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Funds Now - Up to 5000 dollars

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (ClickNLoan)
Thu Oct 31 06:01:14 2013

To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
From: "ClickNLoan" <ClickNLoan@prmibnews.us>
Date: Thu, 31 Oct 2013 03:01:12 -0700

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Secure your loan application in 7 minutes!

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 eatening Western security by not cooperating with the West -- at 
the time, by refusing to bargain with the British-run Anglo-Iranian Oil 
Co. -- thereby threatening the supply of cheap oil to Britain and 
risking a British invasion that could in turn trigger a counter Soviet 
invasion of Iranian oilfields.The documents outline how the Iranian political 
earthquake was to be undertaken. One paper titled "Campaign to Install Pro-Western 
Government in Iran Authority" lists the objectives as "through legal, or 
quasi-legal, methods, to effect the fall of the Mossadegh government" including 
"exposing his collaboration with the Communists" and "to replace it with 
a pro-Western government under the Shah's leadership."In a document titled 
"The Battle for Iran," the CIA reveals the coup plan was called 
"Operation TPAJAX." The unnamed author of the history writes that previously 
published accounts miss the point that "the military coup that overthrew 
Mossadegh ... was carried out under CIA direction as an act of 
U.S. foreign policy, conceived and approved at the highest levels of government." 
The author adds that the coup plan was "an official admission (redacted) 
that normal, rational methods of international communication and commerce 
had failed. TPAJAX was entered as a last resort."The once-secret papers 
also outline the British government's unease when U.S. diplomats revealed 
in the late 1970s that the U.S. and British roles in the 
overthrow might
 was seen recently when Bolivia's Evo Morales' plane was 
grounded in Vienna amid incorrect suspicions that National Security Agency 
leader Edward Snowden was on board.  The region's leaders used Twitter 
to express their disapproval."All international immunities that protect 
heads of state have been violated for the empire's obsession," tweeted Venezuelan 
President Nicolas Maduro, referring to the United States.  Maduro's account, 
https://twitter.com/NicolasMaduro , has nearly 1.3 million followers.Maduro 
has used Twitter to argue with former Colombian President Alvaro Uribe and 
Puerto Rican singer Ricky Martin. He often slams Venezuela's wealthy, makes 
grammatical errors, and fondly remembers his mentor and predecessor, the 
late Hugo Chavez.For many Venezuelans, monitoring Twitter became a must 
after Chavez joined the social media platform in late April 2010, according 
to comScore, an internet monitoring site. Chavez's account still leads the 
pack of Latin American leaders with 4 million Twitter followers.In a politically 
divided country like Venezuela, being able to influence the social media 
space is key. Almost one out of four Venezuelans in the country 
use Twitter regularly, comScore says.Venezuelan officials "don't communicate 
first by television, radio or a speech, but through Twitter," said Javier 
Pereira, the El Nacional newspaper's website coordinator. "That has caused 
us to be alert, monitoring constantly."Venezuela, along with B

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<strong><center><a href="http://www.prmibnews.us/2819/73/150/685/1315.10tt71675797AAF13.php"><H3>Secure your loan application in 7 minutes!</a></H3></strong>
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    <td><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" color="#525252" style="font-size:11px;"><br><center><em> <a href="http://www.prmibnews.us/2819/73/150/685/1315.10tt71675797AAF5.html">Update Preferences</a><br /><br>Blue Global Media | 7144 East Stetson Drive, Third Floor | Scottsdale, AZ 85251</em></font></td>
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">  fans will pay 
$165 in the cheaper category. Brazilians over the age of 60, local 
students and members of some social programs will be allowed to pay 
about $82 for a ticket. Prices for the opener in Sao Paulo 
go from $220-$495, with Brazilians paying $80 and discounted tickets costing 
$40.About 500,000 tickets in total were set aside for the category available 
solely to Brazilian citizens.Applications quickly started pouring in after 
tickets went up for grabs at 1000 GMT Tuesday. Some fans had 
to be placed in a virtual queue "due to an exceedingly high 
demand for access to the ticketing page," FIFA said on its website.FIFA's 
press office said that in the first hour of sales there were 
14,104 requests for a total of 81,821 tickets. Each applicant can request 
for up to four tickets for a maximum of seven matches.The organization 
expects a total of nearly 3.3 million tickets to be available for 
the tournament in Brazil, but only about 1 million are offered in 
the first stage of sales.FIFA said before sales opened that it expected 
a demand for tickets similar to that seen for the 2006 World 
Cup in Germany, when there were about seven applicants for every ticket 
of the monthlong tournament attended by more than 3.3 million fans. Almost 
2 million tickets were sold to the general public for the World 
Cup in South Africa in 2010, although the number of applications during 
the first ticketing phase was significantly lower.Sales of leftover tic
 was seen recently when Bolivia's Evo Morales' plane was 
grounded in Vienna amid incorrect suspicions that National Security Agency 
leader Edward Snowden was on board.  The region's leaders used Twitter 
to express their disapproval."All international immunities that protect 
heads of state have been violated for the empire's obsession," tweeted Venezuelan 
President Nicolas Maduro, referring to the United States.  Maduro's account, 
https://twitter.com/NicolasMaduro , has nearly 1.3 million followers.Maduro 
has used Twitter to argue with former Colombian President Alvaro Uribe and 
Puerto Rican singer Ricky Martin. He often slams Venezuela's wealthy, makes 
grammatical errors, and fondly remembers his mentor and predecessor, the 
late Hugo Chavez.For many Venezuelans, monitoring Twitter became a must 
after Chavez joined the social media platform in late April 2010, according 
to comScore, an internet monitoring site. Chavez's account still leads the 
pack of Latin American leaders with 4 million Twitter followers.In a politically 
divided country like Venezuela, being able to influence the social media 
space is key. Almost one out of four Venezuelans in the country 
use Twitter regularly, comScore says.Venezuelan officials "don't communicate 
first by television, radio or a speech, but through Twitter," said Javier 
Pereira, the El Nacional newspaper's website coordinator. "That has caused 
us to be alert, monitoring constantly."Venezuela, along with B
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