Brown: ‘We answered questions’

At this point, the County Board of Commissioners has done everything possible to be as open and transparent in relation to the Core Infrastructure SPLOST referendum.

There have been two critics for the proposal, Mr. Dennis Chase and Mr. Paul Lentz, who have consistently stated that they do not support it. The chief complaint was that the county was not giving them answers to their questions.

The county government has given both men access to county staff and any documentation they requested, but they continued to state they were not receiving answers.

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via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/10-22-2013/brown-%E2%80%98we-answered-questions%E2%80%99

Chase: ‘You answered too late’

A discussion of questions and answers doesn’t sound like an editorial topic. However, recent exchanges with the Fayette County Commissioners have changed my mind.

Perhaps it will be easier to understand my concerns by using an analogy.

Five hours after the final exam, a senior walks into his high school teacher’s room and hands in his test. Proudly he says, “I have answered all of the questions so now I can graduate.”

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via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/10-22-2013/chase-%E2%80%98you-answered-too-late%E2%80%99

Bicyclists vs. all others: How about no-bike zones?

In reference to an article written about a young lady by the name of Amy Hill, who was hit by a golf cart driven by a juvenile, I would like to give Ms. Hill an alternative viewpoint.

I will give her the benefit of the doubt in regards to how the young cart driver was operating her vehicle.

Ms. Hill states she was heading west on McIntosh Road, in front of Huddleston Elementary school, going 26 miles an hour. That stretch of road is on flat ground starting to go down a long hill with a blind curve at the bottom of the hill. Then the road turns into an incline.

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via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/10-22-2013/bicyclists-vs-all-others-how-about-no-bike-zones

Bike crash and defensive driving

While reading the story of the triathlete, Ms. Hill, who crashed with a young golf cart driver in PTC, a few thoughts come to mind.

First off, I agree with Ms. Hill that anyone allowed to drive a golf cart on city paths without direct supervision should at least have a driving learner’s permit which would require passing a basic rules of the road test.

But more to the point is an old term, defensive driving.

I do not know if this is what is taught in Driver’s Ed these days, but it was a primary phrase when I was receiving instruction way back in the ‘70s.

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via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/10-22-2013/bike-crash-and-defensive-driving

Leonora Daskawicz, 95

Leonora “Lottie” Daskawicz (nee Rydzenski), 95, passed away peacefully Sunday, October 20, 2013.

She was born, January 1, 1918 in New York City and has been a resident of Peachtree City, Ga. since August 2010.

She was a loving and devoted wife, mother and grandmother. She was predeceased by her husband of 50 years, Peter and her daughter, Carolyn Snyder.

She is survived by her daughters, Jean (Marty) Guinup and Lorraine (Joseph) Conant and son-in-law, Jim Snyder. She is also survived by 8 grandchildren, 10 great grandchildren and 4 great great grandchildren.

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via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/10-22-2013/leonora-daskawicz-95

David Charles Murphy, Sr., 62

David Charles Murphy, Sr., 62, passed away October 20, 2013.

He was a 1969 graduate of Sylvan Hills High School and received a degree at University of Georgia in psychology. He retired as senior vice president with 20+ years at Gate Gourmet. He recently relocated from Fayetteville to his dream home in the mountains of North Georgia.

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via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/10-22-2013/david-charles-murphy-sr-62

Robin Higgins, 57, of Fayetteville

Robin Higgins, 57, of Fayetteville, passed away October 13, 2013.

She was preceded in death by her husband Perry Higgins; brother Brant Adams and niece Mandy Lovett.

She is survived by her parents Lawrence and Emily Adams of Fayetteville; sisters Kristi Lovett and her husband Gary of Fayetteville and Paige Adams of Fayetteville; niece Brittany Brooks and her husband Keith of Senoia; nephew Cory Adams of Fayetteville; aunt Kathleen Garner of Fayetteville and several cousins.

There will be no local services.

Carl J Mowell & Son, Fayetteville – www.mowellfuneralhome.com

via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/10-22-2013/robin-higgins-57-fayetteville

France Summons US Ambassador in Snowden Affair

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It’s all for play isn’t it when the French Minister of the Interior Manuel Valls summons the US Ambassador? It’s just for the newspeak and the media on the advice of his spin-doctor to swivel the French public around so much that they won’t know what’s hit them. The National Security Agency will hardly be quaking in its eavesdropping boots since they probably got wind of it long before Valls had even picked up the phone. Anyhow, what will come of it all. The NSA is hardly going to either back down or come clean, is it?

Revelations

The French newspaper Le Monde has published an article today in which it reveals that Edward Snowden has provided the proof that there was a massive-scale program carried out between December 2012 and January 2013in which not only suspected terrorists were being listened in on but also members of industry and politicians as well as the general public.

There were 70.3 million calls that were recorded during that period.

