[Swlugevents] The solution for all of your cooking needs
The NuWave Cooktop
TheNuWaveCooktop at lifoaroniast.com
Sat Feb 22 22:56:30 UTC 2014
Portable cooktop that gives you precise temp control
http://www.lifoaroniast.com/l/lt26L4275UT195X/441UPR1566MCQ3237DUYEM10OUUXX74103107MH532705100
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ather the result of the fog of war, or something like
it. An inquest would be conducted. The bottom of this would be
gotten to.The slow walk was on.Romney subsequently shied from the subject.
The one time he made mention of the attack in a debate
with Obama, the president caught him on a technicality and moderator Candy
Crowley of CNN helped to humiliate the former Massachusetts governor.The
press, mostly either cowed or uninterested on the subject, let the issue
drop too. Obama's strategy was successful. Political disaster was averted.
Cue the confetti.But having been re-elected, the election strategy re: Benghazi
is causing something of a hangover for the president.Now that we have
had the first large-scale terrorist attack on U.S. soil since 9/11, public
anxiety about Islamists and terrorism is way up. With that backdrop, Republicans
are re-opening the inquest into the Benghazi attacks. This time the questions
aren't so much about non-existent riots or why Americans in an Islamist
country weren't on higher alert.This time it's about allegations of a cover-up.
Did Obama officials muzzle critics in service of the president's re-election
goal? Was the inquest full and fair? What did the president know,
and when did he know it?Given it all to do over again,
Obama likely would repeat his pre-election approach to Benghazi: denounce
critics, go slow and minimize any broader significance of the attack. After
all, he did win a second term.But
m.The slight, short
Tounisi stood before the judge in orange jail garb and slippers, flanked
by U.S. marshals. Some 30 friends and relatives sat on spectator benches;
several cried after the judge ruled..Approving the release of anyone accused
on terrorism charges is uncommon, said Phil Turner, a former federal prosecutor
and now private attorney in Chicago."It's incredibly extraordinary," he
said. "It's usually a different realm with terrorist suspects. They're not
viewed as standard criminals but as enemies of the U.S."Pressure on a
judge to hold a terrorist suspect would be all the greater now,
said Turner, in the wake of the Boston Marathon bombings.Prosecutor William
Ridgway had argued that Tounisi posed a threat to the community, saying
he sought to hook up with the al-Qaida-linked group in Syria even
after his friend Daoud's arrest."One would think that would be a wake-up
call," Ridgway said about the arrest. "But it didn't deter him."Tounisi
persisted even as family and friends warned him not to get involved
with extremists, Ridgway said. He quoted a friend as saying about Tounisi
in a wiretap, "He will not die a martyr. He will die
like road kill."The prosecutor said Tounisi also is a flight risk, noting
how he had managed to secure a U.S. passport on short notice
and to scrape together money for a plane ticket."He's very resourceful,"
Ridgway told the judge.But Tounisi's attorney, Molly Armour, said Tounisi
came from a carin
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