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To: TimF who wrote (485819)5/5/2012 3:06:34 PM
From: LindyBill   of 538030
 
Unbelievable. Obama has declared May 1

Oh, it's MUCH worse than that. CONGRESS did the dirty deed THIS YEAR. With a REPUBLICAN Congress.

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To: LindyBill who wrote (485839)5/5/2012 3:09:47 PM
From: DMaA   of 538030
 
How is that different in spirit from the folks that advocate a Constitutional Amendment against flag burning?

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To: Hawkmoon who wrote (485832)5/5/2012 3:23:58 PM
From: LindyBill3 Recommendations   of 538030
 
The world is a nation of huts with an occasional palace. The Anglosphere a nation of palaces with an occasional hut.

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From: LindyBill5/5/2012 3:37:09 PM
3 Recommendations   of 538030
 
Los Angeles Bans Plastic Bags – Despite Effects on Local Plastic Bags Manufacturer
by Jim Hoft



Liberalism at work – Killing jobs

Democrats vote to choke the life out of more California jobs. ( Love Life)

Los Angeles City Council banned plastic bags at a recent meeting. This is despite the effects such a ban would have on a local bag manufacturer.
The LA Times reported:

A Los Angeles City Council committee moved forward Wednesday with a plan to end the use of paper and plastic bags at supermarket checkout lines, saying such a move would spur consumers to switch to more environmentally friendly reusable ones.

The council’s Energy and Environment Committee forwarded its strategy for banning bags at 7,500 stores to the full council, comparing the change to laws requiring seat belts or banning smoking in restaurants.

The vote occurred despite objections from workers at a plastic bag manufacturer who said their company would be devastated if bans are passed throughout the country.

“I will be losing my job, losing my insurance. Please take that into consideration,” said Norma Fierro, an employee of plastic bag manufacturer Crown Poly, whose managers had warned that a city ban could prompt the layoff of between 20 and 130 employees.

Councilman Paul Koretz said he expected that Crown Poly would need to eliminate only a small number of positions. And he compared the company to makers of horse-drawn carriages at the start of the 20th century.

“I’m the last one to allow for layoffs in L.A. city, and I fight them hard,” he said. “But I’ve never stood and said that if a job doesn’t make sense anymore, that we’ve got to keep that job.

Is it any wonder then that California ranks dead last in best/worst state to do business?

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To: Nadine Carroll who wrote (485792)5/5/2012 3:40:36 PM
From: hdl   of 538030
 
i married a sephard. we used to jokingly tell our son to claim he was african or hispanic - my former wife's father's father was from north africa.

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From: LindyBill5/5/2012 3:43:59 PM
2 Recommendations   of 538030
 
OOPS!… President Obama Forgets His Wife Michelle Leaving Air Force One (MUST SEE VIDEO)
from Gateway Pundit by Jim Hoft
He’s so cool.

Oops! President Barack Obama forgot about the First Lady when leaving Air Force One today at the Ohio airport. It was his first “official” campaign event of the season.

It’s a War on Women, folks.

You’ve gotta love his reaction once he realized he left Michelle back in the plane!
Good grief.

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From: LindyBill5/5/2012 3:47:39 PM
3 Recommendations   of 538030
 
Gary Johnson Just Gave the Best Speech of His Presidential Campaign
from Hit and Run by Mike Riggs
Las Vegas - Moments before delegates began casting their ballots to determine the Libertarian Party presidential nominee, Gary Johnson told the crowd at the Red Rocks Resort in Las Vegas that he’d rather be tortured to death than vote for Mitt Romney or Barack Obama.

It was one of several lines that brought the crowd to its feet at this year’s Libertarian Party Convention. Based on what I’ve seen from Johnson in the last year, it was the best speech he’s ever given: Punchy, firm, loud, politically on point, and littered with applause lines.

It was also improvised.

“You must not know much about Gary,” his spokesman told me when I asked for a transcript of the speech, which brought the packed Red Rocks ballroom to its feet half a dozen times. “That was all Gary. All he had up there were a few notes.”

Content-wise, Johnson’s speech was nothing new. He’s talked about winding down the war in Afghanistan, ending the war on drugs, fiscal responsibility, tax reform, GLBT rights, and gun rights at speeches across the country for months. But today’s delivery showed Johnson has finally learned how to package those ideas into sound bites.

Some of the punchiest lines:

“Imagine a libertarian president challenging Congress to bring about marriage equality.”

“Imagine a libertarian president ending impediments to free markets.”

“Imagine a libertarian president challenging Congress to repeal the PATRIOT Act.”

“Imagine a libertarian president challenging Congress for meaningful immigration reform.”

