Sunday, April 27, 2014

Evil woman





Wow! ... a witch preaches torture. The only people that go along with her will probably end up as "Terrorist" list themselves. She rips into Obama ... Where I would agree with the IRS, that she probably does not deserve "tax exemption" for here time in the "Tea Party" union ... (As a person, I like change... That does not call for "Violence" ... as I would revoke her "Christian Status" with preaching this...)  

If someone (even an American)  said these same words in Pakistan in front of a group of a gun carrying group... Wanting to "tea party in this way"...  They whole place would of been targeted in a drone strike.

Palin: If I were president, 'Waterboarding is how we'd baptize terrorists'


 
Yahoo News

Sarah Palin would like all terrorists to know that if she were in charge, waterboarding is how the United States would baptize them.
At least that's what the former Alaskan governor and ex-vice presidential nominee told thousands of attendees this weekend at the National Rifle Association's annual convention in Indianapolis.
"If I were in charge," Palin said Saturday during a Stand And Fight rally at Lucas Oil Stadium, "[our enemies] would know that waterboarding is how we'd baptize terrorists."
Palin mocked what she called the Obama administration's coddling of suspected terrorists.
"Enemies, who would utterly annihilate America, they who'd obviously have information on plots, to carry out jihad," Palin said. "Oh, but you can't offend them, can't make them feel uncomfortable, not even a smidgen." The White House, she said, has failed to put "the fear of God in our enemies."
The conservative firebrand also warned the pro-gun lobby that they — "intolerant, antifreedom leftist liberals" and "clownish, 'Kumbaya'-humming, fairytale-inhaling" Democrats — are seeking to "strip away our Second Amendment rights."
"If you control oil, you control an economy. If you control money, you control commerce," Palin said. "But if you control arms, you control the people, and that is what they're trying to do."
She called gun-free school zones "stupid on steroids."
"Maybe our kids could be defended against criminals on the spot if more Mama Grizzlies carried [guns]," she said. "And [the] Obama administration wants you ID'd for that? Well, then go ahead and carry a sign, too. A sign that says 'Yeah, I carry a gun because a cop is too heavy.'"
The them-versus-us rhetoric from the tea party favorite continued.
"When a kid in school is cussing away like any character in any Tarantino movie, nobody bats an eye," Palin said. "Ooh, but a kid saying a prayer in school, those hypocrites lose their minds."
She added: "By the way, a couple months ago there were 30 times as many Americans that registered for a gun license than registered for Obamacare. Those Democrats, trying to get all Pelosi on you, and you're not going to have it."

Dream


THIS DREAM, I take goes to the invasion... as I take they have to be "shot at" before they can fire back...


 Russia invasion ?? Suicide mission?

Unread postby Gus Who » Sun Apr 27, 2014 8:10 am


My view was like an onlooker from up high ... as I saw a huge military ship out at sea, as on patrol and I had the ability to read the mindset of the captain... as he did not want to invade the land... Like it was going to be a "suicide mission" knowing that no good comes is landing ... but yet he can not stand by idle ... as this ship goes back and forth knowing that they might if things "happen" ... which they must of, as I could hear him pray ... for help.. as he decide to go in ...

As I see the ship hit the land and a whole bunch of army ants get off and spread out... as my view was from far away and people look like little bugs packed all together Image

I did not see any blood shed ... but know that everyone has guns... as it came more a police action.

Friday, April 25, 2014

Look at the tweety birds

The LOONY TUNES are "Tweeting" WAR

Ukraine PM: Russia Wants to Start World War III

Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseny Yatseniuk chairs a meeting in Kyiv, Apr. 25, 2014.
Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseny Yatseniuk chairs a meeting in Kyiv, Apr. 25, 2014.
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VOA News
Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk is accusing Russia of wanting to occupy Ukraine "militarily and politically," as both Kyiv and Moscow mass troops close to their mutual border.


Yatsenyuk warned Friday that Russia's actions could lead to a wider military conflict in Europe. He told an interim Cabinet meeting that Moscow "wants to start World War III."



U.S. President Barack Obama also criticized what he called Russia's "further meddling" in eastern Ukraine, where armed, pro-Russian separatists have occupied government buildings.



Speaking in Seoul, Obama said he would talk to "key European leaders" later Friday about implementing wider sanctions in the event Russia further escalates the situation.



He said Russian President Vladimir Putin must decide whether he wants to see his country's already fragile economy weakened further because he failed to act diplomatically in Ukraine.



