earn or inherent. That means nothing short of abolishing the great mistake of 1913. Forget the flat tax. The only just solution is no tax on incomes ever."Ninety-Nine Years of EvilByJeffrey Tucker
> Feb 3rd, 2012
> Today is the 99th anniversary of the signing of the 16th Amendment to the Constitution. It enshrined into law an idea that stands in total contradiction to the driving force behind the American Revolution and the whole idea of freedom itself.
> The great "old right" commentator Frank Chodorov once described the income tax as the root of all evil. His target was not the tax itself, but the principle behind it. Since its implementation in 1913, he wrote, "The government says to the citizen: 'Your earnings are not exclusively your own; we have a claim on them, and our claim precedes yours; we will allow you to keep some of it, because we recognize your need, not your right; but whatever we grant you for yourself is for us to decide.'"
> He really does have a point. That's evil. When Congress ratified the 16th Amendment on Feb. 3, 1913, there was a sense in which all private income in the U.S. was nationalized. What was not taxed from then on was a favor granted unto us, and continues to be so.
> This is implied in the text of the amendment itself: "The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several States, and without regard to any census or enumeration."
> Where are the limits? There weren't any. There was some discussion about putting a limit on the tax, but it seemed unnecessary. Only 1% of the income earners would end up paying about 1% to the government. Everyone else was initially untouched. Who really cares that the rich have to pay a bit more, right? They can afford it.
> This perspective totally misunderstand the true nature of government, which always wants more money and more power and will stop at nothing to get both. The 16th Amendment was more than a modern additive to an antique document. It was a new philosophy of the fiscal life of the entire country.
> Today, the ruling elite no longer bother with things like amendments. But back in those days, it was different. The amendment was made necessary because of previous court decisions that stated what was once considered a bottom-line presumption of the free society: Government cannot tax personal property. What you make is your own. You get to keep the product of your labors. Government can tax sales, perhaps, or raise money through tariffs on goods coming in and out of the country. But your bank account is off-limits.
> The amendment changed that idea. In the beginning, it applied to very few people. This was one reason it passed. It was pitched as a replacement tax, not a new money raiser. After all the havoc caused by the divisive tariffs of the 19th century, this sounded like a great deal to many people, particularly Southerners and Westerners fed up with paying such high prices for manufactured goods while seeing their trading relations with foreign consumers disrupted.
> People who supported it -- and they were not so much the left but the right-wing populists of the time -- imagined that the tax would hit the robber baron class of industrialists in the North. And that it did. Their fortunes began to dwindle, and their confidence in their ability to amass and retain intergenerational fortunes began to wane.
> We all know the stories of how the grandchildren of the Gilded Age tycoons squandered their family heritage in the 1920s and failed to carry on the tradition. Well, it is hardly surprising. The government put a timetable and limit on accumulation. Private families and individuals would no longer be permitted to exist except in subjugation to the taxing state. The kids left their private estates to live in the cities, put off marriage, stopped bothering with all that hearth and home stuff. Time horizons shortened, and the Jazz Age began.
> Class warfare was part of the deal from the beginning. The income tax turned the social fabric of the country into a giant lifetime boat, with everyone arguing about who had to be thrown overboard so that others might live.
> The demon in the beginning was the rich. That remained true until the 1930s, when FDR changed the deal. Suddenly, the income would be collected, but taxed in a different way. It would be taken from everyone, but a portion would be given back late in life as a permanent income stream. Thus was the payroll tax born. This tax today is far more significant than the income tax.
> The class warfare unleashed 99 years ago continues today. One side wants to tax the rich. The other side finds it appalling that the percentage of people who pay no income tax has risen from 30% to nearly 50% in this period of economic downturn. Now we see the appalling spectacle of Republicans regarding this as a disgrace that must change. They have joined the political classes that seek advancement by hurting people.
> It's extremely strange that the payroll tax is rarely considered in this debate. The poor, the middle class and the rich are all being hammered by payroll taxes that fund failed programs that provide no security and few benefits at all.
> It's impossible to take seriously the claims that the income tax doesn't harm wealth creation. When Congress wants to discourage something -- smoking, imports, selling stocks or whatever -- they know what to do: Tax it. Tax income, and on the margin, you discourage people from earning it.
> Tax debates are always about "reform" -- which always means a slight shift in who pays what, with an eye to raising ever more money for the government. A far better solution would be to forget the whole thing and return to the original idea of a free society: You get to keep what you earn or inherent. That means nothing short of abolishing the great mistake of 1913. Forget the flat tax. The only just solution is no tax on incomes ever.
> But let's say that one day we actually become safe from the income tax collectors and something like blessed peace arrives. There is still another problem that emerged in 1913. Congress created the Federal Reserve, which eventually developed the power to create -- on its own -- all the money that government would ever need, even without taxing.
> For the practical running of the affairs of the state, the Fed is far worse than the income tax. It creates the more-insidious tax of inflation. In a strange way, it has made all the debates about taxation superfluous. Denying the government revenue does nothing to curb its appetites for our liberties and property. The Fed has managed to make it impossible to starve the beast.
> Chodorov was correct about the evil of the income tax. Its passage signaled the beginning of a century of despotism. Our property is no longer safe. Our income is not our own. We are legally obligated to turn over whatever our masters say we owe them. You can fudge this point: None of this is compatible with the old liberal idea of freedom.
> You doubt it? Listen to Thomas Jefferson from his inaugural address of 1801. What he said then remains true today:"…what more is necessary to make us a happy and a prosperous people? Still one more thing, fellow citizens a wise and frugal government, which shall restrain men from injuring one another, shall leave them otherwise free to regulate their own pursuits of industry and improvement and shall not take from the mouth of labor the bread it has earned."Regards,
> Jeffrey Tuckerhttp://whiskeyandgunpowder.com/ninety-nine-years-of-evil/

