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Archive for December 3rd, 2008

It’s been a few years since I’ve been to the Carribean. I love the atmosphere, the weather, the people and the relaxation. My favorite spot is Grace Bay, at the Turks and Caicos Islands. I’ll be back to that beautiful beach some day.

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Time to deviate from the norm

An email from my freind Iris and some reading at Chamayo’s Weblog and some jazz music and I’m fine…Here is Fatt Burger with Good News & Night After Night

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Beyond Ridiculous

 
Wednesday, December 03, 2008
Despite the apparent confusion and the obvious media spin, the picture that emerged from the early reporting of the Mumbai attacks was a fairly comprehensible one: a picture of a false flag commando raid.
It was a commando raid, as opposed to a suicide bombing or other forms of terrorist attack; surely that [...]

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Prepare For Depression Level Unemployment

Deflation has already set in and it’s now realistic to start talking about another “D” word, this one being depression. Before we can use a word, we must define it. For the sake of argument, let’s define depression as unemployment of 10% or greater.
Looking at alternative measures of unemployment (counting discouraged workers, those working part [...]

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By George Monbiot
How was it allowed to happen? How did politics in the US come to be dominated by people who make a virtue out of ignorance? Was it charity that has permitted mankind’s closest living relative to spend two terms as president? How did Sarah Palin, Dan Quayle and other such gibbering numbskulls get [...]

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College May Become Unaffordable for Most in U.S.

This isn’t by accident.
Educated, rational people are far less likely to succumb to a government laboring intensely to created a consistent public frenzy of fear, and will tend to ask the tougher questions when it appears that same government is lying through its teeth to its people.
Tom
 
By TAMAR LEWIN
 

The rising cost of college — even [...]

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by Randy Lewis and Mike Boehm

Odetta, the classically trained folk, blues and gospel singer who used her powerfully rich and dusky voice to champion African American music and civil rights issues for more than half a century starting in the folk revival of the 1950s, has died. She was 77.
 
Odetta, who used just her given [...]

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