Push against the wall of corruption guys, push until it falls.
Tinker:
Push, you guys push, push against the wall of corruption, chose your friend and fight beside them.
Push against the failure of a bleak life in a box.
They controlled the TV programs inside your living room. You know the problem that has been tolerated far too long. So now its time to push back against their wall, the wall of control and deceit.
Taking our money against your will is finally the last straw, so push guys push.
Push against the wall of corruption guys, push until it falls.
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Tinker:
The political power structure in Washington DC is clear to the American people now who hardly ever vote from outside the Washington DC beltway. Tweedledee and Tweedledum has walked Ted Cruz and the outsiders who hate the way Washington DC is run into a box canyon, threatening to slaughter them if they don't conform to the way that the Washington DC establishment is running America.
I wouldn't trade one of you the American citizen, for ten of them other TV people, much less 20 Washington DC politicians.
That Washington DC has been bought by big money dealers that has the American citizens controlled in a fix card game. To further fix the power game that they have been living on in the American government. So professing that Washington DC is a city of corruption is of course obvious.
I just learned like you about how prevalent that corruption is throughout the American citizens society. America is becoming stressed and pushed and then pulled from within the country's neighborhoods, more so then ever before.
America debt is the true story that the American people should be talking about.
Because ladies and gentlemen the American government has never spent this much money at such an alarming rate before. Playing up the republicans party's instinct not to raise the country dept ceiling laying the framework to a government shutdown like that is the end of the world. Is only helping to further push the real end of the American economy to the very brink. Because the America debt is the real true story that the American people should be talking about.
Better to get this fight going sooner rather then later before everyone is falling off the cliff together. So we still have a chance to change our demise if we fight now, instead of later.
I trust in nature although human nature is flawed and dangerous, I trust the natural common sense to stay alive. That should overcome the bad guys bull talking who are trying to boss us all over the face of this earth.
I hope that the American people do have the long awaited fight over the U.S. government spending too much money at last. In this country the people are the boss, and don't you ever let them forget it.
Make your daily public news services tell you the truth.
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Matthew 5:11
"Blessed are you when people insult you, persecute you and falsely say all kinds of evil against you because of me.
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http://www.huffingtonpost.com/
Conservative Obsession With World War II Memorial Continues
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http://www.usatoday.com/story/
Veterans, Palin, Cruz Storm Memorials...
Bring Barricades to White House...
Police deployed in riot gear...
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http://www.reuters.com/
Top bankers warn of dire consequences if USA defaults...
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http://www.nytimes.com/2013/
NO DEAL IN DC...
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http://www.theblaze.com/
The Latest
Jay Carney Twice Ignored a Fox News Reporter—And This Is How It Ended
Related:
Carney called on nearly every reporter in the room while Henry repeatedly tried to ask questions. And when Henry finally saw an opening, all he could get out was “Jay” before Carney turned his attention to The Chicago Tribune’s Christi Parsons.
Henry shook his head.
The Fox News reporter tried once more to ask a question, and the White House press secretary once again appeared to ignore it.
Henry smiled politely, got up, and walked out of the briefing:
Watch Live: ‘Million Vet March’ Descends on D.C.
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http://www.theblaze.com/
CNN Anchor Asks Rand Paul if He Would Consider Switching to the Democratic Party—This Was His Simple Response
Oct. 13, 2013 11:20am
Becket Adams
Senator Rand Paul (R-Ky.) appeared Sunday morning on CNN’s “State of the Union” with Candy Crowley to discuss the GOP’s poor polling numbers, the partial government shutdown, and the approaching debt ceiling deadline.While discussing Republicans’ terrible approval ratings, Crowley had an odd question for Sen. Paul.
“Do you see yourself at any point in the future being anything other than politically a member of the Republican Party?” she asked.
“You mean — you’re implying a third party or some other party?” he said.
“Or if you wanted to become a Democrat — there are lots of parties out there,” she said. “Just wonder if you see yourself being anything other than a Republican?”
Sen. Paul simply laughed.
“No. I’ve always been a Republican, and I’m one of those people who actually is a real lover of the history of the Republican Party from the days of abolition to the days of civil rights. The Republican Party has a really rich history,” he said.