His comments echoed that of U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, who said Thursday that Moscow is making "an expensive mistake" by failing to restrain the separatists.


Underscoring the threat to Moscow's economy, credit agency Standard and Poor's cut Russia's credit rating to BBB- . The agency said it is concerned about increased capital outflows from Russia, and said the rating could be cut further if sanctions are tightened.

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Day old news


Israel suspends peace talks after Palestinian unity bid


By Jeffrey Heller

JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israel on Thursday suspended U.S.-sponsored peace talks with the Palestinians in response to President Mahmoud Abbas's unexpected unity pact with the rival Islamist Hamas group.

The negotiations had appeared to be heading nowhere even before Wednesday's reconciliation agreement between the Palestinian groups plunged them deeper into crisis. The United States had been struggling to extend the talks beyond an original April 29 deadline for a peace accord.

"The government of Israel will not hold negotiations with a Palestinian government that is backed by Hamas, a terror organization that calls for Israel's destruction," an official statement said after a six-hour meeting of the security cabinet.

Asked to clarify whether that meant the talks were now frozen or would be called off only after a unity government was formed, a senior Israeli official said: "They are currently suspended."

In Washington, a U.S. official said the United States would have to reconsider its assistance to Abbas's aid-dependent Palestinian Authority if the Western-backed leader and Hamas formed a government.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry spoke by telephone with Abbas on Thursday and expressed his disappointment at the reconciliation announcement.

Kerry stressed that any Palestinian government must abide by the principles of nonviolence, recognition of the state of Israel, and acceptance of previous agreements and obligations, State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said.

Kerry, who has shuttled repeatedly to the Middle East to push peace efforts, said he was not giving up hope.

"There's always a way forward, but the leaders have to make the compromises necessary to do that," he told reporters.

"We will never give up our hope or our commitment for the possibilities of peace. We believe it is the only way to go. But right now, obviously, it's at a very difficult point and the leaders themselves have to make decisions. It's up to them."

U.N. Middle East envoy Robert Serry offered support for the Palestinian agreement after meeting Abbas on Thursday, saying in a statement it was "the only way to reunite the West Bank and Gaza under one legitimate Palestinian Authority".


Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu attends the weekly cabinet meeting in Jerusalem, in t …
The deal envisions a unity government within five weeks and elections six months later. Palestinian divisions widened after Hamas, which won the last general ballot in 2006, seized the Gaza Strip from forces loyal to Abbas in 2007.

'DOOR WAS NOT CLOSED'

In an interview with MSNBC after the security cabinet meeting, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu appeared to leave open a window for future talks if Abbas reversed course or reconciliation with Hamas, seen by the West as a terrorist group, fell through.

"I hope (Abbas) changes his mind," Netanyahu said. "I will be there in the future if we have a partner that is committed to peace. Right now we have a partner that has just joined another partner committed to our destruction. No-go."

Israeli chief negotiator Tzipi Livni said she hoped a way could be found to return to talks. "The door was not closed today," she told Israel's Channel 2 television.

Wasel Abu Yousef, a top Palestine Liberation Organization official, rejected what he called "Israeli and American threats" and said a unity government would be made up of technocrats.

But Netanyahu dismissed any notion that Hamas would not be the real power behind the bureaucrats.

The Israeli-Palestinian negotiations, championed by Kerry and aimed at ending decades of conflict and creating a Palestinian state in the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip, began in July amid strong public skepticism in Israel and the Palestinian territories.

The two sides were also at odds over Israeli settlement construction in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, activity most countries deem illegal in areas captured in the 1967 Middle East war, and over Abbas's refusal to accept Netanyahu's demand he recognize Israel as a Jewish state.

For Netanyahu, Abbas's approach to Hamas offered an opportunity to withdraw from the negotiations with a reduced risk of a rift with the United States, Israel's main ally, which also refuses to deal with the Islamist militant group.

A suspension of the talks, while casting blame on the Palestinian reconciliation venture, is also likely to calm far-right allies in Netanyahu's governing coalition who oppose the creation of a Palestinian state and territorial compromise.

For Abbas, whose official mandate as president expired five years ago, an alliance with Hamas leading to a new election potentially strengthening his political legitimacy could outweigh the prospect of any international backlash.


