Community > Posts By > HornyChubbyMale
Topic:
John Edwards!!!
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I love these Politicians or Presidential Candidates on how they can save
the economically Crisis that this Great Country of our has. How to cut back and provide saving in hopes to pay off the money owed. Then they hired Aides or Advisorys and ask them "So, how do we save money or cut-back on which programs in order to provide Federal Funding or raising money for our Troops." The Funny things about it if you think carefully. These advisory themselves are really paying themselves. Tax dollars are used to pay these peoples salaries and in turn they pay taxes. Instead, I like to see for once a Presidential Candidate without any help come up with a feasible plan to either lower interest rating, or taxes and know how to probably Budget "THE BUDGET". |
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The post exchange, or PX, knows no wartime limits except blast walls.
Carpets from Iran go fast. Petty Officer Corey Baughman stared with narrowed eyes at the objects on the ground in front of him. Sweat beaded on his upper lip. He knelt down and leaned in for a closer look. The Navy explosives ordnance expert had a difficult choice to make, one that could haunt him for life if he erred. Should he buy the striking carpet from Kazakhstan with blue accents against an ochre background, or a rich, wine-colored one from Turkey? These carpets could be expected to last 90 years with proper care, the rug seller reminded Baughman as he struggled to decide. After several more minutes of silent contemplation, and a small bit of haggling, Baughman bought two Kazakh carpets, closing another deal in one of the strangest shopping environments on Earth: the modern-day military mall. In the trailer next door, Alcon Moroney was selling Harley-Davidsons at a rate of about 30 per week, based solely on pictures in a catalog. Around the corner, Spc. Brian Andrews was sitting in the beauty salon waiting for the clear polish to dry on his freshly pedicured feet. At the jewelry store, Capt. Bill Wold was eyeing gold bracelets for his wife. Downtime is rare for troops in Iraq, but when missions slow down, troops go shopping, and on-base shopping has come a long way since the first PXs, or post exchanges, were established. No longer are troops limited to browsing for rough-hewn underwear and socks at a single store. Now retail centers and food courts are considered crucial to boosting military morale, particularly in places such as Iraq, where every trip into the city is rife with risk. The result is an eclectic mix of retailers and their employees — usually non-U.S. citizens looking to earn more money than they would back home — catering to mainly twentysomething troops with little to do in their free time but spend money. And spend they do, on everything from that most American of motorcycles, the Harley, to ornate silk carpets from Iran, which the U.S. government accuses of sending weapons to Iraq. "It's really odd that you can go out during the day and people can be shooting at you and trying to blow you up, and then you can come back here and buy a plasma TV," said Baughman, who was shopping for rugs to outfit his apartment in Sicily, Italy, where he is based. "It's available, so people do it. It's probably better than spending all your time sitting inside with a PlayStation." Like the other stores in this corner of Camp Liberty, the Ahtamara rug shop was granted a concession to operate by the Dallas-based Army and Air Force Exchange Service, which oversees retail centers at U.S. military outposts around the world. The shops are a reflection of troop requests, said Lt. Col. Dean Thurmond, an AAFES spokesman. The goal is to offer the men and women the comfort items they have back home in hopes of making their deployment slightly less arduous, if only for a few minutes at a time. He described one young soldier's first bite of a Whopper at a Burger King in Baghdad as an example. "It's meat and a bun," he said, "but for a brief moment, that soldier wasn't in Baghdad anymore. He was home." Aesthetically, at least, these shopping areas are anything but homey. Most resemble hastily erected trailer parks surrounded by blast barriers and concertina wire. Functional, not fancy Ahtamara and the other stores occupy about a dozen simple white trailers without elaborate signs or windows, so there is no hint of the treasures inside. The red-white-and-blue labels outside each trailer identify them only by what they sell. Ahtamara's says "Rug Shop." But drawing customers is not a problem, because the trailers line a narrow walkway hemmed in by concrete blast walls. Anyone walking to the beauty salon, the T-shirt shop, the jewelry shop or the gift shop must pass the