“In our state, I’m really proud of the fact that the ones who overturned Jim Crow in Kentucky were Republicans fighting against an entirely unified Democratic Party, so I am proud to be Republican. I can’t imagine being anything else,” he added.
It’s worth noting that Sen. Paul has been critical of both parties, saying recently that neither one has handled the partial shutdown admirably.
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http://www.huffingtonpost.com/
WATCH: 'SNL' Takes On Shutdown
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Sports
LSU Football - Geaux Tigers!!!
| Sunday, October 13, 2013 | |
|---|---|
| LSU Sports | LSU in Major Polls - Coaches - TBA, Harris: TBA, AP: 6 |
| College Football News | CFN Analysis: LSU pushes past Florida |
| The Advocate | LSU defense leads way in win over Florida |
| ESPN | LSU's style: Whatever it takes |
| Bayou Bengals Insider | Physical Tigers too much for Florida |
| Times Picayune | LSU hammers its way to a win Les Miles can enjoy |
| The Advocate | LSU running game busts Florida' s pride right in the mouth |
| The Advocate | Tigers’ success on third downs key to victory |
| Times Picayune | LSU muscles its way past Florida, 17-6 |
| The Advocate | Rabalais: LSU defense turns from nail to hammer in a Florida flash |
| Tiger Rag | LSU turns in a vintage performance in 17-6 win against Florida |
| Tiger Bait | Tigers beat Gators |
| Tiger Bait | Rewind: LSU 17, Florida 6 |
| Times Picayune | Notes: LSU defeats Florida despite a quiet night from Zach Mettenberger |
| Times Picayune | LSU 'Punisher' J.C. Copeland delivers a hard message |
| Louisiana Gannett News | Guilbeau: LSU grinds out win against Florida |
| The Advocate | LSU celebrates 2003 national champions |
| LSU Sports | Video (28 min, 36 sec): Inside LSU Football - Week 7 |
| Louisiana Daily | Audio (21 min, 42 sec): Hanagriff, Risher break down LSU's victory over Florida | .mp3 |
| USA Today | Go figure: The weird, wacky and wow of the weekend |
| Gator Zone | Tigers control lines of scrimmage in win over Gators |
| Gator Zone | Gators come up short at Death Valley |
| Gator Zone | Gators have to get back up fast after LSU loss |
| Florida Today | LSU grinds out win against Florida |
| Gator Vision | Video (9 min, 28 sec) Will Muschamp's postgame press conference |
| SEC Digital Network | SEC GameDay Central |
| Notes: Alabama | Arkansas | Auburn | Furman | Georgia | Kent State | Kentucky | Mississippi State | |
| Notes: Missouri | Ole Miss | South Carolina | TCU | Texas A&M | UAB | |
| USA Today | SEC East may be more confounding than astounding |
| USA Today | College football's Week 7 winners and losers |
| ESPN | Video (5 min, 28 sec): OTL - College Football concussions (Josh Williford featured) |
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http://www.lsusports.net/
LSU Jumps in AP Poll After Defense Emerges
BATON ROUGE -- After holding then-No. 17 Florida without a touchdown for the first time in 24 series meetings, the LSU football team leaped four spots to No. 6 in this week's AP Top 25 that was announced Sunday morning.
The Tigers were among a record eight ranked teams in this week's AP Top 25.
LSU beat Florida, 17-6, on a hot and humid Saturday afternoon in Tiger Stadium. The Tigers limited the Gators to 240 yards of total offense while recording eight tackles for loss including four sacks.
LSU (6-1, 3-1 SEC), bowl eligible for the 14th-straight season, next travels to face Ole Miss on Saturday at 6 p.m. CT in Oxford. The game will be broadcast on ESPN2, and aired on the LSU Sports Radio Network with a pregame show starting at 4 p.m.
Check back for the USA Today Coaches' Poll, and the debut of the Harris Interactive Poll later today.
