Showing posts with label warn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label warn. Show all posts

Sunday, March 16, 2014

Gingrich, Graham Warn of Military Standoff if US Fails to Help Ukraine


Two prominent Republicans are warning that failure of the United States to deter Russia in Ukraine will only embolden Russian President Vladimir Putin and could end in a military standoff.

Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich of Georgia write in an op-ed on CNN.com that failure of the United States and Western Europe to act could give Putin the green light to “test our resolve” in Latvia, Lithuania, or Estonia.


Those three former Soviet republics are now members of NATO, which all other NATO members, including the United States, are bound by treaty to protect with military force.


“Trouble there could ‘reset’ us right back to direct warfare with Russia,” the two write. “That would be a disaster and very, very dangerous.”


Passivity, they say, is the path most likely to lead to war.


“The Obama administration should grant the request for military aid immediately — before it’s too late for deterrence,” they write.


Gingrich and Graham also call for President Barack Obama to immediately issue an executive order approving the export of American natural gas to 20 countries awaiting bureaucratic approval.


“The highest priority should go to approving exports to Europe, where in many places, Russia has a near-monopoly on natural gas,” they said.


They also call on Obama to issue an executive order approving 24 pending liquefied natural gas facilities they say have been delayed by “bureaucratic red tape.”


Europe is heavily dependent on natural gas from Russia, leading many Republicans to call on increased production in the United States to lessen Putin’s stranglehold on Europe, which has been less willing to buy into sanctions against Russia for fear of it holding back energy exports.


The op-ed notes that while Obama hosted Ukraine’s interim Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk last week as a show of support and Secretary of State John Kerry announced “very serious” steps if Russia does not back down by Monday from its attempt to annex Crimea, those words must be backed by action.


“Theodore Roosevelt is famous for a foreign policy he summarized as ‘speak softly and carry a big stick,’” the pair wrote. “Obama’s foreign policy is closer to ‘scream loudly and carry no stick.’”

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Gingrich, Graham Warn of Military Standoff if US Fails to Help Ukraine

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Docs warn of shocking risk during "mud runs"


Diet & fitness



1 hour ago


tough mudder

The American College of Emergency Physicians


A participant runs through the Electroshock Therapy obstacle during a Tough Mudder.



Here is some news that may (or may not) shock you, pun totally intended: Those muddy obstacle course races everyone seems to be doing lately can be dangerous, especially when they involve obstacles charged with 10,000 volts of electricity, emergency physicians say.


Doctors confirmed this in a series of case studies looking at the injuries that happened during a Tough Mudder event in Philadelphia earlier this year. Of the 38 racers treated in the emergency department over that weekend in June, about half suffered electrical injuries.


That’s because this particular event features two obstacles that require runners to brave their way through electroshock: There’s the Electric Eel, in which participants “slide on stomach through frigid water or along layer of ice while shocks hang overhead,” and there’s Electroshock Therapy, in which they “run through a field of live wires (up to 10,000 V).”


“The types of injuries were ones that we had never seen before at a social gathering or sports-related event, the electrical injuries in particular,” says Dr. Marna Rayl Greenberg, director of emergency medicine research at Lehigh Valley Hospital in Allentown, Pa. “I have been practicing for over 20 years, and I have never seen an event that shocked people. It took me a while to understand what was happening to them.”


Endurance obstacle course races — or MOB (mud, obstacles, beer) runs, as they’re sometimes called — have exploded in popularity in the last few years. Take the Tough Mudder: Since it started in 2010, the 10- to 12-mile race has expanded from three to 35 locations, and has had 700,000 participants worldwide. But there’s also the Warrior Dash and the Diva Dash, and even a 48-hour event called The Death Race (you can find out more about that one at www.youmaydie.com).


The perceived danger, obviously, is part of the appeal: People enter these things to prove to themselves that they can withstand discomfort, and conquer their own fear, for the duration of the race. It’s similar to the reasons people enter marathons, or triathlons, or ultramarathons. But the difference, Greenberg says, is that you can train your body to prepare for a race marathon — but there’s not exactly a safe way to prepare for being shocked with 10,000 volts.