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Re: Things Southern Boys Don't Say.....

<Grin>!
 
Some of these were pretty good!  I'd never seen these before,  thanks for sharing PlainOl!
 


 
On Sat, Feb 4, 2012 at 8:36 AM, plainolamerican <plainolamerican@gmail.com> wrote:
TOP 31 THINGS THAT YOU WILL HEAR  NORTHERN BOYS SAY:

31. When I retire, I'm movin' south.

30. I have to because she's only sixteen.

29.  I'll take Margaret Mitchell for 1000, Alex.

28. Taxes will fix that.

27. Come to think of it, I'll have a Heineken

26.  We don't keep firearms in this house.

25. You can't feed that  to the dog.

24. No kids in the back of the pickup, it's just not safe.

23. Wrestling is real.

22. We're vegetarians.

21. Do you think my gut is too big?

20.  I'll have grapefruit and grapes instead of biscuits and  gravy..

19. Honey we need another dog.

18. We won the Civil War

17. Give me the small bag of bagels.

16. Too many deer heads detract from the  decor.

15. I just couldn't find a thing at Macy's today.

14. Trim the fat off that steak.

13. Cappuccino tastes better than espresso.

12. The tires on that truck are too big.

11. I've got it all on the C: DRIVE.

10.  Unsweetened tea tastes better.

9. My fiancĂ©, Northrop, is  registered at Tiffany's.

8. I've got two cases of Zima for the  Super Bowl.

7. I love unions.

6. She's too young to be wearing a bikini.

5. Hey, here's an episode of "Seinfeld" that  we haven't seen.

4. I hate the SEC teams.

3. You Guys.

2. Those shorts ought to be a little shorter, Carmel.

AND THE NUMBER ONE THING THAT YOU  HEAR A SOUTHERN BOY SAY:

1. Nope, no more beer for me. I'm  driving a whole busload of us down
to re-elect  OBAMA

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Re: Things Southern Boys Don't Say.....

