Monday, November 29, 2010

Haas Football Weekend 2


The second Haas Thanksgiving Football Weekend kicked off the day after Thanksgiving, giving everyone a chance to sleep off turkey and corn...and a lot of cookies....
East Carolina took on Southern Methodist University on an unseasonalbly warm day in Greenville, NC in a battle of the "U"'s. ECU vs SMU....neither team remembered to bring their defense and they were both throwing the ball all over the field...The Mustangs threw it a little better and SMU went home with a 41-38 overtime win...East Carolina may have lost but they did better than Pitt. The Panthers donned their Nike "Pro Combat" uniforms, ran out onto the grass at Heinz Field in front of 63,000 rabid fans ready for the Backyard Brawl and promptly stank up the place....West Virgina walked all over the home team 35-10.
Starting off 0-2 is not good but it is not the end of the world either!
On Saturday, the UFL held its championship at historic Rosenblatt Stadium in Omaha, Nebrasks. It was cold and crisp and the weather gave neither team an advantage...Las Vegas vs Florida...not exactly hailing from the snow belt...LOL
It was a great game that came down to a blocked field goal and the Locos hung on for their second straight UFL championship 23-20! Like the Green Bay Packers, they have won the first two championships....Having said that, I think that is all Las Vegas and Green Bay have in common.....
On Sunday, my Steelers jumped out to a 13-0 lead on the Buffalo Bills and then decided to take a nap in the second half! The Bills fought back to tie it at 13 before Pittsburgh hit a field goal to take a 16-13 lead late. But the Bills, sporting awful throwback unis, fought back and hit a field goal at the buzzer to tie it.
In OT, Bills receiver Fred Smith dropped the winning touchdown in the endzone and the Steelers decieded enough of this foolisheness. A long grinding drive later, the Steelers hit a field goal and won 19-16, giving me a 2-2 record so far this Thanksgiving.
Then came the Grey Cup: Canada's Super Bowl with the Saskatchewan Roughriders seeking to avenge last years loss to Montreal when they had too many men on the field. The weather was cold in Edmonton but the action melted the ice.
Unfortunatley, the Riders came up a little short, 21-18.
Then we heard Lesilie Neilson died.
When it rains, it pours.
But it was Thanksgiving and we counted our blessings---we weren't TSA perverts forced to look through someone's flab rolls at the airport!

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

TSA morale falling

It appears most TSA agents do not like the "enhanced pat-downs" either...


TSA Enhanced Pat Downs : The Screeners Point Of View
11.18.2010 Author: flyingfish Posted in Uncategorized
In the past few weeks since the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) implemented its new “enhanced” pat down procedures there has been considerable backlash from the traveling public. This backlash has been loud and angry … but what is not heard or seen in the media is the quiet resentment of this new policy within the TSA.
A few days ago I contacted 20 TSA Transportation Security Officers (TSO) to ask their opinions of the new “enhanced” pat downs. Of the 20 I reached out to, 17 responded. All 17 who responded are at airports where the new “enhanced” pat down is in place … and the responses were all the same, that front line TSOs do not like the new pat downs and that they do not want to perform them. I expected most to not like the pat downs … but what I didn’t expect was that all 17 mentioned their morale being broken down.
Each of the 17 TSA TSOs that responded to me detailed their personal discomfort in conducting the new pat downs, with more than one stating that it is likely they are more uncomfortable performing the pat down than passengers are receiving them.
Some comments from these TSOs include:
“It is not comfortable to come to work knowing full well that my hands will be feeling another man’s private parts, their butt, their inner thigh. Even worse is having to try and feel inside the flab rolls of obese passengers and we seem to get a lot of obese passengers!”
“Do you think I want to go to work and place my hands between women’s legs and touch their breasts for a few hours? For starters, I am attracted to men, not women and if I was attracted to women, it would not be the large number of passengers I handle daily that have a problem understanding what personal hygiene is.”
“Yesterday a passenger told me to keep my hands off his penis or he’d scream. Is this how a 40 year old man in business attire acts? He’ll scream? My 3 year old can get away with saying he’ll scream, but a 40 something business man? I am a professional doing my job, whether I agree with this current policy or not, I am doing my job. I do not want to be here all day touching penises.”
“Being a TSO means often being verbally abused, you let the comments roll off and check the next person, however when a woman refuses the scanner then comes to me and tells me that she feels like I am molesting her, that is beyond verbal abuse. I asked the woman if she thought I like touching other women all day and she told me that I probably did or I wouldn’t be with the TSA. I just want to tell these people that I feel disgusted feeling other peoples private parts, but I cannot because I am a professional.”
“I was asked by some guy if I got excited touching scrotums at the airport and if it gave me a power thrill. I felt like vomiting when he asked that. This is not a turn on for me to touch me it is in fact a huge turn off. There is a big difference between how I pat passengers down and a molester molesting people.”
Aside from the issue of TSA TSOs being required to physically touch passengers in places they do not want to be touching them during the ‘enhanced’ pat down, morale is decreasing for front line TSOs, due in part to an increase in verbal abuse. Each of the 17 TSOs who responded to me detailed a new level of verbal abuse they are experiencing at work.
The TSA has experienced a high level of turn over since its inception, however its turnover rate has decreased recently. With this decrease in morale, caused directly by a change in TSA policy, it is likely to begin experiencing a higher than average turn over again … which will further decrease the effectiveness of airport security.