Competitors swim through mud underneath electrified wires on July 15, 2012, during the Tough Mudder at Mt. Snow in West Dover, Vt. The Tough Mudder is a nine-mile endurance event in which competitors run through a military-style obstacle course complete with mud, water and fire.

JESSICA RINALDI / Reuters


Competitors swim through mud underneath electrified wires on July 15, 2012, during the Tough Mudder at Mt. Snow in West Dover, Vt. The Tough Mudder is a nine-mile endurance event in which competitors run through a military-style obstacle course complete with mud, water and fire.



The authors decided to put the series of five case studies together after their weekend in the emergency department, when they saw 38 people injured during the weekend’s Tough Mudder in Philadelphia in June. The patients ranged in age from 18- to 46-years-old; 22 were men and 16 were women.


“One of the patients, 18-years-old, experienced 13 shocks — he essentially had a heart attack, inflammation of the heart. It was a warm day, and they’d already been through mud and heat and sweat,” Greenberg says.


Tough Mudder declined to comment on this story, although its website says participants are allowed to skip obstacles.”Anyone who is at risk of our electric-related obstacles (due to medical concerns) or cannot swim (and would have a difficult time in water) is strongly advised to skip these obstacles, as safety is held at a premium at Tough Mudder.”


But electrical injury expert Michael Morse is very curious to know how the 10,000 volts in the race are actually created. “It could be capacitive discharge; it could be static shock,” Morse says. “What I can tell you is they’re not delivering 10,000 volts through a power line; that would kill people.”


Even the static shocks created by rubbing your feet across the carpet carry a few thousand volts, Morse explains, it’s just that the shock dissipates very quickly. He thinks the Tough Mudder electroshocks must be created from something similar.


“It’s high voltage, but the energy from the shock must dissipate extremely rapidly,” says Morse, a professor in the University of San Diego’s Shiley-Marcos School of Engineering. “This is the only way I could see them doing this without causing injury, or without causing a lot of injury.


“The problem is that humans are highly variable,” Morse says.


Adding water and mud to the equation also increases the risk of electrical injury. Skin resistance, our natural protection to electricity, is highest when our skin is dry. “When you make skin wet, resistance plummets, which increases the risk of electrical injury dramatically,” Morse says.


One of the case studies was of a 31-year-old man, who had “possible seizure activity” at the event. And a 41-year-old man was admitted to the emergency department after fainting at the race; he’d suffered a head injury and had electrical burns on his face.


Participants take part in the Tough Mudder endurance event at Dalkieth Country Estate on August 24, 2013, in Edinburgh, Scotland.

Jeff J Mitchell / Getty Images


Participants take part in the Tough Mudder endurance event at Dalkieth Country Estate on August 24, 2013, in Edinburgh, Scotland.



But if running and training for obstacle course races have become your favorite way of staying fit, you don’t have to stop. Dr. Howard Mell, spokesman for the American College of Emergency Physicians, says the electrical shocks will make participants uncomfortable, but they’re not strong enough to be dangerous. 


“It almost has that haunted house effect to it — it appears to be more dangerous than it really is,” says Mell, who is training for a Tough Mudder next year. (He did suffer an injury during his training — a stress fracture while running, which, he says, beautifully illustrates the idea that accidents can and do happen during any athletic endeavor.) “There’s no question that the race is designed to create discomfort, and the idea of it is, ‘Hey, I can overcome this.’”


He suggests that participants make sure any race they take on — mud run or a local 5k — has proper medical personnel at the event. “You want paramedics for scrapes and bruises, and CPR-trained personnel there for advanced life support,” he says. Make sure to have a copy of any important medical information about yourself with you during the race in case you suffer a problem — there’s usually an area to write those kinds of details on the back of the race bib.


And definitely don’t take one of these endurance events on without training first.


“While the study author is accurate in saying you can’t really train for something like the electrical shock itself, you can train for the skills you need to make it through,” says Jessica Matthews, an exercise physiologist with the American Council on Exercise. 


For the Electric Eel obstacle in the Tough Mudder, Matthews recommends stomach crawls, and she designed a workout for TODAY.com:


stomach crawl

American Council on Exercise



1. To perform this move, lie on your stomach placing your hands in front of your shoulders, turning your fingers to face one another with your elbows bent and forearms resting on the floor.


