Wednesday, October 30, 2013

We now know who they are


Tinker:


Remember the song "Let's hang On" http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8782KIj_rKw

Well I am very tired of watching so many American people giving up their hopes and dreams in the way that they like to live in America. Just because Barack Obama is a incompetent louse, that is really no reason for the American citizens to be giving up. Because the ghost of our American people spirit and way of life is not dead just yet.

Barack Obama is going to leave the stage as soon as the puppet masters replace him with a Hillary Clinton puppet. Than the American people can vent their anger and replace the corrupted democratic party with a better person. To guide the American government back into health. Don't give up, because we the American people still have a chance to turn the tide of America politics.

In time the American government in Washington DC will go our way if we just keep pushing. So keep marching winning the fight that you are in anyway you can as you walk forward. After all just remember that they can not prevail because they have already destroyed the government that they think is winning.

Stealing all the money from the America people has broken the thing that they run, President Barack Obama and the democrats have trash the government that they were elected to run. The democrats and the establishment republicans are fighting to stay out of jail for as long as they can.

It is just a matter of time before we get to them. And once we do it won't be pretty, so the only way for the American people government to go after that will be up.

To finally get the country politics right and removing the sorry memory of the bad people running the Washington DC government now, out of there. They are fighting for a lost cause, as we in time will fix everything that they have broken.

The spirit of my American Father and Mother was great and the love for each other in our American family was even greater. So to was the spirit of the American citizens, That the self serving corrupt politicians through hook and crook, money and political power was fixing the American people government politics. To take advantage of the American people and place all the political governments power into their corrupted hand.

The American people now know who they are and the safety vale of reasonable doubt has been lifted because of the incompetent behavior of Barack Obama.
Think about what the two political parties did the people of the United States for the past one hundred years.

Well la dee da! What Tweedledee and Tweedledum did was not so great a feat after all, because when you think about what they did, any moron could do that to us.

Because we loved them for true, and trusted them with our government's power. That they have done those dirty trick to steel our money is their sin. They will rest in the grave of lose souls forever, as the American people will once again breath healthy back into their country spirit.

The march against a corrupted Washington DC is just beginning. So march forward to crush down their evil beneath the souls of our shoes, and rejoice in our god light.

“If God is for us, who can be against us?” Romans 8:31
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http://www.anncoulter.com/
Ann Coulter

HANG ONE, TO ENCOURAGE THE OTHERS

October 23, 2013
One of the most effective ways of discouraging people is to make them think there's absolutely nothing they can do about something, anyway. Thus, liberals have tried to insinuate that Obamacare is impossible to remove, hoping conservatives will despair.

But with only one-half of one branch of government, Sens. Ted Cruz and Mike Lee and the House Republicans have made it absolutely clear that Republicans are not giving up on repealing Obamacare. Inasmuch as "bubonic plague" is polling higher than "Obamacare," I'd say this is a brilliant marketing strategy for the GOP.

Unlike every other idiotic government program ever foisted on us by the Democrats, this time Republicans are not rolling over on this illegitimately passed, disastrous legislation. Give Republicans a veto-proof majority in the Senate, America, and they will rid us of this plague. (Without even charging a co-pay!)

Not only that, but Republicans have exposed Democrats as hypocrites who are forcing the rest of the country to live under Obamacare, while shutting down the government rather than live under it themselves.

With any luck, the Obama-Reid government shutdown -- as Sean Hannity calls it -- has also impressed upon Republicans the importance of winning elections.

Whatever cavils and objections liberals have to the Republicans' majority in the House, the Democrats' Senate majority certainly does not reflect the popular will. At least nine sitting Democratic senators have asterisks by their names, indicating seats given away by Republicans through unforced errors.

The only thing the Democrats' majority demonstrates is the stunning incompetence, stupidity and malfeasance of the Republican Party.

Here are a few Senate seats recently sacrificed by Republicans.

In 2008, career prosecutors in George W. Bush's Department of Justice convicted Republican senator Ted Stevens of Alaska for various corruption offenses just weeks before the election. The prosecution was so sleazy that not only was the conviction thrown out, but the indictment was tossed -- by Obama's Justice Department, no less. Read More »
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http://fusion.net/justice/story/ted-cruz-obama-absolutely-abusing-power-165870


Chamber of Commerce Leans On Speaker To Back Immigration Push...
McCain: We'll Pass Bill -- Once Primaries Are Over...
Pelosi: We have the votes...
'Homeland' Approves Over 80% of 'Dreamers' Who Apply for Legal Status...
Amnesty activists block traffic in Manhattan... Orlando...
UPDATE: Rubio Backs Off His Own Bill...
Schlafly: Amnesty = Suicide For Republicans...


CRUZ: OBAMA IN ABUSE OF POWER!