Senior Fatah official Azzam Al-Ahmed (L), head of the Hamas government Ismail Haniyeh (C) and senior …
Palestinians have also been angered by Israel's announcement during the negotiations of thousands of new settler housing units and what they say was its failure to tackle substantive issues such as the borders of a future state.

SANCTIONS

The next immediate steps stemming from the collapse of the talks seemed likely to be Israeli sanctions against the Palestinian Authority, which exercises limited self-rule in the West Bank.

"The sanctions will be measured. We will not cause the Palestinian Authority to collapse," Livni said on television.

Palestinian leaders have already made clear they would seek to further their bid for nationhood via unilateral moves to join various international bodies and United Nations agencies.

The biggest threat for Israel could come in the shape of the International Criminal Court, with the Palestinians confident they could prosecute Israel there for alleged war crimes tied to the occupation of lands seized in 1967.

"Israel will respond to unilateral Palestinian action with a series of measures," said the Israeli statement issued after the security cabinet meeting, without going into detail.

The talks had moved close to a breakdown this month when Israel refused to carry out the last of four waves of prisoner releases, demanding that Palestinians first commit to negotiating after the April deadline.

Abbas responded by signing 15 international treaties, including the Geneva Conventions on the conduct of war and occupations. Israel condemned the move as a unilateral step towards statehood.

Asked whether the reconciliation with Hamas would incur promised U.S. sanctions, PLO Deputy Secretary Yasser Abed Rabo told Palestinian radio it was too soon to penalize a government that had yet to be formed.

"There's no need for the Americans to get ahead of themselves over this. What happened in Gaza in the last two days is just a first step which we welcome and want to reinforce," he said.

"But this step shouldn't be exaggerated, that an agreement for reconciliation has been completely reached... We need to watch the behavior of Hamas on many details during the coming days and weeks on forming a government and other things."

(Additional reporting by Allyn Fisher-Ilan and Ari Rabinovitch in Jerusalem, Ali Sawafta and Noah Browning in Ramallah and Washington's Matt Spetalnick, Mark Felsenthal, Arshad Mohammed and David Brunnstrom; Editing by Angus MacSwan and Mohammad Zargham)

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

It's coming sooner than the US thinks

This kind of headline news, only gives them something to shoot for...     


Satellites show North Korea nuclear test unlikely: think tank

SEOUL Tue Apr 22, 2014 


(Reuters) - North Korea is unlikely to be ready to stage a nuclear test timed to coincide with U.S. President Barack Obama's visit to Asia, a respected think tank said on Wednesday based on its assessment of satellite imagery.
Comments by South Korea's foreign ministry that the North could be moving towards what would be its fourth nuclear test prompted the U.S. State Department to urge Pyongyang to "refrain from actions that threaten regional peace".
North Korea continually works on improving testing at its Punggye-ri site. Satellite imagery analyzed by 38North, which is part of Johns Hopkins University, said that while there had been a pickup in activity, there were few signs of an imminent test.
"Recent operations at Punggye-ri have not reached the high level of intensity - in terms of vehicle, personnel and equipment movement - that occurred in the weeks prior to past detonations," it said.
"Moreover, other possible indicators present before the North Korean nuclear tests in 2009 and 2013, such as communications vans and a satellite dish intended to transmit pre-test data, have not been spotted."
Work at the site is seasonal and often picks up in the Korean spring. Some earlier satellite images had suggested the North was digging multiple tunnels, which could possibly indicate that it was planning more than one nuclear detonation.
38North acknowledges that the commercial satellite imagery it uses may present an incomplete picture of the highly secretive state.
The comments by the South Koreans have been repeated frequently in the past and there was little new in their assessment this week that the North could be ready to launch a new test at short notice.
North Korea has been heavily sanctioned for its nuclear and long-range rocket programs but has pressed ahead with both. Military experts say the North would lose any conventional war with South Korea and the United States and is seeking to develop nuclear weapons as a deterrent.
It has also used the nuclear program to attempt to wring concessions and aid from the United States. Washington has said that it would be open to talks if North Korea abandons its nuclear program.
North Korea describes its nuclear weapons as a "treasured sword" that it will never abandon.



Sunday, April 13, 2014

Russian Iran secret deal

This one goes to a secret deal ...  war materal and a pact ...


