Royals beat the White Sox
- Friday, September 09 2005 @ 11:58 AM CST
- Contributed by: filbert
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Royals need to go 18-6 to avoid 100 losses.
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Royals need to go 18-6 to avoid 100 losses.
Two key brain-building genes, which underwent dramatic changes in the past that coincided with leaps in human intellectual development, are still undergoing rapid mutations, Bruce Lahn and his University of Chicago colleagues report in today's issue of the journal Science.Everybody now, sing: "In the year 2525, if man is still alive . . . "The researchers found that not everyone has the genes, but that evolutionary pressures are causing them to increase at an unprecedented rate. Lahn's group is also trying to determine just how smart the genes may have made humans.
Berger's associates admit he took five copies of an after-action report detailing the 2000 millennium terror plot from the Archives. The aides say Berger returned to his office, discovered that three of the copies appeared to be duplicates and cut them up with scissors.What has it gots in its pockets, gollum, gollum . . .The revelations were a dramatic change from Berger's claim last year that he had made an "honest mistake" and either misplaced or unintentionally threw the documents away.
"We shut down the bridge," Arthur Lawson, chief of the City of Gretna Police Department, confirmed to United Press International, adding that his jurisdiction had been "a closed and secure location" since before the storm hit.This is utterly intolerable. Those involved should be brought up on criminal charges--Arthur Lawson at the top of the list. This is misfeasance of office at least, and quite possibly negligent homicide"All our people had evacuated and we locked the city down," he said.
The bridge in question -- the Crescent City Connection -- is the major artery heading west out of New Orleans across the Mississippi River.
Lawson said that once the storm itself had passed Monday, police from Gretna City, Jefferson Parrish and the Louisiana State Crescent City Connection Police Department closed to foot traffic the three access points to the bridge closest to the West Bank of the river.
Via Instapundit.
Bush could have federalized the relief effort, but had Blanco rejected this, it could have created the kind of state vs. federal crisis that the U.S. hadn't seen since the civil rights era--though the context was obviously quite different.Opinion Journal takes a look at the issue too:So, there was a giant screw-up because most people were too busy reading the fine print to figure out what to really do. But Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff didn't help things by being quoted as saying: "The unusual set of challenges of conducting a massive evacuation in the context of a still dangerous flood requires us to basically break the traditional model and create a new model, one for what you might call kind of an ultra-catastrophe."
One of have thought that the "traditional model" of disaster relief, even short of an ultra-catastrophe, meant precisely knowing how to engage in massive evacuation in the context of a still dangerous flood.
The media message was "do something!" In fact, the president does have "do something" authority. It's called the Insurrection Act, which is what John Kennedy used in 1963 against Gov. George Wallace, ordering the governor's own National Guard to turn against him and forcibly integrate the University of Alabama. As to the looters, who were breaking no evident federal law, the Posse Comitatus Act of 1878 explicitly forbids using the military (unless a governor uses her National Guard under "state status") in a domestic police function.These are the deadly serious questions we need to ask in the Katrina aftermath instead of dwelling on paranoid ravings about racism and rabid Bush-hating.The question raised by the Katrina fiasco--and by the Pentagon's new Homeland Defense Strategy to protect against WMD attack--is whether the threat from madmen and nature is now sufficiently huge in its potential horror and unacceptable loss that we should modify existing jurisdictional authority to give the Pentagon functional first-responder status. Should we repeal or modify the Posse Comitatus Act so homicidal thugs have more to fear than the Keystone Kops? Should a governor be able to phone the Defense Secretary direct, creating a kind of "yellow-light authority" and cutting out the Homeland Security or FEMA middleman? Should presidential initiative extend beyond the Insurrection Act?
SHANGHAI, China (AP) - A restaurant in northeastern China that advertised illegal tiger meat dishes was found instead to be selling donkey flesh - marinated in tiger urine, a newspaper reported Thursday.Let's be careful out there . . .
. . .
The sale of tiger parts is illegal in China and officers shut down the restaurant, only to be told by owner, Ma Shikun, that the meat was actually that of donkeys, flavored with tiger urine to give the dish a "special" tang, the newspaper said.The report didn't say how the urine was obtained.
Currently, the Department of Homeland Security, through FEMA, is running the operation, and the Army gets its orders from DHS Secretary Michael Chertoff. But it's the Humvees, five-ton trucks, and the spirit of the leader that are changing attitudes on the ground, and are largely responsible for bringing a sliver of hope to the shell-shocked victims of Katrina - and bolstering weary relief workers. Willing to get into even the dirtiest task, the general has, by force of personality, changed the pace of the operation as he zips by helicopter from New Orleans to Biloxi, from Gulfport to the canteen of the USS Iwo Jima tied up to the New Orleans docks. His energy is infectious. "There's hope in his message," says Lt. Col. John Cornelio.There are lots of people from New Orleans to Baton Rouge to Washington who look like incompetent fools right now. General Honore is not among them. "We're not stuck on stupid."As head of the First Army, the job fell to him. Before heading up First Army, the 34-year infantryman had done everything from commanding troops in Korea to developing readiness plans for improvised explosive devices in Iraq. The fact that he's a black Cajun, one of 11 children from Lakeland, La., hasn't hurt his efforts in dealing with the large numbers of blacks along the Gulf Coast. His daughter, out of town during the storm, and extended family live in and around New Orleans.