Apparently by simply dialing certain numbers the NSA was triggered and the calls were listened into. The codename of the operation was US-985D. It also covered text messages that were sent and not just voice communication.

Valls: NSA Spying Scandal in France

USA

The US has declined to make a comment so far on this matter and has simply referred media to a statement that was issued by the NSA in June regarding the surveillance of foreign countries. It was restated today that the practices “are lawful and conducted under authorities widely known and discussed, and fully debated and authorized by Congress. Their purpose is to obtain foreign intelligence information, including information necessary to thwart terrorist and cyber-attacks against the United States and its allies”. So, the US has been listening in on French politicians to thwart terrorist attacks on those very same allies. Ah! Gotcha! It’s a homegrown version of terrorism yet again. It’s the French state that is pitching against itself in this story. Is that it?

Just as we thought that there was nothing more to come, Edward Snowden’s father returned after a visit to meet with his son to publically announce that there were more revelations. Snowden had been rather quiet for the past few months and rightly so. The media space was taken up with the trials and tribulations of the US shutdown. Now, it’s the best time for new impact.

France’s Reaction

Valls has also requested an explanation from Washington. But, what is happening is nothing more than the tentative vociferations by a country that will do nothing in the face of the USA. What happened last time when the NSA was revealed to have spied on the EU?

Hollande said “we would like an explanation…please” and Merkel said nothing more than “you can’t do that to your friends” or words to that effect. Nobody did much else in the EU as they were more preoccupied by their own state fallout from the sovereign debt-crisis than human rights. To boot, we all know that all countries are doing the self-same thing. Spying is as old as the hills and nearly as old as the other oldest profession. Wouldn’t do any good to shout too much, the people might just hear you leaders and they certainly wouldn’t want questions to be raised about their own eavesdropping on their very own citizens, would they?

Valls stated on Europe-1 Radio station: “Rules are obviously needed when it comes to new communication technologies, and that’s something that concerns every country. If a friendly country, an ally, spies on France or other European countries, then that is completely unacceptable”.

Mais oui, Mais oui, but what are you going to do about it Monsieur Valls? Is there going to be a duel at dawn after knocking back a good drop of claret? At one time Manuel Valls had stated that despite looking at a request for asylum for Edward Snowden he wouldn’t be in favor of it. Then, it really isn’t worth saying anything. Another example of newspeak?

39% of US citizens believe that Snowden is a traitor, while 35% believe him to be a patriot. It would be interesting to see just how many French people agree with those figures of a divided nation. I thought that Putin had granted asylum on the condition that Snowden would cease damaging the US. That has obviously been thrown out of the Siberian window, hasn’t it?

Well, no worries, Snowden is learning Russian and reading Dostoyevsky by all accounts. I wonder what he is leafing through right now? Is it Crime and Punishment or The Idiot?

Looks as if Dostoyevsky was made for Snowden anyhow…it could have been any of his books but maybe one has a more fitting title than any of the others: The Dream of a Ridiculous Man.

Originally posted: France Summons US Ambassador in Snowden Affair

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What MoMo Massacre? Stock Scramble Sends S&P To New Record High

While Cramer exclaimed this morning that his 'cult' stocks were unstoppable, the MoMo names were crushed today (for no good reason) with NFLX, FB, P (late saved by AAPL), and TSLA all monkey-hammered (as rumors of a major option algo going pear-shaped spread). Meanwhile, the S&P rose for the 9th day of the last 10 and closed once again at another all-time high above another magical level – 1750. Markets keyed off the weakness in the jobs report (ignoring the construction spending beat) and ran in a Taper-off-related manner across all assets – USD was battered, Bond yields compressed, Gold and silver soared. Oil prices did not follow the pattern leaking to $97.60 (-3% on the week). Market internals today were very "glitchy" though… EURJPY was in charge once again but VIX remains bid (and higher on the day), and while credit rallied, it remains less exuberant than stocks.

 

The market was a mess today as clearly algos went nuts early on with indices soaring and the widely held momo names bashed (and AAPL's mini flash crash) suggesting someone was knocked out of their market-hedged longs…

 

From last week's lows… this is just unreal…broadly…

 

and in sectors…

 

Treasuries bid…

 

USD sold…

 

But EURJPY ran the world today…

 

Gold and silver in demand… (but oil not so much – not exactly "growthy")…

 

S, we wonder… the Fed did not Taper last time because EVERYONE was expecting it… This time around, not only are the bubbles bigger (stocks and credit), the market technicals worse (fails are up), data is just as nebulous (some bad, some good)… but this time EVERYONE expected No TAPER… are you ready for shOctTaper…

 

Some seem more worried than others… notice the rise in VIX at the open even as stocks surged higher…. and the top came when AAPL flash-crashed… very fishy

 

Charts: Bloomberg

Bonus Chart: NFLX is now losing out to Caracas as best performing idiocy of the year…


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/TsuztTx4KLI/story01.htm Tyler Durden