AP Top 25
Team (First-Place Votes) Record Points Previous
1. Alabama (55) 6-0 1,495 1
2. Oregon (5) 6-0 1,438 2
3. Clemson 6-0 1,352 3
4. Ohio St. 6-0 1,330 4
5. Florida St. 5-0 1,242 6
6. LSU 6-1 1,137 10
7. Texas A&M 5-1 1,105 9
8. Louisville 6-0 1,077 8
9. UCLA 5-0 1,017 11
10. Miami 5-0 912 13
11. South Carolina 5-1 896 14
12. Baylor 5-0 849 15
13. Stanford 5-1 824 5
14. Missouri 6-0 749 25
15. Georgia 4-2 615 7
16. Texas Tech 6-0 590 20
17. Fresno St. 5-0 383 21
18. Oklahoma 5-1 380 12
19. Virginia Tech 6-1 352 24
20. Washington 4-2 309 16
21. Oklahoma St. 4-1 264 22
22. Florida 4-2 249 17
23. Northern Illinois 6-0 185 23
24. Auburn 5-1 156 NR
25. Wisconsin 4-2 153 NR
Others receiving votes: Michigan 118, Nebraska 94, Michigan St. 69, Utah 47, Notre Dame 39, Oregon St. 21, UCF 19, Texas 16, Arizona St. 7, Northwestern 7, Houston 3, Rutgers 1.
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http://espn.go.com/college-
LSU's style: Whatever it takes
Originally Published: October 12, 2013
By
Ivan Maisel | ESPN.com
Les Miles gets fired up over "hammer and nail" analogy after No. 10 LSU's victory over No. 17 Florida.
Video..http://espn.go.com/
Video..http://espn.go.com/ college-football/story/_/id/ 9817236/lsu-beats-florida-own- game-pounding-gators-defense- running-game
And Mettenberger seemed emblematic of something bigger in the Southeastern Conference. The first half of the SEC season seemed to tip the balance in the league from the power game to the hurry-up, spread, 50-point style that has overtaken the rest of college football. LSU's past two games had been a 44-41 loss to Georgia and a 59-26 victory over Mississippi State.
But that's not what the Tiger offense showed Saturday, not with No. 17 Florida on the other side of the ball. The LSU offense played the game between the tackles, just the way that Gator coach Will Muschamp likes it. Actually, Muschamp coaches as if it he wants to play in an office cubicle. The LSU linemen know what the Florida linemen had for pregame meal -- and vice versa.
And when the Tigers' 17-6 victory ended, they had proven that their
offense might have modernized, but they can be valedictorian in the old
school, too.
LSU coach Les Miles used the phrase "close-quarter scrum." He said that about the end of the game, but it describes all 60 minutes. It appeared that the former Michigan offensive lineman borrowed a game plan out from the library of his college coach, Bo Schembechler. LSU ran the ball 39 times and threw it 17.
"Had we hit a couple more passes, we would've thrown it a bit more," Miles said.
LSU really had no need. The Tigers might have gained only 327 total yards, but they controlled the game. Florida held the ball for 34:11, ran 12 more plays than LSU and gained only 240 yards.
A very young Tiger defense that made a lot of mistakes in the first half of the season made a lot fewer Saturday. Defensive coordinator John Chavis held an emotional meeting with his players this week and implored them to play better. In their past six quarters, the Tigers have allowed nine points. That might good enough.
"I think they're maturing. I think they understand what they're supposed to do," Miles said.
Junior quarterback Tyler Murphy
had to play catch-up football without the benefit of time to throw.
Murphy completed 16 of 28 passes for 129 yards. That's an average of
fewer than 5 yards per attempt before you consider that LSU sacked him
four times, hurried him five times and knocked down three passes at the
line. I mean, really, why even bother? Because the Tigers didn't let
them run the ball, either. That's why.
LSU coach Les Miles used the phrase "close-quarter scrum." He said that about the end of the game, but it describes all 60 minutes. It appeared that the former Michigan offensive lineman borrowed a game plan out from the library of his college coach, Bo Schembechler. LSU ran the ball 39 times and threw it 17.
"Had we hit a couple more passes, we would've thrown it a bit more," Miles said.
LSU really had no need. The Tigers might have gained only 327 total yards, but they controlled the game. Florida held the ball for 34:11, ran 12 more plays than LSU and gained only 240 yards.
A very young Tiger defense that made a lot of mistakes in the first half of the season made a lot fewer Saturday. Defensive coordinator John Chavis held an emotional meeting with his players this week and implored them to play better. In their past six quarters, the Tigers have allowed nine points. That might good enough.