2. Keeping your core engaged and your shoulder blades pulled back and down, slide your left knee forward, bending your knee as you move it out to the side of your body until its level with your hips.


3. At the same time, slide your right arm forward while keep your elbow bent. Start by covering a distance of 30 feet, alternating moving opposite limbs forward — right leg and left arm, then left leg and right arm — keeping your body on the floor the entire time. (Some rotation of your torso will naturally occur with this movement, but just keep in mind that on race day high voltage will be overhead.)






Docs warn of shocking risk during "mud runs"

Friday, November 8, 2013

Syria"s Polio Threatens Europe, Warn Doctors


(Newser) – Polio might just be looking at a comeback tour, thanks to the Syrian civil war. There’s a significant risk that the now-rare disease could spread from Syria to Europe, as refugees seek asylum there, a group of German scientists warned in The Lancet today. The danger is that many people may not know they’re carrying the disease; only about 1 in 200 people infected develop symptoms. The vaccine commonly known in Europe exacerbates this, because it’s good at preventing symptoms but only partially effective at preventing infection.


It could take almost a year of “silent transmission” before the outbreak is detected, “although hundreds of individuals would carry the infection,” they warn. Simply vaccinating Syrian refugees is “insufficient,” they argue, pressing for a broader approach that might include testing sewage near Syrian refugee settlements, Reuters reports. But the news isn’t all disease and death in Syria; inspectors yesterday reported that they have thus far destroyed all but one of the 23 chemical weapons sites the Assad regime pointed them toward, the New York Times reports.




Green from Newser



Syria"s Polio Threatens Europe, Warn Doctors

Friday, October 25, 2013

More states warn against Obamacare fraud...

A nurse measures the blood pressure of a patient, on September 20, 2013 at the cardiology department of Lens

A nurse measures the blood pressure of a patient, on September 20, 2013 at the cardiology department of Lens’ hospital. AFP PHOTO PHILIPPE HUGUEN (Photo credit should read PHILIPPE HUGUEN/AFP/Getty Images)





(CBS) – Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan says she is looking into what appears to be a bogus campaign to sign people up for federal health care coverage under the Affordable Care Act.


Don’t be tricked. You may think you’re signing up for affordable health care, but experts say it could be a scheme to get you to enroll in something else.


CBS 2’s Mike Parker reports.


Posters and flyers are popping up in hopes of enticing people who need health insurance. “Official enrollment center for Obamacare,” they read.


“Are you eligible for free health insurance?” says the ads, which encourage people to enroll immediately.


Sounds very official, right? Not to everybody.


The Chicago campaign is not out of Washington, but out of an office building in Flossmoor. Thats where you find KLS Marketing.


Elliot Williams helps run the program.


“That’s how the company was branded, and it’s totally legal,” he says.


The drive is apparently aimed at developing a client list for a Florida insurance company. People are asked for their social security number, and income and other information.


Soon, they’ll get a call from Florida offering to sell them health insurance.


“People are seizing on the opportunity, they’re using the president’s name as a marketing tool or a marketing gimmick. So, people really do need to beware,” says Mike Claffey, spokesman for the Illinois Department of Insurance.


Can you join up and sign up for the Affordable Care Act with these folks as advertised?


“No, we can’t do that because were not licensed,” Williams says.


If you’re suspicious of someone approaching you for personal information in connection with the ACA, the state insurance department asks you to call their toll free hotline: (866) 445-5364.




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More states warn against Obamacare fraud...

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Sources Warn Miley Cyrus Will Be Depleted by 2013 And Fukushima Japan Still Deadly



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Sunday, October 6, 2013

ECONOMIC COLLAPSE UPDATE: Major Hedge Fund Managers Flee America Warn of Crisis



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Friday, August 9, 2013

Police warn of booby-trap car in search for teen








FILE – This composite photo provided by the San Diego Sheriff’s Department shows: James Lee Dimaggio, 40, left, Ethan Anderson, 8, and Hannah Anderson, 16, whose mother, Christina Anderson, 44, was one of two people found dead in a house fire Sunday night, Aug. 4, 2013. Amber Alerts expanded to Oregon and Washington as authorities searched for Dimaggio, who is suspected of abducting Hannah Anderson and wanted in the death of the girl’s mother and possibly her brother Ethan. (AP Photo/San Diego Sheriff’s Department, File)





