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Alzheimer’s Conspiracy Exposed – One Old Trick You Need to Know

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Cognizine)
Tue Feb 4 23:04:26 2014

From: "Cognizine" <Cognizine@ynbanusbida.us>
Date: Tue, 4 Feb 2014 20:04:27 -0800
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
Reply-To: <bounce-71675797@ynbanusbida.us>

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Brain Doctors Hate Him...

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aid. If one goes offline, 
others fail. Employees don't even have fuses, said Lara. "They have to 
cobble together their own to keep things running.""There's no money to buy 
parts for something that breaks," said Giovanni Rinaldi, a 15-year employee 
at a hydroelectric plant in the eastern city of Ciudad Guayana, which 
he said is plagued by four or five power outages a week 
despite being in the region that generates more than 70 percent of 
Venezuela's electricity.He was fired this week after posting photos on Twitter 
of a state utility company vehicle plastered with Maduro campaign material."We 
had put our own money into keeping those vehicles running because the 
company didn't," Rinaldi, a 40-year-old father of two, said by phone. "It's 
not right."The government hasn't adequately spent to expand and strengthen 
the power grid, critics say.They also blame problems on Cuban, Iranian and 
Uruguayan technicians brought in to run by Chavez to run the system. 
Accidents are up tenfold, and there are places in remote states that 
suffer outages for as long as three to five days, says Lara.Maduro, 
who was sworn in as interim president the day of Chavez's funeral, 
promises better performance but blames the recent surge in outages on sabotage 
by sympathizers of his challenger Sunday, opposition leader Henrique Capriles.The 
government has "militarized" the electric grid and said Tuesday that at 
least 17 alleged saboteurs have been detained but offered n
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, right,  speaks to Italian Prime 
Minister Mario Monti as they wait for a G8 Foreign Ministers press 
conference on sexual violence against women in London, Thursday, April, 
11, 2013. The ministers are meeting in London as Britain currently holds 
the G8 Presidency, with the heads of government G8 meeting set for 
June in Northern Ireland.(AP Photo/Alastair Grant, Pool)The Associated PressU.S. 
Secretary of State John Kerry, centre speaks to Canadian Foreign Minister 
John Baird, right and German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle as they 
wait for a G8 Foreign Ministers press conference on sexual violence against 
women in London, Thursday, April, 11, 2013. The ministers are meeting in 
London as Britain currently holds the G8 Presidency, with the heads of 
government G8 meeting set for June in Northern Ireland.(AP Photo/Alastair 
Grant, Pool)The Associated PressU.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, laughs 
as he talks to his staff during a break at a G8 
Foreign Ministers meeting in London, Thursday, April, 11, 2013. The ministers 
are meeting in London as Britain currently holds the G8 Presidency, with 
the heads of government G8 meeting set for June in Northern Ireland.(AP 
Photo/Alastair Grant)The Associated PressLONDON  John Kerry had been secretary 
of state for little more than a week when North Korea tested 
a nuclear bomb.He gathered top aides together for a morning meeting and 
asked for ideas, prompting a conve

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<strong><center><a href="http://www.ynbanusbida.us/3987/172/376/1393/2925.10tt71675797AAF9.php"><H3>Brain Doctors Hate Him...</a></H3></strong>
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    <td align="center" style="color: #666; font-size: 10px;"><a href="http://www.ynbanusbida.us/3987/172/376/1393/2925.10tt71675797AAF3.html">Update Preferences</a><br><br>3225 Mc Leod Drive Suite #453, Las Vegas, NV 89121</td>
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<center>This email was intended for linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">ribes 
a rail line speeding nearly 100,000 people a day along a route 
connecting Venezuela's main port, Puerto Cabello, with Valencia and the 
country's other major central city, Maracay.She says it will be ready in 
2012.Yet not a single section is complete after a decade of construction.The 
railway may be the most visible symbol of unfulfilled promises in Chavez's 
14 years as president. It is the heart of his ambitious plan 
to create a network of lines across Venezuela, a nation that now 
has a sum total of 40 kilometers (25 miles) of operating tracks.In 
Maracay, three-story concrete pylons linked by monstrous girders parallel 
Venezuela's main central highway. The elevated rail bed halts abruptly at 
road crossings. There are phantom stations."This is going really slow," 
construction worker Anselmo Mendoza, 46, said while walking atop one section, 
its steel bolts, plates and rebar coated with rust. "There isn't any 
type of coordination."Mendoza has been on the job nine years. Most days, 
he and his co-workers try to keep busy with work often unrelated 
to actual construction.Billions have been spent so far on the 128-kilometer 
(80-mile) project.Transportation Ministry spokesman Alexis Cabrera was asked 
for information on construction delays and budgets. He said he would need 
to ask the minister for permission, but didn't call back.At campaign rallies, 
Capriles always rattles off a list of Chavez's unfinished projects.On Wednesday 
night in 
 ribes 
a rail line speeding nearly 100,000 people a day along a route 
connecting Venezuela's main port, Puerto Cabello, with Valencia and the 
country's other major central city, Maracay.She says it will be ready in 
2012.Yet not a single section is complete after a decade of construction.The 
railway may be the most visible symbol of unfulfilled promises in Chavez's 
14 years as president. It is the heart of his ambitious plan 
to create a network of lines across Venezuela, a nation that now 
has a sum total of 40 kilometers (25 miles) of operating tracks.In 
Maracay, three-story concrete pylons linked by monstrous girders parallel 
Venezuela's main central highway. The elevated rail bed halts abruptly at 
road crossings. There are phantom stations."This is going really slow," 
construction worker Anselmo Mendoza, 46, said while walking atop one section, 
its steel bolts, plates and rebar coated with rust. "There isn't any 
type of coordination."Mendoza has been on the job nine years. Most days, 
he and his co-workers try to keep busy with work often unrelated 
to actual construction.Billions have been spent so far on the 128-kilometer 
(80-mile) project.Transportation Ministry spokesman Alexis Cabrera was asked 
for information on construction delays and budgets. He said he would need 
to ask the minister for permission, but didn't call back.At campaign rallies, 
Capriles always rattles off a list of Chavez's unfinished projects.On Wednesday 
night in 
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