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Want to get relief from blood pressure..See Here

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Doctor HaengWoo Lee)
Tue Jul 30 22:31:21 2013

To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
From: "Doctor HaengWoo Lee" <DoctorHaengWooLee@rfclawkdall.info>
Date: Tue, 30 Jul 2013 19:31:18 -0700

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Blood Pressure Myth Exposed...?

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 ch everywhere but Caracas, the capital. Worsening power 
outages, crumbling infrastructure and other unfulfilled promises witnessed 
this week in a trip through the country's industrial heartland could be 
an important factor in Sunday's election to replace socialist President 
Hugo Chavez, who died last month after a long battle with cancer.His 
political heir, Nicolas Maduro, is favored to win, largely on the strength 
of Chavez's generous anti-poverty programs, which Chavez emphasized over 
public works with one big exception: housing.But polls show that support 
may be eroding and the outages are a testament to the neglect 
many Venezuelans consider inexcusable in this major oil-producing state. 
Violent crime, double-digit inflation, official corruption and persistent 
food shortages are other factors.Some of the rolling, intermittent blackouts 
are still scheduled. But most are no longer announced. They generally last 
three to four hours a day on average, said Miguel Lara, who 
ran the power grid until Chavez forced him out in 2004 for 
being "a political risk."Jose Aguilar, a U.S.-based consultant with extensive 
and more recent experience in Venezuela's electrical industry, says it is 
suffering "a downward spiral of deterioration." Insufficient transmission 
lines are running so hot that 20,000 distribution transformers burned out 
last year, he said. "They run them cherry red."Electrical substations are 
in a precarious state, Aguilar and Lara s
 at."We've 
struck the right balance," said Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Mich., the committee's 
chairman. "It's 100 percent voluntary. There are no big mandates in this 
bill, and industry says under these conditions they think they can share 
(information), and the government can give them information that might protect 
them."The Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act, or CISPA, is widely 
backed by industry groups that say businesses are struggling to defend against 
aggressive and sophisticated attacks from hackers in China, Russia and Eastern 
Europe.Privacy and civil liberties groups have long opposed the bill because 
they say it opens America's commercial records to the federal government 
without putting a civilian agency in charge, such as the Homeland Security 
Department or Commerce Department. That leaves open the possibility that 
the National Security Agency or another military or intelligence office 
would become involved, they said. While the new program would be intended 
to transmit only technical threat data, opponents said they worried that 
personal information could be passed along, too.Democratic Reps. Adam Schiff 
of California and Jan Schakowsky of Illinois were the lone dissenters. At 
a press conference, they said they would push for amendments on the 
House floor next week that would specifically bar the military from taking 
a central role in data collection and instead put the Homeland Security 
Department in charge. They also 

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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> s are still 
more focused on ordinary gun violence, especially related to the drug trade.Manchin 
and Toomey have staked out center ground on the issue of firearms 
background checks, and something might eventually pass the Senate and be 
modified again in the House. Yes, there is a call for a 
commission on mass violence, but the success rate for Washington commissions 
is abysmal.Whatever happens, one thing we now know is that anything that 
does pass in the name of Newtown wont address what happened in 
Newtown.And Now, A Word From CharlesI think they cleverly were able to 
get the press to believe that there was a huge concession with 
the change in the calculation of inflation, which creates a miniscule shift 
in the curve on Social Security. It's a quarter of a penny 
on the dollar. It is a very small change.-- Charles Krauthammer on 
Special Report with Bret Baier.Chris Stirewalt is digital politics editor 
for Fox News, and his POWER PLAY column appears Monday-Friday on FoxNews.com. 
Catch Chris Live online daily at 11:30amET at http:live.foxnews.com.
 FILE - This missing person's photo provided by the Fairfield Ohio Police 
Department shows Katelyn H. Markham who had been missing since Aug. 14, 
2011. Indiana police said late Wednesday, April 11, 2013 that remains found 
April 7, 2013, along a creek in southern Franklin County are those 
of Markham.AP/Fairfield Ohio Police DepartmentCINCINNATI  Authorities turned 
their focus Thursday to investigating the cause of death for a southwest 
Ohio woman whose skeletal remains were found in Indiana 20 months after 
she went missing.Indiana State Police Sgt. Noel Houze said police in the 
two states want to hear from anyone who has information about 21-year-old 
Katelyn Markham."Somebody out there knows what happened," Houze said Thursday. 
Indiana police said late Wednesday that remains found Sunday along a creek 
had been identified as those of Markham, reported missing to Fairfield, 
Ohio, police on Aug. 14, 2011. He said foul play is suspected, 
but police and coroner's investigations will be needed to determine cause 
of death."We don't know that for sure, either," Houze said.Fairfield Police 
Chief Michael Dickey, whose investigators have pursued numerous leads in 
the case, said Thursday that Indiana State Police is the lead agency 
in the investigation, and he declined to discuss details of next steps 
in the probe. The Hamilton County coroner's office in Cincinnati made the 
identification of the remains, but also referred questions to Indiana authoriti
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