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Thu Oct 3 16:48:39 2013
From: "Match" <Match@zuidelgonna.us>
Date: Thu, 3 Oct 2013 13:48:36 -0700
Reply-To: <bounce-73800431@zuidelgonna.us>
To: sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu
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Dating News: 1 in 5 Relationships Start Online - Meet Singles Today!
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agenda that the House Republican Caucus set
for the 2013 session. To take effect, the bill still must be
passed by the Senate and approved by Alabama voters in a statewide
referendum.In the Senate, Sanford said he was not trying to declare all
federal gun laws void. Instead, he said he hoped that if Congress
were to pass gun controls, the legislation would permit the state attorney
general to issue an opinion that the law was unconstitutional and then
Alabama law enforcement officers could refrain from enforcing it.We are
going to declare it null and void and not participate with the
federal government, said Sanford, who has a pistol permit and regularly
carries a gun.Republican Sen. Dick Brewbaker of Montgomery voted for the
bill, but he said states trying to nullify federal laws have been
losing ever since the 1830s when South Carolina tried it with a
federal tariff in President Andrew Jacksons administration.Sanfords bill
would have to pass the House and be signed by the governor
to become law. He said House approval will be hard to get
because the Legislature has only four meeting days left in the 2013
session. We are so late in the session, it makes it difficult
to pass anything, he said.The bill comes two weeks after Kansas Republican
governor, Sam Brownback, signed a law providing that all Kansas-made guns
that have not left Kansas are exempt from federal gun control laws.Immediately
after passing Sanfords bill, the Senate pass
e product is safe."This
raises questions about how the GRAS concept is working and is it
working adequately," Taylor said of the gum and other caffeine-added products.As
food companies have created more new ingredients to add health benefits,
improve taste or help food stay fresh, there are at least 4,650
of these "generally recognized as safe" ingredients, according to the nonpartisan
Pew Charitable Trusts. The bulk of them, at least 3,000, were determined
GRAS by companies and trade associations.Caffeine is not a new ingredient,
but Taylor says the FDA is concerned about all of the new
ways it is being delivered to consumers. He said the agency will
look at the potential impact these "new and easy sources" of caffeine
will have on children's health and will take action if necessary. He
said that he and other FDA officials have held meetings with some
of the large food companies that have ventured into caffeinated products,
including Mars Inc., of which Wrigley is a subsidiary.Wrigley and other
companies adding caffeine to their products have labeled them as for adult
use only. A spokeswoman for Wrigley, Denise M. Young, said the gum
is for "adults who are looking for foods with caffeine for energy"
and each piece contains about 40 milligrams, or the equivalent amount found
in half a cup of coffee. She said the company will work
with FDA."Millions of Americans consume caffeine responsibly and in moderation
as part of their daily rout
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">Mubarak Ali Gilani, the shadowy founder of Muslims of the Americas, is
believed to be living in Pakistan. (Christian Action Network)Christian Action
Network vows to bring Gilani, founder of Muslims of the Americas, into
a U.S. court if the $30 million defamation suit proceeds. (Christian Action
Network)Gilani, who is believed to be in his eighties, fires a weapon
in a training video made by Muslims of the Americas. (Christian Action
Network)Muslims of the Americas has rural bases in several states, including
South Carolina and New York.The shadowy leader of an American Muslim organization
accused of running terror training camps in the U.S. could find himself
being questioned under oath if his outfit follows through on its $30
million defamation suit against the Christian group that leveled the charges
in a best-selling book.Muslims of the Americas, a group founded in the
1980s by elusive Pakistani Sheikh Mubarak Ali Gilani, is suing the Christian
Action Network for defamation and libel following CANs recent publication
of the book Twilight in America: The Untold Story of Islamist Terrorist
Training Camps Inside America. Co-authored by CAN founder Martin Mawyer
and Patti Pierucci, the book accuses MOA of acting as a front
for the radical Islamist group Jamaat al-Fuqra.In the suit, filed this year
in federal court in Albany, N.Y., the Muslim group accuses Mawyer, Pierucci
and CAN of "malicious, repetitious and continuous pronouncements and
self as Vice Chancellor
of the International Quranic Open University, Imam of the Muslims of the
Americas and a direct Descendant of the Holy Last Messenger [the Prophet
Muhammed], has previously been accused of inspiring so-called Shoe Bomber
Richard Reid and John Allen Mohammed, the Beltway sniper attacker who, with
a young accomplice, killed 10 people during a brief reign of terror
in October 2002.Mawyer said if the civil suit goes to trial, he
will move to bring Gilani to the U.S. and put him on
the stand. For an organization that so jealously guards its privacy, that
may be enough to drop the suit.I think they hoped that we
would not have the money to fight it and it would serve
the purpose of telling their own members, See, we took care of
that Martin Mawyer fellow, Mawyer said. They say we have declared war
on Islam, but I can tell you that is definitely not the
case. This group is against Christians, Hindus, Hari Krishna, Jews, and
any Imams who do not preach their strict view of Islam.MOA officials
could not be reached, and the group's attorney, Tahirah Clark, did not
return calls. But in a January statement on The Islamic Post website,
the groups official mouthpiece, Gilani denied claims he is a radical. He
said he has weeded out militant Muslims who had infiltrated his inner
circle, including a man he said was a hitman for the Muslim
Brotherhood.Mawyer and the CAN have no intention of backing out of the
legal fight with M
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