[8363] in linux-announce channel archive
Stop Tax Debt Today
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Tax Defense)
Tue Oct 22 16:00:47 2013
From: "Tax Defense" <TaxDefense@peggyformatjebat.us>
Date: Tue, 22 Oct 2013 13:00:47 -0700
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
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Owe Back Taxes to the State or IRS?
http://www.peggyformatjebat.us/2654/37/58/246/600.10tt71675797AAF12.php
To Unsub- http://www.peggyformatjebat.us/2654/37/58/246/600.10tt71675797AAF7.html
In a picture taken with an underwater camera Germany's Sascha Klein and
Patrick Hausding compete in the men's 10-metre synchro platform preliminary
diving event in the FINA World Championships at the Piscina Municipal de
Montjuic in Barcelona on July 21, 2013.AFPBARCELONA (AFP) China's Olympic
champions Cao Yuan and Zhang Yanquan suffered a shock defeat in Sunday's
10m men's synchronised platform final at the world aquatic championships
as Germany claimed a historic gold.The German pair of Sascha Klein and
Patrick Hausding claimed the world title with 461.46 points from Russia's
Victor Minibaev and Artem Chesakov second on 445.96 while Cao and Zhang
settled for bronze on 445.56.This was Germany's first ever synchronised
diving gold at a world aquatic championships.China's Olympic champions Cao,
18, and Zhang, 19, had led going into the fourth round, but
a rare mistake saw the teenage pair drop to third.Having won the
women's 3m synchronised gold on Saturday's first day of competition at the
world championships, China had been looking to emulate their 2011 success
when their team swept all 10 diving gold medals.
n the State Department. The report comes at a time of
heightened concern about both cyber-security and torrents of information
leaks in the U.S. government.According to the audit report, the agency has
statutory responsibility as State's "lead office for information assurance
and security." Its top official, currently William Lay, is known as State's
Chief Information Security Officer (CISO), who reports up to State's Chief
Information Officer, currently Steven C. Taylor.Despite the agency's august
legal status, IRM/IA's staff apparently has no sense of what security functions
their unit is actually required to perform, has failed for years to
update information security manuals used by thousands of other State Department
personnel, and has often left important details about the vulnerability
of State's information systems where they can be accessed by people with
lower-level security classifications.CLICK HERE FOR THE AUDITThe State Department
said in a statement that it was taking the report's findings seriously.Much
of the agency's certification work has apparently been done by outside contractors,
often unsupervised, and often performing duties that are supposed to be
done only by government employees.Neither contractors nor staffers apparently
maintain much documentation about their work, or even about how the contractors
are being paid under a $19 million contract that could swell to
$60 million in outlying years. As the report puts
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> NASA/Swift Science Team/Stefan ImmlerPerhaps our human senses are deceiving
us maybe existence is an illusion, and reality isn't real.The idea that
everything we know is merely a construction of our minds was investigated
in the latest episode of the Science Channel program "Through the Wormhole,"
hosted by Morgan Freeman, which premiered July 17."What is real?" Freeman
asks in the show. "How can we be certain that the universe
around us actually exists? And how can we know that the world
we see matches what anyone else experiences?"Human senses are fallible.
What people think they perceive is actually filtered and processed by the
brain to construct a useful view of the world. Normally, this filtering
is helpful, allowing people to sort out important information from the barrage
of data that comes in every minute from their environment.But this filtering
ability can become a weakness, as it often does when we're watching
a magician."A good magician will tap into universal brain processes that
underlie perception," said Lawrence Rosenblum, a psychologist at the University
of California, Riverside and a magician himself. For instance, a magician
often directs the audience's gaze to one hand while he does something
with the other.- Physicist Steven Nahn of MITBut Rosenblum doesn't see the
human tendency to fall for such misdirection as evidence that all of
reality exists only in our minds. "Our perceptual system can be fooled,
but I do no
uth
is much simpler."It's silliness; it's just people having fun," Hughes said.Some
friends call themselves the Unicorn Army on Instagram -- another web-based
photo sharing site -- and try to find unusual places to get
pictures of someone wearing the unicorn head, Hughes said.Dimas and Hughes
went to the game with tickets the strip club gave them and
took the unicorn mask because they "thought it would be funny to
take the picture of thousands of people with one random unicorn head
in there."That's when a stadium camera operator saw Dimas and motioned for
her to stand up so she could be shown on the stadium's
video scoreboard, but Dimas took it one step further and started dancing
in the aisle. When an usher asked her to sit down, Dimas
didn't -- but only because Hughes said it's hard to hear and
see while wearing the unicorn head -- so Dimas and Hughes were
asked to leave, Hughes said.The sergeant who posed for the picture was
one of several people in the ballpark security office."There was a bunch
of people there, other security officers, too, and they just thought it
was fun," Hughes said. "I think he was just being nice. There
were other officers and people in the room and they were, like,
`Put it on' and he's, like, `I'll do it."'Public safety director Michael
Huss said the sergeant may be disciplined because, "This is someone that
is a supervisor, that we look up to to lead other officers.
It's not the example we're looking fo
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