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Romney's Foreign Policy Address:
'The Mantle of Leadership'
Weekly Standard, by Daniel Halper    Original Article
Posted By: StormCnter- 10/8/2012 5:02:34 AM     Post Reply
The following excerpts of Mitt Romney’s foreign policy address, which will be delivered later today at the Virginia Military Institute in Lexington, Virginia, have been released for preview by the Romney campaign:Of all the leaders who have called Lexington, Virginia their home, none is more distinguished than George Marshall—the Chief of Staff of the Army who became Secretary of State and Secretary of Defense, who helped to vanquish fascism and then plan Europe’s rescue from despair. His commitment to peace was born of his direct knowledge of the awful costs and consequences of war.

Why I’m Voting for Mitt Romney
Daily Beast, by Buzz Bissinger    Original Article
Posted By: StormCnter- 10/8/2012 4:55:12 AM     Post Reply
When I told my wife Lisa that I was writing a column supporting Mitt Romney for president, her reaction was both impressive and revealing: “Why don’t you write about the infield fly rule?” It is impressive that anyone actually understands the infield fly rule, one of those arcane mysteries of life in baseball that became the subject of a riot in the St. Louis Cardinals’ 6-3 victory over the Atlanta Braves Friday in the first ever Wild Card One versus Wild Card Two playoff game.(Snip)At the debate, Romney did not simply act like he wanted to be president.

Romney's debate win opens
cracks in Obama fire wall
Washington Examiner [DC], by Michael Barone    Original Article
Posted By: Pluperfect- 10/8/2012 4:46:28 AM     Post Reply
Wednesday night's presidential debate in which Mitt Romney shellacked Barack Obama attracted the biggest audience since the debate between Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan seven days before the 1980 election.. About 70 million Americans watched, a little more than half the 131 million voter turnout in 2008. That's an estimate, because the ratings companies don't count those watching on C-SPAN, PBS or the Internet. Did the debates matter? The first state polls, conducted by Rasmussen and We Ask America on Thursday night, suggest the answer is yes. Rasmussen reported that Romney was down 1 point

  


  

Obama’s crooked campaign cash-o-matic
machine revisited
Michellemalkin.com, by Michelle Malkin    Original Article
Posted By: steveW- 10/8/2012 1:22:43 AM     Post Reply
In advance of the new Obama donor scandal story that many conservatives have been buzzing about and which is purportedly set to hit the pages of Newsweek/Daily Beast tomorrow morning, I’m reprinting a selection of my previous blog posts over the last four years that exposed various aspects of the Obama crooked campaign cash-o-matic machine. I hear that the new story/investigation will delve deep into online/credit card vulnerabilities and donations from foreign nationals — both subjects which this blog and many other conservative websites have covered extensively since the 2008 campaign.

Romney 
to slam 
Obama 
on warfare
Washington Times, by Seth McLaughlin & Stephen Dinan    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 10/8/2012 1:14:45 AM     Post Reply
Port St. Luci, Fla. - Mitt Romney on Monday will accuse the Obama administration of fundamentally misunderstanding the threat of radical Islam, using a major foreign-policy speech at the Virginia Military Institute to say President Obama is rejecting six decades of bipartisan consensus by not flexing more U.S. muscle on the world stage. (Snip) According to excerpts, he will say the president’s first reaction was to blame an Internet video mocking Islam, and only belatedly to spot “the deliberate work of terrorists who use violence to impose their dark ideology on others.” “Hope is not a strategy,” Mr. Romney will

NATO resumes training of
Afghan police recruits
Washington Times, by Kristina Wong    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 10/8/2012 1:11:26 AM     Post Reply
Special operations forces in Afghanistan have resumed training Afghan Local Police recruits after a suspension last month in response to two insider attacks by recruits on their international coalition trainers in August, U.S. officials say. So far, more than half of the 16,000-member police force has been re-vetted and less than 1 percent have been removed, a special operations spokesman said. (Snip) U.S. officials at first praised the Afghan Local Police training program for insulation from insider attacks, but training was suspended Sept. 2 after five special operators were killed in two such attacks. In one attack, a local police

