ARTICLES - HOT OFF THE FAGGOT

How about more freedom at home first?

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How about more freedom at home first?
Star Parker - Syndicated Columnist

Star Parkercolumnists archives buttonWatching the wave of unrest in the Middle East, there are lessons to consider regarding how we view the world and how we manage our lives here at home.

 

I'd call it getting perspective on what you can control and what you can't.

It should be pretty clear that the upheavals in Tunisia and Egypt came as complete surprises.

 

No one predicted them.

 

Is this because no one was paying attention? Of course not.

 

We've got armies of analysts -- "experts" -- who do nothing but study countries. Not just in the government, but also in the private sector -- at consulting firms and investment firms.

 

Despite the fact that we've got "experts" galore doing nothing but studying particular regions and countries, they rarely, if ever, make a correct prediction if it means that tomorrow will be fundamentally different from yesterday.

 

We can depend on them for plenty of conventional wisdom drawing on reams of information from what's already happened. But can we turn to them for the entirely new, for the unanticipated, for the inconceivable? Forget it.

 

It should be obvious that 10 years, 25 years, 50 years from now the world will be as different from today as today is from 10 years, 25 years, or 50 years ago.

 

And it should be equally obvious that we have no "experts" who know what those great changes will be and what they will mean.

 

Yet we continue to allow ourselves to be persuaded that we can know what cannot be known and that experts can provide us information to control the world and the future. This delusion is true whether we are talking about managing foreign affairs or domestic affairs.

 

Washington is filled with "experts" who are more than ready to tell us the future and how to control it, whether we are talking about healthcare, retirement, energy, environment, or what have you. The fact that they are wrong 100 percent of the time never seems to discourage us from going down the same path again and again.

 

On the other hand, there are things we can do that are far more useful ways to use our brains.

 

We can identify the correct principles by which to live and allow those to guide how we conduct our affairs.

 

Getting back to the Middle East, the most effective thing we could have been doing, and can do now, is set an example.

 

If we want to promote freedom, how about starting at home?

 

The Heritage Foundation and the Wall Street Journal publish annually an Index of Economic Freedom in which they rank 179 nations by economic freedom -- size of government, regulations, tax and trade policy, monetary policy, etc.

 

The Index rankings correlate almost perfect with prosperity. The more a nation is economically free, the more prosperous it is likely to be.

 

When the Index was published in 2010, it showed that the nation with the biggest drop in economic freedom among the world's 20 largest economies was none other than the United States.

 

The drop was so large that the U.S. was re-categorized from the top tier of "free" economies and dropped to the second tier of "mostly free."

 

It turns out that the most important thing we could have been doing -- staying free ourselves -- we haven't been doing.

 

If we'd been doing what we should have, we'd set an example for others, we'd have better judgment regarding what is wrong with them, and we'd be more prosperous and therefore stronger and more influential.

 

If we can't solve our own problems, how can we solve those of others? If we don't know what freedom is here, how can we know what it is elsewhere?

 

It's time to get perspective about what we can do, what we can't do, and get our own house in order.
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Hindus, Buddhists open joint prayer room at Duke

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Hindus, Buddhists open joint prayer room at Duke

Associated Press logo small 2DURHAM, NC - Duke University has opened its first prayer room for Hindus and Buddhists.

The North Carolina school has historic ties to the United Methodist Church. But Christy Lohr Sapp, associate dean of religious life at Duke Chapel, says the student body now includes 263 Hindus and 91 Buddhists.



A Hindu Student Association faculty adviser says Duke has around 100 Hindu faculty as well.



Sumi Kim, the chaplain for the Buddhist Community at Duke, says the two faiths have similar values and both meditate, although Hindus spend more time in prayer.



The Hindu and Buddhist prayer and meditation space was previously a Muslim prayer room, which moved down the hall when another room became available.

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Islamic flood coming to U.S.?

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Islamic flood coming to U.S.?
Chad Groening - OneNewsNow

Tariq RamadanAn Israeli author and expert on the Middle East is warning Americans that Islamic immigrants could possibly flood the U.S. as a result of the events taking place in Egypt.

Israel National News recently reported that the Obama administration has decided to allow Islamic professor Tariq Ramadan to enter the United States. Ramadan, an Egyptian who currently lives in Switzerland, is a leading member of Europe's Muslim Brotherhood branch and is the grandson of the movement's founder. He was invited to teach at the University of Notre Dame in 2004, but the Bush administration revoked his visa because of donations he made to a blacklisted charity.


