Showing posts with label Threat. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Threat. Show all posts

Saturday, April 5, 2014

Afghans Defy Taliban Threat To Vote In Droves


But for some progress, particularly with women’s rights, the country’s situation is inauspicious, especially with its poor security and battered economy. Yet despite spiraling carnage and grave disappointments, Afghans by the millions crowded mosque courtyards and lined up at schools to vote, telling a war-weary world they want their voices heard.


Nazia Azizi, a 40-year-old housewife, was first in line at a school in eastern Kabul. “I have suffered so much from the fighting and I want prosperity and security in Afghanistan. That is why I have come here to cast my vote,” she said. “I hope that the votes that we are casting will be counted and that there will be no fraud in this election.”


Partial results could come as early as Sunday, but final results were not expected for a week or more.


International combat troops are supposed to depart by the end of the year, leaving Afghan security forces – not completely battle-tested and plagued with insurgents even among their ranks – to fight alone against what is likely to be an intensified campaign by the Taliban to regain power.


A security agreement with the United States would allow thousands of foreign troops to remain in the country to continue training security forces after 2014. Karzai – perhaps trying to shake off his image as a creation of the Americans – has refused to sign it, but all eight presidential candidates say they will.


In general, there do not appear to be major policy differences toward the West among the front-runners: Abdullah Abdullah, Karzai’s top rival in the last election; Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai, an academic and former World Bank official; and Zalmai Rassoul, a former foreign minister. A runoff is widely expected since none is likely to get the majority needed for an outright victory.


All eight also preach against fraud and corruption and vow to improve security, while they do differ on other issues such as the country’s border dispute with Pakistan.


The runup to the election was troubling: the Islamic radicals of the Taliban, reviled by many but still popular in some areas, view the entire enterprise as the work of outsiders and infidels, and they vowed to disrupt it by targeting polling centers and election workers.


To drive home the threat, insurgents in recent weeks stepped up shootings and bombings in the heart of Kabul to show they are capable of striking even in highly secured areas. A restaurant popular with foreigners and one of the capital’s main hotels were hit, killing many. Suicide bombers struck relentlessly.


On Friday, veteran Associated Press photographer Anja Niedringhaus was killed and AP reporter Kathy Gannon was wounded when a local policeman opened fire as they sat in their car on the outskirts of Khost, in eastern Afghanistan. The two were at a security forces base, waiting to move in a convoy of election workers delivering ballots – apparent victims of an “insider attack” in which the very people tasked with protection turn out to be insurgents.


On Saturday, the excitement over choosing a new leader appeared to overwhelm the fear of bloodshed in many areas.


Karzai cast his ballot at a high school near the presidential palace.


“Today for us, the people of Afghanistan, is a very vital day that will determine our national future,” he said, his finger stained with the indelible ink being used to prevent people from voting twice.


Karzai has been heavily criticized for failing to end the endemic poverty or clean up the government in a country that Transparency International last year ranked among the three most corrupt in the world, alongside Somalia and North Korea.


And the country is so unstable that the very fact that elections are being held is touted as a success. The Taliban retain significant support, particularly among ethnic Pashtuns and Afghans in the southern provinces where the movement originated. The Asia Foundation, a nonprofit international development organization, found last year that a third of Afghans, mostly Pashtuns and people living in rural areas, had sympathy for the Taliban and other armed opposition groups – despite U.N. findings that Taliban attacks are responsible for the most civilian casualties.


On Saturday, dozens of planned polling centers did not open because of rocket and gunfire attacks. A bomb exploded in a school packed with voters in the Mohammad Agha district of Logar province, wounding two men, one seriously, said local government spokesman Din Mohammad Darwesh.


Afghan Interior Minister Mohammad Umar Daudzai said 20 people – 16 Afghan security forces and four civilians – were killed in 140 attacks or attempted attacks over 24 hours. But the feared a wide-scale disruption did not materialize.


The turnout was so high that some polling centers ran out of ballots, one of the main points of criticism to emerge from an otherwise relatively smooth process. They also extended voting by an hour, to 5 p.m. local time (1230 GMT) to accommodate those still in line.


Independent Election Commission chairman Ahmad Yousuf Nouristani said estimates showed more than 7 million ballots were cast, although he cautioned that was based on preliminary information. He said that in all, 6,218 polling centers opened.


It was a stark difference from the last presidential elections in 2009. Widespread allegations of fraud marred the vote and led to a third of the ballots for Karzai being disqualified, depriving him of the majority needed to avoid a runoff. His nearest rival, Abdullah Abdullah, quit before a second round could be held, saying he did not believe it would be fair either.


“We slapped the face of Afghanistan’s enemy, which claims Afghanistan is not ready for democracy. We proved that we are accepting democracy as a process,” said Shukria Barekzai, one of nearly 70 female lawmakers in the 249-seat parliament. “Today were the real elections, because nobody knows who will be the next president.”


