Showing posts with label Find. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Find. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Does Anyone Else Find This Funny?

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Does Anyone Else Find This Funny?

Monday, February 24, 2014

Male Pundits Find Yulia Tymoshenko Sexually Threatening

Male Pundits Find Yulia Tymoshenko Sexually Threatening
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Image Associated Press
Associated Press

Former Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko was released from jail on Saturday, after ousted president Viktor Yanukovich fled Kiev. The opposition leader has announced that she will run for president, and German Chancellor Angela Merkel has already welcomed her back to the public stage. (Tymoshenko supports integrating Ukraine into the European Union.) But some fear her return to politics, claiming she"s just as corrupt as Yanukovich. Edward Lucas, a senior editor at The Economist, insists, "The truth is that her determination is terrifying. Nobody and nothing gets in her way. When she needs to, she is prepared to use her undeniable sexual magnetism."


In the same Daily Mail column, Lucas warns, "don"t be fooled by [Tymoshenko"s] angelic looks." He continues, "I have interviewed her many times. Her body language, eyes, coquettish tosses of the head and cooing tones are almost hypnotic. But she is also capable of explosive anger. I have seen her shriek and curse in terrifying eruptions of rage: the kitten turns into a tigress." Lucas uses almost every sexist cliche imaginable about powerful women in an attempt to discredit her. According to him, Tymoshenko "believes in horoscopes and psychics," is "prone to irrational, often self-aggrandising flights of fancy" and can"t work in a team. "Aides and colleagues are expected to guess what she wants and do it. If they get it wrong, she erupts," he writes. She apparently even uses her womanhood to scare men:


An ambassador once told me that a two-hour journey he spent in her sound-proofed, tinted-window limousine was the most sexually threatening experience of his life.



Lucas isn"t the only one to come up with these criticisms, though his column is the most egregious example. The Daily Beast"s Christopher Dickey agrees that Tymoshenko is "no angel." He argues, "there’s no doubt that the fire of a hugely ambitious politician still burns hot behind the iconic face and hair of the fairy tale princess." 


Tymoshenko didn"t always have her signature blonde hair folded into halo braids — before she became prime minister, she was brunette. But in consultation with a PR firm, Tymoshenko developed her look to represent the softer, more feminine Urkranian woman. Her hairdo alludes to patriotism and sainthood. It was a calculated political move, sure, but one she felt she had to make to succeed as a woman in Ukraine"s political sphere. As Dickey explains, she was a "hard-bitten ice queen" before the transformation. Welcome to 2014, where female leaders are either frigid or sexually dangerous.  






    








The Wire




Read more about Male Pundits Find Yulia Tymoshenko Sexually Threatening and other interesting subjects concerning Surveillance State at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Use of NSA metadata to find drone targets kills civilians – Greenwald


NSA headquarters. Image from https://firstlook.org
NSA headquarters. Image from https://firstlook.org


The US is relying upon NSA metadata to identify targets for drone strikes, reports the Intercept. A former NSA operative said the tactic is flawed and the agency targets phones “in the hopes that the person on the other end of the missile is the bad guy.”


Citing documents leaked by Edward Snowden and testimonies from former Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC) members, Glen Greenwald and colleague Jeremy Scahill have revealed the extent which the US military is using NSA intel to establish targets for drone strikes in an article in the Intercept.


The most common tactic employed by the NSA is known as ‘geolocation’, which entails locking on to the SIM card or handset of a suspected terrorist. A former drone sensor operator with the US Air Force, Brandon Bryant, told the Intercept that using the metadata led to inaccuracies that killed civilians.


The NSA uses a program called Geo Cell to follow potential targets and often do not verify whether the carrier of the phone is the intended target of the strike.

“It’s really like we’re targeting a cell phone. We’re not going after people – we’re going after their phones, in the hopes that the person on the other end of that missile is the bad guy,”
Bryant told the Intercept – the nascent news site created by eBay founder Pierre Omidyar to “to hold the most powerful governmental and corporate factions accountable.”


