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Drive your partner crazy in bed tonight!

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Vydox)
Tue Nov 12 07:07:18 2013

Reply-To: <bounce-71675797@nagcmraced.us>
Date: Tue, 12 Nov 2013 04:07:17 -0800
From: "Vydox" <Vydox@nagcmraced.us>
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu

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Vydox can get you the erection of your life! Check!

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APAn obscure little State Department agency whose work is called "critical 
to the Department's information security posture" has been in a shambles 
for years, and is still in chaos, according to an audit report 
by the department's inspector general released yesterday.As one result of 
all the bumbling and inaction, the security checks that the agency is 
supposed to perform and subsequent approvals for use that it is supposed 
to bestow every three years on 36 of those State Department systems 
have lapsed entirely, meaning that they are operating, in effect, illegally.Some 
of the lapses have gone on for two years; in at least 
a couple of cases involving information systems that the audit calls "primary 
general support systems," the lapses have gone on since 2007.One of the 
systems that is operating without a current license, known as iPost, was 
given an award two years ago for "significantly improving the effectiveness 
of the nation's cyber security." According to the inspector general's report, 
auditors couldn't find any documentation to back up how the award-winning 
system was created or maintained, nor any source code for the information 
it was supposed to track.There is more -- much more -- concerning 
the 22-person agency, known as the Office of Information Assurance of the 
State Department's Bureau of Information Resource Management (IRM/IA), which 
among other things certifies the security status of more than 170 information 
systems i
July 19, 2013: Emergency personnel are on the scene at Six Flags 
Over Texas in Arlington, Texas, after a woman died on the Texas 
Giant roller coaster.AP/The Dallas Morning News, Tom FoxARLINGTON, Texas 
 Authorities said Saturday that a woman who died Friday evening in 
an accident while riding the roller coaster at a Texas amusement park 
appeared to fall off the ride.Arlington Police Sgt. Christopher Cook told 
The Associated Press on Saturday that there appears to have been no 
foul play in Friday's death at the Six Flags Over Texas park 
in Arlington. Police say the Texas Department of Insurance, which approves 
amusement rides, is involved in investigating the accident.The accident 
happened just after 6:30 p.m. Friday at Six Flags Over Texas in 
Arlington. Park spokeswoman Sharon Parker confirmed that a woman died while 
riding the coaster at Six Flags Over Texas in Arlington but did 
not specify how she was killed.A family in line behind the woman, 
identified by family members to MyFoxDFW.com as Rosy Esparza, said that 
Esparza was on the ride with her daughter and son-in-law. The family 
said her seat restraint seemed to go down normally before the car 
left. They said when the train came back, the seat restraint was 
down.The family said Esparza's daughter and son-in-law were calling for 
help. They were screaming, "We need to go get my mom!"Witnesses told 
local media outlets that the woman fell from the ride, which is 
billed as the tallest 

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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">re there."A role 
of a spouse is a lot like chicken soup amid an array 
of medicines," Cunningham said. "It doesn't hurt, but whether or not it 
has profound value is unclear."On the other hand, there is little question 
that Abedin, who was a top adviser to Hillary Clinton at the 
State Department and is now running her transition team to private life, 
is fully invested in her husband's mayoral run.She was pregnant with the 
couple's now 19-month-old son, Jordan, when Weiner stepped down from office. 
As the former congressman entered a self-imposed political exile, the 36-year-old 
Abedin traveled the globe with Clinton. Although she rarely was more than 
a few feet from one of the world's most famous women, Abedin 
fiercely protected her privacy and avoided the limelight.That changed this 
spring. She sat down for an extensive New York Times Magazine interview 
that was the first step of Weiner's comeback and she even had 
a brief speaking role in his mayoral campaign kick-off video, saying, "We 
love this city and no one will work harder to make it 
better than Anthony."She tapped into the Clinton family's vast network of 
donors and raised more than $150,000 over the last two months for 
her husband. And last weekend, she made her debut on the trail, 
walking Harlem's streets hand-in-hand with Weiner, 48, who has gone from 
punch line to one of the race's front-runners."I'm having so much fun," 
she told reporters. "It's just wonderful to see the re
 t take that at all to mean that we're 
constructing reality," he told LiveScience.All in the mindAs members of 
society, people create a form of collective reality. "We are all part 
of a community of minds," Freeman says in the show.For example, money, 
in reality, consists of pieces of paper, yet those papers represent something 
much more valuable. The pieces of paper have the power of life 
and death, Freeman says but they wouldn't be worth anything if people 
didn't believe in their power.Money is fiction, but it's useful fiction.Another 
fiction humans collectively engage in is optimism. Neuroscientist Tali Sharot 
of University College London studies "the optimism bias": people's tendency 
to generally overestimate the likelihood of positive events in their lives 
and underestimate the likelihood of negative ones.In the show, Sharot does 
an experiment in which she puts a man in a brain scanner, 
and asks him to rate the likelihood that negative events, such as 
lung cancer, will happen to him. Then, he is given the true 
likelihood.When the actual risks differ from the man's estimates, his frontal 
lobes light up. But the brain area does a better job of 
reacting to the discrepancy when the reality is more positive than what 
he guessed, Sharot said.This shows how humans are somewhat hardwired to 
be optimistic. That may be because optimism "tends to have a lot 
of positive outcomes," Sharot told LiveScience. Optimistic people tend to 
live longer
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