FILE – This composite photo provided by the San Diego Sheriff’s Department shows: James Lee Dimaggio, 40, left, Ethan Anderson, 8, and Hannah Anderson, 16, whose mother, Christina Anderson, 44, was one of two people found dead in a house fire Sunday night, Aug. 4, 2013. Amber Alerts expanded to Oregon and Washington as authorities searched for Dimaggio, who is suspected of abducting Hannah Anderson and wanted in the death of the girl’s mother and possibly her brother Ethan. (AP Photo/San Diego Sheriff’s Department, File)





Map locates Boulevard, Calif., where the bodies of missing children were found; 1c x 2 inches; 46.5 mm x 50 mm;





Brett Anderson, the father of missing children 16-year-old Hannah Anderson and 8-year-old Ethan Anderson, speaks during a news conference Tuesday, Aug. 6, 2013, in San Diego. Anderson, the husband of a Christina Anderson, whose body was found in a burned house near the U.S.-Mexico border, said Tuesday that he knew the man suspected of killing his wife and abducting one or both of their children. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)





Missing children Hannah and Ethan Anderson’s aunt Jennifer Willis, left, and cousin Hallie Landy embrace during an emotional candelight vigil Tuesday evening, Aug. 6, 2013, at El Capitan High School in Lakeside, Calif. Authorities found Christina Anderson’s body Sunday in a home in Boulevard, Calif., 65 miles east of San Diego. Her children were missing and one or both may have been abducted. (AP Photo/U-T San Diego, ) NO SALES; COMMERCIAL INTERNET OUT





Athena Stewart lights a candle during a vigil for Hannah, 16, and Ethan, 8, Anderson Tuesday night, Aug. 6, 2013, at El Capitan High School in Lakeside, Calif. The siblings have been missing since Sunday night and are believe to have been kidnapped by James Lee DiMaggio who is suspected of killing Christina Anderson, the children’s mother. (AP Photo/U-T San Diego, Sean M. Haffey) NO SALES; COMMERCIAL INTERNET OUT













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(AP) — A massive search entered a sixth day Friday for a man suspected of abducting a 16-year-old family friend as police warned he may have abandoned his car while on the run and rigged it with explosives.


James Lee DiMaggio, 40, may have had an “unusual infatuation” with the missing girl, Hannah Anderson, said San Diego County Sheriff’s Capt. Duncan Fraser.


“That is kind of a working theory, that it may be something of a motivator,” Fraser said Thursday.


On Sunday night, authorities found the body of Hannah’s mother — 44-year-old Christina Anderson — when they extinguished flames at DiMaggio’s rural home. A child’s body also was discovered as they sifted through rubble in Boulevard, a tiny town 65 miles east of San Diego.


The body may be that of Hannah’s 8-year-old brother, Ethan. Fraser said it could take several days to identify the badly burned remains. Investigators were unable to extract DNA.


Evidence found in the rubble suggested DiMaggio may have fled with homemade explosives, Fraser said, declining to elaborate on what was discovered. The car may be booby-trapped, he said.


“In the event that someone comes across the car, they need to use caution,” Fraser said.


DiMaggio is wanted on suspicion of murder and arson in a search that began in California and spread to Oregon, Washington, Nevada, British Columbia and Mexico’s Baja California state. An additional eight FBI agents were assigned to a command post at San Diego sheriff’s headquarters, as state and local law enforcement agencies were on alert.


Oregon State Police fielded more than 130 tips after authorities issued an Amber Alert for DiMaggio and his blue Nissan Versa with California license plates. A possible sighting was reported in northeast California near Alturas Wednesday afternoon, followed by another about 50 miles along the same highway near Lakeview, in south-central Oregon.


Fraser, whose office had hundreds of leads on DiMaggio’s whereabouts, said the Oregon tip appeared “very credible”


“We’re taking it very seriously,” he said.


