Thursday, April 05, 2018

Lunch video-----Overloaded C-5 Takes Every...Single...Inch Of The Runway To Takeoff | Frontline Videos | Raw, Uncut, Real Videos From The Frontlines

Overloaded C-5 Takes Every...Single...Inch Of The Runway To Takeoff | Frontline Videos | Raw, Uncut, Real Videos From The Frontlines:
WONDER WHAT THE CONVERSATION IN THE COCKPIT WAS LIKE...
In this video, you'll see a C-5 that is flying on their calculations alone with no option to abort after a certain point. Filmed at MSSS (Illapango International Airport) in El Salvador, this Galaxy crew had quite a white-knuckle takeoff. 
Probably maxed out on weight and facing a tailwind, these guys seriously took every inch of that runway to takeoff. 
Check it out. It's pretty sweat-inducing. 

Noon-toon


Disney Princess Rips Planned Parenthood: ‘Abortion Doesn’t Empower’ Women

Disney Princess Rips Planned Parenthood: ‘Abortion Doesn’t Empower’ Women:
Image result for flickr commons images Disney Logo
"A former Disney World princess who had an abortion condemns the recent controversial Planned Parenthood tweet calling for a “Disney princess who’s had an abortion,” by slamming the feminist narrative that abortion “empowers” women."

New Study Confirms Early TV Exposure is the Gateway to Obesity and Unhealthy Habits | The Daily Sheeple

New Study Confirms Early TV Exposure is the Gateway to Obesity and Unhealthy Habits | The Daily Sheeple:
We’ve known for a very long time that watching television has a profound effect on brainwaves and states of consciousness, and that the more television people watch, the more likely they are to be obese, unhealthy and dumbed down. 
This is how TV works.
Television is part of daily life for so many people, and parents and child caregivers are often quick to use the TV as an activity for toddlers and even babies, at a time when their young brains are developing at a rapid rate. It’s one thing for adults to choose to destroy themselves with television, but kids don’t really choose, the television is so seductive that once it is on, young children cannot manage to ignore it.
Television is a drug for children, automatically gripping their minds and holding their consciousness captive.
But what is it really doing? 
...The study, entitled, Prospective associations between toddler televiewing and subsequent lifestyle habits in adolescence, notes the following highlights:
  • Excessive early televiewing was associated with subsequent risks in adolescence.
  • Excessive early televiewing was associated with later risk of being overweight.
  • Excessive early televiewing was associated with later risk of poor eating habits.
  • Excessive early televiewing was associated with later risk of skipping breakfast.
  • Excessive early televiewing predicted a later risk of being less engaged at school.
The conclusions are straightforward..."
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Gun Violence Studies Biased, Used to Force Agenda | National Review

Gun Violence Studies Biased, Used to Force Agenda | National Review
"But we should not allow gun-control advocates to medicalize guns as a public-health concern.
One of the common talking points that liberals throw around in the gun debate is that Republicans have banned even studying gun violence. 
So you get headlines such as “Lift the Federal Ban on Gun Violence Research” (the New Republic), or “Why Gun Violence Research Has Been Shut Down for 20 Years” (the Washington Post’s Wonkblog), or “GOP Chairman: Congress Should Rethink CDC Ban on Gun Violence Research” (The Hill), or “What’s Missing from the Gun Debate. 
It’s Simple: Science” (an op-ed in Politico).
The reality is different, and it illustrates two contending views of how America should be governed.
To start with, nobody has been banned from anything, in the way we typically think of government bans. 
See the source imageNo law prohibits private citizens, universities, private foundations, or state governments from conducting studies of the subject.
 As the Federalist‘s David Harsanyi has noted:
Numerous states and private entities fund peer-reviewed studies and other research on gun violence...
...Moreover, the “ban” in question applies only to the federal government’s Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 
Nothing bars other arms of the federal government from collecting or disseminating information about gun crimes. 
Indeed, the data collected by the federal government is often the foundation for arguments made about guns, by all sides.
 The Justice Department’s Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS), which bills itself as “the United States’ primary source for criminal justice statistics,” has a mission:
To collect, analyze, publish, and disseminate information on crime, criminal offenders, victims of crime, and the operation of justice systems at all levels of government. 
These data are critical to federal, state, and local policymakers in combating crime and ensuring that justice is both efficient and evenhanded.
...But we shouldn’t be delegating such important social questions to agenda-driven advocates operating behind the illusion that they are doing disinterested scientific research..."
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#1 This day 1950-----Teresa Brewer Put Another Nickel In Music, Music, Music 1950