"I think they're maturing. I think they understand what they're supposed to do," Miles said.
"They kind of beat us at our own game," Florida defensive tackle Damien Jacobs said.
Florida played this style a lot more effectively before preseason All-American Dominique Easley blew out his knee three weeks ago. Not only did the Gators lose their best player on either side of the ball, but they lost their depth. LSU decided to exploit that, believing that the Florida linebackers played better running sideline to sideline than they did taking on a power running game.
"I love those big-contact games," LSU fullback J.C. Copeland said, "being able to hit somebody on every play."
This was a game for Copeland, the 6-foot, 270-pound senior fullback who scored the Tigers' first touchdown on the opening play of the second quarter. It took LSU six snaps from the Florida 11 to slam the ball into the end zone. Copeland went in on third-and-goal from the 1, sending a Gator helmet flying, presumably without a head in it.
"Why is it fun?" Copeland repeated. "I can hit somebody and not get sued for it."
Copeland opened plenty of holes for 6-2, 235-pound tailback Jeremy Hill, who rushed for 121 yards on only 19 carries. The Gators came into the game allowing 65 rushing yards per game. They gave up 175.
"Our guys just didn't get off blocks," Muschamp said.
Florida has an offense that looks like it's on blocks in Muschamp's front yard. The Gators win ugly, and on Saturday, they lost ugly. LSU, after half a season of winning pretty, proved it hasn't forgotten how to win ugly. That might come in handy on Nov. 9 in Tuscaloosa. Hitting someone on every play has its pluses.
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http://espn.go.com/college- football/
Upset aftermath »Week 7 lessons »Helmet stickers »Bowl projections »Haney's takes
Russ Isabella/USA TODAY Sports
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Florida played this style a lot more effectively before preseason All-American Dominique Easley blew out his knee three weeks ago. Not only did the Gators lose their best player on either side of the ball, but they lost their depth. LSU decided to exploit that, believing that the Florida linebackers played better running sideline to sideline than they did taking on a power running game.
"I love those big-contact games," LSU fullback J.C. Copeland said, "being able to hit somebody on every play."
This was a game for Copeland, the 6-foot, 270-pound senior fullback who scored the Tigers' first touchdown on the opening play of the second quarter. It took LSU six snaps from the Florida 11 to slam the ball into the end zone. Copeland went in on third-and-goal from the 1, sending a Gator helmet flying, presumably without a head in it.
"Why is it fun?" Copeland repeated. "I can hit somebody and not get sued for it."
Copeland opened plenty of holes for 6-2, 235-pound tailback Jeremy Hill, who rushed for 121 yards on only 19 carries. The Gators came into the game allowing 65 rushing yards per game. They gave up 175.
"Our guys just didn't get off blocks," Muschamp said.
Florida has an offense that looks like it's on blocks in Muschamp's front yard. The Gators win ugly, and on Saturday, they lost ugly. LSU, after half a season of winning pretty, proved it hasn't forgotten how to win ugly. That might come in handy on Nov. 9 in Tuscaloosa. Hitting someone on every play has its pluses.
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http://espn.go.com/college-
Another Win For The Wall
Every team finds the fatigue wall eventually. Some scale it; others run face-first into it. Final »Upset aftermath »Week 7 lessons »Helmet stickers »Bowl projections »Haney's takes
Russ Isabella/USA TODAY Sports
- SEC slates record eight in AP's Top 25
| Poll
- Utah hangs on to shock Stanford
| Gemmell
- Texas upsets No. 12 Oklahoma
| Schlabach
- Missouri stuns No. 7 Georgia
| Franklin hurt
- PSU outlasts No. 18 Michigan in 4OT thriller
- After scare, Manziel boosts Aggies
| Aschoff
- Ducks pull by Washington
| UCLA clocks Cal
- Defense lifts No. 10 LSU by Florida
| Maisel
- Kiffin: Mistakes made, firing 'difficult'
| Miller
- Top-ranked Alabama cruises
| Scarborough
- Wisconsin eases by Northwestern
| Bennett
- No. 3 Clemson staves off upset bid by BC
- Haney: LSU will push Bama in SEC title race

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