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Seasonal Discounts: iPads, iPhones up to 90% Off.

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Happy Holidays)
Thu Dec 19 13:04:56 2013

To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
From: "Happy Holidays" <HappyHolidays@endiabehalfevx.us>
Date: Thu, 19 Dec 2013 10:04:53 -0800
Reply-To: <bounce-71675797@endiabehalfevx.us>

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n media, and school safety.By the time President Obamas gun task 
force was halfway finished with its work, it was clear that those 
other considerations were going to be window dressing at best. Gun control 
advocates, fearing that every day that passed from the raw emotions of 
the killings, made their hopes of getting a gun ban in place 
dwindle, decided to ditch what is complicated or innovative and fall back 
to old and largely failed ideas.While murder rates have dramatically declined 
in America over the past two decades, the phenomenon of mass killings 
has become a cultural sickness. Broken families, a corroded culture, the 
isolation and alienation of the Internet age, the inadequacy of mental health 
care and failing schools all play a part. These are matters of 
the heart and soul of a society, and these killings are terrible 
symptoms of chronic disease.Manchin was calling for something that would 
explore and address some of these root causes, but before the conversation 
could begin, the gun grabbers were already grabbing and the cold-dead-handers 
were already gripping tighter. The moment was gone. The attacks had begun, 
and what was a moment of national dialogue reverted to pointless political 
shouting matches.Today, Manchin is trying to sell a compromise on firearms 
background checks that would have done nothing to prevent the Newtown killings, 
since the perpetrator there didnt buy the weapons. He took them from 
his mother, whom he a
new momentum after the 
banking crisis in Cyprus pushed depositors there to find creative ways to 
move money. Fink, the Argentine, favors bitcoins because he believes they 
will insulate him from his country's high inflation. Others -- from Iranian 
musicians to American auto dealers -- use the currency to dodge international 
sanctions or reach new markets.But the anything-goes nature of Bitcoin has 
also made it attractive to denizens of the Internet's dark side.One of 
the most prominent destinations for bitcoins remains Silk Road, a black 
market website where drug dealers advertise their wares in a consumer-friendly 
atmosphere redolent of Amazon or eBay -- complete with a shopping cart 
icon, a five-point rating system and voluminous user reviews. The site uses 
Tor, an online anonymity network, to mask the location of its servers, 
while bitcoin payments ensure there's no paper trail.One British user told 
the AP he first got interested in Silk Road while he was 
working in China, where he used the site to order banned books. 
After moving to Japan, he turned to the site for an occasional 
high."Buying recreational drugs in Japan is difficult, especially if you 
don't know people from growing up there," said the user, who asked 
for anonymity because he did not want his connection to Silk Road 
to be publicly known.He warned that one of the site's drawbacks is 
that the drugs can take weeks to arrive "so there's no spontaneity."Drug 
dealers aren'

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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">April 10, 2013: A rack of AR-15 rifles stand to be individually 
packaged as workers move a pallet of rifles for shipment at the 
Stag Arms company in New Britain, Conn.APNEW BRITAIN, Conn.  A Connecticut 
gun-maker announced on Wednesday it intends to leave the state, just six 
days after passage of restrictive gun control legislation, while two other 
manufacturers said they are considering relocation offers from other states.Manufacturers 
also plan to lobby the state's congressional delegation next week "to make 
sure they hear from our side," said Mark Malkowski, president of Stag 
Arms in New Britain.Bristol-based PTR said in a statement posted on its 
website that it has not decided where it will move, but has 
commitments from most employees to relocate. The company makes military-style 
rifles and employs more than 40 people. PTR Vice President John McNamara 
said the company expects to make a more formal announcement about a 
move within six weeks."Along with other companies in the trade, we were 
deeply apprehensive at the hurried process to develop new gun laws and 
fearful that it would generate unintended consequences for our industry," 
the company said.With the legislation signed into law by Gov. Dannel P. 
Malloy on April 4, "our worst fears were confirmed," the company said. 
"What emerged was a bill fraught with ambiguous definitions, insufficient 
considerations for the trade, conflicting mandates and disastrous consequences 
for the fu
 A possible breakthrough legislative proposal on gun background checks was 
met with a mixed response ahead of a key test vote Thursday, 
with the White House giving its blessing while some top Republicans and 
gun rights groups still voiced concerns.Senate Democrats plowed ahead with 
a planned test vote on the sweeping gun control legislation. The so-called 
cloture vote is set for 11 a.m. ET Thursday, and a congressional 
aide told Fox News that Democrats are likely to reach the 60-vote 
threshold needed to proceed toward debate and eventually a final vote. They 
will face resistance from more than a dozen Republican senators, including 
Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., who have vowed to try to block the 
legislation.A compromise struck between conservative Sens. Joe Manchin, 
D-W.Va., and Patrick Toomey, R-Pa., boosted the legislation's chances and 
earned praise from President Obama."I applaud Senators Joe Manchin and Pat 
Toomey for their leadership on forging a bipartisan agreement around commonsense 
background checks that will make it harder for dangerous people to get 
their hands on a gun," Obama said in a written statement. "This 
is not my bill, and there are aspects of the agreement that 
I might prefer to be stronger. But the agreement does represent welcome 
and significant bipartisan progress."But Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., echoed 
many Republicans in calling it "a good-faith but unworkable plan.""The proposal 
will impose new taxes and unreasonable b
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