CEI Commends EPA for Reviewing CAFE Rules | Competitive Enterprise Institute

CEI Commends EPA for Reviewing CAFE Rules | Competitive Enterprise Institute
See the source image"... the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released the result of its mid-term evaluation. As a result of the EPA’s review and analysis, EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt announced the current greenhouse-gas emission standards for light-duty vehicles for model year 2022-2025 are not appropriate and should be revised.
The Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI) commends Administrator Pruitt for taking this step forward to ensure the future of automobiles will be cars that are safe, affordable, and what consumers want to buy. 
CEI has followed the CAFE issue for decades, which includes a major court victory in 1992 regarding CAFE's lethal effects. 
CEI experts said the following about today’s announcement.
CEI General Counsel Sam Kazman on CAFE’s mandates and safety: 
CAFE’s lethal effects on vehicle crashworthiness were documented by analysts and a federal appeals court years ago. Despite this, CAFE has remained in force, getting even more stringent and more deadly over the years. We hope that the Trump Administration will finally take account of those effects and start to liberalize this program.
Director of CEI's Center for Energy and Environment Myron Ebell on CAFE’s impact on consumer choice:
EPA’s announcement is good news for consumers who care about safety, performance, and size, as well as fuel economy in the vehicles they drive. This is the first step in many years toward reducing government control over what kinds of cars people can choose to buy. 
CEI Senior Fellow Marlo Lewis on CAFE’s costs and impact on climate:
Fuel economy mandates restrict consumer choice, add thousands of dollars to the cost of new vehicles, and limit vehicle safety. Contrary to the program's original rationale, the world is not running out of oil. And even if you worry about global warming, fuel efficiency standards are a stupendously inefficient climate change mitigation strategy. Congress should end the reign of bureaucrats and put consumers back in charge of telling automakers what kinds of cars and trucks to produce.
More from CEI on the CAFE issue here

You ought to know!


Amending the Constitution is a Hard Thing to Do | National Review

Amending the Constitution is a Hard Thing to Do | National Review:

Image result for flickr commons images Article 5 U.S. Constitution"Article V outlines the procedure by which amendments to the Constitution may be adopted. It is, to put it bluntly, a high bar to clear:
The Congress, whenever two thirds of both houses shall deem it necessary, shall propose amendments to this Constitution . . . which . . . shall be valid to all intents and purposes, as part of this Constitution, when ratified by the legislatures of three fourths of the several states, or by conventions in three fourths thereof.
You read that correctly: two-thirds of both chambers plus three-fourths of the state legislatures must approve an amendment before it becomes law. Repealing the Second Amendment is not going to happen any time soon.
Of course, everybody knows it won’t be repealed — there is no need to belabor the point."

Why are they getting tax dollars from us?-----Planned Parenthood's political group failed to accurately disclose $120G in support of Clinton, Dems, FEC says | Fox News

Planned Parenthood's political group failed to accurately disclose $120G in support of Clinton, Dems, FEC says | Fox News:
"Planned Parenthood’s political arm in Wisconsin has been fined for failing to appropriately report nearly $120,000 in independent expenditures allocated in support of Democratic candidates Hillary Clinton and Russ Feingold during 2016 elections.
The Federal Election Commission (FEC) found discrepancies in Planned Parenthood Advocates of Wisconsin’s October 2016 report that claimed over $133,000 worth of expenditures on political candidates, an FEC report said.
Nearly $120,000 spent in August on Clinton and Democrat Feingold -- who tried but failed to unseat Republican Sen. Ron Johnson in 2016 -- were never shown in any previous 48-hour filing up until the October report, two months later when it was required..."
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AM Fruitcake


History for April 5

See the source image
History for April 5 - On-This-Day.com:
Thomas Hobbes 1588, Elihu Yale(slave trader, university founder) 1649, Joseph Lister 1827 - British surgeon, inventor (Listerine mouthwash)
Image result for Thomas Hobbes QuotesSee the source imageImage result for Joseph Lister Inventions

