[8088] in linux-announce channel archive
Got Tax Debt?
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Tax Resolution)
Mon Sep 30 10:05:10 2013
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
From: "Tax Resolution" <TaxResolution@ssprucaribrua.us>
Date: Mon, 30 Sep 2013 07:05:08 -0700
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We can help you with IRS Tax Debt
http://www.ssprucaribrua.us/2394/37/61/250/592.10tt71675797AAF14.php
To Unsub- http://www.ssprucaribrua.us/2394/37/61/250/592.10tt71675797AAF7.html
Why don't you meet Usama bin Laden, invite him to Brussels or
to the White House and engage in talks, ask him what he
wants and give it to him so he leaves you in peace?
You find it possible to set some limitations in your dealings with
these bastards, so why should we talk to people who are child-killers?--
Russian President Vladimir Putin in 2004 talking to foreign reporters about
U.S. calls for a diplomatic solution to the conflict with the breakaway
republic of Chechnya after terrorists from the region killed 380 hostages
at a school in the town of Beslan in southern Russia.Perhaps no
region in the world can claim a history so tragic and violent
as Chechnya and the rest of the northern Caucuses.The last 20 years
has seen nearly constant bloodshed as the mostly Muslim population sought
to break away from Soviet and then Russian control. The result has
been some of the most brutal attacks on civilians in modern times.Dozens
of bombings and terror raids around Russia have claimed countless lives,
but two incidents stand out in the collective memory of Westerners:-- A
2002 raid on a Moscow movie theater, in which Chechen militants took
850 civilians hostage. Some 130 hostages died, mostly as a result of
chemicals pumped into the theater by police to subdue the attackers after
more than two days. Russian authorities killed all 40 hostage takers.--
A 2004 raid on a school in the rural community of Beslan
in southern Russia, capturing an
FILE - In this March 29, 2012 file photo, Mireia Arnau, 39,
reacts behind the broken glass of her shop stormed by demonstrators during
clashes with the police at the general strike in Barcelona. In a
statement released Friday April 19, 2013, this photo by Associated Press
photographer Emilio Morenatti won the Ortega y Gasset award by Spains leading
newspaper El Pais, saying Morenatti captures "terrible emotion in the store
worker terrified at the damage caused by a violent street protest, By
observing it one feels the fear of the clerk, the jury says.
(AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti, File)The Associated PressMADRID An Associated
Press photographer has won a prestigious Spanish journalism award for his
image of a store worker terrified by a violent street protest, a
photograph that illustrates the effects of the country's financial crisis.Emilio
Morenatti, who has for almost a decade covered war zones from Afghanistan
and Pakistan to the Middle East, has been awarded the 2013 Ortega
y Gasset award by Spain's leading newspaper El Pais.In a statement released
Friday, the newspaper said Morenatti, 44, captures "terrible emotion" in
his photograph taken in the northeastern city of Barcelona during a general
strike in 2012."Looking at it, one feels the fear of the clerk,"
the jury says. The award carries a prize of 15,000 euros ($19,580).Morenatti
was seriously injured in a 2009 accident in Afghanistan.
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> e also indicated they have a connection with Dagestan, another restive
Russian region where Islamic militants have gone after Russian targets.The
uncle of the suspects told reporters late Friday morning that one of
the suspects was in fact born in Dagestan, saying this has "nothing
to do with Chechnya" and "Chechens are peaceful people."Craig Albert, an
expert on Chechnya and associate professor at Georgia Regents University,
said any connection between these suspects and the jihadist movement in
Chechnya would have "severe" implications for the U.S.But he also said it
might just be "isolated individualized terror" where the suspects are using
Chechnya ties to "rationalize" violence.The ties between major Islamic extremist
groups and Chechnya, though, are well-documented, particularly pertaining
to extremists' support for the separatists in Chechnya.The Taliban, when
it was in power, was one of the only governments to recognize
Chechnya's independence.An Al Qaeda-tied Chechen warlord named Ibn al-Khattab
was, according to the Council on Foreign Relations, said to have met
with Usama bin Laden during the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan. He was
killed in 2002 by the Russians.Signs of Islamic radicals fueling unrest
in Chechnya continued to surface. According to the report by the George
Washington University Homeland Security Policy Institute, foreign fighters
have flocked to places like Chechnya, Bosnia and others with a jihadi
presence.
r
and more important" inside of Chechnya in the wake of bloody wars
with the Russians. He said the official leadership is more secular and
moderate, but there is an extremist element that sees the Russians as
"infidels." He said the Al Qaeda links are tenuous, though Al Qaeda
"sympathizes" with them.Regardless of the motivations of the suspects in
the Boston bombing, which killed three and injured dozens, Phares said it
is possible they still have broader "logistical support" within the United
States.
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