[9994] in linux-announce channel archive
Dating News: 1 in 6 Marriages Start Online - Meet Singles Today!
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Match.com Partner)
Sun Mar 2 19:34:38 2014
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
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Date: Sun, 2 Mar 2014 16:34:36 -0800
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Single and looking for plans this weekend?
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Undated: A Facebook graphic, by the group Credo Action, asking Facebook
founder Mark Zuckerberg to stop supporting ads backing the Keystone XL Pipeline.CREDOFILE:
April 4, 2013: Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg during a company press event
in Menlo Park, Calif.REUTERSFacebook founder Mark Zuckerberg is facing a
backlash from the left over ads that support drilling in Alaska and
the Canada-to-Texas Keystone pipeline, as the young billionaire wades ever-deeper
into charged political debates.The daisy chain that connects Zuckerberg
with the drilling ads starts with FWD.US, the bipartisan group Zuckerberg
co-founded for the purpose of supporting immigration legislation. That organization
gave money to a conservative group, Americans for a Conservative Direction,
that aired a TV ad supporting South Carolina Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham.
It also gave to a group that put up an ad backing
drilling in Alaska.Graham is among the eight senators who crafted the bipartisan
immigration legislation now being debated on Capitol Hill. However, Graham
appears in the ad criticizing President Obama for not approving the Keystone
pipeline, which supporters say will help the United Sates achieve energy
independence and critics say will be an environmental hazard.The president
says Im for all of the above when it comes to energy,
Graham says in the 60-second spot. Well, those are words coming out
of his mouth. They dont come from his heart. No Keystone pipeli
rned how to make a bomb. However, it wasnt until the FBI
released a surveillance photo of the suspects that the friends realized
Tsarnaev may have been involved.The FBI claims this prompted Dias Kadyrbayev
and Azamat Tazhayakova both 19-year-old natives of Kazakhstan and friends
of Tsarnaev at UMass-Dartmouth, to go to Tsarnaev's dorm and take a
laptop, the backpack and some Vaseline that may have been used in
making the deadly pressure cooker bombs that killed three and injured more
than 200 at the race. Police believe the bombs were packed with
shrapnel and gunpowder removed from fireworks.Robel Phillipos, of Cambridge,
Mass., also 19, was charged with willfully making materially false statements
to federal law enforcement officials during a terrorism investigation.The
affidavit filed in support of a complaint said Kadyrbayev was the one
who carried out the disposal of the backpack after the three saw
the fireworks that had been hollowed out and emptied of gunpowder.Although
the three new suspects initially appear to have stonewalled authorities,
Phillipos came clean in a fourth interview, conducted April 26. He confessed
that the three took the backpack out of their friend's dorm room,
according to the affidavit. Phillipos allegedly told investigators that
the two others "started to freak out" after seeing Tsarnaev identified on
television.Robert Stahl, an attorney representing Kadyrbayev, said his client
denies the allegations and a
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<strong><center><a href="http://www.endiabehalfevx.us/l/lt1AVK4427GHV107DXAFKW/592LWMT997GFPY1969NGKUXI10VAR71675797YKR532705105"><H3>Single and looking for plans this weekend?</a></H3></strong>
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">March 8, 2012: Florida Gov. Rick Scott delivers his state of the
state speech to the Florida legislature in Tallahassee.APTALLAHASSEE, Fla.
Gov. Rick Scott vetoed a bill late Wednesday that would have
ended permanent alimony in Florida.Scott vetoed the measure (SB 718) just
four hours before the midnight deadline to approve or veto it. The
bill automatically would have become law if Scott had done nothing by
then.If it had become law, Florida would have become the fifth state
to abolish permanent alimony.In a letter to Senate President Don Gaetz,
Scott commended bill sponsors Ritch Workman in the House and Kelli Stargel
in the Senate -- both Republicans -- and said there are "several
forward looking elements of this bill."But alimony "represents an important
remedy for our judiciary to use in providing support to families as
they adjust to changes in life circumstances," Scott wrote. "As a husband,
father and grandfather, I understand the vital importance of family."Scott
could not "support this legislation because it applies retroactively and
thus tampers with the settled economic expectations of many Floridians who
have experienced divorce," he wrote. "The retroactive adjustment of alimony
could result in unfair, unanticipated results."Florida law "already provides
for the adjustment of alimony under the proper circumstances," Scott wrote.
"The law also ensures that spouses who have sacrificed their careers to
raise a family do not s
March 8, 2012: Florida Gov. Rick Scott delivers his state of the
state speech to the Florida legislature in Tallahassee.APTALLAHASSEE, Fla.
Gov. Rick Scott vetoed a bill late Wednesday that would have
ended permanent alimony in Florida.Scott vetoed the measure (SB 718) just
four hours before the midnight deadline to approve or veto it. The
bill automatically would have become law if Scott had done nothing by
then.If it had become law, Florida would have become the fifth state
to abolish permanent alimony.In a letter to Senate President Don Gaetz,
Scott commended bill sponsors Ritch Workman in the House and Kelli Stargel
in the Senate -- both Republicans -- and said there are "several
forward looking elements of this bill."But alimony "represents an important
remedy for our judiciary to use in providing support to families as
they adjust to changes in life circumstances," Scott wrote. "As a husband,
father and grandfather, I understand the vital importance of family."Scott
could not "support this legislation because it applies retroactively and
thus tampers with the settled economic expectations of many Floridians who
have experienced divorce," he wrote. "The retroactive adjustment of alimony
could result in unfair, unanticipated results."Florida law "already provides
for the adjustment of alimony under the proper circumstances," Scott wrote.
"The law also ensures that spouses who have sacrificed their careers to
raise a family do not s
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