“The libertarian candidate for president is the only candidate talking about gun rights and gay rights in the same sentence.”

“The libertarian candidate for president is the only candidate that’s going to be talking about slashing welfare spending and warfare spending in the same sentence.”

“Make no bones about it: The goal here is to win the election.”

"Somewhere between 2000 and 2008, Bob Barr fell out of bed, hit his head, and became a libertarian. I'm glad it happened."

"This is not 2008. I don't have any of that baggage hanging in back of me."

And the best line of the speech:

"I was on NPR's All Things Considered yesterday. The question was, 'You're on the torture rack, they're going to kill you, who are you going to vote for? Mitt Romney, or Barack Obama? I said, 'Look, I've climbed Mount Everest. I know how to do what it takes. Take this to the bank: I would rather die.'"



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From: LindyBill5/5/2012 3:49:16 PM
1 Recommendation   of 538030
 
Panetta: Climate Change Has 'Dramatic Impact on National Security'
from Breitbart Feed


From The Hill:

Climate change has had a direct effect on national security, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said this week.

Panetta told an audience at the Environmental Defense Fund that climate change has raised the need for humanitarian assistance and disaster relief, hitting national security in the process.

“The area of climate change has a dramatic impact on national security,” Panetta said. “Rising sea levels, severe droughts, the melting of the polar caps, the more frequent and devastating natural disasters all raise demand for humanitarian assistance and disaster relief.”

Read the rest of the story here.

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From: LindyBill5/5/2012 4:02:11 PM
3 Recommendations   of 538030
 


The Twitterverse has poked fun at the Obama campaign’s Julia web feature. Here are some of its better tweets. . . .


David Burge: At age 28, Julia drops out of the labor force, helping keep the unemployment rate down.


David Burge: At age 28, Julia drops out of the labor force, helping keep the unemployment rate down.


Kenton Jacobson: It’s pretty sad when one candidate’s policies only benefit fictitious people.



Tim Stanley: Obama not only dates composite women but he seems to think that they are his target voter.


Charles C. W. Cooke: Creepiest thing about the “Julia” page is that Obama seems to think he’ll be president for the whole of her lifetime.


Charles C. W. Cooke: Impressed that, under Barack Obama, Julia manages an immaculate conception.
MORE AT: nationalreview.com 












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From: mistermj5/5/2012 4:11:39 PM
   of 538030
 
"Alert". Be prepared folks...listen to UW. Cyber war is here. It's just a matter of time until they take out something with major consequences.

Alert: Major cyber attack aimed at natural gas pipeline companiesA major cyber attack is currently underway aimed squarely at computer networks belonging to US natural gas pipeline companies, according to alerts issued by the US Department of Homeland Security.

By Mark Clayton, Staff writer / May 5, 2012

csmonitor.com 


A major cyber attack is currently underway aimed squarely at computer networks belonging to US natural gas pipeline companies, according to alerts issued by the US Department of Homeland Security.





Cyber security analysts work in the "watch and warning center" at the federal government’s secretive cyber defense lab, in Idaho Falls, Idaho. The Homeland Security Department's Control System Security Program facilities are intended to protect the nation's power grid, water and communications systems.

Mark J. Terrill/AP

At least three confidential "amber" alerts – the second most sensitive next to "red" – were issued by DHS beginning March 29, all warning of a "gas pipeline sector cyber intrusion campaign" against multiple pipeline companies. But the wave of cyber attacks, which apparently began four months ago – and may also affect Canadian natural gas pipeline companies – is continuing.

That fact was reaffirmed late Friday in a public, albeit less detailed, "incident response" report from the Industrial Control Systems Cyber Emergency Response Team (ICS-CERT), an arm of DHS based in Idaho Falls. It reiterated warnings in the earlier confidential alerts made directly to pipeline companies and some power companies.

Is the cyberwarfare arms race for real? Survey of world experts says it is.

The ICS-CERT is charged with helping secure the nation's industrial control systems – computerized systems that open and close valves, switches and factory processes vital to the chemical, industrial, and power sectors. Their "fly away" teams visit factories, power plants, and pipeline companies to investigate cyber intrusions.

"ICS-CERT has recently identified an active series of cyber intrusions targeting natural gas pipeline sector companies," the confidential April 13 alert warns. "Multiple natural gas pipeline organizations have reported either attempts or intrusions related to this campaign. The campaign appears to have started in late December 2011 and is active today."

Safeguarding industrial control systems from cyber attack is a major point of debate right now in Congress, which has been wrangling over whether to grant the federal government authority to require that vital sectors like the electric utility, oil and gas, and chemical industries meet certain levels of cyber security.