Bachmann's bid for re-election
no longer a lock?
Washington Times, by David Eldridge    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 10/8/2012 1:08:54 AM     Post Reply
Michele Bachmann, the Republican fundraising juggernaut who won her Sixth Congressional District seat in Minnesota two years ago by more than 12 percentage points, is suddenly in a tight contest for re-election. One day after the Cook Political Report downgraded the conservative-leaning Sixth District from "likely Republican" to "leans Republican," Mrs. Bachmann's 2012 opponent, businessman Jim Graves, took to the airwaves Saturday to trumpet his chances of upsetting the three-term congresswoman. (Snip) Mr. Graves has been campaigning for weeks on his own internal poll that shows him within striking distance – two points – of the incumbent, who became a

  


  

Update: Tanks in the streets as
Venezuelan electoral council
declares Hugo Chavez victory
Daily Caller, by Matthew Boyle    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 10/8/2012 12:56:58 AM     Post Reply
Update 10:50 p.m.: According to the Associated Press, Venezuela’s electoral council has declared that Hugo Chavez beat Henriques Capriles in Sunday’s presidential election with about 54 percent of the vote, despite exit polls showing otherwise. Venezuela Twitter users have claimed Chavez’s victory was wrought with election fraud, and that the socialist incumbent president sent tanks into the streets of his country as those exit poll reports showed him losing. A picture of the tanks surfaced on Twitter Sunday evening. (Snip) A Spanish news outlet reported earlier on Sunday that exit polls showed Capriles defeated the socialist president by a narrow

Iran’s FM offers to limit uranium
enrichment if world guarantees
supply of fissile fuel
Times of Israel [Jerusalem], by Ilan Ben Zion    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 10/8/2012 12:42:08 AM     Post Reply
Iran’s foreign minister proposed to limit uranium enrichment in exchange for a guaranteed supply of fissile fuel from abroad, according to a report released on Sunday. In an interview with the German news magazine Der Spiegel set for publication on Monday, Ali Akbar Salehi reiterated that it is Iran’s right to enrich uranium for peaceful purposes, and insisted that there is no proof it is developing highly enriched uranium for the production of nuclear weapons. In a rare statement of flexibility, however, Salehi said that “if our right to enrichment is recognized, we are ready for a trade-off.” The Iranian

The Great Reversal
Washington Post, by Robert J. Samuelson    Original Article
Posted By: Dreadnought- 10/7/2012 11:53:19 PM     Post Reply
What we are witnessing in Europe — and what may loom for the United States — is the exhaustion of the modern social order. Since the early 1800s, industrial societies rested on a marriage of economic growth and political stability. Economic progress improved people’s lives and anchored their loyalty to the state. Wars, depressions, revolutions and class conflicts interrupted the cycle. But over time, prosperity fostered stable democracies in the United States, Europe and parts of Asia. The present economic crisis might reverse this virtuous process. Slower economic expansion would feed political instability

Is Obama overrated
as a candidate?
Washington Post, by Chris Cillizza    Original Article
Posted By: Dreadnought- 10/7/2012 11:51:36 PM     Post Reply
In his closing remarks at the first debate in Denver last week, President Obama uttered the following sentence: “Four years ago, I said that I’m not a perfect man and I wouldn’t be a perfect president.” For anyone who has watched Obama campaign for a second term this year, the phrase is old hat — part of the president’s seemingly self-effacing acknowledgment that he has, is and will continue to make mistakes but that he does so in the service of trying to do the right thing. But the now-familiar phrase took on a different — and more troubling

  



IAF jets fly mock raids over south
Lebanon after mysterious
aircraft shot down over Israel
Associated Press, by Staff    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 10/7/2012 11:39:12 PM     Post Reply
Israeli warplanes swooped low over Lebanese villages Sunday in a menacing show of force apparently aimed at the Hezbollah guerrilla group after a mysterious raid by an unmanned aircraft that was shot out of Israeli skies over the weekend. Israel was still investigating Saturday's incident, but Hezbollah quickly emerged as the leading suspect because it has an arsenal of sophisticated Iranian weapons and a history of trying to deploy similar aircraft. (Snip) Military officials would not say where the drone originated or who produced it, but they ruled out the Gaza Strip, which is ruled by Hamas, a group not

