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Monday, February 28, 2011
110 Comments Since Noon
Salisbury News Goes Back To Anonymous Comments
The main reason so many have asked us to do so is that they are afraid of retribution. Even though we explained that their information would not be accessed by any outside source, people are clearly afraid and I had to reconsider our position.
The final thing that convinced me to go back to anonymous comments is because it is extremely important, (to me) that comments help our community to openly discuss how they feel about a particular situation/post. If people are afraid, well, then only a certain group of people win and the topic fades away or simply drops.
That being said, we will simply reject the personal attacks, all capital letters and curse word comments. Give me 2 minutes and we'll be back to open comments.
Should Council Vote for a New Bennett Middle School?
We need to replace Bennett Middle School. I don’t think there is anyone arguing that we don’t. Accepting this, does that mean the Wicomico County Council should vote on Tuesday to include a new Bennett Middle School in the county’s capital budget? No.
There is no question that Wicomico County cannot afford the project this year. Why, then, should the council agree to include the project?
The argument goes something like this …
By putting the project in the capital budget now we are not committing to funding it. Unless the county’s financial picture changes, we don’t have to include it when the county passes its bond bill in the fall. However, if we don’t the county loses that flexibility. We will certainly face higher construction costs in the future AND we move to the bottom of the pile when seeking funding from the state.
All of this is true. In fact, if a majority of council votes to include a new Bennett Middle in the capital budget on Tuesday this is the same argument we will hear in the fall when passing the bond bill.
Betting On the “Come”
Given the last two rounds of property reassessments, and the current trend in income tax receipts, does any member of council honestly believe that the county’s financial picture will change sufficiently to justify borrowing this money in the fall? Of course not! Why include a project that you wouldn’t vote to fund … unless your real intention is to go ahead and add to the county’s dangerously high debt levels with no real plan for funding it? When voters elected 6 Republican, and supposedly conservative, council members last November they thought the days of “betting on the come” would end in Wicomico County. Tuesday’s council vote will let voters know if this is really true.
A Monument to John Fredericksen’s Ego
While the county’s less than rosy financial situation is reason enough to strip the Bennett Middle project from the capital budget, there is another very important reason for doing so. Superintendent John Fredericksen, and the Wicomico County Board of Education all need to be taught an important lesson – deceiving the council AND the voters of Wicomico County should not be rewarded.
In Monday’s Daily Times we are treated to the following:
School board President Michelle Wright and Superintendent John Fredericksen say there are good reasons to keep the project a possibility. It would give the school system and county more time to discuss cost-cutting ideas and to pursue alternative financing ideas, they say.
Really John? Really Michelle? Just last week the School Building Commission received a consultant’s report (costing the taxpayers almost $20,000) that outlined some very modest cost cutting measures in the proposed project. The BOE stance was that replacing brick pavers (expensive) with more modest concrete would harm the “ambiance” of the school. While I’m sure that the BOE will “discuss” cost-cutting ideas, they are only going to implement them if FORCED. Sadly, County Executive Rick Pollitt doesn’t possess the backbone to force the BOE to do anything.
In an earlier DT article, Wright is quoted:
Wright said though she was aware there was a perception the building was a "Taj Mahal" and more than needed, it was her understanding that all of its features were necessary to meet state construction guidelines and instructional needs.
Are we to believe that the state is REQUIRING brick pavers? I know that this is one minor example. However, it is illustrative. The public simply cannot trust the word of Fredericksen or most of the Board members. The building IS a “Taj Mahal”. The proposed project is a monument to the collective egos of John Fredericksen and the majority of his board members (along with numerous BOE bureaucrats).
We’re NOT Playing Politics
To add insult to injury, Fredericksen and his merry little band are using YOUR tax dollars to politicize the issue.
We shouldn’t forget that your tax dollars go to pay the salary of the wife of the Daily Times’ Managing Editor. Coincidentally (sure), the DT has run at least 3 articles on this subject in the past week!
In addition, tax dollars are being used to “communicate to parents” the “need” to move this forward NOW. Using tax dollars to “encourage” parents and board employees to lobby for more county spending (and debt) is legal, but ethically questionable.
However, we shouldn’t be shocked that board members such as retired teacher Ron Willey find no problem with this:
Board member Ron Willey said he didn't want the board to be perceived as running a political campaign, but he thought it was important to communicate to parents of students at BMS feeder schools that the project was in jeopardy.
The Bottom Line
Wicomico County simply can’t afford to build a new Bennett Middle this year. Even if we could, funding this monument to ego shouldn’t be funded REGARDLESS of the county’s current financial situation.
Fredericksen and Wright should be forced to come up with a REALISTIC and financially prudent plan BEFORE the council agrees to move this project forward. A vote by council to place this on the county’s capital budget is a vote to endorse the spendthrift ways of the WCBOE, a vote for more fiscal chicanery, and a signal that the taxpayers of Wicomico County simply don’t matter in comparison to the desires of the county’s largest bureaucracy.
Why Is Everyone So Afraid Of Fire?
When you get to be my age, after paying for insurance over the past 30 years, why not get something out of it.
Instead, the wet pants liberals want to force a million dollar Fire Boat down our throats even though there hasn't been multiple fires on properties on the river in 20 or 30 years.
The again, are these homes and businesses not insured? If the are, let them burn and rebuild. At least it will boost the local economy. Heck, by the time the Fire Boat arrives it will be too late anyway!
All I can tell you Folks is, you better get out and vote tomorrow and you better vote for Cohen, Spies and Boda.
National Search For Missing Virginia Woman
Lauren Taylor has not been seen since she walked away from a Falls Church group home.
Lauren, who turns 21 today, was last seen early Monday morning of last week .
Fairfax County police spokesman Don Gotthardt says they have issued a national alert with the help of the Natalee Holloway Resource Center.
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OCEAN CITY POLICE HOLDING ADDITIONAL APPLICANT TESTING
Wicomico County Prescription Discount Card Program
Somali Pirates Capture Danish Ship With Seven On Board
Salisbury's New Fire Boat Will Now Cost $1,000,000.00
The reason, Councilwoman Campbell will be flying to Harvard this morning to attend classes this week and she will not be present to vote. That means Comegys won't even need to be present to pass the purchase.
Nevertheless, the price is now $1,000,000.00, not $900,000.00. Surprise, Surprise!
SAPOA vs. CAMPBELL
You wanna talk about ironic! On Friday, Auctioneer Doug Marshall stood in front of a small crowd of people in the attempt to sell an estate sale home right next door to Councilwoman Debbie Campbell. While there may have been some 25 people there, only 3 of them were actual potential buyers and ALL of them are SAPOA Members.
And who ended up as the winning bidder, that would be the President of SAPOA and her Husband. So you might say, the Adams Family could be moving in next door?
Here's the worst part Folks. The home SOLD for $80,000.00! If there's ever a Post in which comments should fly, this is the one.
Will the Adams Family flip the home, move in or rent it? One thing is for sure, buying any home in the City of Salisbury is a Lose/Lose situation any more. The taxes on this home are over $1,600.00 per year, more than twice the mortgage payment per month. Add water and sewer and your getting close to triple.
If the Adams are spiteful, they'll rent it. If they're smart they'll flip it. If they're crazy they'll move in. No matter how you look at it, they got a great buy. God Bless America.
Is This Blight?
Is there no pride? Or shall we look on the blight side and be thankful we have so much inventory.
Pothole Politics Could Drive Gas Tax Rise
Hit to localities' highway funds taking a toll on roads
A few years ago, when Maryland's economy was cruising along and the tax money was rolling in, Howard County Executive Ken Ulman could count on receiving about $16 million a year from the state to keep local roads in good repair.But this year, like the year before, he didn't even get $500,000. And unless the state can tap into a new stream of money, things aren't looking much better for 2012.
Howard County's story is typical of jurisdictions across Maryland. With the exception of Baltimore City, every jurisdiction in the state has seen its road repair money slashed by about 97 percent from levels in budget year 2007.