Karzai, the only president the country has known since the Islamic movement was ousted, is constitutionally barred from a third term.


Martine van Bijlert, co-director of an independent research group called Afghanistan Analysts Network, noted the elections come as the country braces for the withdrawal of international combat troops.


“They come at a time when Afghanistan is in a transition,” she said. “There is this sense of uncertainty what is the future going to bring.”


In addition to the presidential ballot, voters selected provincial council members.


Men in traditional tunics and loose trousers and women clad in all-encompassing burqas waited in segregated lines at polls under tight security. At a Kandahar hospital-turned-polling station, the men’s line stretched from the building, through the courtyard and out into the street. In Helmand province, women pushed, shoved and argued as they pressed forward in a long line.


“I went to sleep with my mind made up to wake up early and to have my say in the matter of deciding who should be next one to govern my nation,” said Saeed Mohammad, a 29-year-old mechanic in the southern city of Kandahar. “I want to be a part of this revolution and I want to fulfill my duty by casting my vote so that we can bring change and show the world that we love democracy.”


Women also turned out in heavy numbers.


Hundreds of thousands of Afghan police and soldiers fanned out across the country, searching cars at checkpoints and blocking vehicles from getting close to polling stations and all voters were searched before being allowed to enter the polling stations. Once in, they showed their ID cards, dipped a finger in indelible ink, then went behind a makeshift cardboard booth and made their choices for who should lead the country into an uncertain future.



Associated Press writers Amir Shah in Kabul and Mirwais Khan in Kandahar, Afghanistan, contributed to this report.




All TPM News



Afghans Defy Taliban Threat To Vote In Droves

Sunday, March 30, 2014

North Korea"s latest threat: "new kind of nuclear test"




SEOUL, South Korea — North Korea threatened on Sunday to conduct what it called “a new form of nuclear test,” raising the level of rhetoric after members of the United Nations Security Council condemned the North’s recent ballistic missile launch.


“It is absolutely intolerable that the UN Security Council, turning a blind eye to the US madcap nuclear war exercises, ‘denounced’ the Korean People’s Army (KPA)’s self-defensive rocket launching drills and called them a ‘violation of resolutions’ and a ‘threat to international peace and security’ and is set to take an ‘appropriate step’,” the North’s foreign ministry said in a statement on the official KCNA news agency.


The statement said KPA drills to counter the US will involve “more diversified nuclear deterrence” that will be used for hitting medium- and long-range targets “with a variety of striking power.”


“We would not rule out a new form of nuclear test for bolstering up our nuclear deterrence,” the North’s statement said, without giving any indication of what that might entail.


After Pyongyang fired two medium-range Rodong ballistic missiles into the sea off the east coast of the Korean peninsula on Wednesday, the 15-member Security Council on Thursday condemned the launches violating UN resolutions.


North Korea’s first firing in four years of mid-range missiles that can reach Japan followed a series of short-range rocket launches over the past two months.


In defiance of UN resolutions, North Korea conducted its third nuclear test in February 2013 and declared it had made progress in securing a functioning atomic arsenal.


It is widely believed the North does not have the capacity to deliver a nuclear strike on the mainland United States.


(Reporting by Narae Kim; Editing by Richard Borsuk)


http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/asia-pacific/north-korea/140330/new-nuclear-test




GlobalPost – Home



North Korea"s latest threat: "new kind of nuclear test"

Thursday, February 13, 2014

We Did Not ‘Lose’ Iraq But it is America’s job to help Baghdad beat back the new threat from al Qaeda


James Jeffrey
foreignpolicy.com
February 10, 2014


Editor’s note: It’s not called forever war for nothing.


Iraq has made an unwelcome return to the American public consciousness. In late December, the al Qaeda-linked Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS) seized considerable territory in the predominantly Sunni Anbar province. Its gains included neighborhoods in the city of Fallujah, the site of an epic U.S. battle against al Qaeda in 2004, rekindling American fears that its old enemies have gained the upper hand in a region where the United States sacrificed so much blood and treasure.


President Barack Obama’s administration is doing the right thing by increasing intelligence and operational cooperation with the Iraqi government, sending weapons to the Iraqi army, and moving forward on attack helicopter transfers. At the same time, the administration is correctly pushing Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki to govern more inclusively, as his marginalization of the Sunni Arab minority has contributed to al Qaeda’s appeal among the community.


But despite Maliki’s flaws, the United States should wholeheartedly work with him in combating the jihadist threat. He is, after all, the elected leader of a critically important country, and the aid we are providing serves the vast majority of the Iraqi people in a desperate fight against a merciless enemy. It is obviously a core U.S. national interest to block al Qaeda from establishing yet another base in an ungoverned territory. This is particularly true in the case of Iraq, which if stable can provide oil exports of 6 million barrels a day by 2020 — an output that would have a hugely positive impact on the global economy. Moreover, given the American sacrifice there, failure to help defend Iraq against a sworn enemy would further undercut U.S. credibility in the Middle East.