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http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/10/29/pakistani-drone-victim-congress_n_4171975.html

A DRONE KILLED MY MOTHER


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http://thecable.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2013/10/28/were_really_screwed_now_nsas_best_friend_just_shivved_the_spies

SPOOKS SPOOKED! 'We're Really Screwed Now'

Nsa Seal
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http://investigations.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/10/29/21222195-obama-administration-knew-millions-could-not-keep-their-health-insurance?lite


ADMIN KNEW MILLIONS WOULD LOSE INSURANCE...
1.5 million cancellations so far...
Thousands head to free clinic event...
Latest Hurdle...
Doctors resisting Obamacare...
Britain's NHS pulls plug on £11bn healthcare computer system...




MYSTERY: GOOGLE 'FLOATING STRUCTURES' ON BOTH COASTS
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http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/10/29/white-house-nbc-news-obamacare_n_4173145.html

White House Not Happy With NBC News

Brian Williams
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http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/10/29/jon-stewart-congress-healthcare-gov_n_4173337.html

Uh Oh, Congress May Have Finally Broken Jon Stewart

Jon Stewart Congress Healthcare
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Sports
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http://espn.go.com/college-football/
Miami Hurricanes and Florida State Seminoles

Tell Me A Story

Miami and Florida State meeting as top-10 teams is the kind of game the ACC dreamed about when the Hurricanes joined the league. Heather Dinich »Al Golden ListenDuke holds the key for Canes »
Getty Images

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http://lsufootball.net/
LSU Football - Geaux Tiger!!!
Tuesday, October 29, 2013
Tiger Rag Kwon Alexander relishing the healthy, productive season he's been waiting for
Tiger Rag Offensive stars shined brightly in Furman win
LSU Sports LSU Tigers in the NFL -- Week 8
Tuscaloosa News *1 Cameron has LSU offense headed in right direction
The Advocate Notes: CBS picks LSU - Bama for prime time
LSU Reveille Chavis' defenses excel on third downs
Les Miles Video (1 min, 42 sec): Players of the Week - Furman
Louisiana Daily Audio (21 min, 37 sec): Tommy Moffitt talks team conditioning | .mp3
Sports NOLA Video (8 min, 39 sec): Jim Hawthorne at New Orleans Quarterback Club
Louisiana Daily Audio (18 min, 40 sec): Monday evening QB with Jarrett Lee | .mp3
Everything Alabama Former Ole Miss chancellor talks about how Confederate flag ban changed a culture
NCAA News NCAA council identifies concepts for Division I redesign
Dothan Eagle Alabama Notes: Bye week comes at the right time
Columbus Ledger, GA Alabama Notes: Landon Collins already winning accolades
Chattanooga Times Alabama veteran WR Kevin Norwood finally gets 100-yard game
Crimson White Crimson Tide faces stretch of big games after win over Vols
Tuscaloosa News *1 Alabama holding teams to under 10 points a game
Notes: Arkansas | Auburn | Florida | Georgia | Kentucky | Mississippi State
Notes: Missouri | Ole Miss | South Carolina | TCU | Tennessee | UAB
Louisiana Daily Audio (11 min, 20 sec): Edward Aschoff talks about the SEC | .mp3
Macon Telegraph SEC needs more transparency, accountability for officials
College Football News Cavalcade of Whimsy: Could BCS be a playoff? | Part 2
USA Today NCAA makes new effort to stop O'Bannon class action bid
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http://www.tigerrag.com/football/alexander-relishing-the-healthy-productive-season-hes-been-waiting-for

Alexander relishing the healthy, productive season he's been waiting for
10/29/2013 9:10:27 AM

Kwon Alexander (25) tackles UAB running back Darrin Reaves in LSU's 56-17 win on September 7, 2013.
By CODY WORSHAM
Tiger Rag Editor


Kwon Alexander still doesn’t know how it happened.

In the third quarter of last season’s game pitting LSU against Florida, the then-freshman linebacker, in his first career start, did what he had done a thousand times in his football career: he dove to make a tackle.

Only this time, he couldn’t get up afterward.

Alexander broke his ankle on the play, ending his football season just as it got started for the second straight season, after missing his senior season of high school with a knee injury.

And while most athletes who overcome injuries burn the film and put the play out of their memories forever, Alexander has never deleted the footage of his injury from his iPad.

"I look at it almost every week, and I still can’t figure it out,” he said "My ankle just popped. Maybe my bones were weak, so I drink a lot of milk now just to get my bones back stronger.”

Far from being a masochist, Alexander says the film serves as inspiration.

"I felt like I was really coming along last season, that’s why it really hurt me,” he said. "But everything happens for a reason.

"It still motivates me.”

That motivation has been evident every time Alexander has taken the field in 2013, as even low-energy contests like Furman feature highlight after highlight of the sophomore flying to the ball like an uncaged predator. His 14 tackles on Saturday night against the Paladins helped inject life into an LSU defense that gave up two long scoring drives in the first half, but held Furman scoreless in the second.

"I don’t know what was going on out there (in the first half), but we got it together,” he said. "Chief [Defensive Coordinator John Chavis] came in and told us what we needed to do. We made some adjustments. We went out there and played ball.”

For Alexander, that’s a gift in and of itself, after spending more time in the last two seasons in the training room and rehab facility than on the football field. His ankle injury against Florida stays in the back of his mind at all times, not as a cautionary reminder.

"I’m not even worried about [getting injured again],” he said. "If it happens, it happens for a reason.”
Instead, the memory of that injured ankle helps him stay at full speed, knowing any play could be his last.

"It gives me a lot of appreciation,” he said. "One of my quotes is, ‘One life, one chance.’ You can only do it one time, so I go out there, practice or game, and try my best every night.”

On the season, Alexander is second on the team with 52 tackles, including 22 solo tackles, easily the most among the LSU linebackers and barely trailing cornerbacks Tre’Davious White and Jalen Mills, who get a boost in solo tackle numbers when they tackle their receiver after a reception. In a season where the LSU defense has been short on bright spots, Alexander continues to excel.

"Kwon Alexander, if you watch his contribution, you can see it with speed and contact,” said head coach Les Miles.

Nine straight weeks of games takes its toll on everybody, but especially Alexander, who hasn’t played nine straight weeks of football since he was 16 years old. The upcoming bye week will give the entire team a chance to catch its breath, something Alexander said is critical entering the back end of the season.

"We need to get our legs back under us,” he said.

Not least of all because the next opponent is Alabama, with whom Alexander, an Oxford, Ala. native, is more than familiar. Alexander chose LSU over the Tide as a prep prospect, but didn’t get to play against them last year because of his ankle.

"I watched in the stands,” he said. "I can’t wait to go back home and play them.”

Until then, he’ll keep watching film – and drinking as much milk as he can.

"I’m happy that I’m staying healthy, and, God bless me, I hope I stay healthy the rest of the season,” he said. "It feels good to keep playing and starting.”

Posted by: Cody Worsham | Submit comment | Tell a friend
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Chief Peace Pipe Picklehead:
10/29/2013
If I was 6-4 or 5, 300 pounds and having the athletic ability to get a college football scholarship  playing football for the LSU tigers, in tiger stadium. I would be a basket case of emotion, wanting to explode on each snap of the football game, until the last whistle.
I would want to block the guy in front of me out of the way. To be the best offensive lineman that I could be.
I feel like it would be a great honor for me if I was 18 or 19, 20 years old and 6-4 or 5, 300 pounds. I would be wanting to play with the emotional fire that I was feeling for at least 15 more years at LSU, and in pro football. I feel like that would be a great job to have, working at the skill to block the other guy out of the way.

If I was that lucky?
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http://www.lsureveille.com/sports/football/football-chavis-defenses-excel-on-third-downs/article_7aa9e9b4-402c-11e3-a308-001a4bcf6878.html

Football: Chavis’ defenses excel on third downs

10.26.13 LSU vs Furman Photo by Charlotte Willcox

10.26.13 LSU vs Furman

The LSU defense makes a stop Saturday night, Oct. 26, 2013 during the Tigers' 48-16 win against Furman in Tiger Stadium.

Posted: Monday, October 28, 2013 6:55 pm | Updated: 12:41 pm, Tue Oct 29, 2013.
Trey Labat | 1 comment
Posted on October 28, 2013
Since his days at Tennessee, LSU defensive coordinator John Chavis has carried around a nickname on message boards.

It isn’t the more popular “Chief,” as his players call him — it’s “Third and Chavis,” as people have taken to accusing Chavis’ defenses of failing in third-down situations.

Since 2009, LSU has consistently ranked in the top half of the Southeastern Conference in opponent third-down conversions. Even with the Tigers’ much-maligned defensive unit this season, LSU is holding opponents to 38 percent on third downs, just behind South Carolina and Missouri.

One of the defense’s most high-profile missteps was in the 2012 season against Alabama. On second down, Alabama running back T.J. Yeldon took a screen pass from quarterback AJ McCarron 28 yards for a touchdown in the closing seconds of the game, essentially winning the match for the Tide.

What many fans don’t remember from the game, though, was that conversion was Alabama’s only third down conversion out of nine attempts that day — the same Alabama offense that ranked third in the nation in offensive success rate and points per play (S&P).
While the defense has been worse in raw third down conversion rate, advanced statistics have shown the Tigers have fared better than what some more traditional stats show.