Remember I told you about this.....


Tensions on the Korean peninsula: What you need to knowBy Zachary Roth

By Zachary Roth zachary Roth – 2 hrs 34 mins ago
Tensions are near the boiling point on the Korean peninsula after North Korea shelled a South Korean island, killing two South Korean soldiers. What's behind this latest spike in hostilities between the longtime adversaries, and just how concerned should we be -- especially since we have 25,000 military personnel stationed in South Korea? Here's what you need to know.
What happened, exactly?
Early Tuesday, North Korea fired artillery shells at the South Korean island of Yeonpyeong, which sits off the disputed maritime border between the two countries. The attack killed two South Korean marines and wounded 18 soldiers and civilians. It prompted an exchange of fire between the two sides, involving around 175 artillery shells and lasting about an hour.
The North accused South Korea of having started the exchange by firing shells inside North Korean territory during a set of South Korean military exercises that the North called "war maneuvers." The South denies that charge, saying that its soldiers were merely conducting military drills and that no shots fell in North Korean territory.
The North Korean attack was the first on a civilian area of South Korea since the Korean War.
Why did this happen now?
Tensions have been running high since March, when a South Korean naval vessel in the same area was sunk, killing 46 sailors. Seoul blamed a North Korean torpedo attack, though the North has denied involvement. Then earlier this month, the South Korean navy fired warning shots at a North Korean fishing boat after the craft strayed across the border. The North Korean boat retreated.
Some analysts have linked Tuesday's action by the North to the impoverished nation's need for food. The Obama administration has refused to remove sanctions against the North, imposed in response to its nuclear program. "They see that they can't pressure Washington, so they've taken South Korea hostage again," Choi Jin-wook, a senior researcher with the South Korean Institute for National Unification, told the New York Times. "They're in a desperate situation, and they want food immediately, not next year."
Does this have anything to do with North Korea's leadership situation?
Kim Jong Il, the North's ailing and reclusive leader, is believed to be gradually shifting power over to his son, Kim Jong Un, who in September was promoted to the rank of four-star general.
Some analysts believe the transition has made North Korea eager to demonstrate its military power. Kim Jong Il famously employed an aggressive "military first" approach to politics, and spoke of turning the North Korean army into a "pillar of the revolution." The regime may now want to show the world that the same military-first policies will prevail under his successor. "The son's power base is derived from the military, and the power of [the] military is greater than ever," Cheong Seong-Chang, a fellow at the Seoul-based Sejong Institute, told Time magazine.
How has the world reacted?
The United States, Britain and Japan have condemned the North Korean attack, with America calling on the North to "halt its belligerent action." China said it was "concerned," while Russia has urged restraint and a peaceful solution to the crisis.
What's the U.S. role in all this?
The United States wants North Korea to resume the six-party talks on the country's nuclear program. The talks, which also include Russia, China, Japan in addition to America and the two Koreas, were launched in 2003, after North Korea opted out of the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty. The talks' aim is to arrive at a peaceful diplomatic agreement to contain the North's nuclear capacity -- but the talks have been in limbo since 2008, and earlier this week, an American scientist revealed that he had been shown a sophisticated North Korean nuclear enrichment facility, throwing the resumption of the talks into further doubt.
Today's incident adds another obstacle, experts say.
The revelation of the uranium facility and Tuesday's attack on South Korea may both be expressions of the North's concern that the Obama administration and its allies are unlikely to offer concessions such as the easing of sanctions. "I think they realize they can't expect anything from Washington or Seoul for several months, so I think they made the provocation," Choi Jin-wook, senior researcher at the Korea Institute of National Unification, told CNN.
How scared should we be?
South Korea has placed its military on "crisis status," and Prime Minister Lee Myung-bak has reportedly ordered strikes on North Korea's missile base if the North makes any "indication of further provocation." It appears unlikely, though not impossible, that further military action will result.
South Korea does not have an active nuclear weapons program. North Korea is believed already to have eight to 12 nuclear bombs. But nuclear issues aside, any military conflict between the countries could badly destabilize the region, especially if the North Korean government were to collapse -- an outcome that some South Koreans fear could lead to a Chinese takeover.