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Tornado Watch Issued For D.C. Area
Moose Lodge Donates To Sheriff's Department
Walker Explodes Union Lies On 'Meet the Press'
Appearing Sunday on NBC's "Meet the Press" with David Gregory, Walker laid out his plan to save his state from fiscal bankruptcy while destroying several false claims about his legislation that is being delayed by Senate Democrats who refuse to appear for a final vote.
Among the significant issues covered during his "Meet the Press" interview, Walker:
Denied he is destroying public employee unions.
Claimed that unions are not acting in good faith.
Explained the law helps local governments curb union demands.
Said public employee unions are making unusual demands on taxpayers.
Pointed out his new plan is consistent with how the federal government handles many employees.
Explained why police and firemen are exempt from his new law.
Read detail on each of these points here
A Letter To The Editor
O’Malley Criticizes Wisconsin Gov. Walker And Spars With Texas Gov. Perry
Continue Reading...
Middle East Oil War Spreads. First Demos In Saudi Arabia, Iraqi Refinery Blasted
Thursday night, Feb. 24, saw the first signs of unrest in Saudi Arabia with demonstrations by young people demanding reforms of the kingdom's system of government and by Shiites living and working in the kingdom's oil-rich eastern regions. They demonstrated at Awwamiya in Qatif in solidarity with the protests in Libya and Bahrain. They also demanded the release of detainees rounded up by Saudi security authorities among the two million Shiites living and working in the main oil centers of Saudi Arabia to nip potential unrest in the bud.
Friday, in the Red Sea town of Jeddah in the west, a group calling itself "Jeddah Youth for Change staged a demonstration.
The slightest sign of unrest in Saudi Arabia, the world's biggest oil exporter, is bound to affect the price of oil. Iran is the biggest beneficiary of soaring prices. Day after day, as Arab capitals are beset by popular turbulence, Tehran is watching the damage caused its economy by international sanctions shrinking.
The gunmen shot four refinery guards and engineers and blew up the Al Shamal unit, its main kerosene and benzene producer, leaving sticky bombs in other operational units to explode after they fled. It took hours to put the fire out. The entire installation is now closed. "We are not talking about days," said a refinery official, "The damage is too severe."
The Baiji refinery working at 70 percent capacity produced 150,000 barrels per day. Oil experts estimate that Iraqi towns face a 35 percent decline in petrol supplies for several months, with an effect on world prices and domestic stability in the country.
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Greens, Reds And Cheeseheads
I’ve explored this for several years. In my book The Politically Incorrect Guide to Global Warming and Environmentalism, Chapter 1 is “Green is the New Red.” Chapter 6 in Red Hot Lies: How Global Warming Alarmists Use Threats, Fraud and Deception to Keep you Misinformed — titled with all the subtlety of an SEIU thug — goes into further detail, and in Power Grab, I drill down into the partnership as melded by Team Obama, in a chapter titled “Obama’s ‘Baptist and Bootleggers’: Unions and Greens Selling Out America.”
It simply is what it is. In America, these two groups are also the biggest hustlers for getting out the vote, manning phone banks, leafleting, and providing the Democrat Party with Astroturf. And amid the Madison, Wisconsin, rabble-rousing now metastasizing to other state capitals, their coalescence is as glaringly in-your-face right now as we have ever seen it.
They push left-wing policies, policies that everywhere have led to net job loss and economic harm but that have benefitted particular, parochial interests. Organized labor’s interest is growing its membership, not the overall workforce. And jobs resulting from federal employment or spending are de jure or de facto union jobs, thanks to Davis-Bacon and the like. That’s bad for us, but good for them.
In his piece in the Wall Street Journal, John Fund notes, “It is deeply symbolic that this epic battle over the direction of government is taking place in the Badger State. Wisconsin was the birthplace of the modern progressive state in the early 20th century under Gov. Robert ‘Fighting Bob’ LaFollette, who championed progressive taxation and the nation’s first worker’s-compensation system. In 1959, Gov. Gaylord Nelson made Wisconsin the first state to grant public employees collective-bargaining rights.”
