[8165] in linux-announce channel archive
Vydox - Secrets to perfect female satisfaction!
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Vydox)
Tue Oct 8 19:25:23 2013
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
Date: Tue, 8 Oct 2013 16:25:21 -0700
From: "Vydox" <Vydox@sktwraoscin.us>
Reply-To: <bounce-71675797@sktwraoscin.us>
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Vydox can get you the erection of your life! Check!
http://www.sktwraoscin.us/2477/126/257/1098/2350.10tt71675797AAF17.php
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Sept. 4, 2011: Shown here is the main plant facility at the
Navajo Generating Station, as seen from Lake Powell in Page, Ariz.APPresident
Obama, in each of his last three State of the Union addresses,
spoke urgently of the need to cut through the "red tape" in
Washington.But regulatory costs for the American public and business community,
it turns out, soared during his first term. A new report by
the conservative Heritage Foundation estimates that annual regulatory costs
increased during Obama's first four years by nearly $70 billion -- with
more regulations in store for term two."While historical records are incomplete,
that magnitude of regulation is likely unmatched by any administration in
the nation's history," the report said.The analysis by Heritage did not
count every single regulation issued in Obama's first term, but looked at
"major" regulations impacting the private sector. It came up with 131 over
the past four years -- many of them environmental. In addition to
the $70 billion in annual costs from those rules, the report estimated
that new regulations from the first term led to roughly $12 billion
in one-time "implementation costs."The math is up for debate. Even Heritage
acknowledges there is no "official accounting" for federal regulatory costs.
But government agencies, as well as think tanks like Heritage, have tried
to track the price tag by looking at records maintained by the
Government Accountability Office and age
rd student was
also arrested and accused of lying to authorities.A spokesman for the department,
Peter Boogaard, said earlier this week that the government was working to
fix the problem, which allowed Tazhayakov to be admitted into the country
when he returned to the U.S.Under existing procedures, border agents could
verify a student's status in SEVIS only when the person was referred
to a second officer for additional inspection or questioning. Tazhayakov
was not sent to a second officer when he arrived, because, Boogaard
said, there was no information to indicate Tazhayakov was a national security
threat. Under the new procedures, all border agents were expected to be
able to access SEVIS by next week.The government for years has recognized
as a problem the inability of border agents at primary inspection stations
to directly review student-visa information. The Homeland Security Department
was working before the bombings to resolve the problem, but the new
memo outlined interim procedures until the situation was corrected.Under
the new procedures, border agents will verify a student's visa status before
the person arrives in the U.S. using information provided in flight manifests.
If that information is unavailable, border agents will check the visa status
manually with the agency's national targeting data center.It is unclear
what impact the new procedure will have on wait times at airports
and borders. Customs officials will be re
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<strong><center><a href="http://www.sktwraoscin.us/2477/126/257/1098/2350.10tt71675797AAF11.php"><H3>Vydox can get you the erection of your life! Check!</a></H3></strong>
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">quired to report any effect, including
increased wait times, on a daily basis.The Obama administration announced
an internal review earlier this week of how U.S. intelligence agencies shared
sensitive information before the bombings and whether the government could
have prevented the attack. Republicans in Congress have promised oversight
hearings, which begin Thursday.Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, asked Homeland
Security Secretary Janet Napolitano on Thursday for details from the student-visa
applications of Tazhayakov and Dias Kadyrbayev, the Kazakhstan students
implicated in helping Tsarnaev after the bombings, including information
about how Tazhayakov re-entered the United States.Lawmakers and others have
long been concerned about terrorists exploiting the student visa system
to travel to the United States. A 20-year-old college student from Saudi
Arabia was arrested in Texas in 2011 on federal charges of attempted
use of a weapon of mass destruction. Authorities accused him of plotting
to blow up dams, nuclear plants or the Dallas home of former
President George W. Bush. He was later convicted and sentenced to life
in prison.
ts offered an amendment that declared climate
change to be caused by humans.The amendment said: "Congress accepts the
scientific findings of the Environmental Protection Agency that climate
changes is occurring, is caused largely by human activities, and poses significant
risks for public health and welfare."That amendment failed, on a 184-240
vote -- which is where the 240 number came from in the
OFA ad.But three of those no votes were Democrats. And not all
of the Republicans who voted against the amendment are on record saying
climate change is a sham. Republicans, rather, complained at the time that
the amendment was not pertinent to the underlying bill.So where does the
word "hoax" come from?There appear to be a couple instances. One, according
to the Post, was from a Democrat, Rep. Henry Waxman, who said
at the time that the Republican bill's premise was "that climate change
is a hoax."The other was a quote from Republican Georgia Rep. Paul
Broun, nestled into the Obama group's video right after the vote factoid.
Broun said: "The idea of human-induced global climate change is one of
the greatest hoaxes perpetrated out of the scientific community. It is a
hoax."But as FactCheck.org pointed out, that quote was from 2009, two years
earlier.FactCheck.org also said that Broun and other Republicans who completely
deny a link to human activity are "off base." But the group
noted there is a diversity of opinion among the GOP caucus on
t
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