A ship, an exchange of prisoners and a tooth

Unread postby Foglia » Sat Apr 12, 2014 4:47 am

I was on a ship in the middle of the sea with my mom, when I saw that the sailors were exchanging messages with another ship using flags. They wanted to exchange a Russian prisoner with an Iranian one.
While I was watching this, one of my teeth fell down. I saw there was a microscopic parasite swimming in it, which was the cause of the falling.
My mother was without her glasses and she didn't succeed to see it.

Umm, a weird dream! :lol: Can you help me interpreting it?
Thank you
Foglia


--------------

Unread postby Gus Who » Sat Apr 12, 2014 11:32 pm
You lose you "innocence" baby tooth as you witness an exchange between these two countries concerning war in a macroscopic deal... They make a deal if push come to shove, they :dusto: knock out a tooth
Edit: The Parasite is the "Tooth Ferry" bringing you this news.

Saturday, April 12, 2014

Roasted Turkey


 Here is a dream that shows what's cooking
Roasted Turkey
Unread postby seyi » Wed Apr 09, 2014 11:19 pm
A STICK WAS HELD TO ME WITH 5KINDS OF MEATS BUT ONLY THE TURKEY WHICH WAS THE 1ST ON THE STICK WAS ROASTED,I ATE IT.

Unread postby Gus Who » Sat Apr 12, 2014 12:52 pm
:eat: It probably goes to this kind of news coming over the stick...


Turkey PM threatens to 'go after' Twitter for tax evasion
By Fulya Ozerkan


Ankara (AFP) - Turkey's prime minister said Saturday he will "go after" Twitter, accusing the site of tax-evasion, after it was used to spread damaging leaks implicating his inner circle in corruption claims.

In a televised speech, Recep Tayyip Erdogan also launched a tirade against the nation's highest court for ruling against a ban on Twitter, charging that it put the rights of businesses above that of Turkey's.

"Twitter, YouTube and Facebook are international companies established for profit and making money," Erdogan said.

"Twitter is at the same time a tax evader. We will go after it," he added.

"These companies, like every international company, will abide by my country's constitution, laws and tax rules".


This file picture dated on March 26, 2014 shows a picture representing a mugshot of the twitter bird …
Erdogan's government on March 20 banned access to the social media site over the leaks, sparking outrage among Turkey's NATO allies and international human rights groups who viewed it as a setback for democracy in the EU-hopeful country.

Ankara had to lift the ban on April 3 after its highest court ruled the blocade breached the right to free speech.

-'Interference in politics'-

Erdogan again blasted the constitutional court's verdict on Saturday, criticising it for "advocating commercial law of international companies instead of defending the rights of its own country and its own people".

"This amounts to interference in politics," he said.


A file photo taken on March 27, 2014 shows a view of a computer screen showing a digital portrait of …
"We abided by the (court) ruling on (Twitter), but I say it again, I don't respect it," he said.

The ban had been widely circumvented by many of Turkey's almost 12 million Twitter users -- including President Abdullah Gul -- who have instead sent tweets via text message or by adjusting their Internet settings.

Erdogan's government also blocked YouTube on March 27 after the popular video sharing site was used to leak a top-secret security meeting of the country's civilian and military officials discussing war scenarios for neighbouring Syria.

Turkish authorities said last week the ban on YouTube would remain in place in defiance of court orders.

Erdogan, Turkey's strongman premier for 11 years, ordered the Internet curbs in the lead-up to March 30 municipal elections, in which his party chalked up sweeping wins despite the claims of sleaze and graft.


Turkey's Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan speaks to members of parliament from his ruling Jus …
He has blamed online leaks on shadowy supporters of influential US-based Islamic cleric Fetullah Gulen known as Gulenists, many of whom hold key positions in the police and judiciary.

Erdogan's latest attack against the country's highest court also comes a day after it annulled the most controversial clause of a law giving the justice ministry greater control over the appointment of judges and prosecutors.

The law, which sparked fistfights among lawmakers debating it in parliament, was one of the retaliatory measures taken by Erdogan in the wake of the vast graft scandal which erupted in mid-December implicating his key political and business allies.

Erdogan said Saturday that the court was showing an "increasing appetite for interference in political sphere" while turning a blind eye to the existence of what he called a "parallel structure" within the state, referring to Gulenists.

"I always say it: those who want to do politics should leave their seat, take off their robes and do politics under the roof of political parties," he said.

"I want everyone to know that that seat or that robe may render you powerful today but you must know that it will harm the country and the people," he said, in a direct attack at the court's judges.

"We will never allow such tensions in our country. Turkey has no tolerance for tensions or non-political interference".