Read more


This article was posted: Tuesday, February 11, 2014 at 1:49 pm









Infowars



We Did Not ‘Lose’ Iraq But it is America’s job to help Baghdad beat back the new threat from al Qaeda

Monday, February 10, 2014

Senator Sessions Slams Lowered Asylum Standards as National Security Threat

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Senator Sessions Slams Lowered Asylum Standards as National Security Threat

Thursday, January 23, 2014

CrowdStrike Global Threat Report: 2013 Year In Review

At Not Just The News, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by Not Just The News and how it is used.


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Like many other Web sites, Not Just The News makes use of log files. The information inside the log files includes internet protocol (IP) addresses, type of browser, Internet Service Provider (ISP), date/time stamp, referring/exit pages, and number of clicks to analyze trends, administer the site, track user"s movement around the site, and gather demographic information. IP addresses, and other such information are not linked to any information that is personally identifiable.


Cookies and Web Beacons


Not Just The News does use cookies to store information about visitors preferences, record user-specific information on which pages the user access or visit, customize Web page content based on visitors browser type or other information that the visitor sends via their browser.


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These third-party ad servers or ad networks use technology to the advertisements and links that appear on Not Just The News send directly to your browsers. They automatically receive your IP address when this occurs. Other technologies ( such as cookies, JavaScript, or Web Beacons ) may also be used by the third-party ad networks to measure the effectiveness of their advertisements and / or to personalize the advertising content that you see.


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CrowdStrike Global Threat Report: 2013 Year In Review

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

US greatest threat to peace: Poll

US greatest threat to peace: Poll
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The United States is considered the greatest threat to peace in the world, says WIN/Gallup International’s annual survey.




The United States has topped the list in an international opinion poll as the greatest threat to the world peace.



According to a worldwide opinion poll conducted by Win/Gallup International, twenty four percent of people worldwide said the US is the biggest threat to the world.


The poll, which collected opinions from about 68,000 people in 65 countries, recorded some of the strongest anti-American sentiment in countries widely regarded as US rivals.


54 percent of respondents in Russia said the US is the greatest threat to peace and 49 percent of Chinese held the same view.


In Latin America, the US topped the list for a significant number of respondents in Mexico (37 percent), Brazil (26 percent) and Peru (24 percent).


Amongst US allied countries, Greece and Turkey (45 percent each), Pakistan (44 percent) and Mexico (about 37 percent) believed the US is the greatest threat to peace.


Even in the US, Americans consider their country to be the most dangerous to the world peace, the poll found.


Opinion pollster Win/Gallup International has been asking the question from people around the world since 1977.


AT/HJ




PRESS TV RSS News




Read more about US greatest threat to peace: Poll and other interesting subjects concerning U.S. News Report at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Midwest under high storm threat; tornado hits Ill.



CHICAGO (AP) — Intense thunderstorms and tornados swept across a number of Midwestern states Sunday, and officials were raising the alarm to warn people — including fans heading to some NFL games — might be caught off guard by such severe weather at this time of year.


The National Weather Service confirmed tornados have touched down in several Illinois communities by early afternoon. Meanwhile in Chicago, fans at Soldier Field watching the Chicago Bears host the Baltimore Ravens were cleared from the stands and players and coaches left the field around 12:30 p.m. as wind and rain moved in.


“Our primary message is this is a dangerous weathers system that has the potential to be extremely deadly and destructive,” said Laura Furgione, deputy director of the National Weather Service National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. “Get ready now.”


Weather service officials confirmed that a tornado touched down just before 11 a.m. near the central Illinois community of East Peoria, but authorities did not immediately have damage or injury reports. Weather officials said it was moving northeast about 60 mph; East Peoria is about 150 miles southwest of Chicago.


“This is a very dangerous situation,” said Russell Schneider, director of the weather service’s Storm Prediction Center. “Approximately 53 million in 10 states are at significant risk for thunderstorms and tornados.”


Schneider noted that the storms are moving at 60 mph, which he said will not give people enough time to seek shelter if they’re relying on watching the sky alone.


The potential severity of the storm this late in the season also carries the risk of surprise.


“People can fall into complacency because they don’t see severe weather and tornados, but we do stress that they should keep a vigilant eye on the weather and have a means to hear a tornado warning because things can change very quickly,” said Matt Friedlein, a weather service meteorologist.


According to agency officials, parts of Illinois, Indiana, southern Michigan and western Ohio are at the greatest risk of seeing tornadoes, large hail and damaging winds throughout the day Sunday. Strong winds and atmospheric instability were expected to sweep across the central Plains during the day before pushing into the mid-Atlantic states and northeast by evening. Many of the storms were expected to become supercells, with the potential to produce tornadoes, large hail and destructive winds.