Over the past five years the NSA “has played an increasingly central role in drone killing,” but the growing reliance on metadata to find insurgents is also targeting civilians. The analysis of the electronic surveillance leaves a lot of room for error and can kill “the wrong people.”


Moreover, the lack of operatives on the ground in Afghanistan, Yemen and Pakistan means the JSOC is often not able to confirm the identity of the targets.


Instead of accessing cellphone metadata through cell phone towers and internet service providers, the NSA uses a program called Gilgamesh. To be able to track the cellphones of potential targets a special device known as a ‘virtual base-tower transceiver’ has to be installed on the drone. The transceiver emits a signal that forces the target’s mobile to lock into the NSA’s system, allowing the target to be tracked to within 30 feet of their location.


As well as Gilgamesh, the NSA has developed a program known as ‘Shenanigans’ that acts like a giant cyber vacuum cleaner. A pod on an aircraft downloads massive amounts of information from any wireless networks, smart phones, computers, or other electronic devices that are within range.


Bryant told the Intercept the “JSOC acknowledges that it would be completely helpless without the NSA conducting mass surveillance on an industrial level.”


Noting that innocent people have “absolutely” been killed in these strikes, Bryant said that some terrorists have got wise to geo-tracking and have developed a number of tricks to elude the NSA. Taliban groups, he said, had been known to purposely distribute SIM cards among their organization to muddle trackers.


“They would do things like go to meetings, take all their SIM cards out, put them in a bag, mix them up, and everybody gets a different SIM card when they leave,” said Bryant, adding the targets “might have been terrorists, or they could have been family members who have nothing to do with the target’s activities.”


The classified data paints a very different picture of the targeted killings to Washington’s stance on the matter. The White House maintains the strikes are conducted with the utmost precision and all possible measures are taken to minimize civilian casualties.


Last year President Obama claimed “before any strike is taken, there must be near-certainty that no civilians will be killed or injured.”


Source: RT





End the Lie – Independent News



Use of NSA metadata to find drone targets kills civilians – Greenwald

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Cops in Spain Find 1 Ton of Cocaine in Backpacks



(Newser) – Authorities in Spain just found a ton of cocaine. Literally. Authorities found 37 large backpacks floating along the Mediterranean coast, jammed with about 2,000 pounds of the drug. The backpacks had flotation devices that kept them below the surface of the water but prevented them sinking. They also had satellite-tracking devices. Newsy reports:



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Cops in Spain Find 1 Ton of Cocaine in Backpacks

Thursday, January 23, 2014

How to Find Area 51 and S4 on Google Earth

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How to Find Area 51 and S4 on Google Earth

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

Colorado Boy Asks Nation Not To Find His Missing Little Brother



Subscribe to The Onion on YouTube: http://bit.ly/xzrBUA The Onion News Network’s Karen Christopher takes you Beyond The Facts, ripping open the chest of news…



Colorado Boy Asks Nation Not To Find His Missing Little Brother

Saturday, October 19, 2013

Americans find little to cheer in deal to end fiscal crisis: poll



Americans find little to cheer in deal to end fiscal crisis: poll

Friday, October 11, 2013

Poll: Americans Find Little to Like in Washington



WASHINGTON (AP) — Americans are finding little they like about President Barack Obama or either political party, according to a new poll that suggests the possibility of a “throw the bums out” mentality in next year’s midterm elections.


The AP-GfK poll finds few people approve of the way the president is handling most major issues and most people say he’s not decisive, strong, honest, reasonable or inspiring.


In the midst of the government shutdown and Washington gridlock, the president is faring much better than his party, with large majorities of those surveyed finding little positive to say about Democrats. The negatives are even higher for the Republicans across the board, with 4 out of 5 people describing the GOP as unlikeable and dishonest and not compassionate, refreshing, inspiring or innovative.


