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FOX NEWS PROJECTS: REPUBLICAN CHRIS CHRISTIE DEFEATS INCUMBENT DEMOCRATIC GOV. JON CORZINE IN NEW JERSEY




Wednesday, November 04, 2009

 

             


Child reacting to
Michelle "Cat Woman" Obama's
Halloween treat of dried brocoli
and tofu covered peas from tax payer
funded White House garden.


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Iranians mark US embassy takeover
Press TV [Iran], by Staff    Original Article
Posted By: PageTurner- 11/4/2009 2:27:36 AM     Post Reply
Rallies marking the 30th anniversary of the US Embassy takeover in Tehran have started in capital Tehran as well as other cities across the country. Tens of thousands of people from all walks of life and many political persuasions have staged a rally at the site of the former US embassy in Tehran, better known in Iranian history as the 'Den of Spies'.

Pablo Escobar burnt £1m
in cash to keep warm on the run
Telegraph [U.K.], by Staff    Original Article
Posted By: PageTurner- 11/4/2009 2:24:19 AM     Post Reply
The infamous cocaine baron is said to have lit a bonfire using wads of US dollars at a mountain hideout while he was being hunted by authorities. Sebastian Marroqui­n, who has changed his name from Juan Pablo Escobar, claimed his father burnt the notes when he realised his daughter Manuela was suffering from hypothermia.

Conservative Loses Upstate
House Race in Blow to Right
New York Times, by Jeremy W. Peters    Original Article
Posted By: PageTurner- 11/4/2009 2:19:21 AM     Post Reply
SARANAC LAKE, N.Y. — Democrats won a special election in New York State’s northernmost Congressional district Tuesday, a setback for national conservatives who heavily promoted a third candidate in what became an intense debate over the direction of the Republican Party. The Democratic candidate, Bill Owens, led with 49 percent of the vote, while the Conservative Party candidate, Douglas L. Hoffman, had 46 percent.

 



 
Obama Pal Edward
Said Another Fraud
American Thinker, by Jack Cashill    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 11/4/2009 1:22:52 AM     Post Reply
Friend and foe alike have wondered how Barack Obama wangled a seat next to Edward Said (pronounced sigh-EED), at an Arab-American community dinner in Chicago in 1998 on the fiftieth anniversary of the Palestinian nakbah, or disaster. At the time, Obama was an obscure state senator and Said, according to the Nation, was 'probably the best-known intellectual in the world.'' (Snip) It is possible, too, that Said and Obama ran in the same radical New

Gay-marriage foes
claim victory in Maine
Associated Press, by Glenn Adams and David Crary    Original Article
Posted By: Iceman- 11/4/2009 1:17:31 AM     Post Reply
Gay-marriage opponents are claiming victory in a closely watched referendum in Maine on a new state law that would have allowed same-sex couples to wed. The law in question was passed by the Legislature in May but never took effect because of a petition drive by conservatives. With more than 84 percent of precincts reporting Tuesday, the side seeking to repeal the law had 53 percent of the vote.

A Privileged Press?
American Thinker, by Lance Fairchok    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 11/4/2009 1:14:41 AM     Post Reply
The New York Times reported on Saturday that the ''Obama administration, leading Senate Democrats and a coalition of news organizations have reached tentative agreement on legislation providing greater protections against the fining or imprisonment of reporters who refuse to identify confidential sources.'' The 'Free Flow of Information Act'' would allow federal courts the power to stifle subpoenas for information from reporters or privileged "covered" persons if the judge determines the public interest is better served

Who Are You Calling ''Extremist''?
Creators Syndicate Inc., by Michelle Malkin    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 11/4/2009 1:07:16 AM     Post Reply
Here is one of the loudest messages of the 2009 off-off-year elections: Conservatives in America will no longer let their opponents define them as outside of the mainstream. They will not submit to Democrats. Or to the media. Or to Beltway Republican capitulationists. They will not ''rebrand.'' They will not sit down. They will not shut up. (Snip) New York Times columnist Frank Rich decried the right's ''Jacobins'' and ''Stalinists'' who he said joined a

The Double Standard
About Journalists' Bias
Creators Syndicate Inc., by John Stossel    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 11/4/2009 1:00:11 AM     Post Reply
I made The New York Times last week. It even ran my picture. My mother would be proud. Unfortunately, the story was critical. It said, ''Critics have leaped on Mr. Stossel's speaking engagements as the latest evidence of conservative bias on the part of Fox.' Which ''critics'' had ''leaped''? The reporter mentioned Rachel Maddow. (Snip) In August, AFP hired me to do the very same thing. I give the money to charity. The Times didn't

