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Sunday, 18 December 2011 |
Lindsey Vonn speeds down the slope during the women's Super-G race on Wednesday, Dec. 7 in Beaver Creek, Colo.
Source;
msnbc.com
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Sunday, 18 December 2011 |
More Than 4,500 U.S. Soldiers Died In Iraq War; More Than 30,000 Wounded...Early Sunday, as the sun ascended to the winter sky, the very last American convoy made its way down the main highway that connects Iraq and Kuwait.
The military called it its final "tactical road march." A series of 110 heavily armored, hulking trucks and Mine Resistant Ambush Protected vehicles carrying about 500 soldiers streamed slowly but steadily out of the combat zone.
A few minutes before 8 a.m., the metal gate behind the last MRAP closed. With it came to an end a deadly and divisive war that lasted almost nine years, its enormous cost calculated in blood and billions.
Some rushed to touch the gate, forever a symbol now of an emotional, landmark day. Some cheered with the Army's ultimate expression of affirmation: "Hooah!"
Once, when hundreds of thousands of Americans were in Iraq, the main highway was better known as Main Supply Route Tampa and soldiers trekked north towards Baghdad and beyond, never knowing what danger lurked on their path.
On this monumental day, the Texas-based 3rd Brigade Special Troops Battalion, 1st Cavalry Division's main concern was how to avoid a traffic jam on their final journey in Iraq.
Staff Sgt. Daniel Gaumer, 37, was on this road in August 2003. It was his first time at war. He was frightened.
There was not a lot of traffic at that time, he recalled. He remembered a lot of cheering by Iraqis, even though the situation was tense.
Sunday morning, the air was decidedly different.
"It's pretty historic," he said about the drive south, hoping he will not ever have to come back through this unforgiving terrain again.
Once there were bases sprinkled in the desolate desert between Nasiriya and Basra, American soldiers hidden from view behind walls of giant mesh Hesco bags filled with dirt and sand to stave off incoming fire.
On this day, the roads, the bases were in Iraqi hands, the sands in the bags returned to the earth.
Once, almost nine years ago in March 2003, U.S. tanks and armored personnel carriers had thundered north, with the drive and determination needed to decapitate a dictator.
On this day, heading south towards Khabari border crossing, the soldiers took stock of their sacrifice.
In another war, there had been little joy or even emotion as final jet transports lifted Americans from Vietnamese soil.
Sunday saw the end of the largest troop drawdown for the United States since Vietnam.
Those men and women who fought in Iraq may not feel they are leaving behind an unfinished war or returning home to a nation as deeply scarred as it was after years of Vietnam.
But many crossed the border harboring mixed feelings and doubt about the future of Iraq.
"The biggest thing about going home is just that it's home," Gaumer said. "It's civilization as I know it -- the Western world, not sand and dust and the occasional rain here and there."
A month ago, Adder, the last U.S. base before the five-hour drive to the Kuwaiti border, housed 12,000 people. By Thursday, the day the United States formally ended its mission in Iraq with a flag-casing ceremony in Baghdad, under 1,000 people remained there.
The 3rd Brigade Special Troops Battalion, 1st Cavalry Division officially transferred control of Camp Adder to the Iraqis on Friday, though it did not really change hands until the last American departed early Sunday morning.
At its height, Adder housed thousands of troops and had a large PX, fast-food outlets, coffee shops and even an Italian restaurant. Now a ghost town, the United States gave 110,000 items left at Adder to the Iraqis, a loot worth $76 million, according to the military.
In her last days working in a guard tower in Iraq, Sgt. Ashley Vorhees, 29, dreamed of seeing her three children and eating crispy chicken tacos at Rosa's Mexican restaurant in Killeen, Texas. She also looked forward to not having to carry her gun with her to the bathroom.
Vorhees, a combat medic, spent her first tour of Iraq with her husband, also a soldier.
"When Osama bin Laden was captured and killed, my mom was like 'Does that mean that everybody is coming home now?'" Vorhees said.