In Chicago, the Office of Emergency Management and Communications issued a warning to fans attending making their way to Soldier Field to watch the Bears-Ravens game. It urged fans “to take extra precautions and … appropriate measures to ensure their personal safety.”


And in McHenry County, northwest of Chicago, funnel clouds were spotted late Sunday morning, dropping out of the clouds and then retreating again, said Bob Ellsworth, the assistant director of the county’s emergency management agency. Ellsworth added that none had touched the ground or caused any damage.


Around the same time, the weather service issued a tornado warning for parts of Kenosha, Racine and Walworth counties in Wisconsin.


Friedlein said that such strong storms are rare this late in the year because there usually isn’t enough heat from the sun to sustain the thunderstorms. But he said temperatures Sunday are expected to reach into the 60s and 70s, which he said is warm enough to help produce severe weather when it is coupled with winds, which are typically stronger this time of year than in the summer.


“You don’t need temperatures in the 80s and 90s to produce severe weather (because) the strong winds compensate for the lack of heating,” he said. “That sets the stage for what we call wind shear, which may produce tornadoes.”


He also said that the tornadoes this time a year happen more often than people might realize, pointing to a twister that hit the Rockford, Ill., area in November 2010.


Friedlein said that the storm will move across northern Illinois from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., meaning Chicago could see the brunt of it about the time the Bears-Ravens gets underway.


NFL games in Cincinnati and Pittsburgh also could be affected by the rough weather.


___


Associated Press writer Sophia Tareen in Chicago contributed to this report.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



Midwest under high storm threat; tornado hits Ill.

Monday, October 28, 2013

Why the Threat of Recession Keeps Nobel Prize-Winning Economist Up At Night

Why the Threat of Recession Keeps Nobel Prize-Winning Economist Up At Night
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American economist Robert Shiller may be a winner of the 2013 Nobel Prize in economic sciences for his research into market prices and asset bubbles, but when The Daily Ticker caught up with him, he wasn’t particularly concerned about current market prices or asset bubbles.


So what keeps the Yale professor and S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index co-founder up at night?


“The world economy is softening a bit,” he tells us in the accompanying interview. “There’s always a chance of another recession. It’s been six years since the last recession started – they tend to come along with some regularity. Congress is now unable to get things done, and so we won’t have a good response if there’s another recession.”


Related: Future of the Housing Market Is ‘A Great Unknown’: Robert Shiller


Daily Ticker guest Jim Rickards told us earlier this month he expects a recession next year because the recovery is already four-years-old and from a business cycle perspective, we are almost at the end of a normal cyclical recovery. He also factored in economic drags like the sequester, government shutdown and the low labor force participation.


Related: Rickards on Fed & Yellen: Here Comes the ‘Helicopter Money’


Check out the video to find out Shiller’s favorite indicator to watch in order to know when a recession is coming.


Tell Us What You Think!


Send an email to: thedailyticker@yahoo.com.


You can also look us up on Twitter and Facebook.


More from The Daily Ticker


Flyer Beware: Southwest Bag Fees Coming Next Year?


Al Gore’s Wrong: Renewable Fuels Are Not Replacing Oil & Natural Gas, Says Oil Expert


Dilbert’s Creator is Proof That Failure Can Lead to Success




Yahoo Finance: The Daily Ticker




Read more about Why the Threat of Recession Keeps Nobel Prize-Winning Economist Up At Night and other interesting subjects concerning Commentary at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Monday, October 21, 2013

The Looming Threat of Hyperinflation Approaches – Diversify Now

James Rawles of Survival Blog is someone that I have long trusted and admired. He has been a stable voice in the wilderness as the US rockets towards an impending financial catastrophe brought on by Progressive Marxists on both sides of the political aisle. He is famous for telling people to ‘hold’ and not run for cover – until now. America had better listen… a modern day Cassandra is telling you: The Time Has Come To Fully Diversify: Retreating From Banks And From The Dollar Itself.


This has been a long time coming. Our debt now is sooo massive, there is no way to avoid hyperinflation. Once interest rates inevitably rise, the deal is done. In an effort to share Rawles’ sage advice, I am cross-posting here what he shared this morning:



The recent political crisis over the delayed raising of the U.S. debt ceiling was just a precursor of a much larger crisis that will occur when interest rates inevitably rise. Once they do rise, it will become impossible for the Federal government to service its debt without massive monetization and concomitant mass inflation. There may also be some draconian stopgap measures such as levies on bank accounts (a.k.a. “bail ins”), nationalization of private pension funds, nationalization or forced common stock purchases for IRA and 401(k) plans, currency controls, bank holidays, bank withdrawal limits, currency recalls, limited access to safe deposit boxes, IRA and 401(k) withdrawals limits, and perhaps even another ban on privately held gold bullion.