 



 
Why Markets Fail
Creators Syndicate Inc., by Ben Shapiro    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 11/4/2009 12:53:34 AM     Post Reply
President Obama says he is a fan of the free market. Back in September, Obama spoke to Wall Street. He stated, ''I have always been a strong believer in the power of the free market.'' (Snip) To paraphrase Spanish dueler Inigo Montoya from ''The Princess Bride'': President Obama, you keep using the phrase ''free markets.'' I do not think it means what you think it means.Here is how the free market works: open competition among

GOP maintains Va. House majority
Washington Examiner, by David Sherfinski    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 11/4/2009 12:42:06 AM     Post Reply
Down-ballot Republicans, riding a sweep at the top of the Virginia ticket, maintained their majority in the Virginia House of Delegates, and appeared poised to widen that margin. The GOP managed to stanch a recent Democratic tide in the state legislature. Democrats had gained 11 seats in the past three elections, leaving Republicans with a six-seat working majority after holding 64 seats in 2001.

NY-23 close, no result tonight
NBC News, by Domenico Montanaro    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 11/4/2009 12:38:08 AM     Post Reply
Democrat Bill Owens is up by just 2,500 votes or about 2%, and there are still about 11,000 absentee ballots that have to be counted. They won't start counting those until the morning, our Elections Unit tells us. So, we're calling it a night. See you in the morning.

Older patients most likely
to die from H1N1 influenza
USA Today, by Rita Rubin    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 11/4/2009 12:35:53 AM     Post Reply
An analysis of more than 1,000 California patients hospitalized with H1N1 flu during the first four months of the pandemic found that infants were most likely to be admitted, and patients 50 and older were most likely to die once admitted. In the first four months of the pandemic, H1N1, like the seasonal flu, was especially severe in older people, who are more likely to have underlying health conditions

Meg Whitman's campaign
spending is causing a stir
Los Angeles Times, by Shane Goldmacher    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 11/4/2009 12:32:46 AM     Post Reply
Sacramento - The radio ads have aired daily across the state since she declared her bid for governor in September. ''I'm Meg Whitman,'' one begins, ''and I want to talk to you about California. . . .'' The costly airtime -- with the primary election still seven months away -- is just one way the former eBay chief is spending the $19 million of her personal fortune that she has plowed into the race.

Republicans walk out of Senate
hearing on climate-change bill
Los Angeles Times, by Alexander C. Hart    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 11/4/2009 12:29:32 AM     Post Reply
Washington - Republicans today boycotted the start of a Senate hearing on climate-change legislation. The Republican members of the Environment and Public Works Committee are demanding a full Environmental Protection Agency analysis of the climate bill. But despite the boycott, committee Chairwoman Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) still held the meeting, arguing that the EPA's partial analysis, based on a similar bill passed by the House of Representatives in June, was sufficient.

New Orleans getting $1 billion barrier
Associated Press, by Staff    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 11/4/2009 12:24:35 AM     Post Reply
Harvey, La. - Mindful that the suburban West Bank of New Orleans has regained its pre-Hurricane Katrina population and is primed for growth, the Army Corps of Engineers is launching a $1 billion effort to keep the next storm at bay. The new flood protection is already having a potentially dangerous consequence, though: It's encouraging more people to move into another bowl-shaped area that experts consider perhaps the city's most vulnerable flank.

2009 Election Results
NY Times, by staff    Original Article
Posted By: ZurichMike- 11/4/2009 12:20:20 AM     Post Reply
[election results]

EPA uses water act to fight dirty air
Washington Times, by Amanda DeBard    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 11/4/2009 12:18:57 AM     Post Reply
To appreciate the extent to which the Environmental Protection Agency under President Obama is a regulator reborn, consider this: EPA officials have begun to cut air pollution by invoking the Clean Water Act. Long quiescent under President George W. Bush, the agency is churning out initiatives and regulations at a pace that pleases its friends in the environmental movement and frightens many in the business community.