"We actually had it a lot better than the people did who did the initial invasion," she said. "We're just thankful that we're not getting attacked every day."
When the war was at its worst in 2006, America had 239,000 men and women in uniform stationed in more than 500 bases sprinkled throughout Iraq. Another 135,000 contractors were working in Iraq.
The United States will still maintain a presence in Iraq: hundreds of nonmilitary personnel, including 1,700 diplomats, law enforcement officers, and economic, agricultural and other experts, according to the State Department. In addition, 5,000 security contractors will protect Americans and another 4,500 contractors will serve in other roles.
The quiet U.S. exit, shrouded in secrecy until it occurred, closes a war that was contentious from the start and cost the nation more than $800 billion.
President Barack Obama, who had made a campaign promise to bring home American troops, reflected on a greater cost as Sunday's exit made good on his word.
More than 4,500 U.S. troops were killed in Iraq; more than 30,000 wounded. In all, 1.5 million Americans served their nation at war.
"All of them -- our troops, veterans, and their families -- will always have the thanks of a grateful nation," Obama said in his weekly radio address Saturday.
It's impossible to know with certainty the number of Iraqis who have died in Iraq since 2003. But the independent public database Iraq Body Count has compiled reports of more than 150,000 between the invasion and October 2010, with four out of five dead being civilians.
And the question of how Iraq will fare in the months ahead, without U.S. troops, is also impossible to answer.
Even before the last soldiers had left, political crisis was erupting in Baghdad.
The powerful political bloc Iraqiya said it was suspending its participation in parliament, which would threaten Iraq's fragile power-sharing arrangement. Iraqiya accuses Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki of amassing power.
But for the last U.S. troops out, the message was clear.
Col. Doug Crissman, their commander, spent the past few weeks speaking to the soldiers in each of his companies.
He told them he was proud of his troops and they should be proud of what they had accomplished. And, he wanted his soldiers to take care of themselves back home as much as they did in Iraq.
In the months before the brigade deployed in February, it lost 13 soldiers to accidents, some because of driving under the influence of alcohol. At least one death was a suicide.
"Quite frankly we lost more soldiers in peacetime in the nine or 10 months before this brigade deployed due to accidents and risky behavior ... than we lost here in combat," Crissman said. "We want every soldier that survived this combat deployment to survive redeployment and reintegration."
Capt. Mark Askew, 28, said he was worried about the well-being of his soldiers, many of whom have done multiple tours of Iraq and felt the stress and sting of war.
Was the loss, the grief, worth it?
For Askew, it will all depend on how Iraq's future unfolds -- whether democracy and human rights will take root, whether Iraq will be a steadfast U.S. ally.
It will depend, he said, on how Iraq shapes its own destiny.
Source: cnn.com
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Saturday, 17 December 2011 |
The Senate in a
67-32 vote has passed a compromise spending bill to keep the government
funded for the rest of the fiscal year -- a day after the bill won
approval from the House of Representatives. The bill now goes to
President Barack Obama to sign.
Source: kcra.com
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Friday, 16 December 2011 |
Crystal Kane, a regular on the Hollywood Scene, and always in the know. Shows off some of the horse and yoga techniques that has made her not only a sought after animal trainer and actress but also a confidante to the rich and famous.
Source: hunter007
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Friday, 16 December 2011 |
Cristan J. Rooms, a 29-year-old state licensed foster parent and
Esparto youth soccer coach, was arraigned today on 48 felony child
molestation counts with a child under 14 and six misdemeanor counts of
child endangerment. Yolo Superior Court Commissioner Janene Beronio set
the bail at $12 million.