Approximately 200,000 miles of these interstate natural gas transmission pipelines in the US supply 25 percent of the nation's energy. Pipeline safety has been a major issue in recent years, highlighted by the San Bruno, Calif. pipeline explosion that killed eight people and destroyed 38 homes in the Bay Area in September 2010.

In yesterday's public warning, ICS-CERT re-affirms that its "analysis of the malware and artifacts associated with these cyber attacks has positively identified this activity as related to a single campaign from a single source. It goes on to broadly describe a sophisticated "spear-phishing" campaign – an approach in which cyber attackers attempt to establish digital beachheads within corporate networks.

Spear phishing has become one of the attack vectors of choice for cyber spies intent on infiltrating corporate networks. In such an attack, a specific person in the organization is researched, often using social networking sites like Facebook or LinkedIn in order to carefully craft a convincing e-mail that appears to be from a close associate.

But the benign seeming e-mail typically contains a malicious software attachment or link. Once clicked on or opened, the malware or link creates a back-door for a hacker to then gain entry and begin prowling for valuable data.

Yet there are several intriguing and unusual aspects of the attacks and the US response to them not described in Friday's public notice. One is the far greater level of detail in these alerts than in past alerts. Another is the unusual if not unprecedented request to leave the cyber spies alone for a little while.



A major cyber attack is currently underway aimed squarely at computer networks belonging to US natural gas pipeline companies, according to alerts issued by the US Department of Homeland Security.


Each of the three alerts, for instance, includes detailed descriptions of the cyber threat – far more detailed than previous ICS-CERT warnings over the years, cyber security experts who have seen the alerts say. Those private warnings included computer file names, computer IP addresses and other key information that a company's cyber security experts could use to check and see if their networks have been infiltrated.

Skip to next paragraph"This was far more detail than we've ever received in the past – and the number of alerts in succession was unusual," says one security expert who requested anonymity because he was sharing sensitive material. "It indicated to me this was pretty serious."

Amazingly, he says, companies were also specifically requested in a March 29th alert not to take action to remove the cyber spies if discovered on their networks, but to instead allow them to persist as long as company operations did not appear endangered.

"In essence they were saying: 'Do not put in any mitigation or blocks against these active intruders,’" says the individual who has seen all three confidential alerts. "But if you're telling an investor owned utility not to do anything, that's pretty unheard of. Step one is always block these guys and get them off the system. It's pretty unusual in the commercial world to just let them collect data. Heaven forbid that the intruders gains control. It kind of looks like out intel guys were trying to get more information."

Beyond indicating that multiple companies were targeted and some other systems compromised, neither the alerts nor the public notice indicate just how many companies have been infiltrated. The documents also do not indicate that any companies' pipeline operations – or their vital computerized industrial control systems that run pumps – have yet been affected.

But other cyber security experts familiar with the alerts warn that access to a company's corporate system can eventually allow a hacker to wind through a corporate network and into the vital industrial control processes. Those systems, if infiltrated, could allow hackers to manipulate pressure and other control system settings, potentially reaping explosions or other dangerous conditions.

"There's not enough information available yet to tell exactly what is the target or goal here," says Jonathan Pollet, founder of Red Tiger Security, who specializes in industrial control system security and who has worked extensively in the oil and gas industry. "But it's a concern because if they access the corporate network it's often just a short step to the next level and right into their control system network."

One reason ICS-CERT may have acted, he believes, is because of the large number of companies discovering attackers on their networks. As many as 20 companies have already come forward to tell ICS-CERT of the infiltrations, Mr. Pollet says. That number could not be independently verified. A DHS spokesman was unavailable to comment at press time Saturday.

Even so, there is at least some support for Pollet's assertion.

Sanaz Browarny, chief, intelligence and analysis, of the control systems security program at DHS, told a security conference last month that “on a daily basis, the U.S. is being targeted.” In her presentation, as reported in Homeland Security News Wire, she said that ICS-CERT’s response team had taken 17 trips to private utilities last year, seven of those as a direct result of sophisticated spear-phishing attacks. She did not, however, indicate the attacks were against a specific type of utility.

There are also signs the threat could extend across North American. A Canadian cyber security expert told the Monitor authorities in his country also are on alert since the US warnings, although it is not clear if any Canadian companies are affected, he said.

At least one confidential US alert, a portion of which was obtained by the Monitor, urged companies to remain on guard – and send back information.

"ICS-CERT has received additional reports involving targeted and compromised organizations within the gas pipeline sector," according to the April 13 alert. "Analysis from those reports, including the analysis of hard drives and logs, has yielded new indicators of compromise…. Organizations are strongly encouraged to review this report and contact ICS-CERT to report their findings."

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