Negativity historically hurts the party in power – particularly when it occurs in the second term of a presidency – but this round seems to be hitting everyone. More people now say they see bigger differences between the two parties than before Obama was elected, yet few like what either side is offering. A big unknown: possible fallout from the unresolved budget battle in Washington.


The numbers offer warning signs for every incumbent lawmaker, and if these angry sentiments stretch into next year, the 2014 elections could feel much like the 2006 and 2010 midterms when being affiliated with Washington was considered toxic by many voters. In 2006, voters booted Republicans from power in the House and Senate, and in 2010, they fired Democrats who had been controlling the House.


“There needs to be a major change,” said Pam Morrison, 56, of Lincoln, Neb., among those who were surveyed. “I’m anxious for the next election to see what kind of new blood we can get.”


Morrison describes herself as a conservative Republican and said she is very concerned about how her adult children are going to afford insurance under Obama’s health care law. She places most of the blame for the shutdown on the president, but she also disapproves of the job Congress is doing. “I don’t think they’re working together,” Morrison said.


“Congress needs to take a look at their salaries, they need to take a cut to their salaries and they need to feel some of the pain the American people are feeling,” said Morrison, who is married to a government worker who she said has been deemed essential and is still on the job.


People across the political spectrum voiced disappointment.


Suzanne Orme, a 74-year-old retiree and self-described liberal who lives in California’s Silicon Valley, says the shutdown is more the Republican Party’s fault. “The Republicans seem to be a bunch of morons who aren’t going to give in for anything. I just don’t get it with them. They are just crazy,” she said.


But she also said she strongly disapproves of the way Obama is handling his job, and doesn’t find him likable, decisive, strong, honest, compassionate, refreshing, ethical, inspiring or reasonable. The only positive attribute she gave him was innovative.


“It sounds like he’s kind of weak. He says one thing and does another,” Orme said after taking the survey. For example, she said Obama hasn’t made good on his promise to close the U.S. detention center at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and changed his position on whether people should be penalized for failing to get health insurance.


“I voted for him, and he’s turned out to be a big disappointment,” she said. “I mean, what’s the alternative?” Orme said it just seems to her that Washington is run by lobbyists and consumed by financial greed.


A bad sign for Democrats is that Obama has bled support among independents – 60 percent disapprove of the way Obama is handling his job, while only 16 percent approve. As he began his second term in January, independents tilted positive, 48 percent approved and 39 percent disapproved.


Neither party can win without the support of independents, with only about a third of the poll’s respondents identifying themselves as Democrats and about a quarter as Republicans.


Obama has held onto support from Carol Cox, a 59-year-old independent from Hartville, Ohio, who says she feels the president helps people in need. She is happy to see his health care law that offers coverage to the uninsured and to people with pre-existing conditions, although she thinks the rollout could have been better. “I think he’s doing an OK job,” she said of the president.


But she is not happy with either party in Congress. She said the shutdown is affecting her family’s investments and she’s concerned about the future of Social Security. “I’m really angry and frustrated. I can’t believe how mad I am about this.”


As for next year’s congressional election, she said, “I would love to see just a total turnover.”


The AP-GfK Poll was conducted Oct. 3-7, 2013, using KnowledgePanel, GfK’s probability-based online panel. It involved online interviews with 1,227 adults and has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3.4 percentage points for all respondents.


The survey was designed to be representative of the U.S. population. Respondents to the survey were first selected randomly using phone or mail survey methods and later interviewed online. Those who didn’t otherwise have access to the Internet were provided with the ability to get online at no cost.



News Survey Specialist Dennis Junius contributed to this report. 




RealClearPolitics – Articles



Poll: Americans Find Little to Like in Washington

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Low-income schools find new way to fundraise





No one really wants to buy candy or wrapping paper for a school fundraiser, but some parents can’t afford it.