rug shop, in addition to the motorcycle and car dealership next door. Kamuran Sercan, one of Ahtamara's salesmen, said the U.S. war of words with Iran had no effect on sales of his most expensive carpets, the silk Persians from Iran. They are his best sellers, Sercan said as he ran his fingers over the turquoise- and rose-colored flowers adorning one of the rugs. He flipped the corner over to show the perfect hand stitching. It took someone seven months to finish this carpet, a 2-by-3 gem so beautiful, Sercan said, that it belonged on a wall, not a floor. The price was $950, and by early afternoon he had sold at least one. "To be honest, the Iranian ones are the best. They are the best in the world," Sercan said as he went from one pile of carpets to another, dragging his favorites out for shoppers to view. Sercan is typical of the vendors. He earns $1,200 a month, twice what he would get for the same work back home in Turkey. He sends most of his earnings to his family. It wasn't money that drew Moroney, the motorcycle salesman, to Iraq. It was a yearning to see something other than his native Ireland. The Exchange New Car Sales dealership where he works is nothing more than a trailer with three desks, and walls plastered with photographs of Harley-Davidsons and Ford and DaimlerChrysler vehicles. "Most of the guys know more about these vehicles than I do," Moroney said, speaking in a thick brogue. "I'd worked in Ireland since I left college. I thought it was a bit of excitement and a chance to see what's going on here. It has been borderline exciting, but also a bit scary." As he spoke, a tiny woman with a look of consternation on her sunburned face burst in. She was Sgt. 1st Class Patricia Moore, and she was checking on the fire-engine-red Harley-Davidson Dyna Super Glide that she had ordered as a gift for her husband, who is also in the Army. Moroney sent an e-mail to the supplier and assured Moore that the Harley would be waiting for them back home in time for their May leave. Buying a Harley, or any of the other vehicles offered by Exchange, is pretty much like buying a pair of pants online. There are no tires to kick, no engines to rev, no big stickers on windows to remind you of the price. There are simply catalogs with photographs of appealing new vehicles, ranging from the $80,000 Dodge Viper sports car to the top-of-the-line Harley, a $20,000 Ultra Classic Electra Glide. The shop's location, next to the AT&T call center, helps business. Most customers come in, ask a few questions, then go next door and call home to get a spouse's approval. "I'm going to mull it over and talk to the old lady," one young soldier said. Moroney is quick to tell drop-ins who just want to pick up a catalog about the advantages he says Exchange offers them. They pay no taxes, and with extra rebates and discounts offered to the military, they can expect to pay 10% to 20% less than if they bought in the United States, he says. Exchange even gives motorcycle buyers $250 to attend a safety course. Buyers can select a delivery date to coincide with the end of their deployment or their R&R. Should a buyer die before taking possession, the deposit is returned to the family, he said. Harleys are by far the most popular item and outsell the cars, trucks and SUVs combined. "A lot of the guys here are making extra money and not paying taxes, so it's a good opportunity for them to buy something like this," Moroney said. Kids in a candy shop? Not everyone supports the idea of having big-ticket items for easy sale to young and often vulnerable customers, many earning less than $2,000 a month as enlisted soldiers with fewer than five years in the military. While posted to Iraq, they don't pay federal taxes. They also get hazard pay and, if married, family separation pay, all of which can give them a false sense of financial security, said Wold, the Army captain shopping for jewelry. But when they return to the United States and see those few hundred extra dollars a month vanish, many find themselves burdened by debt, he said. The most vulnerable are the troops stationed in areas without decent shopping. "They come through here and go on a spree because of the selection," Wold said as he tried to choose a bracelet for his wife, Aurora, in Fayetteville, N.C. He ran his fingers along a delicate gold chain on the jeweler's glass counter and asked the price. The jeweler, after weighing the bracelet on a tiny scale, told him $300. Sensing that the price was too steep for his customer, he brought out a nearly identical but less ornate one, for $215. "I'll take it," Wold said, and handed over his debit card as the jeweler tucked the trinket into a cotton-lined box. |
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WASHINGTON (AP): The Bush administration's plans for a missile defence
