[Swlugevents] Controversial Fruit Melt Fat FAST
Shocking Research
ShockingResearch at tipishwmecch.us
Mon Jan 6 16:57:03 UTC 2014
How To LOSE 20-40 Lbs in 2014? (Hint: Eat this 1 TINY Fruit)...
http://www.tipishwmecch.us/3648/170/369/1380/2865.10tt74103107AAF30.php
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May 10, 2012: Thomas Perez, now the Labor secretary nominee, speaks in
Phoenix.APLabor secretary nominee Thomas Perez was confronted Thursday with
tough questions about an alleged "secret deal" he cut with leaders from
St. Paul, Minn., during his tenure as a top attorney at the
Justice Department.During Perez' confirmation hearing, Sen. Lamar Alexander,
R-Tenn., accused the nominee of "manipulating" the system to get the result
he wanted - and potentially costing taxpayers millions of dollars in the
process.According to a Republican report released earlier this week, Perez
helped persuade St. Paul to drop a contentious lawsuit in exchange for
the Justice Department staying out of whistleblower cases brought against
the city. Perez' "quid pro quo" potentially cost taxpayers as much as
$200 million, the report said."That seems to me to be an extraordinary
amount of wheeling and dealing outside the normal responsibilities of the
assistant attorney general for civil rights," said Alexander, who is the
top Republican on the Senate panel screening Perez' nomination."It seems
you have a duty to the government to collect the money, a
duty to protect the whistleblower who's kind of left hanging in the
wind."Both cases involved the city of St. Paul. The 67-page report states
that the Justice Department's decision to opt out of the whistleblower cases
potentially cost taxpayers as much as $200 million -- the amount the
government could have won ha
Why don't you meet Usama bin Laden, invite him to Brussels or
to the White House and engage in talks, ask him what he
wants and give it to him so he leaves you in peace?
You find it possible to set some limitations in your dealings with
these bastards, so why should we talk to people who are child-killers?--
Russian President Vladimir Putin in 2004 talking to foreign reporters about
U.S. calls for a diplomatic solution to the conflict with the breakaway
republic of Chechnya after terrorists from the region killed 380 hostages
at a school in the town of Beslan in southern Russia.Perhaps no
region in the world can claim a history so tragic and violent
as Chechnya and the rest of the northern Caucuses.The last 20 years
has seen nearly constant bloodshed as the mostly Muslim population sought
to break away from Soviet and then Russian control. The result has
been some of the most brutal attacks on civilians in modern times.Dozens
of bombings and terror raids around Russia have claimed countless lives,
but two incidents stand out in the collective memory of Westerners:-- A
2002 raid on a Moscow movie theater, in which Chechen militants took
850 civilians hostage. Some 130 hostages died, mostly as a result of
chemicals pumped into the theater by police to subdue the attackers after
more than two days. Russian authorities killed all 40 hostage takers.--
A 2004 raid on a school in the rural community of Beslan
in southern Russia, capturing an
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