Booker T. Washington 1856 - Educator, author (Up From Slavery), Bette (Ruth Elizabeth) Davis 1908 - Actress ("Dangerous", "What Ever Happened to Baby Jane?"), Gregory Peck 1916 - Actor ("To Kill a Mockingbird [1962]", "The Guns of Navarone", "Captain Horatio Hornblower")
Image result for Booker T. Washington QuotesImage result for Bette (Ruth Elizabeth) DavisImage result for Gregory Peck

1614 - American Indian Pocahontas married English colonist John Rolfe in Virginia.
Image result for Pocahontas married English colonist John Rolfe

1792 - U.S. President George Washington cast the first presidential veto. The measure was for apportioning representatives among the states.
Image result for President George Washington cast the first presidential veto.

1887 - Anne Sullivan taught Helen Keller the meaning of the word "water" as spelled out in the manual alphabet.
Image result for Anne Sullivan taught Helen Keller the meaning of the word "water"

1923 - Firestone Tire and Rubber Company began the first regular production of balloon tires.
Image result for 1923 - Firestone Tire and Rubber Company began the first regular production of balloon tires.

1951 - Americans Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were sentenced to death for committing espionage for the Soviet Union.
Image result for julius and ethel rosenberg guilty

1955 - Winston Churchill resigned as British prime minister.
Image result for Winston Churchill resigned as British prime minister.

1985 - John McEnroe said "any man can beat any woman at any sport, especially tennis."
Image result for John McEnroe said "any man can beat any woman at any sport, especially tennis."

1998 - The Akashi Kaikyo Bridge in Japan opened becoming the largest suspension bridge in the world. It links Shikoku and Honshu. The bridge cost about $3.8 billion.
Image result for Akashi Kaikyo Bridge

Wednesday, April 04, 2018

LIBERTY REVIEW

LIBERTY REVIEW:

https://libertyreview76.blogspot.com/2018/04/april-4-2018-revolutionary-changes-by.html

Revolutionary Changes

By Tammy Derouin

Sometimes it can be difficult to notice changes in our circumstances or our surroundings, especially if they occur slowly and over time. Sometimes it takes removing ourselves from the situation to see the difference. If we live in an area for a long time we understand and are aware of changes. To someone who has moved away and comes back, the changes may seem more monumental. By living in the location and watching the changes take place, day by day, we adapt and accept our evolving surroundings.

Image result for library of congress  Signing of the Declaration of Independence
Changes can be both good and bad. The key is identifying the difference between the two. What may seem harmless at the time could be the beginning of a disaster. It's sort of like getting a minor cut. You know if you don't take care of it, clean it and wrap it, it could become infected and turn into something much worse. We all ignore the little things from time to time. When we look back, we realize how much easier life would have been had we just addressed it and moved on. It's those little reminders which have a way of keeping us in check.

Unfortunately, there has been a big push, over the past too many years, to alter what we know is right. Those who have an agenda to completely alter the American way of life and the foundation of our beliefs have tried to slip many unhealthy changes into our society. They want to alter how we think, hoping it will change how we believe and act.

New ideas can be the start of revolutionary changes. New ideas or concepts should be debated. Facts need to be presented and understood as facts for a healthy debate. Make believe and false information to push an agenda hurts everyone in the long run......


The way we were-----Gary Lewis and the Playboys - This Diamond Ring

Boob-tube-----TV Censored Bloopers (1981) Dick Clark

State Opioid Taxes Would Needlessly Harm Patients | Economics21

State Opioid Taxes Would Needlessly Harm Patients | Economics21:
"Americans face a daily barrage of news of the latest casualties in the deadly scourge of opioid addiction.
The estimated 115 opioid overdose deaths that happen in the United States every day cut across demographic and class lines, affecting communities across the country.
More than two million Americans are caught in the grips of a dependency on prescription painkillers and street pills, with little sign of decline in most states.
...wide-scale taxation is a recipe for increased suffering and black market activity.  
In addition to these unintended consequences, any increase in medication costs will raise the costs of Medicaid and Medicare.
Over the past few months, lawmakers in some of the states most affected by the opioid epidemic have proposed taxing pharmaceutical companies for bringing painkillers to market.
...Within the overwhelming majority of opioid users that are not addicted, most patients would either absorb the higher cost or endure increased pain. 
An “effective” opioid tax, then, would punish millions of Americans for whom opiods are the only cure for immense physical pain..."
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