The day before, Paul Taylor’s Eco-Politics column was titled and explored how “Enviros back unions in Midwest budget battles.” In it he noted:
As progressive nonprofits, an odd amalgam of green groups and labor organizations has emerged in the Midwest state budget battles. Eco-groups such as the Sierra Club, League of Conservation Voters, Blue-Green Alliance and the Union of Concerned Scientists are marching lockstep with traditional blue-collar unions. These include the United Steelworkers, Communications Workers of America, International Brotherhood of Teamsters, AFL-CIO’s Plumbers and Pipefitters and Laborers International Union of North America, as well as dominant government employee unions. The “greens” and their big labor collaborators want to kill state attempts to cut unsustainable spending.
Both recalled for me the non-coincidence of then-Sen. Gaylord Nelson being the father of Earth Day, which is held on April 22, a date that we are told was randomly chosen. In his excellent book, my CEI colleague Iain Murray nailed the point:
[T]he instinct to broadly and aggressively apply the tools of Marxism — central planning and government control — lives on. The instinct is the same as it was when Marx articulated it in the 19th century, but the old justification just doesn’t fly. Free enterprise has proven itself not to oppress the working man, but to free him.
If the working man is no longer oppressed, the central tenet of Marxism no longer applies, but surely there must be another victim of capitalism to take its place? Women and minorities have advanced themselves under free enterprise just as surely as have the working man, and so they are not ideal candidates.
Luckily for the Left they have a victim ready on the shelf. This time it is one that will not exercise free choice in rejecting the ministrations of those who claim to speak for it. In the leftist’s world view, the worker has been replaced by “the Environment.”
The transition was seamless, because of a long history of co-operation between Marxists and environmentalists. Earth Day is held every year on April 22nd, a date deliberately chosen because it was Lenin’s birthday.
Read more
‘There Is Hate In Their Eyes’
On Saturday night’s broadcast of “Geraldo at Large,” Fox News correspondent Mike Tobin took some critical shots at protesters attempting to shout down and disrupt his broadcast. He told host Geraldo Rivera he has observed hate and an effort to shut out other viewpoints.
“One thing I think should make clear – the people coming after us from every live shot here, these people hate,” Tobin said.
“These are people who don’t respect diverse viewpoints. In fact, they’re so afraid I’ll present a diverse viewpoint, that’s why they try to heckle me and shut down every live shot. They’ve made it clear, that what they want to make it harder for me to do my job. They are proud of that when they disrupt a live shot, when they really trample over the First Amendment rights or the First Amendment’s obligations of a reporter.
Now, I am not saying that’s all of the people. Those are the people that come here and heckle and try to disrupt things. I look in their eyes – there is hate in their eyes. They don’t want to hear any kind of viewpoint that is different from their own. That’s why they do what they do.”
More details and video here
Is Lawsuit About Defamation, Or Shutting Up The Right?
Shirley Sherrod, a former Obama administration official, is suing new media mogul Andrew Breitbart for igniting a political firestorm she claims burned her good name and inflicted emotional distress.
But Breitbart, who runs several conservtive websites, and congressional supporters say the action is a nuisance lawsuit that is funded by liberals to squelch constitutionally protected free speech and conservative voices.
The drama initially unfolded last summer as a new Tea Party came to power amid cries of racism from the Left.
Breitbart sought to rebuff the claims by airing a video of a speech given by Sherrod that he said showed positive reactions to racism and discrimination against a white farmer by members of one of the Left’s most valuable allies, the NAACP.
Although Sherrod says the tape was heavily edited and that her speech was meant to instruct against racism, retribution from within her own ranks was swift, and she says she was fired after a call from the White House was made to her employer at the Agriculture Department.
Although she was later offered a better job within the agency, Sherrod declined to accept it and seven months later is suing Breitbart for damages.
Sherrod has declined to speak on the civil action publicly, but in a written statement said, “This lawsuit is not about politics or race. It is not about right versus left, the NAACP, or the Tea Party. It is about how quickly, in today's Internet media environment, a person's good name can become collateral damage in an overheated political debate,” Sherrod said.
But Breitbart says it’s no longer about any of that.
It’s all about Pigford, he says.