Washington State Patrol responded to reports of sightings on Interstate 5, including the Tacoma area, Vancouver and at least one near Bremerton, said Sgt. Jason Hicks.


Messages seeking DiMaggio and the Anderson children appeared on digital billboards and freeway signs, said Bob Hoever, director of special programs for the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children. Loud tones beeped on mobile phones in the four western states where Amber Alerts were issued.


In Mexico, airports, bus and taxi companies and law enforcement agencies were on the lookout, said Alfredo Arenas, international liaison for the Baja California state police.


“This is a pretty much an all-hands-on-deck effort. It’s huge,” Fraser said.


DiMaggio, a telecommunications technician at The Scripps Research Institute in San Diego, was like an uncle to Hannah and Ethan Anderson. He was close to their parents for years.


Christina Anderson’s father, Christopher Saincome, said his daughter visited DiMaggio’s home to say goodbye before he moved to Texas.


Dawn MacNabb, whose son, Alan, was close friends with Hannah, said Hannah told her son Friday that the Andersons were going to visit DiMaggio at his house before he moved.


“She told him Jim was depressed, that it was his last weekend,” MacNabb said.


DiMaggio told Hannah Anderson a couple months ago he had a crush on her and would date her if they were the same age, said Marissa Chavez, 15, a friend who witnessed the remarks when DiMaggio was driving them home from a gymnastics competition. Chavez said Hannah was “a little creeped out by it.”


DiMaggio argued with Hannah when he took her alone to Hollywood to celebrate her 16th birthday last month, Chavez and MacNabb said.


MacNabb said DiMaggio occasionally took Hannah and her friends to his house and that she felt uncomfortable enough to warn Christina Anderson.


“She really trusted him,” MacNabb said. “I have been concerned for a while. It’s not normal behavior.”


Brett Anderson, the children’s father and Christina’s husband, recently moved to Tennessee.


___


Associated Press writers Terrence Petty in Portland, Ore., and Eugene Johnson in Seattle contributed to this report.


Associated Press




Top Headlines



Police warn of booby-trap car in search for teen

Police warn of booby-trap car in search for teen







FILE – This composite photo provided by the San Diego Sheriff’s Department shows: James Lee Dimaggio, 40, left, Ethan Anderson, 8, and Hannah Anderson, 16, whose mother, Christina Anderson, 44, was one of two people found dead in a house fire Sunday night, Aug. 4, 2013. Amber Alerts expanded to Oregon and Washington as authorities searched for Dimaggio, who is suspected of abducting Hannah Anderson and wanted in the death of the girl’s mother and possibly her brother Ethan. (AP Photo/San Diego Sheriff’s Department, File)





FILE – This composite photo provided by the San Diego Sheriff’s Department shows: James Lee Dimaggio, 40, left, Ethan Anderson, 8, and Hannah Anderson, 16, whose mother, Christina Anderson, 44, was one of two people found dead in a house fire Sunday night, Aug. 4, 2013. Amber Alerts expanded to Oregon and Washington as authorities searched for Dimaggio, who is suspected of abducting Hannah Anderson and wanted in the death of the girl’s mother and possibly her brother Ethan. (AP Photo/San Diego Sheriff’s Department, File)





Map locates Boulevard, Calif., where the bodies of missing children were found; 1c x 2 inches; 46.5 mm x 50 mm;





Brett Anderson, the father of missing children 16-year-old Hannah Anderson and 8-year-old Ethan Anderson, speaks during a news conference Tuesday, Aug. 6, 2013, in San Diego. Anderson, the husband of a Christina Anderson, whose body was found in a burned house near the U.S.-Mexico border, said Tuesday that he knew the man suspected of killing his wife and abducting one or both of their children. (AP Photo/Gregory Bull)





Missing children Hannah and Ethan Anderson’s aunt Jennifer Willis, left, and cousin Hallie Landy embrace during an emotional candelight vigil Tuesday evening, Aug. 6, 2013, at El Capitan High School in Lakeside, Calif. Authorities found Christina Anderson’s body Sunday in a home in Boulevard, Calif., 65 miles east of San Diego. Her children were missing and one or both may have been abducted. (AP Photo/U-T San Diego, ) NO SALES; COMMERCIAL INTERNET OUT