Topics:

Ohio

Cincinnati

Education







In April 2010, the students at Concord Elementary School in Anderson, S.C., sold lemonade on the playground to raise money for new landscaping for the school.Ken Ruinard/AP




Sean McCauley, an elementary school principal in Cincinnati, Ohio, has been at his job for six years – and doesn’t remember ever asking his students to participate in a fundraiser, the kind in which children and parents are asked to buy and sell overpriced soaps, calendars and magazine subscriptions to family members, friends and coworkers.


It’s not that McCauley wouldn’t like to raise money for Ethel M. Taylor Academy, where he oversees about 300 students in a school in the middle of a Cincinnati Metropolitan Housing Authority Project.


Ninety percent of the students’ parents and guardians earn income under the poverty level. Every child receives a government-paid breakfast and lunch, and 15 to 20 percent of the student body is considered homeless, either living in a shelter or camped out at somebody else’s home.


“We’ve been approached by fundraising organizations, but we always tell them that our families aren’t going to be able to do that,” said McCauley.


In times past, that meant McCauley’s school couldn’t take advantage of the aid many schools get from their fundraising. The nonprofit Association of Fund-Raising Distributors and Suppliers website indicates that schools raise nearly $ 1.4 billion annually, which pays for everything from athletic team and band uniforms to playground equipment and computer labs.


But increasingly, thanks to technology and some creative thinking, schools with fewer resources are able to join the pack. Even schools that are relatively flush are changing the way they raise funds.


“School fundraising, especially public school fundraising, is in the midst of a sea change,” said Michael Montgomery, a fundraising consultant and an adjunct professor at Lawrence Technological University in Southfield, Michigan.





Some schools hit you up to the degree that the parents get kind of a glaze over their faces, and they don’t hear you anymore.





During the 1950s and ’60s, school fundraising became somewhat mainstream, utilizing annual carnivals, car washes and dances – not to mention ubiquitous vending machines – to raise money for schools. By the late 1970s, as school budgets continued to weaken, it was commonplace to award students with prizes for selling candy, linens, posters and whatever the companies could come up with. (In 1997, the industry began to discourage door-to-door sales after an unsupervised 11-year-old boy in New Jersey was lured into a house and killed).


Today, schools around the country ask children multiple times each year to sell everything from flowers and candles to Tupperware and T-shirts.


“Some schools hit you up to the degree that the parents get kind of a glaze over their faces and they don’t hear you anymore,” said Sarah Barrett, a school fundraising consultant based out of Studio City, Calif., and the author of “A Mom’s Guide to School Fundraising.


To cut through the glaze, students and schools have had to innovate. A couple of years ago an Illinois school had students selling fertilizer from an alpaca farm, and in recent years poker tournaments have been popular. Then last month, the boosters of an elementary school in Lucama, N.C., held an auction for a rifle.


Critics immediately brought up last year’s mass shooting at the school in Newtown, Conn., but the controversial auction did raise $ 7,000.


Online fundraising has helped level the playing field for lower-income schools, says Jeremy Burton, chief technology officer for Razoo.com, an online giving and fundraising site. PTA groups for poorer schools may not be able to get money from Mom and Dad, but getting an uncle or aunt to donate can be easier, or even complete strangers, if a school’s message resonates with the public. “You can expand your reach,” Burton said.


To date, 157 PTAs have raised approximately $ 614,000 on the site, Burton said.


But in general, schools like Ethel M. Taylor Academy – which doesn’t have a PTA – don’t receive the benefits that school fundraising brings. The downside is obvious, Montgomery said:  “Private fundraising for public schools has the potential for enlarging – rather than remedying –the disparities in American public education.”





A year ago, McCauley asked his school’s resource coordinator, Molly Luken, to set up a fundraising vehicle, the Soaring Hawks Foundation.





But some scrappy schools aren’t waving the white flag; instead, they’re eschewing traditional sales and trying other approaches.


“A lot of schools, across the spectrum, have done more reaching out to corporations, trying to get them to donate supplies or money. And some communities have created educational foundations that raise money for all of the schools in the districts,” Barrett said back in San Francisco.


