Archive for October, 2009

Pakistan Offensive Against Taliban

30000 pakistani troops have begun there long waited offensive against the Taliban stronghold in South Waziristan where they have been massing for months.

The Pakistan Army has mounted a three pronged ground  attack and air and artillery strikes have been going on for weeks against militant targets near the border.

Ther are 2 divisions of the pakistan army with 28000 soldiers, The frontier Corps and paramilitary forces from tribal areas who are likely to assist the pakistani army are up against an unknown number of Taliban militants, with estimates ranging from 10500 to 25000.

Thousands of civilians have fled the area and almost all communication in the area has been jammed.

The ground troops were moving from the northern town of Razmak, between North and South Wazirstan; from Jandola in the east; and from Shakai in the west and have been reported moving towards Makeen, Spinkai Raghzai and Tiarza (see map below).

The Pakistan government has been under a lot of pressure from the US to confront the problems in South Waziristan for some time now and it has finally come to a head after Prime Minister Yusuf Raza Gilani attended a meeting of the Pakistan’s  senior political and military leadership.

South Waziristan was considered to be the leading sanctuary of the Taliban outside of Afghanistan since 9/11. It has been described by US officials as “The most dangerous place on earth”. There are also numerous training camps for suicide bombers located there.

It will be a tough battle especially if the number of militants is as large as some estimates have predicted. The taliban know the area well and will set up ambushes and entrench themselves, and could prove very difficult to remove, but the Pakistan army is much better armed with tanks as support, Cobra gunships, F-16 jets and much better maintained equipment.

We can only hope that this will be ended quickly to minimise the loss of life on both sides.

Here is a map of the area.

South Waziristan

I will keep you posted.

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6 Year Old Missing Colorado

A six year old boy climbed into a home made experimental ballon earlier, released the tethers and took off.

The experimental craft was quite small and was never actually meant to carry anyone.

The ballon eventually came to a relatively gentle stop in a field  but no signs of the boy were found.

A ground search is underway and officials are reviewing the footage of the craft.

I will keep you updated when they eventually do find the boy.

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6.0 Earthquake Samoa

There was a magnitude 6.0 earthquake in Samoa at 18:00 UTC or 6 am local time on the 14th of October 2009 .

The epicenter was 165 Km north of Hihifo in Tonga and was at a depth of just 10 km.

It is too early to tell if there was any damage or loss of life and there was no immediate tsunami alert issued.

This quake comes just weeks after about 200 people were killed by an earthquake and tsunami in Tonga, Samoa and American Samoa.

I will keep you updated as the story progresses.

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Moscow Halo Cloud

A bizarre weather phenomenon occurred in Moscow a few days ago, a cloud nicknamed the hole-punch-cloud which appeared to be a supernatural phenomon was spotted and videotaped, the footage has made headlines around the world and really its not that much of a strange phenomon.

It is simply a hole punch cloud, which is a cloud which appears to have a ‘hole’ in it and is caused by ice crystals being changed by a jet passing throught the cloud.

here are a few pictures of hole punch clouds:

holepunch2hole punch 1

And here is the youtube video of the Moscow hole punch / halo cloud!

not an awful lot of difference to me, but there are conspiracy theories going around all over the joint aaaaaah the aliens are invading!!!!! pfff unless the fly jets through clouds to invade then they most certainly are not!

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Swine Flu Vaccine

Attorney Jim Turner is seking an injunction against the FDA on Friday in an attempt to stop the distribution of the swine flu vaccine in the USA.

The lawsuit charges that the FDA violated the law in its hasty approval of four swine flu vaccines by failing to scientifically determine neither the safety nor efficacy of the vaccines.

The suit seeks to  nullify the FDA’s unlawful “approval” of the four H1N1 influenza vaccines and to also ask the court to issue an injunction that would stop any forced vaccination.

“The FDA is required by law to establish that a vaccine is safe and effective before it can be given to the public,” said Turner. “We are arguing that they did not establish that the vaccine was effective, and did not establish that it was safe. They are trying to get it on the market by a waiver.”

The vaccine and adjuvant combination has never been properly tested or approved by the FDA and in many cases is being shipped to clinics and pharmacies seperately requiring them to mix them together themselves, involving a massive risk of improper mixing, dosages and human error.

If these charges prove correct, it will mean that the FDA has violated its own policies in approving the vaccines and the potentially deadly adjuvant as well.

The FDA has not produced any scientific evidence documenting safety tests, no published studies, no safety tests, no paper trail.

Under normal circumstances, for any pharmaceutical product to get FDA approval there is a well documented paper trail of scrutiny, clinical trials and supporting evidence but as far as I am aware there is no such trail for the swine flu vaccines.

Approval of these vaccines in the absense of proper testing puts the FDA in direct violation of federal law.

It would appear that a profit motive is at stake. At $24.95 per vaccine for 100 million people that is a serious amount of money. Why else would the FDA do this sort of thing? perhaps the white house is giving the orders.. who knows

A push for vaccination in the U.S.  could target over 200 million Americans, generating almost $5 billion in revenue. Cashing in on those revenues, however, requires three things:

1) Spreading fear about H1N1 swine flu by exaggerating its dangers.

2) Quickly making a vaccine available for sale, even if it has never been thoroughly tested for safety and efficacy.

3) Aggressively marketing the vaccines before the H1N1 swine flu fizzles out and can no longer be hyped up as “highly virulent.”

Tick, Tick and Tick

In 1976 a previous formulation of the swine flu vaccine paralyzed and killed thousands of Americans. Jim Turner, the same attorney working on this case was one of the attorneys who helped halt the spread of that vaccine.