system in Europe encountered resistance Thursday from congressional Democrats who cast doubt on the technical feasibility of the project and said it could bolster Russia's ties with Iran. The hearing before two House Foreign Affairs subcommittees came a day after the House Armed Forces Strategic Forces subcommittee voted to delete $160 million (euro117.5 million) sought by the administration to fund the installation of 10 missile interceptors in Poland. The administration is requesting $310 million (euro227.7 million) for the overall project. At Thursday's hearing, Assistant Secretary of State Daniel Fried said testing has shown that the system being proposed works. But Rep. Robert Wexler, a Democrat and chairman of the European subcommittee, voiced skepticism about the system because no tests have been conducted under combat conditions. In addition to the interceptors for Poland, the administration is planning radar facilitates in the Czech Republic. Rep. Brad Sherman, another Democrat, said Russia could retaliate against the plan by backing nuclear weapons development in Iran. ``We need Russian cooperation on Iran,'' Sherman said. ``I can think of no better way to ensure that Russia will do very little to help stop the Iranian program than to stick it to them by putting our missiles in what used to be their allies,'' he said. Fried reaffirmed the U.S. view that the system poses no threat to Russian security. ``Ten defensive missiles would be of no use against Russia's hundreds of missiles and thousands of nuclear warheads,'' Fried said. ``The Russians know this.'' But Sherman said that Russian fears that the system will grow ``are not all that fanciful.'' He added that in private conversations, European officials have expressed deep reservations about the system. |
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Topic:
What do you make of this
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Maiden launch of GSLV Mark-III in 2009
ISRO Ahmedabad, May 4 (PTI): India's ambition to grab a slice of the billion-dollar global satellite launch market will get a major boost when ISRO makes the maiden launch of its new Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle (GSLV) Mark-III in 2009. "The development of GSLV Mark-III is progressing well and we hope to have its maiden launch in 2009," said Madhavan Nair, Chairman of Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), on Thursday. The GSLV Mark-III is an entirely new three-stage launch vehicle and is not derived from PSLV or GSLV Mark-I or II series. With the development of GSLV Mark-III, India will be able to launch heavy satellites into the geosynchronous transfer orbit. This vehicle is billed as the technological successor to GSLV Mark-II. Nair, who was at Space Applications Centre here to attend a "National Telemedicine Users' Meet", told the media that ISRO had identified the problems that had caused the failure of GSLV Mark-II launch last year. "Last year we had a failure. But we have identified the reasons for it." "There is nothing wrong with the design or any of the other sub-systems. It was only a fabrication error which caused the failure," he said of the three-stage 414 tonne launch vehicle which had lifted off from Satish Dhawan Space Centre in July 2006 only to plunge into the Bay of Bengal with a 2,168-kg INSAT-4C satellite. Nair said ISRO had rectified the snag and the space agency will be re-launching the GSLV Mark-II by October this year. "We hope that we will be able to make a launch sometime in September or October this year," Nair said. "Till date we have had four launches of GSLV of which only one has failed." The first two flights of GSLV were developmental, while the third was an EDUSAT communication satellite launch in September 2004. Nair said satellite launch vehicles like the PSLVs and the GSLVs will also be used for commercial launches by ISRO. "We are trying to sell it to the extent possible." "The GSLV Mark-II is a very good vehicle for launching small satellites," he said, adding the vehicle could carry 2,500-kgs of payload into the geosynchronous transfer orbit. Earlier, speaking at the inaugural function of the "National Telemedicine Users' Meet", Nair said the year 2007 had begun well for ISRO in terms of space launches. He hailed the ISRO's space-recovery experiment conducted in January this year as the best achievement for the space agency. "The space capsule was in space for 12 days, conducted experiments and had later successfully re-entered the earth's atmosphere," Nair said. "It is the best achievement anybody can dream of." |
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Hi.. I'm new!!!
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i am new too
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