Cristina Kirchner 'using Falkland
Islands as a smokescreen'
to hide failing economy
Telegraph [UK], by Jonathan Gilbert    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 10/7/2012 11:31:32 PM     Post Reply
Buenos Aires - Cristina Kirchner is facing revolt over an ailing Argentine economy, as her approval rating hits a record low and aides admit she is using the Falkland Islands as a smokescreen to mask domestic failings. The streets of Buenos Aires have been crammed with up to 200,000 people in recent marches against the Argentine president, deploring inflation, insecurity and alleged corruption. The economy has slowed dramatically. Growth was more than eight per cent in 2011 but is projected at 3.4 per cent this year. Independent analysts, who say the government manipulates data,

Americans Will Pay More For Gas
If Hugo Chavez Is Reelected
Business Insider, by Rob Wile    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 10/7/2012 11:23:27 PM     Post Reply
Today, Venezuelans go to the polls to decide their next President. If it turns out to be the same guy as before, Americans will almost certainly end up paying more for gas, according to analysts. "If President Chavez gets reelected, I expect that we will see lower crude oil sales to the U.S. as Venezuela and the U.S. move further apart, and that's going to cost the consumer more money for their gasoline," Andy Lipow, a Houston-based oil industry expert, told NBC News.

SpaceX Dragon capsule
launched to space station
Associated Press, by Staff    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 10/7/2012 11:20:33 PM     Post Reply
Cape Canaveral - A commercial cargo ship rocketed into orbit Sunday in pursuit of the International Space Station, the first of a dozen supply runs under a mega-contract with NASA. It was the second launch of a Dragon capsule to the orbiting lab by the California-based SpaceX company. The first was last spring. This time was no test flight, however, and the spacecraft carried 1,000 pounds of key science experiments and other precious gear. There was also a personal touch: chocolate-vanilla swirl ice cream tucked in a freezer for the three station residents.

  


  

The Muslim Brotherhood and
Egypt's Coming Economic Storm
U.S.News & World Report, by Andrew Natsios    Original Article
Posted By: LittleHoodedMonk- 10/7/2012 11:19:43 PM     Post Reply
Much of the news out of Egypt since the "Arab Spring" uprising has focused on the Muslim Brotherhood and its role in the collapse of the Mubarak government; and later its victory in the parliamentary elections in 2011 and slender win in the presidential election in 2012. That Egyptian narrative is gradually changing to one much more complicated and less visible focused on Egypt's economic crisis which will unfold slowly, but may then engulf the country like a title wave over the next few years. That title wave could drive Egypt to a much more violent second revolution.

Summer drought turns fall
leaves deeper red as foliage
puts on spectacular show
Daily Mail (UK), by Staff    Original Article
Posted By: JoniTx- 10/7/2012 11:19:00 PM     Post Reply
These breathtaking fall scenes drenched in crimson and gold are all down to a drawn-out summer with long periods of drought. The vivid array of color is due to increased concentrations of anthocyanins in leaves. These natural pigments, which produce the brilliant reds and purples on many trees in the northeastern U.S., have been intensified by a lack of rain in the last few months. The end of summer is signified by the turning of the leaves when photosynthesis - the process of making food in leaves - shuts down.

2 arrested for trying to steal
TV from police station
Ynet News [Israel], by Raanan Ben-Zur    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 10/7/2012 11:13:27 PM     Post Reply
A resident of Hod Hasharon (25) and a resident of Baqa al-Gharbiya (21) were arrested on suspicion of attempting to steal a television set from the Glilot police station in Herzliya. The two men arrived at the station overnight Sunday to visit the detained brother of the Hod Hasharon resident. At some point they allegedly detached a television screen from a wall in the hallway. Officers who noticed that the TV was missing eventually found it hidden. They immediately suspected the two young men, who denied the allegations during questioning. There is no footage of the theft because the hallway

Venezuela's Chavez re-elected
to extend socialist rule
Reuters, by Diego Ore, Eyanir Chinea    Original Article
Posted By: Attercliffe- 10/7/2012 11:08:29 PM     Post Reply
Venezuela's socialist President Hugo Chavez won re-election in on Sunday, quashing the opposition's best bet at unseating him in 14 years and cementing himself as a dominant figure in modern Latin American history. The 58-year-old Chavez took 54.42 percent of the vote, with 90 percent of the ballots counted, to 44.97 percent for young opposition candidate Henrique Capriles, official results showed. Chavez's victory would extend his rule of the OPEC member state to two decades, though he is recovering from cancer and the possibility of a recurrence hangs over his political future. Jubilant supporters poured onto the streets

