Tuesday, October 30, 2018

Conveying...

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The emotion of anger is neither good nor bad. Like any emotion, it’s conveying a message, telling you that a situation is upsetting, or unjust, or threatening. 
If your kneejerk reaction to anger is to explode, however, that message never has a chance to be conveyed. So, while it’s perfectly normal to feel angry when you’ve been mistreated or wronged, anger becomes a problem when you express it in a way that harms yourself or others.
If you have a hot temper, you may feel like it’s out of your hands and there’s little you can do to tame the beast. But you have more control over your anger than you think. You can learn to express your emotions without hurting others.

Monday, October 29, 2018

Heart Break...

The cartoonist's homepage, courier-journal.com/opinion
Tree of Life Congregation Synagogue in the affluent Squirrel Hill neighborhood in Pittsburgh.

Suspect...

The cartoonist's homepage, clarionledger.com/opinion

Everything has a tracking device. Your finger print, DNA, Cell Phone, Driver license, CCTV, and  most of all your hate towards others. It's in your face.. book.

Sunday, October 28, 2018

Location....

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Rally...

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We all see things from our own perspectives. In the world of politics, sometimes we look at things through the eyes of politicians who have an agenda. But the visual is worth a thousand words. 
The caravan of immigrants coming through Mexico can be seen as people who are looking for a better life  families with women and children escaping the possible oppression in their own countries. While Mexico offered... but no.
But the issue is 6 Billion people are looking for a better life. Most of what we consider them to be terrorists also want to live a better life and in the process destroy other people's lives. Some think they can obtain government support upon arrival and that would be enough to live on.
Without legal immigration and active screening, those who are forcing their ways through the border with fake stories, like Chinese team earlier who coached 14000 asylum seekers, those who are following the law have no chance.

Turf....

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Petri...

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Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarifsays U.S. support for Saudi Arabia has allowed the kingdom to act with impunity in the Middle East.
"I think the blanket support that the U.S. provides to Saudi Arabia has enabled it to carry out atrocities," Zarif said in an interview with CBS News correspondent Elizabeth Palmer on "Face the Nation" Sunday. 
Saudi Arabia has come under withering international criticism for the killing of dissident journalist Jamal Khashoggi at the hands of Saudi operatives at the country's consulate in Istanbul earlier this month.
Zarif also said U.S. choices have consistently destabilized the Middle East over the past two decades.
"The United States' choices in the Middle East are wrong, and these wrong choices lead to the disaster in our region," Zarif said. 
"We knew that the invasion of Iraq was the wrong choice, although Saddam Hussein was our enemy. 
We knew that the attack against Afghanistan was the wrong choice although Taliban were our enemy. 
We know that the invasion and attack, bombardment of Yemen are wrong choices. But the United States is continuously and persistently on the wrong side."
He didn't mention Syria's destruction by terrorists supported by foreign powers with its humanitarian collapse.

Body_hugging...

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In 1925, boxer shorts were unleashed on the world: loose-fitting underwear for men, featuring an elastic waistband inspired by the shorts worn by boxers. It was underwear for the inner pugilist. 

Just ten years later, briefs—jockey shorts, tighty-whities—entered the ring, offering a different vision of masculinity, both sleeker and more self-conscious. 

Since then, all manner of hybrids and contenders have emerged, from G-strings and banana slings to boxer briefs and tighty-non-whities. 

But the mavens of under-fashion still mostly align along the original poles: boxers versus briefs; feral versus domestic; low-rider comfort versus high-ball style.

In recent years, that divide has gained an existential edge, with various studies suggesting that wearing tight-fitting underwear may be bad for the under wearer. 

Saturday, October 27, 2018

Tree of Life...

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Twisted...

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Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck Grassley referred lawyer Michael Avenatti to the Justice Department for a second criminal investigation, alleging that Avenatti had submitted a fraudulent sworn statement to the committee on Oct. 2. 
Grassley also referred Avenatti and his client, Julie Swetnick, to the Justice Department for a separate investigation, for three separate crimes: conspiracy, providing false statements to Congress and obstructing a Senate investigation.
Swetnick alleged that Brett and his friend Mark Judge were present at a high school party when she was gang raped by a series of boys after her drink was spiked. 
Swetnick also accused Kavanaugh of helping facilitate gang rapes when he was in high school.  Swetnick subsequently walked back of the allegations
 In a letter to the Justice Department, Grassley wrote that his second referral stemmed "from a second declaration he submitted to the Committee that also appears to contain materially false statements." Grassley cited an NBC News report that alleged inconsistencies in a sworn statement by a woman submitted to the Judiciary Committee that was supposed to bolster Swetnick's claim.
The anonymous woman alleges that she saw Kavanaugh spike a drink. However, in an interview with NBC News before Avenatti published the statement on Twitter, the woman said she never saw Kavanaugh spike a drink, and that she met Swetnick when they were in their 30s. According to NBC News, she told the network that Avenatti "twisted" her words.