[8957] in linux-announce channel archive
Direct Wire - Up to 5000 dollars
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Loan Department)
Mon Dec 2 08:43:51 2013
From: "Loan Department" <LoanDepartment@ntdflubber.us>
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
Date: Mon, 2 Dec 2013 05:43:43 -0800
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Secure your loan application in 7 minutes!
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In this 2007 file photo the Massive Ordnance Penetrator conventional bomb
is off-loaded at White Sands Missile Range, N.M.The Boeing Company/DTRAThe
Pentagon's biggest bunker-busting bomb has been upgraded with one task in
mind: taking out suspected Iranian nuclear facilities built deep under the
mountains of the Islamic Republic's northern region.At 30,000 pounds, the
Massive Ordnance Penetrator packs brute force and advanced features meant
to enable it to destroy Iran's most fortified nuclear site.The bomb is
nearly a third bigger than the MOAB, or so-called "Mother of all
Bombs," the 22,000-pound previous generation of bunker busters first built
in 2003 but never used outside of tests. Officials are confident the
newest bunker-buster can dismantle even the deepest and most fortified nuclear
facility.- Senior U.S. official"Hopefully we never have to use it," a senior
U.S. official familiar with the development of the new version told The
Wall Street Journal. "But if we had to, it would work."The Pentagon
redesigned the bomb with more advanced features intended to enable it to
penetrate even deeper, giving it the ability to destroy Iran's most heavily
fortified and defended nuclear site. U.S. officials see development of the
weapon as critical to convincing Israel that the U.S. has the ability
to prevent Iran from getting a nuclear bomb if diplomacy fails, and
also that Israel's military can't do that on its own.American officials
have
An investigators carries a piece of debris amid the destroyed fertilizer
plant in West, Texas, Thursday, May 2, 2013. Investigators face a slew
of challenges in figuring out what caused the explosion at the fertilizer
plant that killed 14 people and destroyed part of the small Texas
town. (AP Photo/Pool/ LM Otero)The Associated PressWEST, Texas Burglars
occasionally sneaked into and around a Texas fertilizer plant in the years
before a massive, deadly explosion sometimes looking for a chemical
fertilizer stored at the plant that can be used to make methamphetamine,
according to local sheriff's records.Sheriff's deputies were called more
than 10 times to West Fertilizer in the 11 years before an
April 17 blast that killed 14 people, injured 200 and leveled part
of the tiny town of West, according to McLennan County sheriff's office
files released through an open-records request. Multiple calls involved
suspicion that anhydrous ammonia was being stolen.The records portray a
plant with no outer fence that was a sporadic target of intruders.
Law enforcement was occasionally called because someone had noticed the
smell of gas outside or signs of an intruder.Anhydrous ammonia is a
fertilizer that is a frequent target of burglars trying to manufacture methamphetamine.
In the right conditions it can be flammable or explosive, though that
is nearly impossible outdoors. However, a leak of the gas could create
a potentially fatal toxic chemical
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<td colspan="2"><p><font color="#454545" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="+2"><font color="#57969f" ><strong>> </strong></font> Loans from $500 - $5000</font></p>
<p><font color="#454545" face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="+2"><font color="#57969f"><strong>> </strong></font> Repayment Terms Up To 60 Months!</font></p>
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<td><font face="Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" color="#525252" style="font-size:11px;"><br><center><em> <a href="http://www.ntdflubber.us/3323/73/150/682/1317.10tt71675797AAF5.html">Update Preferences</a><br /><br>Blue Global Media | 7144 East Stetson Drive, Third Floor | Scottsdale, AZ 85251</em></font></td>
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;"> rnative under
sequestration," Forest Service Chief Tom Tidwell wrote in March to governors
in 41 states, explaining that since the payments were issued in the
2013 budget year, the money would be subject to sequestration.Infuriated,
Republicans and Democrats from Capitol Hill to the governor's offices banded
together to fight back, arguing the money was paid to the states
well before the spending reductions went into effect. The governors of Alaska
and Wyoming have flat out refused to send the money back."The frustration
level is off the charts on this," said Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore.,
whose timber-rich state is the top recipient of the Forest Service payments
and stands to lose nearly $3.6 million.Wyden, chairman of the Senate Energy
and Natural Resources Committee, said he and Alaska Sen. Lisa Murkowski,
the panel's top Republican, are working together to "turn this around" so
their states and others are not forced to return any money to
the federal government."This is slap-your-forehead-in-disbelief kind of
stuff," Wyden said.At issue are so-called county payments, a revenue sharing
plan that's existed since President Teddy Roosevelt created the national
forests to protect timber reserves from the cut-and-run logging going on
at the time. For nearly a century, hundreds of counties received a
quarter of the revenue from the timber sold on federal land. The
money is being used for roads, schools and emergency services and is
a welcome a
ddition to cash-strapped county coffers, especially in the Northwest.
In recent years, the law has acted as a subsidy for states
and counties hard hit by logging declines triggered by measures to protect
threatened species.Idaho's Valley County, for example, would have to return
more than $128,000 from its budget of $2.5 million for roads and
schools. That leaves Gordon Cruickshank, chairman of the Valley County commission,
in a no-win position. Should he forgo the repaving of even a
single mile of the county's 300 miles of paved roads, defer maintenance
on a bridge or lay off two county employees?"We are struggling really
hard now to figure out what to do," Cruickshank said. "It's a
tough pill to swallow that they sent these payments out just a
few months before sequestration, and now they want them back."The Forest
Service has paid billions of dollars to counties over the decades, but
the receipts dwindled as logging on national forests dropped precipitously
in the 1990s -- first in the Northwest to protect the northern
spotted owl and salmon, and then later across the country as concerns
grew over the impact of clear-cut logging on wildlife and clean water.In
2000, Wyden led the charge for a new law, called the Secure
Rural Schools Act, a way for the government to pay counties that
no longer could depend on revenue from logging in federal forests. But
the law has expired, and the last payments went out in January.
Wyden and other l
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