Friday, April 28, 2006

Congressman Ron Paul Speaks Out AGAINST War With IRAN - April 2006 - Google Video

Congressman Ron Paul Speaks Out AGAINST War With IRAN - April 2006 - Google Video: "Ron Paul addresses the House of Representitives against the bi-partisan tide of war-mongerers. He gives an excellent ... all � historical case on why and how this deception of an 'Iran Threat' is being laid on the public.

He addresses U.S. involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan, the recent elections in Pakistan, the nuclear capabilities of India, Pakistan, North Korea and Israel.

He also goes in depth at the economic consequences to the Average American, and how Congress has forfeighted its 'powers to declare war' to the administrative branch. "

Congressman Ron Paul Speaks Out AGAINST War With IRAN - April 2006 - Google Video

Congressman Ron Paul Speaks Out AGAINST War With IRAN - April 2006 - Google Video:

Go to the link above for a good video from Google that actually makes a bit of sense!!!!

"Ron Paul addresses the House of Representitives against the bi-partisan tide of war-mongerers. He gives an excellent ... all � historical case on why and how this deception of an 'Iran Threat' is being laid on the public.

He addresses U.S. involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan, the recent elections in Pakistan, the nuclear capabilities of India, Pakistan, North Korea and Israel.

He also goes in depth at the economic consequences to the Average American, and how Congress has forfeighted its 'powers to declare war' to the administrative branch. "

Monday, April 24, 2006

Jose Angel Gutierrez - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jose Angel Gutierrez - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia: "Jose Angel Gutierrez, is an attorney and professor at the University of Texas at Arlington. He was a founding member of the Mexican American Youth Organization (MAYO) in San Antonio in 1967, and a founding member and past president of the Raza Unida Party a Mexican-American third party movement that supported candidates for elective office in Texas, California, and other areas of the Southwestern and Midwestern United States."

Thursday, April 20, 2006

Jelly Pizza: Hey, George, Meet Another New Boss Of You....

Jelly Pizza: Hey, George, Meet Another New Boss Of You....: "China recently surpassed Japan to become the largest holder of $833 billion of dollar reserves, most of which is thought to be invested in US Treasuries."

Tuesday, April 04, 2006

CNN.com - France hit by new mass�protests - Apr 4, 2006

CNN.com - France hit by new mass�protests - Apr 4, 2006: "PARIS, France (CNN) -- Protesters took to the streets of France Tuesday for a fifth 'day of action,' hoping to kill a new labor law that will allow employers to more easily hire and fire first-time workers 26 years old and younger.

Protesters were on the streets of 150 French cities. An estimate by the leaders of the union CGT put the turnout at more than three million, but the French Interior Ministry put its crowd estimate at 935,000.

Between one million and three million protesters turned out for a previous day of action on March 28, but the situation has changed. French President Jacques Chirac has signed the proposal into law, but has asked the French parliament to amend it to soften its effects."

Monday, April 03, 2006

TIME Europe Magazine: A Strange Kind of Revolution -- Apr. 03, 2006

TIME Europe Magazine: A Strange Kind of Revolution -- Apr. 03, 2006: "It's all going to blow up.' this prophecy, which often comes up in French conversations, suggests that we understand our own history. Indeed, in France — where the word consensus is not exactly common usage, and the word reformist is considered an insult — confrontation always seems inevitable. Whether the First Employment Contract (cpe), the measure intended to encourage job creation by allowing employers to more easily dismiss the young staffers they take on, is good or bad is beside the point. It took an unusual degree of blindness for Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin to think that the French, who said non to the European constitution, would approve of this 'reform.' After all, it has revealed to young people the extent to which they have been victims of their elders, who have hoarded generous social benefits for the last 20 years. Financing those benefits has created a debt whose annual interest approaches France's total annual income-tax revenues. Against this backdrop, Villepin has managed to drive onto the streets not just youth who are locked out of the labor market, but also civil-servant trade unions, which habitually block reform on the pretext of resistance against what they sloppily label 'ultraliberalism.' "