Saturday, August 17, 2013

NAUGHTY NSA - but not a very nice part of the US government

 
Tinker:
 
The Naughty NSA is what we feared all along, self-serving government workers somehow pushing aside the American peoples personal dignity by peaking in on our every move and listening to our every word secretly. Are you kidding me? Hay Chief what do you think about the Naughty NSA?
 
Chief Peace Pipe Pickle Head:
 
When the white man first appeared in the forest my people looked at him as if he was a stranger dressed completely different then what we were use to seeing.
 
After we began to understand the sings that he made in trying to talk to us in spite of not understand our language. We realized that the white men were very different in every way from us.
 
To this very day the Whiteman is a very different race of people who defies description. How can you explain a culture without standards?
 
Bravery, honesty, truth, trust, as a standard basic way of life is developed and refined from generation to generation. Those truth that we lived by was only one side of the Whiteman daily life.  The Whiteman had a hidden face below the service. 
 
No the White people I began to understand had another side of their behavior that made them into a more complex curiosity to what we were use to.
 
Whiteman talked with a fork tong, to deceive the Indian of what the Whiteman really wanted. The Indian's only learned later that the Whiteman was a selfish power seeking hungry hunter, using others for his own self serving interest. What you call politics today. 
 
You can see for yourselves how dishonest the White People behave very clearly now on your new HDTV everyday.
 
Who else would want to live that way, amazing isn't it, so beware of some of the people in the tribe of white eyes, don't become corrupted as to belong to that way of life. 
 
 
Iko Iko - The Dixie Cups (Acapella)

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Timi Yuro - Hurt
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How Everyone On The Internet Can Stop Trolls
Cyberharassment
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Timi Yuro - What's a matter baby
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August 15, 2013

President's economic policy hurting his approval rating?

Reaction from Fox News political analyst Angela McGlowan
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AP Photo
Stephanie Gaskell August 15, 2013

The Pentagon Has Lost Its Leverage with Egypt. Now What?

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Unchained Melody - Righteous Brothers

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Reuters

Saudi king calls on Arabs to stand with Egypt

  • Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah speaks at the opening ceremony of the Organisation of Islamic Conference (OIC) summit in Mecca August 14, 2012. REUTERS/Hassan AliView Photo Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah speaks at the opening ceremony of the Organisation of …

RIYADH (Reuters) - Saudi King Abdullah called on Arabs to stand together against "attempts to destabilize" Egypt, in a strong message of support for the country's military leadership read out on Saudi television on Friday.

"The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, its people and government stood and stands by today with its brothers in Egypt against terrorism," he said.

"I call on the honest men of Egypt and the Arab and Muslim nations ... to stand as one man and with one heart in the face of attempts to destabilize a country that is at the forefront of Arab and Muslim history," he added.
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PHOTO: Big Explosion On NYC Bridge

Queensboro Bridge Fire
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 Sports
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MULE: Patterson’s criticisms taken out of context

August 16, 2013   -   © 2013 Tiger Rag
 

Hill should sit, but he probably won’t


By MARTY MULE
Tiger Rag Featured Columnist


Jeremy Hill ought to sit.

For his transgressions - not the least of which is putting himself in such a vulnerable situation at a Baton Rouge tavern at 2 a.m in the first place - he ought to warm the bench for LSU’s opening four games against Texas Christian, Alabama-Birmingham, Kent State and Auburn.

Three games normally would be sufficient for a dunderhead already on probation to cold-cock another kid after an altercation in the bar, but what kind of penalty would that be when two of the games he’s held out of are Alabama-Birmingham and Kent State? Make it two meaningful games (against Texas Christian and Auburn) and the punishment would have teeth, maybe actually teach a life’s lesson, to paraphrase Gary Patterson.

Knowing Les Miles, there’s a good chance nothing more than “internal discipline” will be inflicted on LSU’s leading rusher of 2012 (and what does that mean exactly? Does Hill have to run stadium steps every day, or have sit out the opening series against the Horned Frogs?). What extra penalties did Jordan Jefferson face after a similar incident in 2011, or Tyrann Mathieu after failing as many as, by his own admission, 10 drug tests before being forced from the team?

Here’s the thing: most inside observers of Miles and the Tigers felt Hill was going to sit for an unspecified period of time, probably two or three games. But that was before a “calling out” of the Mad Hatter by Patterson, TCU’s head coach, who had suspended a key member of his own defense, Devonte Fields, for an unnamed team violation.

Allegedly (and this a key word) Patterson was asked in a press gathering if he’d rethink his action against Fields in view of Hill’s possible availability in the opening game, Patterson supposedly responded, in what seemed to be a shot at Miles, “I’d be inclined not to endorse that - that’s doesn’t teach life lessons.”

Of course, the comment went viral. I spent hours Thursday listening to a cadre of national ESPN writers and pundits moralizing and pontificating about the low road LSU and Miles are traversing by (1) letting the team have the final word on whether they wanted its gifted sophomore runner back, and (2) inflicting no further punishments.

First of all, the team should have a voice in the matter. Suppose they didn’t want to play with Hill?
And, as noted before, the conventional wisdom believed Hill would have sat for a while.
But there’s a chance shoddy reporting may have changed all that.

From inside the press conference where Patterson was supposed to have rapped Miles’ knuckles, came this revelation: Patterson never once alluded to Miles or Hill. Gil LeBreton of The Fort Worth Star-Telegram was there, and says unequivocally, “Jeremy Hill’s name was never mentioned; Les Miles’ name was never mentioned.”

What LeBreton (an LSU alum, but as close as a reporter can get to the TCU program) said, later verified by Patterson, was he was referring strictly to his own player and nobody else was part of the conversation. Patterson was asked if Fields’ situation, which is being appealed, could be overturned by university high-ups, bringing on his now well-known response.

“For anyone who knows Gary Patterson,” LeBreton said, “the story wouldn’t ring true. He’s an old-school coach who spends every moment outside of coaching making sure he doesn’t say or do anything to fire up opposing coaches, teams, or fans. This is more of an illustration of just how far journalism has fallen in recent years. These younger guys not only get the facts wrong, but the ones they have are not put in context.”

Patterson, in an attempt to clarify, said: “I’m not Babe Ruth. I don’t point at fences. Anybody who knows me knows that’s way outside of my character, so why would I do it now? Why would I call up the Tiger? They don’t need any more help.”

Patterson was so upset he had the questions and answers of the press conference transcribed and sent to Miles to prove he didn’t speak out of turn.

Here’s the crux of the matter: We all know Miles can be stubborn. Does anyone think he’s going to sit Hill, and make it look like he’s going to kowtow to a cadre of moralizing sportswriters and outsiders telling him how to run his program?
Hill ought to sit, preferably for four games.
But the feeling now is that he won’t.

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No Responses to “MULE: Patterson’s criticisms taken out of context”
  1. Chief Peace Pipe Pickle Head: on Your comment . August 16th, 2013 10:50 am
    Chief Peace Pipe Pickle Head: said, that the TCU head football coach Patterson talk with fork tong. That his TCU Horned Frogs will soon know first hand about Jeremy Hill powerful medicine. He who tries to walk in another man musicians winds up a misfit.
    “And the hurt of one is the hurt of all.
    And the honor of one is the honor of all.”
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