The Tigers have been better on passing downs this season than they have on third downs, according to Football Outsider defensive S&P rankings. LSU has ranked in the nation’s top 25 of defensive S&P on passing downs every season since Chavis’ hiring in 2009.

The LSU defense is ranked in the nation’s top 15 of Difference in Net Points, raw average of the points an offense scores on a given drive compared to the points it would be expected to score based on starting field position.

In LSU’s loss to Georgia, while the Bulldogs scored on the final possession, the Tigers held them to only four conversions on 11 attempts.

Georgia’s offense is ranked fifth in Fremeau Efficiency Index, which considers each of the nearly 20,000 possessions every season in major college football. All drives are filtered to eliminate first-half clock kills and end-of-game garbage drives and scores. A team is rewarded for playing well against good teams, win or lose, and punished more severely for playing poorly against bad teams than it is rewarded for playing well against bad teams.

While LSU’s defense has statistically fallen this season, the Tigers’ struggles on third downs have been exaggerated by focusing on three or four failures rather than the greater number of successes.

Chief Peace Pipe Picklehead posted at 12:22 pm on Tue, Oct 29, 2013.

  Posts: 1
Oh how I long for the rock solid defense from other past LSU football team. Sacking the opponents QB, stopping the other team 3 plays and out. Getting the football back from fumbles, after a jarring tackle, or from a thrilling interception.

all I see mostly now is arm tackling and no football pursuit what so ever. In fact I feel broken hearted that I am now watching a LSU football game knowing that LSU can't stop the other offense if our life depends on it.

I'm afraid that the dark day before Nick Saban has returned to LSU Tiger Stadium
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http://www.nola.com/lsu/index.ssf/2013/10/lsu_quarterback_zach_mettenber_20.html

LSU QB Zach Mettenberger is looking like a Day 2 NFL draft pick, analyst says

Zach Mettenberger : LSU vs. Florida
LSU Tigers quarterback Zach Mettenberger is improved in his second year as a starter and may be a second day draft pick. ((Photo by Brett Duke, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune)

Jim Kleinpeter, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune By Jim Kleinpeter, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune
Email the author | Follow on Twitter
on October 29, 2013

LSU quarterback Zach Mettenberger has suffered a bit of a backslide with five interceptions in two games. But his overall NFL draft stock has risen considerably this season, according to ESPN draft analyst Todd McShay.

Mettenberger was rated in the seventh round by McShay coming into the season. That was before the results of Mettenberger's collaboration with new offensive coordinator Cam Cameron could be noted and now McShay likes the fifth-year senior's chances of going on the second day when NFL teams make their second- and third-round selections.

"Seeing him in a pro-style offense, seeing the improvement he's made and knowing he has that size, arm strength and quick release you can't coach, I think he's moved up from a seventh-round grade to possibly in the Day 2 range," McShay said on a conference call Tuesday. "Like (Virginia Tech quarterback) Logan Thomas, he'll be a developmental quarterback that you bring in and don't have to play right away. (You) go for a few years and hope that he gets it so when he gets a shot to push for a starting job, he's able to do the things he needs to do."

Mettenberger (177.1) was the SEC's top quarterback in efficiency and No. 4 in the nation at one time this season, but has dropped behind Texas A&M's Johnn Manziel (181.9), the 2012 Heisman Trophy winner. Mettenberger is tied for second with the most interceptions in the SEC with seven. But he is completing 65.4 percent of his passes (151 of 231) and is second to Manziel (22) with 19 touchdown passes.

The 6-foot-5, 242-pound Mettenberger burst out with good showings early this season after an inconsistent season in 2012, his first as a starter. Mettenberger and LSU coach Les Miles credit the time spent with Cameron, an NFL veteran offensive coordinator, with overhauling his mechanics and making him more productive. He's already surpassed the 12 touchdown passes he threw last season and is 118 yards from topping his yardage total with three regular-season games, plus a bowl game, to play.

Mettenberger has also improved his athleticism, although he's nothing close to a dual-threat quarterback, a style that is becoming more popular at the next level.

"(There are) still concerns about his lack of mobility," McShay said. "If he's going to have a chance to push for a starting job in the league, he's going to have to be great mentally, because he can't beat you with his feet, so he's got to beat you with his mind and then his arm."

McShay said it isn't clear if Cameron simplified the offense for Mettenberger or just has taught it better. But Mettenberger's comfort level is unmistakable.

"He's dropping back and he knows where his eyes should go, knows what to look for, and is a lot more decisive," McShay said. "It's very obvious with young quarterbacks when they know what they're doing, they can focus on the physical part. But when you are always thinking and wondering where you are going to go with the ball and concerned about what read you are making, that effects the physical part.

Read more...http://www.nola.com/lsu/index.ssf/2013/10/lsu_quarterback_zach_mettenber_20.html
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