However, the Obama administration has now decided to lift the ban and possibly allow Ramadan and Adam Habib, another Muslim professor, onto U.S. soil.

Avi Lipkin 2"I'm sure you've heard many times that Washington, DC, is now flooded with Muslims in very high positions in the U.S. administration, and these Muslims already control the gates," notes Avi Lipkin, an Israeli scholar and author who has traveled throughout the U.S. to warn Americans about the threat of Islam. "The floodgates are open. The Muslims are coming in in tremendous numbers into the U.S."


But he warns that the floodgates will only get worse when illegal aliens gain their amnesty.


"What we will be seeing, I'm afraid, will be an amnesty for the illegal immigrants in America," Lipkin laments. "Once the amnesty takes place for the Latin Americans, then they will get ready for the next wave of illegals, which will be the tens of millions of Muslims who are going to be flooding into the U.S., especially Egyptians and Palestinians."



Meanwhile, the State Department has declared that it no longer considers Ramadan or Habib to be a threat to the United States.

 


What's the primary reason for the increasing influence

and influx of radical Muslims in the U.S.?

Vote in our poll

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Louisiana Mayor, Town Clerk Plead Guilty to Defrauding FEMA

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Ball, Louisiana Mayor and Town Clerk Plead Guilty

ALEXANDRIA, LA—United States Attorney Stephanie A. Finley announced today that Roy E. Hebron, former mayor of the town of Ball, Louisiana entered a guilty plea today to a charge of conspiracy to defraud the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) following Hurricane Gustav. The government's plea agreement with Hebron required him to resign from his office as mayor. The resignation is effective immediately. Pleading to the same charge was Brenda Kimball, the clerk of the town of Ball.

Jay L. Barber, former chief of police for the town of Ball; Anthony Akins; Judy Crowe; and Laverne James previously pled guilty to related charges and were cooperating with the government.

Hebron, 56, and Kimball, 54, admitted at guilty plea hearings today before U.S. District Judge Dee D. Drell that they conspired to submit false statements to FEMA in an application for benefits to be paid in connection with the Presidential Disaster Declaration for the state of Louisiana in September 2008 for Hurricane Gustav. Hebron and Kimball admitted to lying to the government by overstating the use of town vehicles and
equipment and hours worked by town employees to receive government funds to which they individually and the town of Ball were not entitled. Hebron served as mayor of Ball, Louisiana from 1988 until 2011.

Hebron and Kimball face a maximum penalty of five years in prison, a $250,000 fine, or both. Hebron and Kimball remain free on bond pending their sentencing hearing which is set for May 6, 2011.

This case was investigated by Special Agent Randolph J. Deaton, IV of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and Special Agents Rick Perry and Steven Monachello of the United States Department of Homeland Security - Office of Inspector General. The case was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Cytheria D. Jernigan and First Assistant United States Attorney Alexander C. Van Hook.

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Stillwater Man Sentenced for Producing Child Pornography

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Stillwater Man Sentenced for Producing Child Pornography

A 41-year-old Stillwater man was sentenced earlier today in federal court in St. Paul for
taking illicit photographs of a girl with his cell phone. United States District Court Judge
Donovan W. Frank sentenced Shane Allen Werlein to 360 months in prison on one count of
production of child pornography. Werlein was indicted on March 9, 2010, and pleaded guilty on
September 27, 2010.

In his plea agreement, Werlein admitted that between November of 2009 and February 26,
2010, he used multiple fictitious Facebook profiles to befriend at least two minor females. Those
profiles were created as part of a scheme to persuade the girls to engage in sexually explicit acts
and provide Werlein with photos of those acts. Werlein also admitted having sexual contact with
the girls and using his cell phone to take photos of them. He then downloaded the photos to his
computer.

This case was the result of an investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the
Stillwater Police Department, the Washington County Sheriff's Office, and the Minneapolis
Police Department. All four agencies are affiliates of the Minnesota Internet Crimes Against
Children Task Force. The case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney LeeAnn K. Bell.

The U.S. Department of Justice is committed to combating the sexual exploitation of
children. For more information about these efforts, visit the Department's Project Safe
Childhood website at www.projectsafechildhood.gov.

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Harris County Deputy Pleads Guilty to Conspiracy to Commit Extortion

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Harris County Deputy Pleads Guilty to Conspiracy to Commit Extortion

HOUSTON—A member of the Harris County Sheriff’s Department has pleaded guilty to and been convicted of conspiring to commit extortion,

Richard Bryan Nutt Jr., 43, pleaded guilty today before United States District Judge Vanessa Gilmore to conspiring with others to use his position as a law enforcement officer to steal drug loads from dealers and split the proceeds with others after the stolen drugs were sold by co-defendants. Judge Gilmore accepted the guilty plea, convicted Nutt of conspiracy to commit extortion, and has set sentencing for June 6, 2011. Nutt has been permitted to remain on bond pending sentencing. He faces a maximum of 20 years in prison without parole for the conviction and a $250,0000 fine.

The charges and today’s conviction is the result of a joint Houston Police Department (HPD) Internal Affairs and Narcotics Division and the FBI of a sting operation initiated after HPD obtained information that members of law enforcement were robbing shipments of narcotics in Houston, Texas.

On Dec. 15, 2010, Deputy Richard Bryan Nutt of the Harris County Sheriff’s Office met with co-defendants Nathaniel House, 37, Richard Jerome Banks, 38, John Edward Scott, 34, and Danny Wayne Bell, 40. House told the group that a vehicle containing narcotics or narcotics proceeds would be driving through Houston. The co-defendants agreed to stop the vehicle, a Chrysler Aspen SUV, with the assistance of Deputy Nutt. Nutt was to conduct a traffic stop of the SUV, which was reportedly to be driven by a drug dealer from Mexico. Nutt was to pretend to arrest the driver then release him while the co-defendants took the vehicle containing the drugs. The conspirators would then split the money from the sale of the drugs. However, the plan did not proceed as intended.

Later that day, Deputy Nutt, in full uniform and driving a silver pickup equipped with red and blue emergency lights, spotted and followed the Chrysler Aspen SUV as it drove into a parking lot of a Houston area shopping center. Once parked, the SUV driver, actually an undercover HPD officer, abandoned the SUV.

House entered the SUV and removed a package he believed contained cocaine and transferred the package to a blue Nissan Altima allegedly driven by Banks. Leaving the silver pickup to other co-defendants, Nutt entered the passenger seat of the blue Nissan Altima and left the parking lot in the vehicle with the package.

As the Nissan Altima left the parking lot it was stopped by HPD officers. The package containing the purported cocaineit was actually fakewas found and removed from under the passenger seat where Nutt sat. Unlike the plan, Nutt and his co-defendants were arrested by law enforcement officers and subsequently charged federally.

House also pleaded guilty today and is also set to be sentenced in June. The remaining defendants are pending trial in mid-March 2011 and presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty through due process of law.

Assistant U.S. Attorney James McAlister is prosecuting the case.

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Former Police Officers Plead Guilty to Drug Charges

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Former Police Officers Plead Guilty to Drug Charges

PHILADELPHIA—Robert Snyder, 30, and James Venziale, 32, both of Philadelphia, pleaded guilty today to a drug conspiracy involving heroin and related offenses, announced United States Attorney Zane David Memeger. At the time of the crimes, both defendants were Philadelphia Police Officers assigned to the 25th and 39th Police Districts, respectively.

Snyder and Venziale were charged in July 2010, along with then-police officer Mark Williams, Zachary Young, Angel Ortiz, Christal Snyder, and Miguel Santiago. Today, the two defendants admitted that they planned and executed a scheme to steal heroin from Santiago and then distribute that heroin to another person whom the defendants believed to be a drug dealer and money launderer, but who was, in reality, an undercover special agent from the Drug Enforcement Administration. Snyder and Venziale abused their authority as police officers and agreed to assist in the scheme to steal heroin from Santiago. On May 14, 2010, immediately after Santiago’s drug courier delivered 300 grams of heroin, Venziale—who was on duty and in uniform at the time—stopped Ortiz’s vehicle and, with Santiago’s drug courier watching nearby, Venziale made it appear as if the heroin was being seized and Ortiz arrested. As a result, the co-conspirators obtained 300 grams of heroin, without payment to Santiago. Venziale was then paid for taking part in the scheme. In addition to the conspiracy count, Venziale pleaded guilty to knowingly and intentionally distributing, and aiding and abetting the distribution of, 100 grams or more, that is, approximately 299 grams, of a mixture and substance containing a detectable amount of heroin; and possession with the intent to distribute 100 grams or more of heroin within 1,000 feet of a school. Snyder also pleaded guilty conspiracy to distribute 100 grams or more of heroin, possession with intent to distribute 100 grams or more of heroin; possession with the intent to distribute 100 grams or more of heroin within 1,000 feet of a school; use of a communication facility in furtherance of drug trafficking; conspiracy to commit robbery which interferes with interstate commerce; attempted robbery which interferes with interstate commerce; and using and carrying a firearm during and in relation to a crime of violence.

