Tuesday, September 17, 2013

The beat goes on in America because any moron can do us that.


Tinker:

Well I guess that any moron can start shooting a lot of unarmed people at their work place, because after all how many of us carry guns as they work in our daily jobs.

Guards should be more often seen working at a Navy building I suppose but it is of course very easy to understand that people don't really expect that kind of deliberate killing at any place in this country.

Who would want to do such a senseless act of shooting innocent people going about their daily business. What is gained from that kind of behavior.  Just shooting anyone they see?

Good Grief!
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http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/sep/16/police-responding-report-shots-washington-navy-yar/?1


  13 DEAD IN NAVY YARD SHOOTING

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http://www.rushlimbaugh.com/daily/2013/09/13/another_journalist_joins_the_regime

Another Journalist Joins the Regime

September 13, 2013 RUSH: Did you hear the news that Richard Stengel is leaving TIME Magazine and going over to the Regime?  I'll tell you, folks, I've mentioned it I don't know how many times. There's an incestuous relationship that exists between the Washington press corps and any Democrat administration.

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http://www.rushlimbaugh.com/daily/2013/09/13/russians_celebrate_day_of_conception

Russians Celebrate Day of Conception

September 13, 2013 RUSH:  How many of you people thought about taking the day off today to have sex?  


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http://www.anncoulter.com/
Ann Coulter

SYRIAL LOSERS

September 11, 2013
Americans unsure what to think about President Obama's plans for Syria should remember that all military action undertaken by Democrats for the last half-century has led to utter disaster. (With the possible exception of the Village People's "Y.M.C.A." video, which I say still holds up.)

Democrats are gung-ho about deploying the U.S. military provided only that it will harm the national security interests of the United States, but vehemently oppose interventions that serve American interests.

Republican President Dwight Eisenhower, the supreme commander of the Allied forces in World War II, said he could conceive of no greater tragedy than the U.S. getting heavily involved in Vietnam. He sent aid to the anti-communist forces, but no troops.

Democratic President John F. Kennedy sent troops. But in short order he was conniving to assassinate South Vietnamese president Ngo Dinh Diem -- also known as "our ally in the middle of the war."

JFK's brother, the Democratic attorney general, actually suggested that Americans donate blood to the North Vietnamese -- or "our enemy" -- as a gesture of good will. (Secretary of State John Kerry's bold threat this week of an "unbelievably small" strike against Syria sounds positively macho by comparison.)

Kennedy's successor, Lyndon B. Johnson, escalated the war in Vietnam in order to prove that Democrats could be trusted with national defense. Which they cannot. As journalist David Halberstam reported, LBJ would "talk to his closest political aides about the McCarthy days, of how Truman lost China and then the Congress and the White House, and how, by God, Johnson was not going to be the president who lost Vietnam and the Congress and the White House."

LBJ sacrificed tens of thousands of American lives to try to make the Democrats look manly.

Nixon came in and honorably ended the Democrats' disastrous handling of the Vietnam War by signing the Paris Peace Accords in January 1973. In return for the lousy terms we jammed down South Vietnam's throat, America promised that, if the North attacked, the U.S. would resume bombing missions and military aid. Read More »
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http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/09/15/religion-is-the-enemy-of-science-bill-nye-joins-bill-maher-in-lambasting-creationism/


‘Religion Is the Enemy of Science’: Bill Nye Joins Bill Maher in Lambasting Creationism

Sep. 15, 2013 4:15pm

“If you want an iPhone, you still have to have the United States. … innovation is what’s going to make the United States economy grow,” he told Maher, going on to discuss far more controversial subjects.

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http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/09/16/the-moment-an-apparent-israeli-arab-slugs-a-jewish-man-out-of-the-blue-at-the-doctors-office-and-knocks-him-unconscious/

The Moment an Apparent Israeli Arab Slugs a Jewish Man Out-of-the-Blue at the Doctor’s Office and Knocks Him Unconscious
Watch

The Moment an Apparent Israeli Arab Slugs a Jewish Man Out-of-the-Blue at the Doctor’s Office and Knocks Him Unconscious
“Video you won’t see on CNN.”
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http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/09/16/would-you-be-able-to-do-what-a-boston-homeless-man-did-after-finding-over-40000/

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Sports
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XpQj_zpnnoI

Tinker:

Well the beat is on for real now all across the college football world, everywhere that we look and hear we can see the clash of the sports media experts bull talking the hype of everyone football team to just promote the next college football games coming attraction.

Because as we all know by now it is the show that matters baby and all the talk about the substance involved in the game is for someone else to talk about. Because for now the beat is on in college football and we are in the 4th week.

LSU vs Auburn Tiger Stadium Sat, 09/21/2013 6:45
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Tiger Rag

Football

ENGSTER: Statistically Speaking
9/16/2013 9:49:42 AM

By JIM ENGSTER
Tiger Rag Featured Columnist

Les Miles boosted his LSU record to 88-21 with last week’s 45-13 breeze against Kent State. Miles was 28-21 in four years at Oklahoma State, about five perfect seasons away from his mark in nine years at TigerTown. His challenging stint in the Sooner State seemed a distant memory until last week.

