[38461] in SIPB IPv6
No more pills or capsules to swallow
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Slim Spray)
Sun Dec 29 07:04:29 2013
Date: Sun, 29 Dec 2013 04:04:27 -0800
From: "Slim Spray" <SlimSpray@npsihmoph.us>
Envelope-to: sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu
To: sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu
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As seen on ABC's Shark Tank
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FILE: June 25, 2013: George P. Bush, 37, speaks during an interview
with The Associated Press in Frisco, Texas.APFRISCO, Texas On a recent
evening, George P. Bush was telling a packed room of wealthy North
Texans how he got his start in politics. It was May 1979
and the then 3-year-old was in a Houston park, clutching a balloon
and watching his grandfather, George H.W. Bush, announce his first campaign
for president."It was my first memory," Bush recalled. "I was wearing a
George P. Bush, er, uh, George H.W. Bush for President T-shirt."Drowned
out temporarily by laughter, Bush insisted it wasn't a Freudian flub. An
aide approached a reporter scribbling notes and jokingly commanded: "Stop
writing!"The light moment underscores the dilemma of the latest scion of
an American political dynasty.How does Bush keep his family's powerful past
from overwhelming his present? How can he ease into his first campaign
for elected office amid lofty expectations that he will help save a
Republican Party in Texas that's endangered by the state's booming Latino
population?Bush, 37, says he's more than just a famous surname. Both his
grandfather and uncle were presidents; his father, former Florida Gov. Jeb
Bush, may run for the White House in 2016.George P. Bush is
running for state land commissioner, a post unfamiliar to most Texans, because
he says it best suits his skills, not because it could launch
him to bigger things in the largest Republican-lean
bbas will likely
opt for negotiations to avoid a risky confrontation with the U.S. that
could spell the end of his Palestinian Authority, analysts said. "Abbas
is going for talks with Israel to avoid the U.S. blame, because
he couldn't move against its (Washington's) will," predicted George Giacaman,
a political scientist in the West Bank.___Karin Laub, chief correspondent
for the Palestinian territories, has covered the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
since 1987. Mohammed Daraghmeh has reported from Ramallah since 1996. Associated
Press writer Aya Batrawy in Cairo contributed to this report.
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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">Democrats who accused Republicans of being anti-women during last years
campaign are strangely silent now that one of their own -- San
Diego Mayor Bob Filner -- is accused of groping and sexually assaulting
women."Don't identify him as my former colleague," an agitated House Democratic
Leader Nancy Pelosi reportedly said Thursday night when asked about the
claims against Filner.Pelosi worked alongside Filner for 10 years in Congress.
The two were founding members of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, and
Filner was a loyal foot soldier for the House leader, having spent
20 years in Congress. On Friday, however, Pelosi said, "What goes on
in San Diego is up to the people of San Diego. I'm
not here to make any judgments."Compare that to the scandal involving Florida
Rep. Mark Foley. Republican Foley was accused of sending sexually explicit
emails to a congressional page. On the very same day the story
broke, Pelosi took to the House floor to demand an investigation.Or consider
the case against Oregon Sen. Bob Packwood, accused of unwanted sexual advances
in November 1992. Two days later, the Oregon Democratic Party called for
his resignation, followed by a call from California Democratic Sen. Dianne
Feinstein. Twelve days after the story broke and before any investigation,
Feinstein said Packwood should resign if the allegations were true. A month
later, California's other senator, Barbara Boxer, said Packwood should resign
immediately
lth law is wide of
the mark."Every voter knows what Republicans are against. They don't know
what they're for" on health care, said Rep. Steve Israel of New
York, who heads House Democrats' campaign committee. He said the strategy
would haunt Republicans next year among moderate and independent voters
who want changes, not outright repeal.The fate of legislation to put more
funds into high-risk pools demonstrated a belief among some Republicans
that they should advance alternatives. Polling presentations make the same
point but are not uniformly persuasive among the rank and file, according
to officials, and lawmakers' speeches sometimes make it sound as if the
health law is disintegrating on its own.Yet one prominent conservative,
Ramesh Ponnuru, warned recently that it was a "perverse complacency" to
do nothing while assuming the health law will implode."We can be sure
that the Left would respond to any such collapse by making the
case for a `single payer' program in which the federal government directly
provides everyone insurance," he wrote May 30 in National Review Online.Ponnuru
added that in some Republican circles, "the idea that an alternative is
necessary is seen as a mark of wimpiness, a weakness for big-government
programs that are just slightly" weaker than what Democrats possess.The
Associated Press contributed to this report.
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