For the past seven years I have urged my readers to diversify their investments out of U.S. Dollars and into tangibles. I am now repeating that with an even greater sense of urgency. It is high time to deliberately draw down you bank accounts and stop rolling over your CDs. I now urge my readers to gradually withdraw as much cash as you can, leaving only as much in your checking accounts as you need to pay your monthly expenses and to make your tax payments.


Beware of CTRs


If you have more than $ 10,000 in your account and you attempt withdraw it all at once, then by law your bank teller will fill out a Currency Transaction Report (CTR). These reports are available to the IRS and other government agencies. To avoid this, you need to gradually withdraw your cash, in unequal amounts, over a period of weeks or months. If you have a lot of cash to move, then one viable approach is to write checks to open bank accounts in other banking institutions, and then deliberately draw down those new accounts with numerous small cash withdrawals.(Less than $ 7,000 each.) According to Wikipedia, CTRs include “an optional checkbox at the top if the bank employee believes the transaction to be suspicious or fraudulent, commonly called a SAR, or Suspicious Activity Report.” If your bankers suspects that you are “structuring” withdrawals, then they will feel obliged to file a SAR.


What to do with the cash you withdraw:


1.) Get your beans, bullets and Band-Aids squared away. This should be your highest priority. Don’t consider “investing” in anything else until you get your key preparations established.


2.) Keep some greenback cash “mattress money” in small bills. If possible, keep enough cash for a couple of months worth of expenses. Again, keep it very well hidden at home, or bury it in waterproof containers.


3.) Only after accomplishing Steps 1 and 2, buy some physical silver. In the U.S., pre-1965 dimes, and quarters are the best choice. Keep your silver very well hidden at home, or bury it in waterproof containers. Make sure that you let a couple of trusted relatives know exactly where it is hidden, in case you might come to harm.


4.) Invest in some common caliber ammunition. Here is your shopping list, in a nutshell: Rifle: .30-06, .308 Win., 5.56 NATO, 5.45×39, 7.62×39, .30-30, and .22 LR. Pistol: .45 ACP, 9mm, .40 S&W., .357. 38 Special. Shotgun: 12 Gauge, 2-3/4″ length. (Buy a good mix of buckshot, slug and birdshot shotshells, with an emphasis on buckshot.)


5.) Invest in some good quality battle rifles, handguns, and full capacity magazines.


6.) Buy productive farm or ranch land (with good pasture and hay ground) that is in a viable retreat region.


7.) Invest in your education. That is the ultimate form of portable wealth. A second stream of income may become important in the coming years, so getting an education in a practical trade would be wise.


8.) If you have substantial liquid wealth (more than $ 500,000), then start shuttling some of it offshore. But because of the coming currency fluctuations, I recommend that the majority of that be stored offshore in physical precious metals. If you don’t already have a deeply trusted relationship with a family in your offshore host country (you should!), then you will have to trust a bank deposit box in your offshore host country.


9.) Buy a few books of “Forever” postage stamps. These may become useful for barter, as they will hold their value against inflation better than cash.


10.) Invest in a depression-proof business that is portable. (See the blog article links in my reply to these letters.)


11.) Build your personal reference library.


12.) If you are elderly, then invest in preparedness for your children and grandchildren. In the depths of the Second Great Depression, you won’t be able to count on the government to help you. But you can count on your close relatives.


What NOT to do with the cash you withdraw:


1.) Unless you are a multimillionaire, don’t buy large quantities of gold or gemstones. Not only is gold too compact a form of wealth for practical barter, but it is also far more likely to be confiscated than silver.


2.) Don’t build up your Bitcoin wallet balance above 15 BTC. Because Bitcoins are a synthetic currency and Internet-based, they are subject the whims of larcenous politicians. Bitcoin transactions can be tracked, because nearly every Bitcoin transaction has a corresponding e-mail trail. (And anyone who thinks that their e-mails are all “safely encrypted” is fooling themselves.)


3.) Don’t buy urban or suburban real estate.


4.) Don’t buy a second home in a “resort” area. As I’ve mentioned before in SurvivalBlog, resort areas will be targeted by looters in times of social chaos.


5.) Don’t invest in fine art, vintage wines, rare postage stamps, classic cars, or collectibles. Those will sell for just pennies on the dollar in the Depression. (If you want any of those, then wait for the opportunity to “buy low.”)


6.) Other than some home security webcams, a starlight scope, and a Dakota Alert passive IR intrusion detection system, don’t waste your money on electronic gadgets.


7.) Don’t invest in foreign currencies. There are no more “safe” currencies!


8.) Don’t invest in foreign stocks. Tangibles will trump, worldwide.


9.) Don’t over-prepare or over-invest in one area, at the expense of others. (For example, buying all guns and no storage food, or vice versa.) Balanced preparedness is the key!


Bottom line: The time for hesitation has passed. If you leave your liquid assets in a bank or in a savings and loan, then you are now a sitting duck.