Jeff Dunham throws
his voice into stardom
Los Angeles Times, by Greg Braxton    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 11/4/2009 12:15:52 AM     Post Reply
In the last few years, Jeff Dunham has become something akin to a rock star. The 47-year-old entertainer routinely sells out concert halls and arenas at home and abroad, travels in a decked-out touring bus and just launched a new weekly cable television show. He can thank a bunch of dummies with names including Bubba J, Walter and Achmed the Dead Terrorist for his astonishing success.

Crist Faces Test From
Right in Bid for Senate
Wall Street Journal, by Peter Wallsten    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 11/4/2009 12:09:25 AM     Post Reply
Conservatives, energized by their role in shaping Tuesday's New York congressional election, have set Florida in their sights as the big battleground for 2010. That state's Republican Senate primary in August is emerging as a focal point in the wider debate over the future course of the Republican Party. Gov. Charlie Crist, who is supported by party leaders in Washington, backed President Barack Obama's stimulus package and has expressed openness to cap-and-trade legislation to curb

Worms infesting PCs
worldwide: Microsoft
Agence France-Presse, by Glenn Chapman    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 11/4/2009 12:07:03 AM     Post Reply
A Microsoft security report released on Monday warns that cyber crooks are digging into computers for weak spots to penetrate with worms - malicious software that steals control or data. Rogue security software remained the top hacker threat to computers during the first half of this year, but the number of infections was dropping while penetrations by worms doubled

Owens Still Leading Hoffman
Daily Times [Watertown, NY], by Staff    Original Article
Posted By: SpinMaster- 11/3/2009 11:45:29 PM     Post Reply
[Update] - Democrat Bill Owens is leading in the 23rd Congressional District race. The Plattsburgh attorney has 58,812 votes compared to Conservative Doug Hoffman, a Lake Placid CPA, with 54,637 votes. Dede Scozzafava, a Republican who dropped out of the race Saturday, has 6,665 votes. There were more than 10,000 absentee votes sent out before the election and some 5,800 were returned and must be counted. More absentee

Jailed Buddhist argues
for pet visitation rights
9 News [Australia], by Staff    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 11/3/2009 11:19:31 PM     Post Reply
Buddhists believe in reincarnation — but courts do not. A Buddhist bank robber has pled for the right of his cat to visit him in jail, saying the animal is the reincarnation of his dead mother. The man, serving five years in a German jail for armed robbery, made the court application this week, (Snip) ''I need to see her like other prisoners see their wives and children.'' The court turned down his application, arguing that he had no proof that it was

Congratulations, Chris Christie:
Now comes the hard part
Star Ledger [Newark, NJ], by Editorial    Original Article
Posted By: earlybird- 11/3/2009 11:13:39 PM     Post Reply
Congratulations, Chris Christie, and good luck. You’ll need it. The campaign that ended with today’s voting may have seemed a difficult ordeal, but it was a day at the beach compared to the task ahead. Now comes the really hard part. The list of problems facing the state would try the patience of Job:

Iran twitchy since Israel
strike on Syria nuke reactor
Haaretz [Israel], by Ofer Aderet    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 11/3/2009 11:12:59 PM     Post Reply
Berlin - Relations have been tense between Iran and Syria in recent weeks, according to the German weekly Der Spiegel, which quotes Western intelligence sources. Iran has demanded that Syria return the uranium delivered to it prior to the Israeli bombing of the Syrian reactor two years ago, says the weekly. Moreover, Iran reportedly wants the radioactive material restored in its entirety and without Syria's receiving compensation in

Chris Christie wins N.J.
governor race, defeats Jon Corzine
Star Ledger [Newark, NJ], by Mark Mueller    Original Article
Posted By: earlybird- 11/3/2009 11:08:55 PM     Post Reply
Former U.S. Attorney Christopher Christie has defeated Gov. Jon Corzine in his bid for re-election. Christie, 47, who rose to political prominence as a corruption-buster, becomes the first Republican in 12 years to win a statewide contest in heavily Democratic New Jersey. With 90 percent of precincts reporting, Christie had 49 percent of the vote, compared with 45 percent for Corzine.

What Women Want on Health Care
Wall Street Journal, by Heather Richardson Higgins    Original Article
Posted By: Dreadnought- 11/3/2009 11:06:11 PM     Post Reply
Women are seen as a key constituency of Democrats, particularly on issues like health care. But current congressional proposals not only concern women, they may actually drive women away from the party. The Independent Women's Forum (IWF) commissioned a survey to better understand women's health-care concerns. We asked extensive questions of 800 registered voters, deliberately taking a broad sample to be

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