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daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Ancestrycom)
Tue May 26 15:49:16 2015
To: <sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu>
Date: Tue, 26 May 2015 12:49:14 -0700
From: "Ancestrycom" <Ancestrycom@relave.work>
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<span style="font-size: 9px ">109 E. 17th Suite 4552 - Cheyenne, WY 82001 </span>
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This is ad vertising;
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already nearly come to blows over oil fields in this disputed region.
In 2008, a 24-hour standoff developed between their respective security forces over
a section of an oil field in Kirkuk, an ethnically-mixed area the
Kurds want to annex.Baghad warns it could punish Exxon Mobil and that
the company's existing contracts could be in jeopardy. But so far it
has taken no punitive measures.Many analysts doubt that it will, considering Baghdad's
profound need for foreign investment.Outside the Kurdish zone, Exxon Mobil and Shell
are already developing one of Iraq's biggest oil fields, the 8.6 billion-barrel
West Qurna Stage 1 field in southern Basra province. Exxon Mobil is
also expected to lead a multibillion dollar project in Basra, a Shiite
stronghold, that will help make available the water needed for oil development.Baghdad's
oil policy is not a "long-term sustainable program that would attract foreign
capital into Iraq," said Fadel Gheit, chief economist with
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ished in 2010 in the same journal, politely citing a multitude of
problems with the study's methodology. The Indian researchers responded a month later
with their own two-paragraph letter defending the methodology and calling for a
larger study to establish the superiority of antibiotic treatment over surgery.There's no
word whether that larger study is pending, but the journal's editors retracted
the original article for reasons of alleged plagiarism, stating that "significant portions
of the article were published earlier" by other researchers in 2000 and
1995.#2: Litter breeds crime and discrimination.It sounded so reasonable: Graffiti and litter
in urban settings can trigger changes in the brain that can lead
to crime, hatred and discrimination. Alas, the senior author of this April
2011 paper in Science, Dutch social psychologist Diederik Stapel, might have fabricated
much of the data.The journal Science retracted the paper in November upon
realization that
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tate Hillary Clinton wrote. "Officials from U.S. Embassy Baghdad will visit regularly
and frequently....At this new location, the U.N. High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR)
will be able to conduct refugee status determinations for the residents of
Ashraf -- a necessary first step toward resettlement to third countries."So who
are these Iranians left stateless in Iraq and why does the U.S.
have a responsibility for them?The group known as the Mujahideen Khalq or
MEK, has been based in Iraq since the 1980s.Saddam Hussein gave them
protection because they helped him fight Ayatollah Khomeini and the mullahs in
Iran. Since the U.S. military toppled Saddam Hussein after the invasion in
2003, the Iranians have been urging Iraq to hand over the exiles,
whom Tehran considers traitors and spies.Technically, the MEK is still on the
State Department's Foreign Terrorist Organization list, placed there by President Bill Clinton
because the group allegedly killed six American d
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NEW YORK A U.S. congressman from New York says three security
contractors, including two Americans, have been released by Iraqi Army forces after
they were held for more than two weeks.Republican Peter King announced the
releases of the men Tuesday. He identifies them as an Army veteran
from Long Island, a former National Guardsman from Savannah,Ga., and a man
from Fiji. He says they were working for a security firm when
Iraqi Ministry of Defense officials rejected paperwork prepared on their behalf by
the IraqiMinistry of Interior and held them Dec. 9.The men weren't charged
with any crimes. King says they were released Tuesday after efforts by
his office, the State Department, the U.S. embassy in Baghdad, the DefenseDepartment
and the White House.
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research, mainly through the National Institutes of Health. It was not considered
particularly controversial. But things changed during the congressional health care debate, after
former GOP vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin made the claim, now widely
debunked, that Obama and the Democrats were setting up "death panels" to
ration care.As a result, lawmakers hedged the new institute with caveats. It
was set up as an independent nonprofit organization, with a .org Internet
address instead of .gov. The government cannot dictate Selby's research agenda. And
there are limitations on how the Health and Human Services department can
use the research findings in decisions that affect Medicare and Medicaid.Selby says
the institute is taking seriously the term "patient-centered" in its name. Patients
will not be merely subjects of research; they and their representatives will
be involved in setting the agenda and overseeing the process."We are talking
about patients
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File: Sen. Ben Nelson talks to reporters in December 2009. (AP)Nebraska Democratic
Sen. Ben Nelson, a pivotal figure in the health care debate, announced
his retirement Tuesday in a letter to Nebraskans, saying, "Simply: it's time
to move on.""It's time for me to step away from elective office,
spend more time with my family and look for new ways to
serve our state and nation. Therefore, I am announcing today that I
will not seek reelection," he said.Nelson's departure is not considered a surprise
despite efforts from his allies to encourage him to seek reelection, though
Democrats were taken aback that he chose not to run again while
holding $3 million in the bank ahead of expected GOP attacks.Sources say
the senator has been frustrated for awhile with Washington. He was roundly
scorned for his role in the health care debate by Democrats, who
were furious with his opposition to the so-called public option and requests
for exemption on abortion coverage.He was
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