- JWR



You can call me a survivalist, you can call me a nut… I’ll take Jim’s advice any day, any where, any time. The looming threat of hyperinflation approaches; you better diversify now just in case. Better safe than sorry or dead.



Trevor Loudon’s New Zeal Blog


Commentary from Experts around the web…



The Looming Threat of Hyperinflation Approaches – Diversify Now

Sunday, October 20, 2013

Authorities probe threat against Cruz

Authorities probe threat against Cruz
http://isbigbrotherwatchingyou.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/b66cf__nsa_spying__printer_famfamfam.gif


Alexander Bolton 
The Hill
October 20, 2013


Law enforcement officials are investigating a threat against Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), who was vaulted into national prominence with his push to defund ObamaCare.


A person identifying himself as Troy Gilmore Jr., posted on Twitter Friday morning: “Take down Ted Cruz, at his home” and listed Cruz’s home address in Houston.


“What goes around comes around CRUZ!!” the person wrote.


The author of the threat uses the Twitter handle @ArmyVet54 and identifies himself as having served in the U.S. Army and Navy.


Full article here


This article was posted: Sunday, October 20, 2013 at 7:38 am









Prison Planet.com




Read more about Authorities probe threat against Cruz and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Thursday, October 17, 2013

U.S. Congress ends default threat, Obama signs debt bill



U.S. Congress ends default threat, Obama signs debt bill

Sunday, October 13, 2013

The Threat We Face-The most important battle in the world today is not being waged in the Middle East but here at home in the United States.


“The president, his chief operative Valerie Jarrett and his chief political strategist David Axelrod all came out of the same Communist left and the same radical new left as I did, and all have remained heart and soul a part of it. As someone who turned his back on that destructive movement, I can say with confidence that they have not.”


“There are four defining features of the left, which distinguish it as a movement of individuals who approach politics quite differently from pragmatically-minded conservatives.


The first of these features is their alienation from country: If you ask progressives about their patriotic feeling, they will tell you that they don’t think of themselves first as Americans but as “citizens of the world.””


“The second feature of the progressive left that is key to understanding it is its instinctive, practiced, and indispensable dishonesty.”


“A third feature of progressives that defines their politics is that they regard the past, which is real, with contempt, and are focused exclusively on a future, which is imaginary.”


“The fact that they see themselves as saving the world – or “saving the planet” as they would prefer — results in a fourth key characteristic of their politics, which is that they regard politics as a religious war. This explains why they are so rude and nasty when you disagree with them or resist their panaceas (and of course if they had the power, the punishments would be more severe); that is why the politics of personal destruction is their favorite variety, why they are verbal assassins and go directly for the jugular, and why they think nothing of destroying the reputations of their opponents and burying them permanently. And that is why they can perform their character assassinations without regrets – or did I miss Obama’s apology to Romney for accusing him of killing a woman with cancer during the campaign? Why apologize when you did it for the good of a world transforming cause?”


http://frontpagemag.com/2013/david-horowitz/the-threat-we-face-2/#.UllS8HBBX0c.email


Socialism, Marxism, Communism & Obama


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The Threat We Face-The most important battle in the world today is not being waged in the Middle East but here at home in the United States.

Thursday, October 3, 2013

Obama"s phony debt default threat


To paraphrase a famous Democrat, “It’s the Federal Debt Stupid.”  On this issue, the Tea Party probably can win.  And, now a knowledgeable Washington insider is on their side.


When he took office, President Reagan promoted a young Michigan congressman, considered a federal budget whiz kid at the time, to head the Office of Management and Budget.  David Stockman was convinced that federal spending had to be reduced.  I can still recall a famous headline at the time likening him to the Grim Reaper:   ”The Stockman Cometh.”


Now he’s arguing in an interview at Yahoo Finance that the President can indeed prioritize Federal spending so that the debt limit does not  have to be mindlessly raised.


He tells The Daily Ticker the real story is the debt ceiling, and he thinks we’re “finally getting to a defining moment when the truth comes out…if we run out of debt ceiling, the president does have the power to prioritize the inflow of revenue which is still massive coming in.”


And the first thing the government will do, he says, is spend $ 30 billion paying the interest on the debt (according to Stockman, the government could also pay social security retirees, the armed services, and Medicare reimbursements despite broaching the debt limit).



“It is a complete red herring to say there will be a default,” he tells us. “There will never will be a time in which there is not enough cash to pay the interest.”


Stockman’s no lightweight.  He knows the law and encourages House Republican’s to call Treasury Secretary Jack Lew’s bluff about breaching the debt ceiling.  According to Stockman Uncle Sam is collecting $ 250 billion a month, which leaves plenty of cash for Social Security, Medicare, the armed forces and a host of other things.    He also argues that Obamacare should be delayed.  Let’s face it — who knows how much that’ll cost?


