Tag Archives: pakistan

Would-Be bin Laden assassin detained in Pakistan

Apparently, 52 year-old Gary Faulkner decided to head to Afghanistan with a sword, pistol and some night vision gear and assassinate the Taliban's head honcho. He was arrested in the Chitral region of Pakistan on Sunday night. “We initially laughed when he told us that he wanted to kill Osama bin Laden,” said police officer Mumtaz Ahmad Khan. But he said when officers seized the pistol, the sword and night-vision equipment, “our suspicion grew.” added by: Andrew_Douglas

FAA Under Pressure to Open US Skies to Drones

WASHINGTON (AP) – Unmanned aircraft have proved their usefulness and reliability in the war zones of Afghanistan and Iraq. Now the pressure's on to allow them in the skies over the United States. The Federal Aviation Administration has been asked to issue flying rights for a range of pilotless planes to carry out civilian and law-enforcement functions but has been hesitant to act. Officials are worried that they might plow into airliners, cargo planes and corporate jets that zoom around at high altitudes, or helicopters and hot air balloons that fly as low as a few hundred feet off the ground. On top of that, these pilotless aircraft come in a variety of sizes. Some are as big as a small airliner, others the size of a backpack. The tiniest are small enough to fly through a house window. more at link… So, about a year ago I reported on drones in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Somalia and stated that it was only a matter of time before they have them flying our 'friendly' skies, but I was called a “crazy, tin-foil nutter,” but that's ok…I've done the research and knowledge is power. Today, drones are mostly used for blowing women and children to bits by some pimple-faced geek with a PlayStation controller, but don't worry, they don't want to kill you. LOL “Those Who Sacrifice Liberty For Security Deserve Neither.” Benjamin Franklin added by: rodstradamus

Pentagon ‘Discovers’ Huge Lithium Deposit in Afganistan

Bob Lutz, GM’s previous product development chief who intro’d the Volt. Image credit: hybridcars.com Here’s a story that almost analyzes itself. As quoted in the New York Times story, U.S. Discovers Vast Riches of Minerals in Afghanistan ” “There is stunning potential here,” Gen. David H. Petraeus, commander of the United States Central Command, said in an interview on Saturday. “There are a lot of ifs, of course, but I think potentially it is hugely significant.”” Does it m… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Pentagon ‘Discovers’ Huge Lithium Deposit in Afganistan

Will the White House Press Corps Get Wimpier Without Helen Thomas?

Jon Ward of the Daily Caller, until recently a White House reporter for the Washington Times, wrote a piece for Sunday’s Washington Post titled “Why we’ll miss Helen Thomas.” But Ward also interviewed some White House press colleagues who suggested Thomas had ventured across a line into explicit advocacy and argument: “Helen had always been a tough, no-nonsense interrogator of presidents and press secretaries,” said Ann Compton, who has reported on the past six presidents for ABC News. “About a decade ago, when she shed her role as reporter and began a career at Hearst as an opinion columnist, Helen’s questions began to cross the line into advocacy.” Ward wrote that as “zany and obvious” her advocacy had become, he wondered if other reporters couldn’t learn something about a little bit tougher on press secretary Robert Gibbs. Fox reporter Major Garrett admitted to Ward “that until the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico became a major story, the White House press corps (himself included) had often failed to adequately hold Gibbs’s feet to the fire.” He explained: “There had long been an unnecessary deference and sort of delicacy and decorum about waiting to be called upon, and rigidly adhering to what is essentially a manufactured process that Robert sought to achieve at the very beginning,” Garrett said. He added that the dynamic of the press room works best when reporters are free to follow up and really push the press secretary, but “that has been extremely rare, for whatever reason.” Ward offered a few examples he felt showed excessive deference: A couple of incidents come to mind. At a briefing just one week after Obama’s inauguration, for example, only two reporters pressed Gibbs for details about the president’s knowledge of a drone strike in Pakistan — the first military action of the new administration — and they received no backing from colleagues in the room when he refused to discuss it. And more recently, in the June 3 briefing, Gibbs faced only a few scattered questions on the announcement by Colorado Senate candidate Andrew Romanoff that a top White House official had dangled three job possibilities in front of him should he drop his challenge to the incumbent Democrat, Michael Bennet. Ward didn’t explore the idea that the bosses of these White House reporters weren’t truly interested in pressing Gibbs. Even as several reporters asked for answers on job offers to Romanoff and Pennsylvania’s Joe Sestak, the networks never put the non-answers of Gibbs on the air to create pressure for more disclosure. Persistent questions by reporters alone doesn’t move the news needle. Their bosses also have to find it essential to get answers out of Gibbs.

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Will the White House Press Corps Get Wimpier Without Helen Thomas?

