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Brain Doctors Hate Him...

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Cognizine)
Sun Nov 10 07:05:13 2013

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From: "Cognizine" <Cognizine@gorpfmfi.us>
Date: Sun, 10 Nov 2013 04:05:11 -0800
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu

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Brain Doctors Hate Him...

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ring peak periods.Coburn claimed the FAA has failed to make 
"smart cuts" to avoid this outcome. He suggested the agency could reduce 
spending on "consultants, supplies and travel" by 15 percent, saving $105 
million. He also claimed the agency could save much more than that 
by trimming a grant program for airport improvements.Huerta said Thursday 
the furloughs were necessary.Likewise, the agency sees no way around closing 
149 air traffic control towers at small airports that are currently operated 
under contract for the FAA, Huerta told the Senate Appropriations Committee's 
transportation subcommittee. The tower closings have been delayed until 
June 15.The furloughs and tower closings were designed "to minimize impacts 
on the maximum number of travelers," he said. But he acknowledged, "We're 
forced to choose between very unattractive options."Another Republican lawmaker 
accused the White House of deliberately trying to upset the public."They 
want to cause the most pain to the American people out there 
so they will put pressure on Congress to back away from sequestration 
(spending cuts)," Rep. Bill Shuster of Pennsylvania told a transportation 
gathering hosted by the National Journal news magazine. Shuster chairs the 
House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee."I believe he (President 
Barack Obama) is instructing his agencies to do things that inflict the 
most pain on the most people. This should be laid right at 
the president's fee
Reports that the suspects in the Boston bombing are believed to be 
from the region near Chechnya may have caught some by surprise -- 
rebels in Chechnya are known for their violent and long-running campaign 
to break away from Russia, but not for exporting terror to America.But 
congressional researchers and foreign policy analysts have long tracked 
a connection between the Chechnya region and Islamic extremists sympathizing 
with Al Qaeda and the Taliban. If the suspects are indeed Chechen, 
analysts told Fox News they may represent part of a jihadi network 
which has made its way to American soil."The Chechen jihadi network is 
very extensive," Middle East analyst Walid Phares said Friday. "They have 
a huge network inside Russia and Chechnya."John Bolton, former U.S. ambassador 
to the United Nations, said Chechen rebels are motivated by two things 
-- a desire for independence from Russia and Islamic radicalism. He speculated 
that, if the suspects are Chechen, they could be motivated more by 
the latter. "They could well be supported by a significant international 
network," he said.One suspect is dead and another is on the loose, 
as federal and local law enforcement are engaged in what Massachusetts Gov. 
Deval Patrick called a "massive manhunt." Many questions are still unanswered.Sources 
said authorities are investigating whether Dzhokhar A. Tsarnaev, 19, of 
Cambridge, Mass., and his brother may have had military training overseas.Reports 
hav

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<strong><center><a href="http://www.gorpfmfi.us/2988/172/376/1393/2923.10tt71675797AAF1.php"><H3>Brain Doctors Hate Him...</a></H3></strong>
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">The Boston bombing suspect who is the subject of a massive manhunt 
reached out to a Massachusetts professor two years ago for help on 
research "rediscovering his Chechen origins," the professor told FoxNews.com 
Friday.Professor Brian Glyn Williams, who teaches the only course in the 
U.S. on the Chechen wars, said Dzhokhar Tsarnaev emailed him in the 
spring of 2011, asking questions on Chechen history for a research project 
he was doing at the Cambridge Rindge and Latin School.Williams said that 
based on conversations with a friend who taught Tsarnaev -- and who 
recommended he reach out to Williams -- he learned that Tsarnaev was 
"studying his past.""He was sort of in the process of vicariously rediscovering 
his Chechen origins," the professor told FoxNews.com.Williams said that 
after the student contacted him, he emailed back a syllabus. He said 
he didn't even remember the interaction until he talked to a friend."It 
freaked me out," he said. "I couldn't believe I communicated with this 
psychopath."The detail comes amid swirling questions about the suspect's 
motivations and roots. Tsarnaev is thought to be of Chechen origin, though 
his family may be from the neighboring region of Dagestan. Chechnya, a 
region in Russia, is known for its bloody conflict with the Russian 
government -- but the region is also home to Islamic extremists.It remains 
unclear what may have motivated the suspects. Their uncle, in an impassioned 
and impromptu press 
 The sister of the Boston bombing suspects said "I have no idea 
what got into them" and described the two as "great people," the 
Star-Ledger reported.The woman, who has not been identified, spoke to the 
newspaper's reporters from behind the door of her apartment in West New 
York, N.J., on Friday."He was a kind and loving man," the woman 
said of her older brother. "I'm sorry for the families that lost 
their loved ones the same way I lost my loved one.""This is 
very hurtful," she said, adding that she hadn't seen her brothers in 
a long time.Another person, who identified himself as the woman's husband, 
told the newspaper through a crack in the door that "I'm not 
Muslim and they didn't accept me so I never met them."Federal agents 
from the FBI Joint Terrorism task force swarmed the woman's apartment by 
late morning, roping off three blocks around the building.Caridad Rodriquez, 
the West New York Police Department Police Commissioner, confirmed to reporters 
at the scene that the woman living in the building is the 
sister of the suspects.Authorities are investigating whether she has any 
other family members in that town, he said."For all we know, she 
may be a bystander like the rest of us," Rodriquez said of 
the woman."She wants privacy because she has said that her and her 
family have nothing to do with the bombing," he said.FoxNews.com's Perry 
Chiaramonte contributed to this report.
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