Birbirinden ateşli özbek sex videolarına hemen sizde izlemeye başlayın. Yeni fantazi olan eşli seks ile ilgili içeriklerimiz ilginizi çekebilir. Çeşitli sekreter türk içerikleri son derece heyecanlandırıcı ve zevk verici duruyor. İnternet ortamında güvenilir bir depolama sistemi olan dosya yükle adresimiz sizleri için sorunsuz bir şekilde aktif durumda. Hiç bir bilsiyar keysiz kalmasın diye özel bir indirim Windows 10 Pro Lisans Key Satın Al kampanyasına mutlaka göz atın. Android cihazlarda Dream League Soccer 2020 hileli apk ile beraber sizler de sınırsız oyun keyfine hemen dahil olun. Popüler oyun olan Clash Royale apk indir ile tüm bombaları ücretsiz erişim imkanını kaçırmayın. Sosyal medya üzerinden facebook beğenisi satın al adresi sizlere büyük bir popülerlik katmanıza imkan sağlamaktadır. Erotik kadınlardan oluşan canlı sex numaraları sizlere eğlenceye davet ediyor. Bağlantı sağladığınız bayanlara sex sohbet etmekte dilediğiniz gibi özgürsünüz. Dilediğiniz zaman arayabileceğiniz sex telefon numaraları ile zevkin doruklarına çıkın. Kadınların birbirleri ile yarış yaptığı canlı sohbet hattı hizmeti sayesinde fantazi dünyanız büyük ölçüde gelişecek. Sizlerde hemen bir tık uzağınızda olan sex hattı hizmetine başvurarak arama yapmaya başlayın. İnternet ortamında bulamayacağınız kadın telefon numaraları sitemiz üzerinden hemen erişime bağlı bir şekilde ulaşın. Whatsapp üzerinden sıcak sohbetler için whatsapp sex hattı ile bayanların sohbetine katılabilirsin. Erotik telefonda sohbet ile sitemizde ki beğendiğiniz kadına hemen ulaşın. Alo Sex Numaraları kadınlarına ücretsiz bir şekilde bağlan!
supertotobet superbetin marsbahis kolaybet interbahis online casino siteleri bonus veren siteler
We are the Liberal Blog From Hollywood
L.A.'s Premier Post Facility

Film / Movie Quality Control Reports


Hot Pics & Gossip.

Archive for August 25th, 2011

False Choice: Preserving Corporate Tax Cuts, Arizona Gov. Brewer Plans To Slash Higher Education

Posted in Main Blog (All Posts) on August 25th, 2011 4:34 am by HL

False Choice: Preserving Corporate Tax Cuts, Arizona Gov. Brewer Plans To Slash Higher Education
It is becoming a well-worn tradition among Republican governors to use state budget woes to pursue lopsided budget priorities. Dedicated to preserving $538 million in corporate tax cuts, Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer (R) willingly sacrificed transplant patients, low-income families, the “mentally ill,” children’s health programs, and arts programs in the name of a balanced budget. […]

It is becoming a well-worn tradition among Republican governors to use state budget woes to pursue lopsided budget priorities. Dedicated to preserving $538 million in corporate tax cuts, Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer (R) willingly sacrificed transplant patients, low-income families, the “mentally ill,” children’s health programs, and arts programs in the name of a balanced budget. Now — despite once abhorring the idea — Brewer is taking her knife to another one of her low priorities: higher education.

Having already cut state funding for public universities from $1.2 billion in FY2008 to $682 million this year, Brewer is prepping to gouge out higher education in order to pay for an expected 40 percent growth in Medicaid and other health-care expenses by 2015. To accommodate the cost, Brewer is interpreting Arizona’s constitution’s requirement that the state provide higher education “as nearly as free as possible” to mean that higher education is “a large bucket” of money to redistribute:

A spokesman for Gov. Jan Brewer said it is “simply a fact that higher education is a large bucket when it comes to state funding.”

“It’s something where the state has discretion in terms of cuts,” said Matthew Benson, the spokesman.

Higher education officials say Arizona schools are already at a “breaking point.” According to the Arizona Board of Regents spokeswoman Katie Paquet, schools will significantly hurt enrollment if they keep raising tuition. “We’re going to start to have an access issue if state budgets continue to decline and we’re forced to continue to raise tuition,” said Paquet.