However, some communities don’t want to share money. Several months ago, in California, the Santa Monica-Malibu school board indicated that it wanted to take some of the funds raised by Malibu High School and disperse them to some less-affluent schools in the district. They were met with dissension from the Malibu High parents.


Which is why it may be better for a low-income school to simply go it alone. A year ago, McCauley asked his school’s resource coordinator, Molly Luken, to set up a fundraising vehicle, the Soaring Hawks Foundation.


In the last year, the foundation has raised $ 15,000, some of which was spent last summer. The school’s foundation, also using a matching grant from a local bank, bought more than 100 children bicycles and bike helmets as a reward for passing a state achievement test. Before it was created, if the Ethel M. Taylor Academy raised money, McCauley had to first get a number of signatures approving the funds – a process that could take weeks. With the foundation, which has a board of directors, spending money on students can occur, if needed, in the same day.


If the foundation hits its stride, McCauley has big plans for it. Among his wish list – to hire a school librarian.


“We haven’t had a librarian for two years,” he said. “Because of state cuts, which trickled into our district, we had to let her go. A librarian would be a great resource for the kids,” McCauley says. He also someday wants a marquee sign outside the school, to post messages alerting the community about what’s going on in classes.


But that, like the annual salary of a school librarian, is a big-ticket item. Marquee signs, which need to be secured into the ground, can cost about $ 30,000, McCauley says. A sign would help link the school to the rest of the community – it never helps a fundraising program if the students are invisible.


“Some people drive by, and I’m not sure they even know this is a school,” McCauley said.





Al Jazeera America



Low-income schools find new way to fundraise

Saturday, August 24, 2013

Syrian soldiers enter rebel tunnels, find chemical agents: state TV



BEIRUT | Sat Aug 24, 2013 6:33am EDT



BEIRUT (Reuters) – Syrian state television said government soldiers found chemical agents in rebel tunnels in the Damascus suburb of Jobar on Saturday and some of the troops were suffocating.


“Army heroes are entering the tunnels of the terrorists and saw chemical agents,” state television quoted a “news source” as saying. “In some cases, soldiers are suffocating while entering Jobar,” it said.


“Ambulances came to rescue the people who were suffocating in Jobar,” it said, adding that an army unit was preparing to storm the suburb where rebels fighting to oust President Bashar al-Assad are based.


Syrian activists accuse Assad’s forces of launching a nerve gas attack in Jobar and other suburbs before dawn on Wednesday, killing between 500 and more than 1,000 people.


Assad’s government has dismissed the accusation and its major ally Russia has suggested rebel fighters may have launched the attack themselves to provoke international action.


U.N. High Representative for Disarmament Affairs Angela Kane arrived in Damascus on Saturday to push for access to the suspected chemical weapons attack site for U.N. inspectors, who are already in Syria to investigate months-old accusations.


So far Assad’s government has not said whether it will allow access to the site despite being under increasing pressure from the United Nations, Western and Gulf Arab countries and Russia. If confirmed, it would be the world’s deadliest chemical attack in decades.


(Reporting by Oliver Holmes; Editing by Andrew Heavens)





Reuters: Top News



Syrian soldiers enter rebel tunnels, find chemical agents: state TV

Syrian soldiers enter rebel tunnels, find chemical agents: state TV

BEIRUT (Reuters) – Syrian state television said government soldiers found chemical agents in rebel tunnels in the Damascus suburb of Jobar on Saturday and some of the troops were suffocating.


Reuters: Top News



Syrian soldiers enter rebel tunnels, find chemical agents: state TV

Sunday, August 18, 2013

Police in Canada find 40 snakes in motel room



The reptiles were found in several plastic storage bins on Thursday night in a room in Brantford, Ontario, where a couple who had been evicted from their home were staying, police said in a statement.




Officers have opened a probe into the incident but they did not say where the couple were at the time or whether the pair would be charged with breaking local laws that prohibit owning pythons.