TOP 31 THINGS THAT YOU WILL HEAR NORTHERN BOYS SAY:

31. When I retire, I'm movin' south.

30. I have to because she's only sixteen.

29. I'll take Margaret Mitchell for 1000, Alex.

28. Taxes will fix that.

27. Come to think of it, I'll have a Heineken

26. We don't keep firearms in this house.

25. You can't feed that to the dog.

24. No kids in the back of the pickup, it's just not safe.

23. Wrestling is real.

22. We're vegetarians.

21. Do you think my gut is too big?

20. I'll have grapefruit and grapes instead of biscuits and gravy..

19. Honey we need another dog.

18. We won the Civil War

17. Give me the small bag of bagels.

16. Too many deer heads detract from the decor.

15. I just couldn't find a thing at Macy's today.

14. Trim the fat off that steak.

13. Cappuccino tastes better than espresso.

12. The tires on that truck are too big.

11. I've got it all on the C: DRIVE.

10. Unsweetened tea tastes better.

9. My fiancé, Northrop, is registered at Tiffany's.

8. I've got two cases of Zima for the Super Bowl.

7. I love unions.

6. She's too young to be wearing a bikini.

5. Hey, here's an episode of "Seinfeld" that we haven't seen.

4. I hate the SEC teams.

3. You Guys.

2. Those shorts ought to be a little shorter, Carmel.

AND THE NUMBER ONE THING THAT YOU HEAR A SOUTHERN BOY SAY:

1. Nope, no more beer for me. I'm driving a whole busload of us down
to re-elect OBAMA

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Things Southern Boys Don't Say.....



Hell, yea !!!



 


 Things southern boys don't say.....



 TOP 31 THINGS THAT YOU WILL

NEVER HEAR  SOUTHERN BOYS SAY:

31. When I retire, I'm movin'  north.

30. Oh I just couldn't, she's only sixteen.

29.  I'll take Shakespeare for 1000, Alex.

28. Duct tape won't fix  that.

27. Come to think of it, I'll have a Heineken

26.  We don't keep firearms in this house.

25. You can't feed that  to the dog.

24. No kids in the back of the pickup, it's just  not safe.

23. Wrestling is fake.

22. We're  vegetarians.

21. Do you think my gut is too big?

20.  I'll have grapefruit and grapes instead of biscuits and  gravy..

19. Honey, we don't need another dog.

18. Who  gives a damn who won the Civil War?

17. Give me the small bag  of pork rinds.

16. Too many deer heads detract from the  decor.

15. I just couldn't find a thing at Wal-Mart  today.

14. Trim the fat off that steak.

13. Cappuccino  tastes better than espresso.

12. The tires on that truck are  too big.

11. I've got it all on the C: DRIVE.

10.  Unsweetened tea tastes better.

9. My fiancĂ©, Bobbie Jo, is  registered at Tiffany's.

8. I've got two cases of Zima for the  Super Bowl.

7. Checkmate

6. She's too young to be  wearing a bikini.

5. Hey, here's an episode of "Hee Haw" that  we haven't seen.

4. I don't have a favorite college  team.

3. You Guys.

2. Those shorts ought to be a little  longer, Betty Mae.

AND THE NUMBER ONE THING THAT YOU WILL NEVER  HEAR A SOUTHERN BOY SAY:

1. Nope, no more beer for me. I'm  driving a whole busload of us down
to re-elect  OBAMA



------ End of Forwarded Message

 

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Re: Concerns grow over volcanic eruptions