“The fiscal process doesn’t work. It’s broken and the only way to get the wheels of this thing to stop turning is for a determined minority to grab the bull by the horns. And if they want to call it ‘hostage taking’ they can use that term but why do people think we can keep adding to the national debt?”



Stockman sees the government shut down morphing into a national debate about spending and the federal debt.  It looks to me like most democrats and lobbyists agree — which explains the apocalyptic, wailing and gnashing of teeth from liberaldom over the shutdown.




American Thinker Blog



Obama"s phony debt default threat

Monday, September 30, 2013

Sen. Boxer: Government Shutdown Threat "War On Women"


Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-CA) says a potential government shutdown would be especially harmful to women. Boxer says Republicans have targeted a part of the Affordable Care Act that benefits women’s health.




RealClearPolitics Video Log



Sen. Boxer: Government Shutdown Threat "War On Women"

Sen. Boxer: Government Shutdown Threat "War On Women"


Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-CA) says a potential government shutdown would be especially harmful to women. Boxer says Republicans have targeted a part of the Affordable Care Act that benefits women’s health.




RealClearPolitics Video Log



Sen. Boxer: Government Shutdown Threat "War On Women"

Saturday, September 28, 2013

Shutdown threat puts pressure on House Republicans







House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio, arrives at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Saturday, Sept. 28, 2013. Heat is building on balkanized Republicans, who are convening the House this weekend in hopes of preventing a government shutdown but remain under tea party pressure to battle on and use a must-do funding bill to derail all or part of President Barack Obama’s health care law. (AP Photo/Molly Riley)





House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio, arrives at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Saturday, Sept. 28, 2013. Heat is building on balkanized Republicans, who are convening the House this weekend in hopes of preventing a government shutdown but remain under tea party pressure to battle on and use a must-do funding bill to derail all or part of President Barack Obama’s health care law. (AP Photo/Molly Riley)





House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio, arrives at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Saturday, Sept. 28, 2013. Heat is building on balkanized Republicans, who are convening the House this weekend in hopes of preventing a government shutdown but remain under tea party pressure to battle on and use a must-do funding bill to derail all or part of President Barack Obama’s health care law. (AP Photo/Molly Riley)













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(AP) — Lawmakers from both parties urged one another in a rare weekend session to give ground in their fight over preventing a federal shutdown, with the midnight Monday deadline fast approaching.


But there was no sign of yielding Saturday in a down-to-the-wire struggle that tea party lawmakers are using to try derailing President Barack Obama’s health care law.


Obama, in his weekly radio and Internet address, accused House Republicans of being more concerned “with appeasing an extreme faction of their party than working to pass a budget.”


With pressure mounting on splintered Republicans, House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, scheduled a closed-door, lunchtime meeting of GOP lawmakers to see what, if any, legislation he could push through that might prevent large parts of the government from shuttering.


Failure to pass a short-term measure to keeping the government running would mean the first partial closing in almost 20 years.


With nothing much to work on, House members took to their chamber’s floor and mixed name-calling with cries for compromise.


“I’ve got a titanium backbone. Let ‘em blame, let ‘em talk, it’s fine,” said Rep. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., about Democratic claims that the GOP would be at fault if the government must close.


She said the GOP wanted to keep the government open, but also wanted to reduce its size and “delay, defund, repeal and replace Obamacare,” as the health law is known.


Should the House approve legislation on the looming shutdown, a vote seemed most likely Sunday, leaving little time for the Senate to respond on Monday.


Senators on Friday sent a bill to the House that would keep the government’s doors open until Nov. 15. But Democrats removed a provision to defund the health law, officially called the Affordable Care Act.


The Senate’s 54-44 vote was strictly along party lines in favor of the bill, which would prevent a shutdown of nonessential government services.


That followed a 79-19 vote to cut off a filibuster by Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, that exposed a rift among Republicans eager to prevent a shutdown and those, like Cruz, who seem willing to risk one over the health overhaul.


All 52 Democrats, two independents and 25 of 44 Republicans voted in favor. That included Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and most of the GOP leadership.


Cruz was trying to rally House conservatives to continue the battle over heath care. He was urging them to reject efforts by Boehner and other GOP leaders to offer scaled-back assaults on the law such as repealing a tax on medical devices as the House response.


Some conservatives were taking their cues from Cruz rather than party leaders such as Boehner hoping to avoid a shutdown. Closing down the government could weaken Republicans heading into an even more important battle later in October over allowing the government to borrow more money.


“We now move on to the next stage of this battle,” Cruz said after the Senate vote. He told reporters he had had numerous conversations with fellow conservatives in recent days.


“I am confident the House of Representatives will continue to stand its ground, continue to listen to the American people and … stop this train wreck, this nightmare that is Obamacare,” he said.


Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., warned that the Senate will not accept any House measure that contains provisions opposed by Democrats.