More here
Obama Not Just Above The Law-- He Is The Law
DOMA defines marriage as "only a legal union between one man and one woman as husband and wife" for purposes of all federal laws, rules and regulations (Section 3). It specifies that no state shall be required to honor laws of other states that treat same-sex relationships as legal marriages -- effectively carving out an exception to the Constitution's full faith and credit clause (Section 2).
Congress passed this law by enormous majorities (Senate 85-14, House 342-67) in response to political pressure in some states to redefine marriage, especially a Hawaiian court's decision suggesting the Hawaii Constitution conferred the right to same-sex marriage. Congress was worried that, among other things, same-sex couples living in other states might go to Hawaii to marry and demand that their home states recognize their marriages.
It seems that in enacting this law, the federal government was quite scrupulous in deferring to the sovereignty of the states by pronouncing a federal standard for marriage applicable to federal laws but not presuming to encroach on states' authority to set their own standards. It affirmed the states' prerogative by providing that their marriage laws would not be abrogated or diminished by conflicting laws of other states but did not preclude them from honoring, if they so choose, laws of other states validating same-sex marriages.
During his presidential campaign, Obama stated that he did not support same-sex marriage but that he did believe that DOMA should be repealed. He gave no hint that he would take it upon himself to issue a presidential edict, without a congressional bill placed before him, forbidding the executive branch from enforcing the law. But that is precisely what he did this week.
To understand the magnitude of Obama's action, we must consider the fact that both chambers of Congress passed DOMA by overwhelming majorities reflecting the will of the people that marriage be defined, for legal and policy purposes, as it always had been. Also, no federal appellate court has ruled the statute unconstitutional.
As he has in so many other areas (EPA, the offshore drilling ban, IMF), Obama has usurped the authority of the other two coequal branches of government to make himself, in effect, not just chief executive but super-legislator and a supreme judicial authority.
So now we have an imperial president who is refusing to enforce a law passed by powerful congressional majorities while persisting in enforcing a law (ObamaCare) that two federal courts have already invalidated.
The only common denominator is that Obama believes he is the law.
More from attorney David Limbaugh
Top 10 Labor Union Outrages
No wonder approval ratings for unions are at an all-time low.
Here are the Top 10 Labor Union Outrages.
Islamic Indoctrination On U.S. Taxpayers' Tab
The network of more than 100 facilities in 27 states is the result of the work of Turkish expatriate billionaire Fethullah Gulen, who lives in a heavily guarded compound near Saylorsburg, Pa.
Terrorism analyst, author and Family Security Matters contributing Editor Paul Williams explains that Gulen left Turkey under a cloud, and came to the United States carrying an agenda
"Fethullah Gulen is a chap who fled Turkey in 1998. He was attempting to avoid prosecution from the secular government at that time; he wanted to set up an Islamic government," Williams explained.
"He moved to Pennsylvania and established a mountain fortress around Saylorsburg, which is in the heart of the Poconos," Williams explained.
Court records from the Eastern District of Pennsylvania's federal courts indicate that Gulen won his removal case against Homeland Security by showing that he was an "alien of extraordinary ability," and that by staying in the United States he could pursue his work of "authoring articles and providing guidance 'to fellow scholar in the fields of theology, political science, Islamic studies, and education.'"
Williams says Gulen had help
"The Department of Homeland Security uncovered that Gulen has over $25 billion in assets. That's more money than many countries have. Most of this money has been channeled to Gulen from the CIA," Williams asserted.
Koinonia Institute senior analyst Steve Elwart says Gulen was helped by a number of different factors.
"He was denied his visa the first time around by DHS by saying that he didn't have any experience since he was trying to come in as an educator. DHS said that he really didn't have the qualifications to hold himself out as an educator," Elwart observed.
Elwart says there was another concern.
"There were also concerns about his ties to the CIA and that as it turned out, those concerns were apparently valid, because when he appealed the decision, he got two letters of recommendation from the CIA," Elwart continued.
"That would strengthen the position that he did seem to have those ties," Elwart added.
Williams explains that U. S. officials may have had a reason for funneling money to Gulen.