Athena Stewart lights a candle during a vigil for Hannah, 16, and Ethan, 8, Anderson Tuesday night, Aug. 6, 2013, at El Capitan High School in Lakeside, Calif. The siblings have been missing since Sunday night and are believe to have been kidnapped by James Lee DiMaggio who is suspected of killing Christina Anderson, the children’s mother. (AP Photo/U-T San Diego, Sean M. Haffey) NO SALES; COMMERCIAL INTERNET OUT













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(AP) — A massive search entered a sixth day Friday for a man suspected of abducting a 16-year-old family friend as police warned he may have abandoned his car while on the run and rigged it with explosives.


James Lee DiMaggio, 40, may have had an “unusual infatuation” with the missing girl, Hannah Anderson, said San Diego County Sheriff’s Capt. Duncan Fraser.


“That is kind of a working theory, that it may be something of a motivator,” Fraser said Thursday.


On Sunday night, authorities found the body of Hannah’s mother — 44-year-old Christina Anderson — when they extinguished flames at DiMaggio’s rural home. A child’s body also was discovered as they sifted through rubble in Boulevard, a tiny town 65 miles east of San Diego.


The body may be that of Hannah’s 8-year-old brother, Ethan. Fraser said it could take several days to identify the badly burned remains. Investigators were unable to extract DNA.


Evidence found in the rubble suggested DiMaggio may have fled with homemade explosives, Fraser said, declining to elaborate on what was discovered. The car may be booby-trapped, he said.


“In the event that someone comes across the car, they need to use caution,” Fraser said.


DiMaggio is wanted on suspicion of murder and arson in a search that began in California and spread to Oregon, Washington, Nevada, British Columbia and Mexico’s Baja California state. An additional eight FBI agents were assigned to a command post at San Diego sheriff’s headquarters, as state and local law enforcement agencies were on alert.


Oregon State Police fielded more than 130 tips after authorities issued an Amber Alert for DiMaggio and his blue Nissan Versa with California license plates. A possible sighting was reported in northeast California near Alturas Wednesday afternoon, followed by another about 50 miles along the same highway near Lakeview, in south-central Oregon.


Fraser, whose office had hundreds of leads on DiMaggio’s whereabouts, said the Oregon tip appeared “very credible”


“We’re taking it very seriously,” he said.


Washington State Patrol responded to reports of sightings on Interstate 5, including the Tacoma area, Vancouver and at least one near Bremerton, said Sgt. Jason Hicks.


Messages seeking DiMaggio and the Anderson children appeared on digital billboards and freeway signs, said Bob Hoever, director of special programs for the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children. Loud tones beeped on mobile phones in the four western states where Amber Alerts were issued.


In Mexico, airports, bus and taxi companies and law enforcement agencies were on the lookout, said Alfredo Arenas, international liaison for the Baja California state police.


“This is a pretty much an all-hands-on-deck effort. It’s huge,” Fraser said.


DiMaggio, a telecommunications technician at The Scripps Research Institute in San Diego, was like an uncle to Hannah and Ethan Anderson. He was close to their parents for years.


Christina Anderson’s father, Christopher Saincome, said his daughter visited DiMaggio’s home to say goodbye before he moved to Texas.


Dawn MacNabb, whose son, Alan, was close friends with Hannah, said Hannah told her son Friday that the Andersons were going to visit DiMaggio at his house before he moved.


“She told him Jim was depressed, that it was his last weekend,” MacNabb said.


DiMaggio told Hannah Anderson a couple months ago he had a crush on her and would date her if they were the same age, said Marissa Chavez, 15, a friend who witnessed the remarks when DiMaggio was driving them home from a gymnastics competition. Chavez said Hannah was “a little creeped out by it.”


DiMaggio argued with Hannah when he took her alone to Hollywood to celebrate her 16th birthday last month, Chavez and MacNabb said.


MacNabb said DiMaggio occasionally took Hannah and her friends to his house and that she felt uncomfortable enough to warn Christina Anderson.


“She really trusted him,” MacNabb said. “I have been concerned for a while. It’s not normal behavior.”


Brett Anderson, the children’s father and Christina’s husband, recently moved to Tennessee.