Etna just woke up

On Feb 3, 6:58 pm, Travis <baconl...@gmail.com> wrote:
>  Concerns grow over volcanic eruptions****
>
> By Elizabeth Weise, USA TODAY****
>
> http://www.usatoday.com/tech/science/environment/story/2012-02-01/dea...
> ****
>
> Published: 2/1/2012 7:52:20 PM****
>
> Scientists have known for decades that hidden under those impressive vistas
> at sites such as Death
> Valley<http://content.usatoday.com/topics/topic/Death+Valley>and
> Yellowstone
> National Park<http://content.usatoday.com/topics/topic/Places,+Geography/Parks/Yell...>are
> magma pools that under the right conditions can trigger explosive
> eruptions.****
>
> Now, new research is changing scientists' understanding of the timing of
> those eruptions, and prompting them to call for greater monitoring of sites
> to help save lives when the next big volcano explodes.****
>
> Two recent papers highlight the shift. One looked at a Death Valley volcano
> thought to be 10,000 years old and found it last erupted just 800 years
> ago, and is still an eruption danger. The other found that large caldera
> volcanoes, such as the one under Crater Lake in Oregon, can recharge in a
> matter of decades, rather than the thousands of years previously thought.***
> *
>
> "The understanding of the timing of eruptions and the timing of the
> building up to eruptions is changing," says Margaret Mangan, the scientist
> in charge of volcano monitoring in California for the U.S. Geological
> Survey<http://content.usatoday.com/topics/topic/U.S.+Geological+Survey>.
> "These two papers are very nice examples of good scientific work."****
>
> One thing that's coming to light is that eruptions are often clustered,
> with "long stretches of inactivity punctuated by periods of activity that
> can go on for years," Mangan says.****
>
> The first paper looked at the Ubehebe Crater (you-bee-HE-bee) at the
> northern end of California's Death Valley. It's about half a mile wide and
> 700 feet deep. It was long believed to have been caused by a volcanic
> eruption sometime in the past 10,000 years or so.****
>
> However, researchers recently looked at beryllium in the rocks and were
> able to date the last series of eruptions to just 800 years ago. They say
> the ingredients necessary for another eruption are all still there.****
>
> Ubehebe Crater is the result of what's known as a phreatomagmatic
> (free-at-oh-mag-MAT-ick) eruption. That means that it has a huge pocket of
> molten rock, or magma, deep below it. When it begins to push to the surface
> and comes into contact with water, superhot steam is created, building up
> pressure until it explodes.****
>
> It had been thought that the eruptions would occur only during wet climate
> periods, and as Death Valley is famously dry now, there was little concern.
> But using U.S. Geological Survey data, the scientists show that the current
> water table may be just 500 feet below the surface of the crater. The paper
> was published this month in the journal *Geophysical Research
> Letters<http://content.usatoday.com/topics/topic/Geophysical+Research+Letters>
> *.****
>
> The relatively recent eruption means that the magma underground, which can
> take thousands of years to cool, is likely still hot. When water and hot
> magma come into contact, it can produce something "like a very large bomb
> going off," says Brent Goehring, a geochemist at the department of Earth
> and Atmospheric Sciences at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Ind., and
> one of the paper's authors.****
>
> Another worry is that caldera volcanoes, such as Mount Pinatubo in the
> Philippines and Krakatoa in Indonesia, may be able to blow much more
> quickly than previously believed.****
>
> Caldera volcanoes consist of large underground lakes of magma. As more
> magma builds up, the pressure builds and the magma starts getting pushed
> upward through cracks in the Earth's surface. When the pressure gets too
> great, it explodes.****
>
> Caldera volcanoes typically have a long quiet period prior to eruptions.
> Writing in Wednesday's edition of the journal *Nature*, researchers looked
> at the eruption of the Santorini volcano in Greece around 1,600 B.C., which
> released as much as 12 cubic miles of magma.****
>
> By analyzing feldspar crystals formed within the magma and then ejected
> during the eruption, the researchers found that the volcano's magma chamber
> grew by as much as 10% in the final few decades before it blew, says Tim
> Druitt, a volcanologist at Blaise Pascal University, Clermont-Ferrand,
> France, and senior author on the paper. ****
>
> For this reason, scientists are calling for greater monitoring, including
> satellite surveillance, to detect ground swelling.****
>
> There are several large and still active calderas in the United
> States<http://content.usatoday.com/topics/topic/Places,+Geography/Countries/...>,
> including the one under Yellowstone National Park. All are closely
> monitored. What worries the researchers are other unmonitored calderas
> around the world with the potential to send huge clouds of ash into the
> atmosphere, causing massive ecological and climate damage.****

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