"I'll tell you why the CIA is funding him. These countries (referring to the Middle East and former Soviet Central Asian Republics) have vast natural gas and oil reserves. They are afraid of where those reserves will go, so we want to gain some control over the supplies," Williams claimed.
Now his fingerprints are all over schools across Asia – and dozens more charter schools across the United States. Those are schools that are run on the taxpayers' money, but have private teaching agendas, often using the subtle inferences in social studies courses to advocate for Islam, observers report.
Read more
Obama To Face Shariah Court?
Choudary, founder and former chief of two Islamic groups disbanded by the British authorities under anti-terror legislation, is planning a Washington protest later this week in which he says he will call on American Muslims to revolt against the country and implement Shariah law.
Speaking in an interview with investigative reporter Aaron Klein on his program on New York's WABC Radio, Choudary claimed Obama was waging a war against Islam.
"[Obama] has promised all Muslims to be released from Guantanamo Bay. They are still languishing there even though he knows they are completely innocent," Choudary claimed.
"On top of that, he's increased the number of U.S. forces in Afghanistan, so he is a warmonger just as his predecessor was.
And thirdly and more importantly," Choudary said, "the Muslims don't want democracy and freedom. Democracy and freedom are anathema to Islam and the Shariah."
Choudary said that at his protest, scheduled to take place Thursday in front of the White House, he will call on Obama and all Americans to "embrace Islam, not only as a religion but as a way of life."
More details and audio
USDA Offers Settlement To Women, Hispanic Farmers
The Agriculture and Justice departments announced Friday that farmers who could prove discrimination could receive up to $50,000. The proposal comes after the government settled with American Indians over similar discrimination issues last fall and Congress provided money for the second round of a black farmers settlement.
Like the black and American Indian farmers, the thousands of minorities and women say local USDA offices for years denied them loans and other assistance that routinely went to whites.
The government first announced its intent to settle the complaints in May. The more detailed offer announced Friday does not cap the number of farmers who may receive awards and waives some application fees.
Lawyers for both the women and Hispanic farmers said their clients deserve more money. Indian farmers were offered up to $250,000 each to settle claims.
Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said any Hispanic and women farmers not pleased with the settlement can still pursue their cases against the government.
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Report: Israel's 'Iron Dome' Nears Completion
Defense officials plan to order four or five Iron Dome systems. United States President Barack Obama has asked Congress to approve $205 million in aid for the project.
The report of the system's readiness follows rocket attacks on Be'er Sheva and Netivot. Gaza terrorists targeted both cities in recent weeks for the first time since the Cast Lead counterterror operation of early 2009, which crippled Hamas' weapons stores, rocket factories and infrastructure.
The Defense Ministry has touted Iron Dome as a solution to terrorist attacks from Gaza. However, the system can only successfully target rockets with a flight time of approximately 15 seconds or more, while Gaza terrorists can hit several Israeli communities with rockets that have a shorter flight time, including the city of Sderot.
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UNIVERSAL LAWS
After your hands become coated with grease,
your nose will begin to itch and you'll have to pee.
2. Law of Gravity - Any tool, nut, bolt, screw, when dropped,
will roll to the least accessible corner.
>3. Law of Probability -The probability of being watched is directly
proportional to the stupidity of your act
>4. Law of Random Numbers - If you dial a wrong number, you never
get a busy signal and someone always answers.
>5. Law of the Alibi - If you tell the boss you were late for
work because you had a flat tire, the very next morning you will have a flat tire..
>6. Variation Law - If you change lines (or traffic lanes),
the one you were in will always move faster than the one you are in now (works every
time).
>7. Law of the Bath - When the body is fully immersed in water,
the telephone rings.
>8. Law of Close Encounters -The probability of meeting someone you
know increases dramatically when you are with someone you don't want to be seen
with.
>9. Law of the Result - When you try to prove to someone that
a machine won't work, it will.
>. 12. The Coffee Law - As soon as you sit down to a cup of hot
coffee, your boss will ask you to do something which will last until the coffee
is cold.
>14. Law of Physical Surfaces - The chances of an open-faced jelly sandwich
landing face down on a floor, are directly correlated to the newness and cost of
the carpet or rug.
