Monthly Archives: January 2014

Liberty Never Sleeps Show: The Government Protection Racket – Video

Posted: January 9, 2014 at 2:44 am


Liberty Never Sleeps Show: The Government Protection Racket
Topics Include the Government Protection Racket as well as top stories of today Conservative talk show with Republican rascal and raconteur, syndicated colum...

By: Thomas Purcell

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Liberty Never Sleeps Show: The Government Protection Racket - Video

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Chicago hope: A welcome gun ruling affirms the Second Amendment

Posted: at 2:42 am

Published: Wednesday, Jan. 8, 2014, 9:00p.m. Updated 6 hours ago

Ruling that Chicago's ban on licensed retail gun shops and private firearms transfers is unconstitutional, a federal judge has dealt a stinging, much-needed rebuke to an overreaching city government.

U.S. District Judge Edmond Chang stayed his decision to give Chicago which last year led U.S. cities in homicides time to mull an appeal. But there's no appealing the Second Amendment, which he cited in ruling that Chicago's duty to protect its citizens' safety is outweighed by its obligation to protect their constitutional rights.

It's not the first time that a court has curbed Chicago or Illinois gun-grabbing. The U.S. Supreme Court struck down the city's gun ban in 2010. A federal appellate court forced Illinois last holdout among the states to finally allow concealed carry permits last year.

After a federal appellate court struck down the city's gun-range ban in 2012, Chicago used zoning and other regulatory measures to make it difficult for such law-abiding firearms businesses, according to the Chicago Tribune. Besides possibly appealing this latest ruling, the city might try such tactics again.

If it does, Chicago will confirm its anti-gun attitude's underlying tendency: wrongly blaming legal guns, legal firearms businesses and law-abiding gun owners for gun-related violent crime. The latter two should be thankful that this judge and others stand ready to uphold their Second Amendment rights.

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Chicago hope: A welcome gun ruling affirms the Second Amendment

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Nader has some Sirius issues with Liberty bid

Posted: January 8, 2014 at 3:45 am

Consumer advocate Ralph Nader said Liberty Media Chairman John Malones offer to buy out the remaining stake in satellite radio company Sirius XM was ludicrous and called for activist investor Carl Icahn to take notice.

Nader, a Sirius shareholder, said on Monday that Libertys $3.68-a-share bid was below the $4 where the company was trading a few weeks ago.

I am sure that I along with other shareholders in Sirius XM will be interested in a legal challenge to John Malones company for lowballing Sirius XMs shareholder value, the 79-year-old consumer crusader said in a statement. Carl Icahn take notice and interest.

It was not immediately clear how many Sirius shares Nader owns. Nor was it clear whether Icahn is a shareholder of the company.

A spokeswoman for Liberty Media did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Liberty Media, which already owns about half of the satellite-radio company, made an offer Friday valuing the rest at $3.68 a share, or about $10.6 billion.

The stock closed at $3.83 today in New York, more than 4 percent higher than the bid by Liberty, an investment company controlled by billionaire John Malone.

The reaction signals that Liberty may face opposition in getting investors to approve the current deal.

Greg Maffei, the companys chief executive officer, said last week that Liberty plans to tap the cash of Sirius to potentially finance other transactions, including a possible bid for Time Warner Cable.

Liberty Media is contemplating making a Time Warner Cable deal through another of its holdings, Charter Communications.

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Nader has some Sirius issues with Liberty bid

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Just About Every Rich, Famous, and Powerful Person Has Been Hacked by Guccifer

Posted: at 3:45 am

George W. Bushs shower self-portrait, Bill Clintons chicken-boner dick doodle, Candace Bushnells new book, Colin Powells almost affair. All were stolen and leaked by the same person (people?), the prolific hacker Guccifer, an anonymous anti-Illuminati computer criminal who is somehow still at it. I dont know what near future hold for me, the possibly foreign, or just savvy, hacker told the Smoking Gun, while also providing a massive new cache of documents lifted from the e-mail accounts of the world's elite, in case I disappear.

Sure, hes not quite Edward Snowden when it comes to the international importance of his stash, but what Guccifer lacks in gravitas, he makes up for in bold-faced quantity. The MO is simple enough and pretty lo-fi: Guccifer accesses an account usually from an old-school, less secure provider like AOL, Yahoo, or Earthlink (change your e-mails, rich people!) and correctly answers forgot your password? questions until he can change the password. Once inside, he accesses that persons very important address book and the dominoes fall from there.

According to the new load, celeb victims so far include, but are not limited to: comedian Steve Martin, editor Tina Brown, author Kitty Kelley, actress Mariel Hemingway, the creator of Downton Abbey (from whom he nabbed the script for the season finale before it aired in England), and actor Rupert Everett. In politics: former Nixon aide John Dean, friend of the Clintons Sidney Blumenthal, ex-U.S. ambassador John Negroponte, journalist Carl Bernstein, numerous military officials, and many more. At this point, being hacked by Guccifer is almost a status symbol.