Now refer back to blog entry dated August 15, 2010

Friday, November 19, 2010

A step in the right direction....

....but we still have a lot of ground to cover!


TSA:Pilots to be exempt from some security checks
Associated Press Associated Press
WASHINGTON – The Transportation Security Administration has agreed to allow airline pilots to skip security scanning and pat-downs, pilot organizations said Friday. Pilots traveling in uniform on airline business will be allowed to pass security by presenting two photo IDs, one from their company and one from the government, to be checked against a secure flight crew database, officials at the pilot groups said.
"This looks good. It's basically what we've been after for 10 years," says Sam Mayer, a spokesman for the Allied Pilots Association at American Airlines, the union that raised objections to the new screening process about two weeks ago. "Pilots are not the threat here; we're the target."
TSA said in a news release Friday that pilots would begin seeing changes immediately in security screening, but did not specify what they would be.
The Coalition for Airline Pilot Associations, a trade organization for pilot unions, also described the new program.
It is an expansion of a program tested at three airports, the organizations said.
The decision comes amid recent outrage over invasive pat-downs and full body imaging machines used for screening at airports.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

TSA feeling the heat....


It looks like the TSA is starting to give way...note paragraph three..it probably will upset the pedophile lobby....


“Some of these technological responses to terrorism really start to seem like placebos,” says Susan Herman, President of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and law professor at Brooklyn Law School. “To the extent that people understand what the benefits are, and the invasion of privacies are, they can make more informed decisions about giving up their privacy for machines that make them feel better, but don’t do the job of preventing any terrorist device from getting on an airplane.”

Professor Herman says the scanners present a significant threat to privacy.
“This technology can go right up a woman’s skirt," and it can reveal medical conditions via the presence of an adult diaper, a colostomy bag, or other personal medical equipment – information that individuals have the right to keep private, she adds.

The TSA has relented in the face of some complaints. It announced Tuesday that it will no longer screen children under 12.

Chris Calabrese, a privacy lobbyist for the ACLU, says “the balance seems to be missing here.”
“Until it’s restored, I think TSA is going to continue to hear these concerns," he adds. "This is pretty far outside the norm of what people expect when they travel, even in these days. We’ve certainly seen the normal shift over the past decade, but there’s still a line, and both these procedures are on the wrong side of that line.”

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

"Don't touch my junk."


Time to make a stand, America!


If Rosa Parks can do it, so can we! Invasive searchs are illegal, do not work, won't catch terrorists, and only succeed in turning Americans against each other.

November 24 is National Opt Out day. Time to bring it all to a halt!


http://www.optoutday.com/



http://johnnyedge.blogspot.com/2010/11/these-events-took-place-roughly-between.html

Monday, November 8, 2010

How to win friends and influence people....


After getting trounced in the midterm elections, watching his president grovel before India, and having some no name "security" offical try to bar American reporters from covering the conference, Robert Gibbs needed to blow off some steam apparently....
Do you think he is still upset about NC State losing to East Carolina? :-)
Wait until the G20 summit starts....

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Election Day Tidal Wave!


Election day 2010 and the Democratic party lost control of the House and nearly the Senate. President Obama all but fled to India and the Tea Party made its presence felt.
Mr. Hope and Change did not deliver so why is everyone in the Democratic Party so surprised? You force "health care" on people, you bail out corrupt corporations and threaten to raise taxes.....
...if any of those people ever held a real job in their lives, they might understand.
Might be hard to do though...unemployment is stuck at 9.6%.
And they wonder why the electorate turned on them....