___


Associated Press writers Terrence Petty in Portland, Ore., and Eugene Johnson in Seattle contributed to this report.


Associated Press




U.S. Headlines



Police warn of booby-trap car in search for teen

Saturday, August 3, 2013

Govs warn Washington against fiscal inaction







Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker draws the biggest crowd of reporters following a news conference on the opening day of the National Governors Association meeting on Friday, Aug. 2, 2013, in Milwaukee, Wis. (AP Photo/Scott Bauer)





Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker draws the biggest crowd of reporters following a news conference on the opening day of the National Governors Association meeting on Friday, Aug. 2, 2013, in Milwaukee, Wis. (AP Photo/Scott Bauer)













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MILWAUKEE (AP) — The nation’s governors have a warning for President Barack Obama and Congress: A fiscal standoff in Washington this fall could be catastrophic for states already feeling the fallout of sweeping cuts in federal spending.


“When there’s uncertainty in Washington, D.C., that uncertainty can affect our economic climate and revenue growth,” Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin, a former U.S. House member, said Friday. She echoed the concerns of her counterparts in other states at their annual three-day summer conference. The meeting opens on the same day Congress was leaving Washington for a five-week break with key pieces of consequential work unfinished.


“All those things left undone, the uncertainty in Washington has an impact,” she added.


The fast-approaching fiscal showdown — and the governors’ deep contempt for Washington’s inability to break impasses on spending — hung over the meeting in swing-voting Wisconsin.


As the conference began, Republicans and Democrats alike bemoaned the cost of Washington’s inaction for states struggling to recover economically and striving to attract employers.


“When they see other countries invest in transportation…and we’re not, that’s a strike against us,” said Delaware Gov. Jack Markell, a Democrat. “When you want some kind of predictability with respect to immigration …that’s a strike against us.”


Washington-bashing — a favorite pastime of governors — was certain during a series of public sessions and private meetings intended for state leaders to trade ideas on solutions to common problems, like containing health care costs, creating jobs and ensuring homeland security. The weekend agenda included discussions on cybersecurity, prison reform and “building a national consensus on infrastructure” with Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx.


Policy aside, the gathering also provides governors eyeing the 2016 presidential race an opportunity to build alliances, test messages and command the spotlight. Among them: the conference’s host governor, Republican Scott Walker, who plans to lead a parade of Harley-Davidson motorcyclists through the streets of Milwaukee on Saturday. Other possible candidates — Republican Chris Christie of New Jersey and Democrat Martin O’Malley of Maryland also were expected to be among the roughly two dozen governors in attendance.


Fiscal uncertainty appeared at the top of governors’ concerns.


The new federal budget year begins on Oct. 1, and a stopgap funding bill will be necessary to prevent a government shutdown, which would halt the flow of federal dollars for programs in education and natural resources and could idle thousands of workers.


While Democratic and Republican leaders have signaled a desire to avert such a situation, tea party Republicans in Congress are threatening a partial shutdown if the budget includes money to implement the 2010 health care law. Another showdown also looms over must-pass legislation increasing the government’s borrowing cap to prevent a default on debt obligations that could rattle the financial markets.


The drama on Capitol Hill draws particular scorn from governors, who are bound by stricter budgeting rules than the federal government.


Markell, chairman of the national governors group, led a delegation of Democratic and Republican governors to Washington in December to advise Obama and congressional leaders on the effects of across-the-board spending cuts that took effect in March.


“You go from that to a total shutdown? That takes it to another whole level,” said Markell.


In an opening news conference Friday, a half dozen governors highlighted state progress on issues that Congress and the president have failed to act on.


“Congress doesn’t seem to have the same cordiality,” Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper, a Democrat, quipped, when asked about gridlock in Washington. “Where’s the constituency for moderation?”


Hickenlooper, who last year faced the mass shooting at a suburban Denver movie theater, discussed action he and the Democratic-controlled legislature took to require comprehensive background checks for all firearm sales, as well as an increase in mental health spending.


Still, the political divisions that have mired Washington were present in Milwaukee.


Wisconsin’s Walker noted how he signed legislation passed this year by the Republican-controlled legislature increasing mental health screening, but stopping short of raising restrictions on gun sales.