Guccifer broadly describes his targets as the new ukusa empire, and claims to be working from the cloud of Infinite Justice, a place that apparently remains invisible to law enforcement. For now.

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Just About Every Rich, Famous, and Powerful Person Has Been Hacked by Guccifer

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California, Other States, Weighing Anti-NSA Bills

Posted: at 3:41 am

First there was the Second Amendment Preservation Act, a bill floated in a number of conservative statehouses in recent months that would make it a crime for U.S. government officials to enforce federal gun laws within their state boundaries.

Now comes the Fourth Amendment Protection Act.

Its the name of a ripped-from-the-headlines bill introduced by state lawmakers in California on Monday.

It would ban state agencies and officials from helping the federal government collect electronic data and metadata on Americans without a targeted warrant. And it would prohibit state and local law enforcement authorities from using such data in their investigations and prosecutions.

Lawmakers in Arizona and Oklahoma are drafting similar measures all of them based on model bill language crafted by the Los Angeles-based Tenth Amendment Center, the same states rights advocacy group that also spearheaded the Second Amendment protection lobbying campaign.

In a lively-worded statement, Sen. Ted Lieu, a Democrat from Redondo Beach who sponsored the bill, described it as an essential guard against privacy abuses, decrying the National Security Agencys spy programs as a direct threat to our liberty and freedom.

The NSA believes its data collection to be legal and is defending the agencys surveillance programs in pending lawsuits across the country.

Its not clear how the measure would actually intersect with federal spy programs.

A statement from Mr. Lieus office announcing the bill says: To collect data on Californians, the NSA sometimes relies upon services provided by the state and/or private entities that provide services on behalf of the state.

The California bill doesnt specify any penalties for violations by state officials. A spokesman for Mr. Lieu called the bill a starting point.

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California, Other States, Weighing Anti-NSA Bills

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ORLANDO SENTINEL EXCLUSIVE NASA gets White House backing to extend space station

Posted: at 1:46 am

WASHINGTON The world's most expensive science project the $100 billion-plus International Space Station is poised to get four more years in orbit.

According to documents obtained by the Orlando Sentinel, NASA plans to announce this week that it has White House approval to extend the station's operations by four years until 2024.

The decision follows years of pressure by top NASA officials, who consider the station a critical steppingstone to future exploration. But a four-year extension likely would cost NASA about $3 billion a year from 2021 to 2024. That's a major chunk of the agency's annual budget, which is now about $17 billion, and a longer mission could force NASA to make tough financial decisions in the future.

The administration's approval, however, doesn't guarantee that the station, which has been continuously occupied since 2000, will survive past its current end date of 2020. At some point, Congress must approve a NASA budget that includes an extension of the station's life. The plan also must get the support of whoever wins the White House in 2016 though the backing of President Barack Obama now might make it harder for the next administration to renege.

Still, the move is expected to reassure NASA's international partners, who have wondered how long the U.S. plans to commit to the station. NASA's announcement coincides with a visit to Washington this week by leaders of the world's space agencies.

"Arriving at this decision in a timely and coordinated fashion will, hopefully, prove beneficial to our international partners as they struggle with decisions on funding for their space programs," NASA Chief Charlie Bolden wrote in an email to NASA and administration officials that praised the decision.

The announcement also has the potential of sending a signal to China, NASA's latest cosmic competitor.

In 2003, China become just the third country to launch an astronaut into space, and Beijing reportedly is making plans to assemble its own space station next decade.

By keeping the space station operational, NASA can maintain its own symbol of technical advancement while limiting attempts by the Chinese to woo global partners for its own outpost.

The symbolism is especially important for NASA because of the agency's recent struggles with its human-exploration program.

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ORLANDO SENTINEL EXCLUSIVE NASA gets White House backing to extend space station

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NASA gets White House backing to extend space station by 4 years

Posted: at 1:46 am

WASHINGTON The world's most expensive science project the $100 billion-plus International Space Station is poised to get four more years in orbit.

According to documents obtained by the Orlando Sentinel, NASA plans to announce this week that it has White House approval to extend the station's operations by four years until 2024.

The decision follows years of pressure by top NASA officials, who consider the station a critical steppingstone to future exploration. But a four-year extension likely would cost NASA about $3 billion a year from 2021 to 2024. That's a major chunk of the agency's annual budget, which is now about $17 billion, and a longer mission could force NASA to make tough financial decisions in the future.

The administration's approval, however, doesn't guarantee that the station, which has been continuously occupied since 2000, will survive past its current end date of 2020. At some point, Congress must approve a NASA budget that includes an extension of the station's life. The plan also must get the support of whoever wins the White House in 2016 though the backing of President Barack Obama now might make it harder for the next administration to renege.

Still, the move is expected to reassure NASA's international partners, who have wondered how long the U.S. plans to commit to the station. NASA's announcement coincides with a visit to Washington this week by leaders of the world's space agencies.

"Arriving at this decision in a timely and coordinated fashion will, hopefully, prove beneficial to our international partners as they struggle with decisions on funding for their space programs," NASA Chief Charlie Bolden wrote in an email to NASA and administration officials that praised the decision.