Even Republican state Rep. Tom Forese is uneasy with the prospect of higher education cuts. “We’re really putting ourselves in a position where we’re not going to be able to meet these unfunded federal mandates without taking part in several very bad positions,” he said. Regents Chairman Fred DuVal, meanwhile, blasted Brewer for putting tax cuts ahead of education spending. “Pitting Medicaid against education is not a full disclosure of the choices,” he stated. “If education is their fourth priority — they should just say so.”

Republicans Bash Administration For Refusing to Promote Oil Shale, ?The Petroleum Equivalent Of Fool’s Gold?
By Tom Kenworthy, Senior Fellow, Center for American Progress Action Fund. There’s something about the ever-elusive prospect of sucking petroleum out of the American West’s vast supplies of shale rock that addles people’s brains and warps their judgment. Oil shale has been a pipe dream in the Rockies for the better part of a century. […]

By Tom Kenworthy, Senior Fellow, Center for American Progress Action Fund.

Reps. Scott Tipton and Doug Lamborn (R-CO) at the oil shale hearing. Credit: Western Colorado Congress.

There’s something about the ever-elusive prospect of sucking petroleum out of the American West’s vast supplies of shale rock that addles people’s brains and warps their judgment.

Oil shale has been a pipe dream in the Rockies for the better part of a century. In 1916, the Pittsburgh Press confidently declared that the development of resources in Colorado and adjoining states “will mark a new era in oil production….” In 1980, the Washington Post said commercial oil shale development “seems assured.”

And today, at a field hearing of the House Natural Resources Committee energy subcommittee in Grand Junction, Colorado, Rep. Scott Tipton (R-CO) said that with reserves of 1.5 trillion barrels of oil lodged in shale, “the time is appropriate for the U.S. to grasp the reins of its own energy future.”

With three panels of mostly cheerleading witnesses, Tipton and his Colorado colleague, Rep. Doug Lamborn (R-CO), tried valiantly to blame the Obama administration for erecting roadblocks to the development of oil resources that could fuel our SUVs for a century or more.

But the simple truth is that “the rock that burns” has never been commercially viable, and despite ongoing research projects in western Colorado and eastern Utah, it shows no signs of becoming commercially viable any time soon.

As a senior policy researcher for the Rand Corporation advised the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee in June, oil shale development remains “uncertain” after a hundred years of promises:

The prospects for oil shale development in the United States remain uncertain… It is our understanding that privately-funded research activities are ongoing but that no private firm is prepared to commit to commercial production.

And beyond the question of whether oil can be economically extracted from shale, there is the equally important question of whether the West could afford the cost in water. In a study last year the Government Accountability Office found that oil shale development would use between three and five barrels of water for every barrel of oil produced.

That water would come from the Colorado River basin, the water source for 25 million people in the West, and a resource that is already over-allocated and looking at a reduction in flow of as much as 25 percent by mid-century due to climate change.

“A full-scale oil shale industry producing 1.55 million barrels of oil a day would require approximately 360,000 acre-feet of water a year — roughly one-and-a-half times the amount of water used by Denver per year,” concluded a new study by the Natural Resources Defense Council. “The water supply impact of this demand would not only affect agriculture and cities in the region, but could have an impact on all Colorado River Basin water users, even those as far away as southern California.”

Randy Udall, an energy analyst from western Colorado, calls oil shale “the petroleum equivalent of fool’s gold.” As today’s hearing showed, there are plenty of fools left who are still chasing that phony gold.


Cheney says his memoir will rock Washington

Posted in Main Blog (All Posts) on August 25th, 2011 4:33 am by HL

Cheney says his memoir will rock Washington

Former vice president Dick Cheney told NBC’s Dateline that his memoir will be so candid “there are gonna be heads exploding all over Washington.’’

In the book, which will be released next week, Cheney reveals that he kept a secret resignation letter locked away in a safe to be hauled out in case his health failed and he became incapacitated.

He said he prepared the letter for a couple reasons. “One was my own health situation,” he told NBC’s Jamie Gangel in an interview that will air on Aug. 29, the night before publication of “In My Time: A Personal and Political Memoir.” “The possibility that I might have a heart attack or a stroke that would be incapacitating. And there is no mechanism for getting rid of a vice president who can’t function.’’