>18. Wilson's Law of Commercial
Marketing Strategy - As soon as you find a product that you
really like, they will stop making it.
to go to the doctor, by the time you get there you'll feel better. But don't make an appointment, and you'll stay sick.
Survivor Texas Style
Due to the popularity of the "Survivor" shows, Texas is planning to do one entitled, "Survivor, Texas-Style!" The 8 contestants will all start in Dallas , then drive to Waco, Austin, San Antonio, over to Houston and down to Brownsville ... They will then proceed up to Del Rio, El Paso, Odessa, Midland, Lubbock, and Amarillo. From there they will go on to Abilene , Fort Worth and finally back to Dallas . Each will be driving a pink Volvo with bumper stickers that read: "I'm a Democrat," "Amnesty for Illegals," "I love the Dixie Chicks," "Boycott Beef", "I Voted for Obama", " George Strait Sucks," "Hillary in 2012" And........"I'm here to confiscate your guns." The first one to make it back to Dallas alive wins. God Bless Texas ! |
Brooklyn Smoker Grows Own Tobacco To Avoid Cigarette Taxes
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Video Of Bully Debt Collector Crumbling
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Golf’s New No. 1: Is Tiger’s Era Over?
The decline of the Tiger Woods era overshadows Martin Kaymer’s ranking as the world’s newest number one golfer.
Comptroller Spends $489 Million On Office Space
Avoiding A Government Shutdown
NOMINATIONS BEING ACCEPTED FOR 2011 OUTSTANDING PUBLIC HEALTH LEADER AWARD
Nominations can be submitted online at http://www.wicomicohealth.org/. Nomination forms can be obtained by visiting the website or by calling (410) 334-3480. Nominations are due by Monday, March 28, 2011. Late submissions cannot be accepted.
You Have More Money In Your Wallet Than Bank Of America Pays In Federal Taxes
Frank Buckles, Last Surviving U.S. World War I Veteran, Dies
Buckles, who lived in Charles Town, died at about 12:15 a.m. Sunday, but it was unclear if he was at home at the time, said Michelle Tanner, receptionist for Joseph Gawler’s Sons Inc., at 5130 Wisconsin Ave., N.W.
No arrangements had been made as of late Sunday, Tanner said.
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Maryland Off-Track Betting Parlors Struggle
Cracked Claw OTB could close without help
One longtime patron, Chris Kovin, said he comes because he prefers to hoist a beer and socialize while watching the races, rather than placing online bets from home. But, he acknowledges, the Cracked Claw "has definitely seen better days."
The state's four remaining off-track betting facilities are struggling along with the declining horse-racing industry, itself hobbled over the years by the sport's waning popularity and by competition for gambling dollars from nearby slot-machine parlors and casinos.
Giant Food Workers Worry About Job Losses At Jessup Facility
New operator C&S Wholesale Grocers calls concerns 'speculative'
Hundreds of workers at Giant Food distribution center in Jessup worry that their jobs are in danger because a New Hampshire company will take over operations of the facility next month.The company, C&S Wholesale Grocers, laid off 1,100 workers at a subsidiary in New Jersey earlier this month when it shut down six food distribution centers. Unionized Giant workers fear they could face the same fate just as their contract is slated to expire May 14.
About 600 of the workers and union organizers gathered at a Teamsters union hall Sunday to discuss how to fend off possible job losses that could impact more than 1,000 workers.
An executive with C&S contacted by phone later in the day said any decision about the plant will be made during contract negotiations.
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Volunteers: You Broke Our Fire Truck, Now Fix It
The volunteers have asked nicely for some of the $2.65 million fund the county sets aside for such repairs. They've had their councilman lobby on their behalf. They've gone to state lawmakers.
They say if the county doesn't take responsibility for the damage, they'll only have two options: run the Deale station short one piece of equipment or face a decade's worth of carnivals, oyster roasts and haunted houses to raise the money to replace it.
"All we want is an engine fixed that was working perfectly well when it was sent up the road," said Ray Mudd, board member of the Deale Volunteer Fire Department and Rescue squad.
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