“There’s a much bigger issue of mental health concerns that goes beyond the tragic incidents like this,” said Walker. There were two mass shootings in Milwaukee suburbs last year.


___


Associated Press writer Scott Bauer contributed to this report.


Associated Press




Politics Headlines



Govs warn Washington against fiscal inaction

Friday, June 21, 2013

Egypt Islamists warn opponents with huge pro-Mursi rally


Egypt

Egypt’s President Mohamed Mursi (C) arrives at Bole International airport for the 21st Ordinary Session of the African Union (AU) in Addis Ababa May 24, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Tiksa Negeri






CAIRO | Fri Jun 21, 2013 8:17am EDT



CAIRO (Reuters) – Thousands of Islamist supporters of Egypt’s President Mohamed Mursi gathered in Cairo after Friday prayers to show support for the elected head of state ahead of protests his opponents hope can force him from office.


Crowds converged on a mosque in the suburb of Nasser City, many waving the national flag, some carrying pictures of the bearded president, in what is intended to demonstrate the Islamists’ strength of numbers ahead of opposition rallies set for June 30, the first anniversary of Mursi’s inauguration.


“Yes to respecting the will of the people!” read banners.


“There are people seeking a coup against the lawful order,” said demonstrator Gaber Nader, 22, his head protected from the burning early afternoon sun by a green banner from Mursi’s Muslim Brotherhood, the movement whose organizational strength won it successive elections since the fall of Hosni Mubarak.


“Dr. Mursi won in free and fair elections like in any state in the world,” Nader said, shrugging off concerns among the less well organized opposition that the Brotherhood is aiming for a monopoly of power and to install Islamic rule and social order.


“The secular parties are eating the democracy that God gave them,” he added. “The secularists are not respecting democracy.”


Secular groups say they have gathered some 13 million signatures – almost equal to the number of votes that elected Mursi a year ago – on a petition calling on him to step down.


They plan mass rallies across Egypt on June 30 and have attracted support from many Egyptians less politically motivated but exasperated by economic stagnation under Mursi and the Islamist-led legislature.


Reflecting a sense their electoral success is under siege from unelected institutions and vested interests rooted in the Mubarak-era, when their party was banned, some in Friday’s crowd – mostly men, with a few women, heavily veiled – chanted for “A purge of the judiciary!” and “A purge of the media!”


There was no trouble evident around the crowd of well over 10,000 in Cairo, but state newspaper al-Ahram carried a report on its website from the second city of Alexandria saying there had been some violence between pro- and anti-Mursi factions.


OPPOSITION FRUSTRATION


Opposition groups range from the young liberals who first took to Tahrir Square in January 2011 to challenge Mubarak, to conservatives yearning for the stability of army rule. Many in Egypt’s 10-percent Christian minority also fear the Islamists.


Mohamed ElBaradei, the former top U.N. diplomat who is a leader of the opposition “Rebel!” campaign, told Al-Hayat newspaper that economic problems, including power cuts as summer heat takes hold, were fuelling support for a movement which he said hoped to end the “total polarization in Egypt”.


ElBaradei said a united opposition push could bring an early presidential election that would unseat Mursi, though he himself would not run: “The division of the opposition put Mursi in power and I believe it has realized this mistake,” he said.


Tensions between Mursi’s supporters and opponents spilled over into violence outside Cairo this week. Around 100 people have been injured in scattered skirmishes triggered by Mursi’s decision to appoint more Islamists as provincial governors.


Rhetoric has grown more toxic in recent days: one Islamist cleric referred to Mursi’s opponents as “infidels” during a rally attended by the president last week. The opposition are billing it as Mursi’s last days in office, hoping for a repeat of the uprising that toppled Mubarak two and half years ago.


But Egypt’s biggest Salafi Islamist force, the Nour Party, is not taking part. It warns of “an imminent collision” between Egyptians and called on both sides to give ground – Mursi by appointing a cabinet for national unity and the opposition by switching its focus to elections from street protests.


(Additional reporting by Shadia Nasralla, writing by Alastair Macdonald)





Reuters: Top News



Egypt Islamists warn opponents with huge pro-Mursi rally