Jim has been quoted saying “[In 1976] they were intending to inoculate 200 million people. We stopped them… and somewhere between 40 and 50 million people were vaccinated. What ultimately brought it down is that a substantial number of people got ‘French Polio’ [Guillain-Barre syndrome], a paralysis that goes… through the body, and if it goes far enough you die.”

Jim Turner is one of the most accomplished and respected health freedom attorneys practicing today. His firm, Swankin & Turner, represents businesses and individuals on a variety of regulatory issues relating to foods, drugs and health.

Donations to support this swine flu vaccine lawsuit are greatly welcomed. You can donate to Citizens.org/page_id=20

I will keep you updated as the story progresses

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Zachary Christie

6 Year old Zachary Christie was suspended from school and is facing 45 days at reform school.
What did he do? you ask well he didnt threaten anyone, didnt hurt anyone wasnt violent. All he did was take a cub scout utensil which is used as a knife, a fork and a spoon to school.

You would think that is harmless enough, but the school officials ruled that he had violated the schools zero-tolerance policy for weapons!

This is definately a case of zero tolerance going too far.

Zachary is now being home-schooled while his family attempt to get the decision overturned.

Zachary’s parents have started a website for those who want to help

helpzachary.com

If i was local i would be at the board meeting!

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Rusty Weir Dead

Rusty Weir, A Texas music legend has passed away today, details are very hard to find at this point but he was diagnosed with cancer in 2007 and had been undergoing chemotherapy.

Rusty had been in the music industry since the 70′s and had an accomplished career.

His most famous song was “Dont it make you wanna dance” which had over 2 million sales going double platinum. He was inducted into the Austin songwriters hall of fame in 2002.

Here is a copy of a touching tribute posted at rustywier.com.

Rusty Wier Tribute
May 3, 1944 – October 9, 2009

Rusty Wier told us early on that he didn’t want to lay his guitar down. And we most certainly didn’t want to let him. We watched and prayed and prayed some more these past two years as he fought the demon cancer with that same sense of determination and commitment he brought to entertaining every time those big ol’ boots of his hit the stage.

Joe Ables, who owns the Saxon Pub, home of Rusty’s regular Thursday night gig for 14 years, knows something about that: “I use Rusty as an example to these younger acts, who get a little sniffle and then want to cancel. Even before it happens, I always tell ’em about him. I’ve seen him sicker ’n a dog, but hit the stage, and you’d never know it. A true professional.”

And Margaret Moser told us about the time Rusty stepped up on that stage for one of those Thursday night shows less than twelve hours after his mother had passed away. “She didn’t want me to miss the show,” he explained. “Just make ’em smile. It’s what I’m there for. They’re not there to hear all my problems. And I do my best to make ’em laugh.”

And, boy, was he good at that. Having discovered his inner ham at the tender age of three while charming patrons of his father’s Austin restaurant by riding his stick horse between the tables as the pianist played “The William Tell Overture,” Rusty fully embraced the joy of entertaining.

He banged on pots and pans with spoons until the age of ten, when his parents finally bought him a set of drums. “Then they turned around and bought me a soundproof room,” he adds with a touch of that typical Wier humor.

Within three years, Rusty was defying parental and legal curfews to begin his professional career drumming for the Centennials. Over the next ten years, he drummed his way through several rock and roll outfits, including the Wig with Benny Rowe and Lavender Hill Express with Layton DePenning and Gary P. Nunn. Somewhere along the way, he discovered the blues clubs of East Austin and began to broaden his musical horizons.

Rusty’s adamant stand against being pigeonholed into any one genre of music probably dates from this period in the Sixties, when folk, rock, and blues all cross pollinated to produce new strains of music. And he was already looking to throw another element into the mix. As he recalled, “I wanted to call Lavender Hill Express ‘the Blue Mountain Train.’ I was trying to go country even then.”

But there was a different change of direction in Rusty’s immediate future. When Lavender Hill Express broke up, he put down his drumsticks, picked up a Mel Bay book of guitar chords, and began teaching himself to play the guitar.

Heading into the Seventies, our budding Texas troubadour was right on schedule for a head-on collision with his destiny. Just as Michael Martin Murphey, Jerry Jeff Walker, Steven Fromholz, Willie Nelson, and Waylon Jennings were all busy turning that Sixties blend of folk, rock, and blues into the “Austin Sound,” Rusty Wier came back from an ill-advised trip to LA with the inspiration for a little ditty called “Don’t It Make You Wanna Dance.”

The rest, as they say, was history. Recorded by artists as diverse as John Hiatt, Barbara Mandell, and Jerry Jeff, the song became a monster hit when Bonnie Raitt’s version appeared on the Urban Cowboy soundtrack, earning Rusty a double platinum record for over two million sales. His signature song, it catapulted him to fame, fortune, and life in the fast lane. He suddenly found himself touring with such artists as Ray Charles, the Charlie Daniels and Marshall Tucker bands, The Outlaws, Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Amazing Rhythm Aces, Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings, the Atlanta Rhythm Section, Pure Prairie League, The Allman Brothers, Commander Cody, Asleep at the Wheel, Doug Kershaw, and Gatemouth Brown, among others. Sometimes, as was the case with George Strait, they opened and he headlined the shows.

Rusty signed his first contract with ABC Records and later recorded with both 20th Century and Columbia Records, producing more than a dozen albums during the course of his career. He also appeared on Austin City Limits on three different occasions, delivering his unique brand of what Margaret Moser labeled “Rusticana.”

A songwriter’s songwriter, an entertainer’s entertainer, perhaps Moser summed up Rusty Wier best of all when she observed, “Through rain, sleet, and dark of night, Rusty Wier delivers.” And now Rusty Wier has been delivered. And if that don’t exactly make you wanna dance, do it anyway. It’s what he would have wanted.

Rest in peace Rusty the world will never be the same.

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