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From: SmoothSail3/21/2012 9:05:19 PM
5 Recommendations   of 536484
 
Great picture of Reza Kahlili.



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To: sm1th who wrote (477911)3/21/2012 9:10:18 PM
From: LindyBill   of 536484
 
The problem with Pakistan nukes is the ability of its govt to control them.

That's what I am talking about. Read a good thriller recently that was based on the concept of a Pak General turning one over to an Islamist outfit.

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To: Carolyn who wrote (477917)3/21/2012 9:12:03 PM
From: LindyBill1 Recommendation   of 536484
 
Assuming, as is now likely, that Obama will try to claim martial law to stay in power and suspend the election, what do you think will happen?

Never going to happen.

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To: robert a belfer who wrote (477929)3/21/2012 9:14:11 PM
From: Carolyn   of 536484
 
Amen to that! Good, Ihope the generals and admirals also know this and will act accordingly.

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To: LindyBill who wrote (477932)3/21/2012 9:15:39 PM
From: Carolyn   of 536484
 
I sure hope so!

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From: LindyBill3/21/2012 9:27:35 PM
   of 536484
 
I love watching Obama out there pushing windmills and sunbeams. He is on the wrong end of a 70/30 split.

REAL CLEAR POLITICS

Obama Takes On GOP Over Energy Policy - Jackie Calmes, New York Times
Paul Ryan Shows What Real Leadership Looks Like - Ross Kaminsky, TAS
GOP Budget: Burn the Safety Net! - Robert Reich, Salon
Soldiers Shouldn't Die for BS - Ralph Peters, Family Security Matters
Illinois Victory Signals an End to the GOP Primary - Mark Halperin, Time
Shapeless Romney's "Etch-a-Sketch" Problem - Howard Kurtz, Daily Beast
GOP Race Is Over & It Wasn't Close - David French, National Review Online
Nomination Had Value--Then Came Mitt - Howie Carr, Boston Herald
Walking While Black - E.J. Graff, American Prospect
Wall Street: What Goes Up Must Come Down - Doug Kass, TheStreet.com
What Do Republicans Believe? - Armey & Kibbe, Wall Street Journal
Videos: Geithner | Barbour | McConnell | Durbin | Axelrod | Fehrnstrom

More From Real ClearEnergy:

Oil & Gas Deliver, Will Obama? - McClendon et al., Oklahoman
World: All Hell May Break Lose Between Iran, Israel - Ari Shavit, NYT
Policy: New Jersey Is Proof Mandate Is Essential - Jonathan Cohn, KHN
Sports: NFL Gets It Right in Hammering Payton - Mike Freeman, CBS

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To: SmoothSail who wrote (477930)3/21/2012 9:41:28 PM
From: ManyMoose   of 536484
 
Good caption too.

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To: LindyBill who wrote (477901)3/21/2012 9:45:32 PM
From: Sea Otter1 Recommendation   of 536484
 
articles.businessinsider.com 

A catastrophe just waiting to happen. Much worse than Iran.

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To: Zakrosian who wrote (477924)3/21/2012 9:51:46 PM
From: goldworldnet   of 536484
 
OT, but since many of us have had the procedure, I did find some information.

Splenic rupture after colonoscopy

wjes.org 

* * *

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To: goldworldnet who wrote (477938)3/21/2012 9:53:53 PM
From: FUBHO1 Recommendation   of 536484
 
Inside the Ring: Beijing coup rumors
By Bill Gertz
The Washington Times

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

U.S. intelligence agencies monitoring China’s Internet say that from March 14 to Wednesday bloggers circulated alarming reports of tanks entering Beijing and shots being fired in the city as part of what is said to have been a high-level political battle among party leaders - and even a possible military coup.

The Internet discussions included photos posted online of tanks and other military vehicles moving around Beijing.

The reports followed the ouster last week of senior Politburo member and Chongqing Party Secretary Bo Xilai, who was linked to corruption, but who is said to remain close to China’s increasingly nationalistic military.

Chinese microblogging sites Sina Weibo, QQ Weibo, and the bulletin board of the search engine Baidu all reported “abnormalities” in Beijing on the night of March 19.

The comments included rumors of the downfall of the Shanghai leadership faction and a possible “military coup,” along with reports of gunfire on Beijing’s Changan Street. The reports were quickly removed by Chinese censors shortly after postings and could no longer be accessed by Wednesday.

The unusual postings included reports that military vehicles were sent to control Changan Street, along with plainclothes police officers and metal barriers.

Another posting quoted internal sources as saying senior Communist Party leaders are divided over the ouster of Mr. Bo. The divide was said to pit Prime Minister Wen Jiabao and against party security forces and Minister of Public Security Zhou Yongkang.

Late Wednesday, another alarming indicator came when Beijing authorities ordered all levels of public-security and internal-security forces under Mr. Zhou to conduct nationwide study sessions, although Mr. Zhou’s name was not on the order - a sign his future may be in doubt.

Additional references on Chinese social media included vague mention of high-level party political struggles and related police activity in Beijing.

One posting referred to a mysterious atmosphere in Beijing and a reported shooting Tuesday night. The posting was quickly censored by authorities.

PENTAGON CYBERSECURITY LACKING

A defense official told Congress this week that Pentagon security efforts against hackers and other threats remain weak.

Kaigham J. Gabriel, acting director of the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, told a Senate hearing Tuesday that the Pentagon is “capability-limited in cyber, both defensively and offensively.”

“We need to change that,” Mr. Gabriel said.

He noted that most details of cybersecurity threats and efforts to counter them can only be disclosed at the “special-access level,” the most secret security classification.

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washingtontimes.com 

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