Read full article >>

Mitt Romney now trailing Rick Perry for GOP presidential nomination, poll shows

CLAREMONT, N.H. — All year, he was the nominal front-runner, the weak front-runner, the putative front-runner. On Wednesday, Mitt Romney stopped being the front-runner at all.

“I’m just one of the guys running,” the former Massachusetts governor told reporters here Wednesday.

As Romney returned to the campaign trail this week, he faced a new reality: He is no longer ahead of the pack in the race for the 2012 GOP presidential nomination. A Gallup poll released Wednesday showed Texas Gov. Rick Perry with a sizable lead over Romney among Republicans and GOP-leaning independents nationally, 29 percent to 17 percent.

Read full article >>

The Influence Industry: ‘Candidate super PACs’ surge ahead in the 2012 money race

Until this month, Steven C. Roche was one of Mitt Romney’s most trusted advisers, helping the former Massachusetts governor raise tens of millions of dollars in his long quest for the White House.

Now Roche has jumped ship to Restore Our Future, a “super PAC” dedicated to helping Romney win the presidency by raising unlimited funds from wealthy donors and corporations.

The move, first reported by the Center for Public Integrity, illustrates the rise of yet another money-raising vehicle for the 2012 elections: “candidate super PACs,” which are emerging as de facto subsidiaries of the traditional presidential campaigns.

Read full article >>

Libyan rebels, allies implement plans to prevent anarchy in Tripoli

Among the first waves of rebels to storm Tripoli this week was a small team whose members carried smartphones along with their weapons. Under a well-rehearsed plan, they blasted Arabic text messages that would appear on tens of thousands of cellphones throughout the city.

“Don’t destroy public buildings,” one read. “These are for the future of Libya.”

The dissemination of the messages, intended to discourage looting and arson in liberated parts of the city, was among the lead items on a long to-do list that the rebels are just beginning to put into place. Developed and refined during multiple meetings in Washington, Benghazi and Doha, the list represents an attempt to anticipate every possible hiccup and challenge that could undermine Libya’s transitional government in its first weeks — from reprisal killings to power outages to sewage backups.

Read full article >>

Martin Luther King Jr.’s children reflect on the weight of his legacy

As their father’s legacy is officially enshrined in granite on the Mall, the children of Martin Luther King Jr. have come to pay homage to their daddy.

He is the man whose powerful shadow they could never escape, whose message they were expected to further and whose image they feel called to protect.

“I try .?.?. to focus on the blessing of having been in this kind of a family,” Martin Luther King III said Wednesday in an interview at the Willard Hotel in Washington. “This is the only life I’ve ever known.”

Read full article >>


Perry Could Form Broad GOP Coalition

Posted in Main Blog (All Posts) on August 25th, 2011 4:31 am by HL

Perry Could Form Broad GOP Coalition
Ron Brownstein, National Journal
About Us Questions? Call us at 800-207-8001A closer look at today's striking Gallup poll showing Texas Gov. Rick Perry rocketing to the top of the 2012 Republican presidential field captures the threat his campaign could pose to Mitt Romney, the former Massachusetts governor who had previously been considered the front-runner.The Gallup results show Perry displaying broad reach across the party, with appeal that, for now at least, transcends lines of income and education. Those results underscore Perry's potential, as a staunch social conservative with a strong economic story…

Little Sunshine for Obama in Florida
John Hayward, Human Events
Magellan Data and Mapping Strategies has a new poll out for Florida, generally regarded as a crucial swing state, and occasionally seen as the swing state.  In certain elections, its 29 electoral votes dangle like chads.It doesn’t look as if 2012 will be one of those elections.  Magellan provides these grim numbers for the President’s extremely well funded, but sputtering, re-election campaign:

About That “Failed” Stimulus…
Jonathan Cohn, The New Republic
The economy is sluggish and unemployment is on the rise, but Republicans and their allies say they want nothing to do with President Obama’s agenda for job creation because it’ll be just another “failed stimulus.” Here's John Boehner making that argument on his official blog. Here's Karl Rove doing the same on Fox News. And here's Richard Posner offering his version at TNR — although, to be fair, he merely calls the stimulus “botched” and I'm not sure he qualifies as a Republican ally. Of…