Miles spent the better part of his days and nights leading up to the date with Kent State absorbing blows from a four-part series from Sports Illustrated, which launched a dizzying four-day array of alleged transgressions against the OSU program led by Miles and his successor Mike Gundy.

Miles has denied knowledge of wrongdoing while serving as coach of the Cowboys from 2001-04. It may be possible for head coaches to be insulated from corruption and chicanery in their programs. Passions are so intense that actions of alumni, boosters and university officials sometimes know no bounds.

It has been some time since actual coaches delivered cash in shoeboxes to their players. That was an accusation against the Tulane basketball program three decades ago. Coupled with point-shaving revelations, basketball was shut down for a few years at the academically heralded New Orleans school.

Earlier this summer, charges of academic fraud were tossed at the University of North Carolina, once considered a pristine model of integrity in collegiate athletics. It was reported in June that nearly half of the students who enrolled in suspect courses at Chapel Hill were athletes and the average grade was an A-minus.

A trail of emails adds credence to the findings at UNC, ranked the 30th best university in America in the latest survey from U.S. News and World Report.

Too much time has passed since he departed Oklahoma State for Miles to face the NCAA’s erratic brand of justice. Miles has wisely refrained from attacking the college sports governing authority in contrast to the way that Hall of Fame basketball coach Dale Brown critiqued and taunted the NCAA. "Gestapo bastards” was one of the kinder descriptions Brown hurled at his tormentors, and his program was spanked in the Lester Earl probe in a case which had more holes than a doughnut shop.
It would be wise for the NCAA to grant immunity to every program in America. We might then learn how many schools are operating outside of or on the fringe of the rules.

The NCAA should install a system that works. It is time for big money sports on campus to pay their gladiators for enriching universities and entertaining the rest of us.

Prep recruits should be compensated for signing similar to the way draft choices are rewarded for professional contracts. This would remove the ruse of amateurism from the college arena, and the monetary dividends for athletes who produce huge revenues for their schools would be proportionate and legal.

LSU has risen $60 million annually in revenue from $41 million ten years ago. This includes expenses for every varsity sport as well as maintenance of facilities and salaries to coaches and administrators. There might be a few million dollars available for offers to five-star recruits.

The LSU war chest is puny compared to professional football, basketball and baseball, so there should be no concern that compensation for athletes would soar to levels exceeding their coaches.

The Philadelphia Phillies have endured a losing season in 2013 with just five players (Cliff Lee, Roy Halladay, Ryan Howard, Cole Hamels and Chase Utley) combining for more in salaries than the $101 million projected for all LSU sports this year.

In 1990, then Baton Rouge NAACP President George Eames railed against "the plantation.” Eames noted that college athletes, many from impoverished African-American families, often left their respective universities without degrees and with life-time injuries while coaches and administrators, usually from the majority race, benefitted immensely from their contributions.

Eames lamented a cycle of athlete-scholars striving to stay eligible until a scant few of them cashed in at the professional level while many of the others were cast aside for new talent with four years of eligibility.

The issues raised by Eames are as pertinent today as they were 23 years ago. Most leaders in higher education possess above average intelligence and innovative minds. They should acknowledge flaws in the current system and embrace substantive change.
Otherwise, today’s imperfections will produce tomorrow’s scandals.
2013 academic ranking of SEC schools by U.S. News and World Report
17. Vanderbilt
49. Florida
60. Georgia
69. Texas A&M
86. Alabama
91. Auburn
97. Missouri
101. Tennessee
112. South Carolina
119. Kentucky
128. Arkansas
135. LSU
142. Mississippi State
150. Ole Miss
Posted by: Jim Engster | Submit comment | Tell a friend
Comments

Chief Peace Pipe Picklehead

So what?
LSU fans know that the shyster reporter writing that SI sports story about Oklahoma State and Less Miles was a channelized shell game to gain readers, coming from the worst kind of witness. We know Les Miles better then that SI story said.

Les Miles needs no defense because his history speaks for him.
Well that is very interesting to see where the SEC schools are ranked by U.S. News and World Report. LSU # 135..Congratulations go to #17. Vanderbilt for getting the highest SEC ranking in that poll.
I am not impressed however with a # 17 ranking comparing to LSU # 135 ranking. Because that high or low ranking doesn't means a more honest university's to me.

Because I know you are well aware of the under the table enrolling that the richer population gets over the academician population in the higher ranked university's. Because money talks and bull talk walks in both academician and sports programs in our country now, and back then.

So what is the point of comparing LSU # 135 ranking against Vanderbilt # 17 ranking from the U.S. News and World Report poll. Hypocrisy is all through America society for as long as I can remember, not just in our college football programs. I think that the academic leaders are even worse then the college sports programs over just how honest they operate.

By the way what kind of wonderful wisdom is coming out of the college graduates from Harvard in Washington DC these days?
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http://www.shanghairanking.com/

World Top 500 Universities

World Top 200 Universities in

World Top 200 Universities in

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http://espn.go.com/college-football/


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