The announcement also has the potential of sending a signal to China, NASA's latest cosmic competitor.

In 2003, China become just the third country to launch an astronaut into space, and Beijing reportedly is making plans to assemble its own space station next decade.

By keeping the space station operational, NASA can maintain its own symbol of technical advancement while limiting attempts by the Chinese to woo global partners for its own outpost.

The symbolism is especially important for NASA because of the agency's recent struggles with its human-exploration program.

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NASA gets White House backing to extend space station by 4 years

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ORLANDO SENTINEL EXCLUSIVE NASA gets White House backing to extend space station by 4 years

Posted: at 1:46 am

WASHINGTON The world's most expensive science project the $100 billion-plus International Space Station is poised to get four more years in orbit.

According to documents obtained by the Orlando Sentinel, NASA plans to announce this week that it has White House approval to extend the station's operations by four years until 2024.

The decision follows years of pressure by top NASA officials, who consider the station a critical steppingstone to future exploration. But a four-year extension likely would cost NASA about $3 billion a year from 2021 to 2024. That's a major chunk of the agency's annual budget, which is now about $17 billion, and a longer mission could force NASA to make tough financial decisions in the future.

The administration's approval, however, doesn't guarantee that the station, which has been continuously occupied since 2000, will survive past its current end date of 2020. At some point, Congress must approve a NASA budget that includes an extension of the station's life. The plan also must get the support of whoever wins the White House in 2016 though the backing of President Barack Obama now might make it harder for the next administration to renege.

Still, the move is expected to reassure NASA's international partners, who have wondered how long the U.S. plans to commit to the station. NASA's announcement coincides with a visit to Washington this week by leaders of the world's space agencies.

"Arriving at this decision in a timely and coordinated fashion will, hopefully, prove beneficial to our international partners as they struggle with decisions on funding for their space programs," NASA Chief Charlie Bolden wrote in an email to NASA and administration officials that praised the decision.

The announcement also has the potential of sending a signal to China, NASA's latest cosmic competitor.

In 2003, China become just the third country to launch an astronaut into space, and Beijing reportedly is making plans to assemble its own space station next decade.

By keeping the space station operational, NASA can maintain its own symbol of technical advancement while limiting attempts by the Chinese to woo global partners for its own outpost.

The symbolism is especially important for NASA because of the agency's recent struggles with its human-exploration program.

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ORLANDO SENTINEL EXCLUSIVE NASA gets White House backing to extend space station by 4 years

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Tampa man one step closer to Mars?

Posted: at 1:45 am

Tampa, Fla. - A 43-year-old self-employed Tampa man has made it past the first hurdle in a selection process to potentially choose the first team to attempt not only a manned mission to the planet Mars, but its colonization.

Hampton Black, a former NASA employee, received an email in December telling him that he is one of 1,058 finalists who could potentially be a part of the "Mars One" mission. "Mars One" is an organization seeking crowd-funding for an effort to land humans on Mars in 2025. The mission would be a one-way trip.

"My heart is there, you know? I want to be a part of this mission," Black said.

In comparison to planet Earth, Mars is far from hospitable. Frequent sub-zero temperatures, radiation, and an unbreathable atmosphere would be just a few of the challenges facing astronauts who would seek to live on the red planet.

Black said the mission is for the good of all humanity. He maintained the Earth should not be the human race's only home.

"We just commit ourselves to this one planet, and this planet only? We're not going to be around here too much longer," said Black.

Ann Marie Slavik, Black's girlfriend, said she supports his goal of relocating permanently to Mars.

"If he should go, of course I would be sad, but it's not my style to stand in front of somebody's dream," she said.

To learn more about the "Mars One" organization, visit http://www.mars-one.com .

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Tampa man one step closer to Mars?

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Increased risk of prostate cancer in African American men; implications for PSA screening

Posted: at 1:45 am

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

7-Jan-2014

Contact: Vicki Cohn vcohn@liebertpub.com 914-740-2100 Mary Ann Liebert, Inc./Genetic Engineering News

New Rochelle, NY, January 7, 2014African American men have an increased risk of prostate cancer and are two times more likely than Caucasian American men to die from the disease. Despite recent questions about the overall usefulness of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) testing to detect prostate cancer, should PSA screening be used to detect early-stage disease to help save lives in this at-risk population? The controversy is explored in a Review article in Journal of Men's Health, a peer-reviewed publication from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers. The article is available free on the Journal of Men's Health website at http://www.liebertpub.com/jomh.

In the Review "PSA Screening for the African American Male: When and Why?" Tyler Luthringer, Ilija Aleksic, Vladimir Mouraviev, and David Albala, Associated Medical Professionals of NY, PLLC, and SUNY Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, support the American Urological Association's position that early detection of prostate cancer should include multiple parameters to assess personal risk. Together with their physicians, men should decide on an individualized approach to risk assessment and screening, which may include PSA testing and digital rectal examination.

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Increased risk of prostate cancer in African American men; implications for PSA screening

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