Home-grown terror suspects
spark French alert
France 24, by Staff    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 10/7/2012 11:07:23 PM     Post Reply
For Jérémie Louis-Sidney, France’s latest home-grown terror suspect, the end came swiftly and violently. On Saturday morning, the 33-year-old Frenchman was sitting on a couch in a Strasbourg apartment when special anti-terror police officers stormed into the premises, according to police sources. Sidney immediately fired at them with a .357 Magnum, emptying his Smith & Wesson pistol barrel before he was shot dead by police. Three police officers were injured – including one who was shot in the chest and another in the head. They were both protected by their helmets and body armour. Sidney, a recent convert to Islam,

  



Nine in ten Scots 'living
off state's patronage'
Telegraph [UK], by Simon Johnson    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 10/7/2012 11:00:16 PM     Post Reply
Almost nine out of 10 Scottish households take more from the public purse than they contribute in taxes thanks to a “rotten system” of state patronage, the Tory party conference will hear on Monday. Ruth Davidson, the Scottish Conservative leader, is to highlight official figures showing that only 283,080 households north of the border – 12 per cent of the total – pay more in tax than they receive in public services. She will tell delegates that, because the public sector is seen as the key provider of everything from housing to employment, state spending now accounts for more than

Hugo Chavez’s nervous wait as
Venezuela ballot boxes close
Telegraph [UK], by Jonathan Gilbert*    Original Article
Posted By: Attercliffe- 10/7/2012 10:45:07 PM     Post Reply
Venezuelans voted on Sunday in a presidential election that posed the greatest challenge to the 14-year reign of socialist Hugo Chávez. With results expected to be announced on Monday, a majority of pre-election polls gave Mr Chávez a 10-point lead. Others, however, had put him neck and neck with the opposition candidate, Henrique Capriles, a pro-business centrist who has managed to unite a fractured opposition. [Snip] The populist leader has been accused of allowing free but not fair elections, dominating the airwaves in the build-up with long broadcasts while Mr Capriles was afforded just three minutes a day.

U.S. suspects Haqqani tie
to Afghan insider attacks
Associated Press, by Staff    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 10/7/2012 10:37:53 PM     Post Reply
Kabul, Afghanistan - The Haqqani insurgent network, based in Pakistan and with ties to al-Qaida, is suspected of being a driving force behind a significant number of the "insider" attacks by Afghan forces that have killed or wounded more than 130 U.S. and allied troops this year, American officials said Friday. (Snip) New data provided to The Associated Press this week also reveal that in addition to 35 U.S. and allied troops killed in insider attacks last year, 61 were wounded. Those included 19 in a single attack in the eastern province of Laghman on April 16, 2011, in which

Eurozone to launch
new rescue fund ESM
Deutsche Welle, by Bernd Riegert    Original Article
Posted By: Photoonist- 10/7/2012 10:33:44 PM     Post Reply
With the first session of the governing body, the eurozone's finance ministers inaugurate the permanent rescue fund ESM in Luxemburg. How does the new firewall against the mountain of debt work? Even after it officially opens on Monday, there won't be much to see at the offices of the European Stability Mechanism (ESM). Despite soon being responsible for 700 billion euros ($912 billion), press spokesman Wolfgang Proissl told DW there may not even be a sign announcing the European bailout fund on the front of the inconspicuous office building (Snip) In order for the system to work, the ESM needs

Hundreds of pastors back
political candidates, defy tax rules
Reuters, by Nanette Burns    Original Article
Posted By: JoniTx- 10/7/2012 10:28:37 PM     Post Reply
CHARLOTTE, North Carolina - Baptist Pastor Mark Harris stood before his flock in North Carolina on Sunday and joined hundreds of other religious leaders in deliberately breaking the law in an election-year campaign that tests the role of churches in politics. By publicly backing candidates for political office from the pulpit, Harris and nearly 1,500 other preachers at services across the United States were flouting a law they see as an incursion on freedom of religion and speech. Under the U.S. tax code, non-profit organizations such as churches may express views on any issue, but they jeopardize

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