FIFA World Cup 2010 Schedule Pakistan Standard Time [PST]

Here are the detail schedules of all the football matches in 19th FIFA Football World Cup 2010 South Africa according to Pakistan standard time (PST)

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FIFA World Cup 2010 Schedule Pakistan Standard Time [PST]

Conservative-Bashing Hypocrites at WaPo Publish Smerconish Attacking Cable News for ‘Polarized Politics’

A month ago, The Washington Post editorial page was dropping rhetorical bombs on conservative Republican Ken Cuccinelli for investigating ClimateGate. The headline at the top of the paper’s May 7 editorial page (now scrubbed online) was “Mr. Cuccinelli’s witch hunt: Virginia’s attorney general declares war on academic freedom and climate reality.” It began: WE KNEW Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli II (R) had declared war on reality. Now he has declared war on the freedom of academic inquiry as well. We hope that Gov. Robert F. McDonnell (R) and the University of Virginia have the spine to repudiate Mr. Cuccinelli’s abuse of the legal code. If they do not, the quality of Virginia’s universities will suffer for years to come. That’s an unsigned staff editorial, not some fulminating columnist with a byline. But these very same Washington Post editorial page staffers offered space on Friday to alleged conservative Michael Smerconish to trash cable news bookers at Fox News and CNN for wrecking America with “polarized politics.”   The producer asked whether CNN could identify me as a conservative. “Well, if someone who supports harsh interrogation, thinks we should be out of Iraq but in Pakistan, doesn’t care much if two guys hook up, and believes we should legalize pot and prostitution is conservative, fine,” I replied. More silence… Another time, a Fox News producer invited me to appear on a program to discuss then-candidate Barack Obama. I was told they were “looking for someone who would say he’s cocky and that his cockiness will hurt him, if not in the primary, definitely in the general election against McCain.” I declined. A few hours later, the same producer made a new pitch: “What about a debate off the top of the show on whether or not Hillary is trustworthy? We have someone who says she is and we’re looking for someone who says she isn’t.” The message of both episodes is clear: There is no room for nuance. Either you offer a consistent (possibly artificial) ideological view or you often don’t get a say…. All of which leaves more elected officials beholden to the fringe elements of their parties, which in turn means less gets done. It’s a self-fulfilling prophecy, and it is robbing our televisions and radios of the substantive dialogue the country desperately needs, while leaving our politics a petty and unproductive mess. Other than favoring the legalized pot and prostitutes, Smerconish is often a supporter of cringing moderation, so cringing and opportunistic that you switch parties when your polls look bad. Recall Smerconish in April helping NBC proclaim a devastated Republican Party when Arlen Specter swapped parties: “The Republican Party in the aftermath of the presidential race should have come to him and tried to clone him. They need more Arlen Specters.” It’s Specter right now who looks like he’s leaving politics as a petty and unproductive mess.

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Conservative-Bashing Hypocrites at WaPo Publish Smerconish Attacking Cable News for ‘Polarized Politics’

Vuvuzela: SA football’s beautiful noise

What’s plastic, a metre long, brightly coloured and sounds like an elephant? It’s the vuvuzela, the noise-making trumpet of South African football fans, and it’s come to symbolise the sport in the country. It’s an instrument, but not always a musical one. Describing the atmosphere in a stadium packed with thousands of fans blowing their vuvuzelas is difficult. Up close it’s an elephant, sure, but en masse the sound is more like a massive swarm of very angry bees. And when there’s action near the goal mouth, those bees go really crazy. To get that sound out requires lip flexibility and lung strength – in short, a fair amount of technique. So be sure to get in some practice before attending a South African football match, or you the sound you produce may cause some amusement in the seats around you! Vuvuzela supplier Boogieblast offers this advice: “Put your lips inside the mouthpiece and almost make a ‘farting’ sound. Relax your cheeks and let your lips vibrate inside the mouthpiece. As soon as you get that trumpeting sound, blow harder until you reach a ridiculously loud ‘boogying blast’. Read here

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Vuvuzela: SA football’s beautiful noise

FIFA World Cup South Africa – 2010

The stage is set for football lovers for the biggest event in history of the sports where teams from 32 countries are going to battle hard to prove their worth. FIFA World Cup 2010 is being played in South Africa, from June 11 to July 11, 2010 and football fans have already gathered there to watch the thrilling game and the rest are glued to different media channels to find what is happening. The passion for Football is certainly sweeping every one in Pakistan this time, particularly the sportsmen and the youth. In addition to conventional media, Pakistani football fans are going online to find all sorts of information about the championship, including multimedia content such as brief video clips of stars and highlights from games from earlier championships. Many Internet sites have sprung up which are reporting each and every thing about the World Cup. “The hype this time is of an entirely different order,” says Zahir Khan, footballer and a student in Business and Information Technology. Earlier football fan frenzy started when the 18 carat gold FIFA World Cup

World Cup Hype

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World Cup Hype

Sania Mirza Made A Winning Return After The Wedding

India’s Sania Mirza has made a winning comeback after her wedding to Pakistan cricketer Shoaib Malik, when she defeated Chan Yung-Jan with a score of 6-1 and 6-4 in the first round. The India’s tennis star player spent several months off from tennis to focus on her personal life and got wed to Malik in April. Their marriage went through a lot of controversy but no one can stop them from pursuing it. Mirza has now return to play tennis and she was able to quickly recover her rhythm on the Birmingham grass court as she swatted Chan of Taipei during their match. Sania Mirza Made A Winning Return After The Wedding is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading