A. It could do whatever it wanted, because it was also eleven feet long and had five inch claws on its hands. And please don't disturb it with your silly questions.
-- John Coby found Greg Abbott exposing himself on television. Ew.
-- Boehner rejects 'bipartisan breakthrough' on jobless aid:
I got nothing.
-- This is going to be a little rough on you Christians out there.
Sometimes the truth is brutal. And harsh.
-- Twenty-five years ago, the Exxon Valdez ran aground in Prince William Sound off the coast of Alaska. Even though I worked in their Beaumont refinery in the summer of 1980 before my final senior semester, I never bought any of their gas after that environmental apocalypse. The permanent loss of my business hasn't slowed 'em down too much, though.
-- And speaking of protests...
Kind of a big deal, if we can ever learn the truth about that. Oh, and don't miss reading some of the comments to discover what our local conservatives really think about Occupy. It's far too late for them to keep it classy; that oil tanker has sailed.
-- John Coby found Greg Abbott exposing himself on television. Ew.
-- Boehner rejects 'bipartisan breakthrough' on jobless aid:
After months of effort, a group of senators from both parties announced last week they’d reached a deal on extending unemployment benefits. Sen. Jack Reed (D-R.I.), one of the lead negotiators, called it a “bipartisan breakthrough.”
And by most measures, it was. The agreement would extend jobless aid to nearly 2 million Americans, without increasing the deficit. It’s a popular, election-year measure, backed by a Senate supermajority, and the compromise is poised to pass the chamber next week.
That House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) announced yesterday, however, that the Senate shouldn’t bother – House Republicans won’t even consider the “bipartisan breakthrough.”“We have always said that we’re willing to look at extending emergency unemployment benefits again, if Washington Democrats can come up with a plan that is fiscally-responsible, and gets to the root of the problem by helping to create more private-sector jobs. There is no evidence that the bill being rammed through the Senate by Leader Reid meets that test,” Boehner said in a statement Wednesday.That the Republican leader doesn’t want to extend unemployment benefits is predictable. But what mattered yesterday was the weakness of his excuse.
I got nothing.
-- This is going to be a little rough on you Christians out there.
Sometimes the truth is brutal. And harsh.
-- Twenty-five years ago, the Exxon Valdez ran aground in Prince William Sound off the coast of Alaska. Even though I worked in their Beaumont refinery in the summer of 1980 before my final senior semester, I never bought any of their gas after that environmental apocalypse. The permanent loss of my business hasn't slowed 'em down too much, though.
-- And speaking of protests...
A federal judge has ordered the FBI to explain why it withheld some information requested by a graduate student for his research on a plot to assassinate Occupy Houston protest leaders.
Ryan Noah Shapiro, a doctoral student at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Mass., filed a lawsuit April 29, 2013, against the U.S. Department of Justice in the U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C.
U.S. District Judge Rosemary M. Collyer issued her order, with an accompanying memo, on March 12.
The FBI, as part of the Department of Justice, controls the records Shapiro wanted for his study of "conflicts at the nexus of American national security, law enforcement and political dissent," the plaintiff's complaint stated.
Houston was among hundreds of U.S. cities where protesters occupied outdoor spaces as part of the Occupy Movement that started in New York's Zucotti Park on Sept. 17, 2011.
"The movement has sought to expose how the wealthiest 1 percent of society promulgates an unfair global economy that harms people and destroys communities worldwide," the complaint stated.
Kind of a big deal, if we can ever learn the truth about that. Oh, and don't miss reading some of the comments to discover what our local conservatives really think about Occupy. It's far too late for them to keep it classy; that oil tanker has sailed.