He knows better than anyone that any single senator could slow down the Senate’s ability to return yet another version to the House.


“This is it. Time is gone,” Reid said.


If lawmakers miss the deadline, hundreds of thousands of nonessential federal workers would have to stay home on Tuesday.


Critical services such patrolling the borders, inspecting meat and controlling air traffic would continue. Social Security benefits would be sent and the Medicare and Medicaid health care programs for the elderly and poor would continue to pay doctors and hospitals.


The new health insurance exchanges would open Tuesday, a development that’s lent urgency to the drive to use a normally routine stopgap spending bill to gut implementation of the law.


___


Associated Press writers Josh Lederman and Alan Fram contributed to this report.


Associated Press




Politics Headlines



Shutdown threat puts pressure on House Republicans

Thursday, September 26, 2013

Italy president reprimands Berlusconi party over resignation threat


Former Italian leader Silvio Berlusconi stands inside the new headquarters of his re-launched original political party, Forza Italia (Go Italy), in downtown Rome September 19, 2013. REUTERS/Massimo Percossi/Pool

Former Italian leader Silvio Berlusconi stands inside the new headquarters of his re-launched original political party, Forza Italia (Go Italy), in downtown Rome September 19, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Massimo Percossi/Pool






ROME | Thu Sep 26, 2013 6:35am EDT



ROME (Reuters) – Italian President Giorgio Napolitano canceled his attendance at a conference on Thursday because of what he called disturbing political developments after center-right supporters of Silvio Berlusconi threatened to walk out of parliament.


Italy has lurched closer to a crisis since Berlusconi, a partner in Prime Minister Enrico Letta’s coalition government, was sentenced last month to four years in prison, commuted to a year under house arrest or in community service, for tax fraud.


Late on Wednesday, Berlusconi’s allies made their latest threat to bring down the government, saying they would resign if a special Senate committee meeting on October 4 voted to strip the 76-year-old media tycoon of his seat in the upper house.


Letta has said that Italy needs political stability while it struggles to emerge from more than two years of recession, rein in a 2-trillion-euro ($ 2.7-trillion) public debt, and bring its budget deficit under control.


As the latest bout of political brinkmanship preoccupied Rome, rumors swirled that Italy faced a renewed downgrade of its government debt, sending the Milan bourse lower and pushing up borrowing costs on benchmark 10-year bonds.


Napolitano, who had been due to attend a conference on post-war premier Alcide De Gaspari, sent a message to organizers excusing himself and saying that “a sudden political development that is institutionally disturbing” required his attention.


How serious a threat the latest move presents is difficult to assess given a series of contradictory signals from Berlusconi’s allies in parliament, who are divided between a faction of hardliners and more conciliatory doves.


On Thursday, Transport Minister Maurizio Lupi, a member of Berlusconi’s Forza Italia (FI) party, said the center-right had no joint commitment to stand down. “The resignation of the parliamentarians is a decision which will depend on the conscience of each individual,” he told RAI state radio.


“IF THIS MESS CONTINUES, I COULD RESIGN”


But Letta’s center-left Democratic Party (PD) said the threats could undermine the government as it grapples with problems ranging from strained public finances to the fate of big Italian firms including Telecom Italia and national carrier Alitalia, both embroiled in complex takeovers.


“Unfortunately, this back and forth with threats weakens an equilibrium which is already very delicate,” Luigi Zanda, Senate floor leader of the PD, told the daily Corriere della Sera.


PD leader Guglielmo Epifani accused the center-right of “blackmail” but said his party would not change its approach and would vote to strip Berlusconi of his seat.


Berlusconi’s political fate has hung in the balance since the tax fraud conviction opened the way to his expulsion from parliament under legislation passed last year that bans politicians with criminal convictions from holding seats.


He says the sentence, which is likely to remove his parliamentary immunity from arrest over other cases, is unjust and accuses what he calls left-wing magistrates of plotting to drive him out of politics.


Pressure on the coalition from Forza Italia rose hours after Letta sought to reassure international investors in New York that Italy was a stable and reliable partner.


Without citing its sources, the Corriere della Sera daily said that Letta had informed Angelino Alfano, the deputy prime minister and party secretary of Forza Italia: “Angelino, if this mess keeps up, I could resign from here.”


Napolitano, who would have to decide whether to call new elections or seek to build a new coalition if the center-right bows out of the government, has said he does not want a vote.


But the constant tension within the coalition has hobbled reform efforts and wasted weeks in wrangling over issues including tax cuts and Berlusconi’s political future.


Financial markets have shown none of the panic seen during previous government crises in 2012 or at the height of the euro zone debt crisis in 2011. But borrowing costs have ticked up during the latest bout of uncertainty. On Thursday, yields on Italy’s 10-year bonds rose by six basis points.


(Editing by Mark Heinrich)





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Italy president reprimands Berlusconi party over resignation threat