Return-Path: [edfcpod@walla.com]No, Mr. Abu Al-ConMan, for the sake of Humanity, I'd rather post your ridiculous spam e-mail on my web site so that all the world can see what a moron you are. Maybe if you're lucky your spam mailboxes on this page will get harvested by some nice bot and you'll be repaid ten-fold in the spam you've sent. Have a nice day. Oh, and learn how to spam in proper English, OK?
Delivered-To: medary-medary:com-whip@medary.com
X-Envelope-To: whip@medary.com
Received: (qmail 4384 invoked from network); 6 Sep 2005 22:05:27 -0000
Received: from unknown (HELO mrson1538.com) (196.207.231.49)
by dhabat.pair.com with SMTP; 6 Sep 2005 22:05:27 -0000
From: "Mr. Abu Al-Karmel" [edfcpod@walla.com]
Reply-To: karmel203ng@yahoo.co.in
To: whip@medary.com
Date: Sun, 4 Sep 2005 23:08:31 +0200
Subject: Mr. Abu Al-Karmel(FROM IRAQ CENTRAL BANK)
X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook Express 5.00.2919.6900 DM
Hello/Dear,
I am Mr. Abu Al-Karmel, I am working in Economic Development and Foreign contract payment Operations Department,in the Central Bank of Iraq (CBI).
My aim of writing you is to seek for your kindness assistance to allow me quickly transfer the sum of US$15.million dollars, into your account.It will interest you to know how this huge sum amount of funds came about.About two days before the United State and British, bombing began,Saddam Hussein, ordered his youngest son, Qusay, to remove the sum of US$1.billion (£640 million) from the Central Bank of Iraq (CBI) The cash which was loaded on to three lorries.
That memorable day Qusay and a senior aide to the former president Saddam Hussein delivered the instruction in person to the bank's governor of the Central Bank of Iraq (CBI). And the money was removed without proper official documentations. The money was not debited. It was just remove from the foreign reserve vault. This illegal withdrawer created opportunity for our staffs working in the foreign payments department. We hastingly remove from the vault the sum of US$75.million, which we shared among ourselves working in the department,five in number. My share was US$15.million, the deal which was absolutely successfully.
Then,after the fall of Saddam,a Finance Company based in Jordan assisted me to move the fund as a Bond Deposit into Bank in EUROPE.Due to recent probe in our Apex Bank,i decided to leave and i am under cover in SENEGAL -AFRICA.
What I needed now is your "TRUST" HONESTY and TRANSPERENCY" since i would want you to receive the money into an account from the EUROPEAN Bank which i will disclose to you later on.I will also front you in any kind of investment that we might decide to enter later.
As a matter of fact,if i am convinced and with your declaration of interest in this deal,then,i will tell you the procedures to follow.For security of this transaction,i do hereby implore youto treat and maintain it with absolute confidentiality.
Please,if you are not dispose to assist,kindly destroy this letter for the sake of Humanity.
Looking forward to your urgent response.
Best Regard
Mr. Abu Al-Karmel
(karmel203ng@yahoo.co.in)
(What I want to know is...how dumb/naive do you have to be to fall for this, er, nonsense?)
#10: Airlines in trouble
#9: The Kansas City Hornets?
#8: White Sox 6, Royals 5
#7: The "refugee" debate
#6: Superdome may have to come down
#5: Katrina: What worked?
#4: Americans aren't buying the blame spin
#3: Escape from New Orleans
#2: The collapse of the NOPD
#1: Is New Orleans being evacuated? Or not?
WTF?
Right now, confusion reigns. Are they clearing out the city, or aren't they? The Washington Post wasn't sure this morning, either:
Ed Jones, chief of disaster recovery and mitigation for the Louisiana Department of Homeland Security, said the decision to use the military and state rescue personnel to forcibly evacuate citizens from New Orleans lies with the governor, not with the mayor.More, from Reuters:National Guard and state rescue workers have not received any communication from Mayor Nagin about forcing people out of their homes and an order to take such action would need to come from the governor, said Jones at disaster headquarters in Baton Rouge.
Art Jones, a senior official with the Louisiana Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness, said state authorities, who are in command of the Louisiana State Police and National Guard, have no plans at the moment to participate in a forced evacuation.The question which has dogged the entire Katrina disaster in Louisiana is: who's taking charge? Thousands of dead and evacuated victims later, we still don't know for sure. Mayor Nagin thinks he is. Governor Blanco thinks she is. General Honore probably should be, given the relative performances of these three major actors in this real-life drama."We personally will not force anyone out of their homes," he told reporters at a briefing, adding that "for their own common sense they should get out as quick as they can."
Jones said Nagin was the ultimate authority in New Orleans at the moment.
Clarifying the state's position later, Mark Smith, a spokesman for Louisiana Homeland Security, said Nagin would have to formally request that state authorities help him to force people out, but as yet no such request has been made.
"If it is made, it is still up to our discretion whether we would support the request," he said. "We are not required by law to provide military troops to force people from their homes."
U.S. active-duty troops will not take part in a forced evacuation. Under the Posse Comitatus Act, active troops are not allowed to take part in law enforcement unless ordered to do so by the president in an extreme emergency.
"If the authorities in the state of Louisiana chose to use their National Guard in a state status that would certainly be permissible and their call," said Army Lt. Gen. Joseph Inge, deputy commander of the U.S. Northern Command, which is coordinating military relief efforts.
Update: The collective jaws of our Free Republic friends are on the floor over the Blanco-Nagin Keystone Cops act.
Napolitano on Fox News says that neither the governor nor the mayor have the authority to force people out of their homes. He's probably right. But is there any point in staying in a city which will be essentially dead for at least three months?