The snakes, which ranged in length from 30 centimetres to 1.4 metres, were in poor health and have been taken in by the Canadian Society for the Protection of Animals, where a veterinarian is monitoring them.




The find comes 11 days after Connor and Noah Barthe, aged six and four respectively, died in the eastern town of Campbellton, New Brunswick when an African python escaped from its terrarium and killed them.




The boys had been enjoying a sleepover with a friend, whose father’s private menagerie of exotic animals included the python.




Animal experts expressed astonishment at the tragedy, many of them noting that, while an African rock python is a dangerous animal capable of killing large prey, it would not normally attack humans.


The initial police investigation found that the snake probably managed to break out of its terrarium and then nosed through a ventilation duct which led into the boys’ bedroom.


Sources: ITN/agencies





Weird News – Funny and strange news – How About That



Police in Canada find 40 snakes in motel room

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Girls named in river bodies find











Two teenage girls, whose bodies were found by police divers in the River Wear in Tyne and Wear, have been named.


Passers-by tried to rescue the pair who were discovered on Tuesday evening after getting into difficulty near a viaduct in Fatfield, Washington.


They were named locally as Chloe Fowler and Toni-Beth Purvis.


A spokesman for Northumbria Police said inquiries would now be carried out into the circumstances surrounding the deaths.


Onlookers said they believed the girls jumped into the river for “fun” and to “keep cool” but this has not been confirmed by police.


Northumbria Police said the river was still tidal at the point where the girls went missing just before 15:00 BST and there was a lot of debris and foliage in the water.


Supt Alan Veitch said: “One was an off-duty police officer going for a run who dived in and saved a boy who was trying to save one of the missing girls.


“Another gentleman dived in and swam the width of the river to get to one of the girls but he came up empty-handed. He was distraught, as you can imagine.”


About 100 emergency services staff were involved in the search, which took about six hours.




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Girls named in river bodies find

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

JFK Authors Find Conspiracy Theories Sell Lots of Books


JFK Authors Find Conspiracy Theories Sell Lots of Books

When it comes to President John F. Kennedy’s assassination, no word has been left unturned. As the 50th anniversary draws near, some might think there is lit…
Video Rating: 4 / 5



JFK Authors Find Conspiracy Theories Sell Lots of Books

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Can you find the sequester cuts?

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The truth is out: The threat that “sequester” will decimate the nation is a fraud, according to former presidential candidate Rudy Giuliani.

On Fox News tonight, he said it’s “totally absurd” that Americans should be worried about the cuts, because they’re not cuts at all, just a slower increase in spending.

“Why the American people can’t see through…” he said. “This is fraud.”

Sharing that opinion was former Sen. Jim DeMint, now chief of the Heritage Foundation.

He said the American media is “so sold out to Obama they’re missing the obvious.”

“Spending under the sequester continues to go up,” he said. “Instead of $ 1.7 trillion [more] in the next decade, we’re going to spend $ 1.6 trillion.

“Yet the president is making this look like it’s an apocalyptic situation,” he said, “because he wants to do what they’re doing in Europe, which is to blame their economic woes on the reduction in government spending so it feeds into his philosophy [that] we’ve got to keep growing spending.”

DeMint told Fox that the tax increases implemented under Obama on Jan. 1 of 2013 will make a bigger impact on the economy than any sequester.

He said those tax hikes “are going to hurt our economy, probably going to bring it down.”

He said the truth is that there are no cuts in spending.

“Very few people are telling the truth,” he said.

The Congressional Budget Office, in fact, documents his perspective.

In the following chart, the CBO reveals that the “sequester” savings are an infinitesimal portion of the nation’s coming spending plans.

The gray tip of the green spending column is what would be saved, the agency reported.

DeMint, in fact, told Fox that the spending needs to be cut a lot more than the sequester envisions.

“We need to accept the fact we have to cut more than the sequester,” he said.

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WND


Can you find the sequester cuts?