Both defendants are scheduled to be sentenced May 10, 2011. Snyder faces a mandatory minimum term of ten years in prison; Venziale faces a mandatory minimum of five years in prison. The remaining co-defendants are awaiting trial.

The case was investigated by The Drug Enforcement Administration and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, with the cooperation and assistance of the Philadelphia Police Department. The case is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Maureen McCartney and Anthony Wzorek.

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Manhattan U.S. Attorney Charges White Plains Man with Child Pornography Possession

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Manhattan U.S. Attorney Charges White Plains Man with Child Pornography Possession

PREET BHARARA, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, and JANICE FEDARCYK, the Assistant Director in Charge of the New York Field Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation ("FBI"), announced today the arrest of SAMUEL J. FANELLI on charges of possessing, receiving, and distributing child pornography. FANELLI, 22, was arrested Friday, January 28, 2011 by FBI agents. He was presented on Saturday, January 29, 2011, in White Plains federal court before U.S. Magistrate Judge PAUL E. DAVISON.

U.S. Attorney BHARARA stated: "Individuals who receive and distribute child pornography prey on the most vulnerable members of our society, our children. As technology advances and facilitates the spread of child pornography, our office and the FBI continue to work tirelessly to combat this scourge on our community and to protect the innocent from harm."

FBI Assistant Director in Charge FEDARCYK stated: "The FBI remains committed to vigorous enforcement of child pornography laws. The market for child pornography creates demand for images, and the production of those images means the victimization and exploitation of children. Child pornography is not a victimless crime, it is a grave assault on the most innocent of victims."

According to the criminal complaint unsealed earlier today:

FANELLI, possessed child pornography that had been downloaded from the Internet. During a search of FANELLI's residence prior to his arrest, FANELLI's computer was seized and was found to have more than 10,000 images and videos of child pornography.

FANELLI is charged with one count of possessing child pornography and one count of receiving and distributing child pornography. Upon conviction, the first count carries a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison and a maximum fine of $250,000 or twice the gross gain or loss from the offense. The second count carries a mandatory minimum sentence of five years, a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison, and a maximum fine of $250,000 or twice the gross gain or loss from the offense.

Mr. BHARARA praised the outstanding investigative work of the FBI and thanked the Westchester County District Attorney's Office and the New Rochelle and Larchmont Police Departments for their efforts. He added that the investigation is continuing.

Mr BHARARA requests that any individuals with relevant information contact the Federal Bureau of Investigation in White Plains, New York at (914) 989-6000.

The prosecution is being handled by the Office's White Plains Division. Assistant United States Attorney REBECCA MERMELSTEIN is in charge of the prosecution.

The charges contained in the complaint are merely accusations, and the defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

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Disgusting Crime Involves ‘Semen-Tainted Yogurt Sample’

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Disgusting Crime Involves ‘Semen-Tainted Yogurt Sample’








Maureen O'Connor


Disgusting Crime Involves 'Semen-Tainted Yogurt Sample'A lady in New Mexico received a yogurt sample from her local grocer. She recognized the flavor: semen. She spat the yogurt out and called the cops. Forensic evidence later revealed sperm cells in the lady's yogurt.

This has been your daily reminder that human sexuality is occasionally vile. May "semen-tainted yogurt sample" go down in history as the grossest phrase to grace a headline on February 7, 2010. [TSG, image of non-tainted yogurt via Flickr]

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Catholic Church OKs Confession iPhone App [Religion]

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Catholic bishops have approved an iPhone app that walks the faithful through the confession process (though they must consult a priest for absolution). The app is called "Confession," an improvement on the original name, "A Priest in Your Pocket."

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