Source: sacbee.com
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Friday, 16 December 2011 |
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E! News host and reality TV star Giuliana Rancic was recovering Wednesday after undergoing a successful double mastectomy. Rancic, 37, underwent the four-hour procedure Tuesday night as part of her battle against breast cancer. "G is doing really well," husband Bill Rancic told E! News. "Her surgery lasted about four hours and the doctors were very pleased with the result." "She had a little bit of pain through the night but is feeling much better this morning and was cracking jokes," he added. Giuliana Rancic said earlier this month that she would undergo a double mastectomy after a lumpectomy did not remove all the cancer. She was originally diagnosed with the disease when she saw a fertility doctor during her third attempt at in vitro fertilization, as detailed in the Style Network's reality series "Giuliana & Bill." Source: newscore |
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Thursday, 15 December 2011 |
Simon Cowell and Paula Abdul may be chummy now, but the reality TV judges weren't always friends.
In an interview with Barbara Walters for her "10 Most Fascinating People of 2011" special, Simon says they couldn't even stand each other in their early "American Idol" days.
"The first two seasons, we couldn't travel on the same plane together," he admits. "We really disliked each other that much."
When asked why, the "X Factor" judges says it the sex factor!
"I think it sexual tension ... on her part," Simon explains.
"Paula Abdul wanted you?" Barbara poses.
"A million percent," he laughs. "I considered it, but then I thought, I don't think the after would be as good as the before."
Just
watch Simon's response when asked about "the morning after." Let's just
say he's falls into the "love 'em and leave 'em" category!
Source: toofab.com
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Tuesday, 13 December 2011 |
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Donald Trump announced Tuesday that he is
bowing out as the moderator for a Republican presidential debate later
this month, after most candidates in the field opted not to attend.
Trump, in a written statement, said he
wanted to make sure there's no "conflict of interest" in case he decides
to run as a third-party candidate next year.
"I must leave all of my options open because, above all else, we must make America great again!" he said.
Though the Dec. 27 debate technically is
sponsored by Newsmax, Trump quickly became the face of it after he was
named as moderator.
While former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and
former Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum agreed to attend early on, other
Republican candidates subsequently bowed out.
Some expressed concern that the real estate
mogul and reality TV star, who previously flirted with a possible
Republican presidential bid before shelving the idea, would not
definitively rule out running as a third-party candidate.
Trump said Tuesday that, because he wants to
keep his options open for a White House run, he will not participate in
the debate.
"It is very important to me that the right
Republican candidate be chosen to defeat the failed and very destructive
Obama administration, but if that Republican, in my opinion, is not the
right candidate, I am not willing to give up my right to run as an
independent candidate," he said. "Therefore, so that there is no
conflict of interest within the Republican Party, I have decided not to
be the moderator of the Newsmax debate."
Trump went on to praise Gingrich and Santorum for "having the courage, conviction, and confidence" to agree to the debate.
Voicing his trademark confidence, Trump
asserted that had he followed through, "I believe this would not only
have been the most watched debate, but also the most substantive and
interesting debate!" Source: foxnews.com/hunter007
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Tuesday, 13 December 2011 |
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The timing of Lindsey Vonn's divorce,
combined with a few other events, has led to a few rumors that she and
Broncos quarterback Tim Tebow were dating. Vonn denied that is the case,
saying she is single, and that she is friends with the Tebow family.
"I am single. I’m not with anyone,” Vonn said in response to the rumors. “I’ve heard a lot of rumors and a lot of reports.”
Vonn contributed to the rumors when she went "Tebowing" after winning a race last week. She said that was just a sign of respect for Tim.
“He’s proving them all wrong,” Vonn said of Tebow's critics. “In a
way, that’s what I’m trying to do as well — to be able to compete under
any circumstance and keep fighting and doing my best every day. Just
because I `Tebow,’ doesn’t mean I’m dating him. I said that if I won in
Colorado, I would `Tebow’ because I admire what he’s doing."
The Olympics skier watched the Broncos game Sunday from the Tebow family box. She wrote a column about the experience, and explained her relationship with the family.
A lot of people are wondering what's up with me and the Tebows. I'm
just friends with the family. I met Tim and his brother Pete at the ESPY
Awards like three or four years ago in the gym — we were working out
there. I spent more time with Tim and his brother at the V Foundation
Golf Tournament, and this year at the ESPYs.
Tim presented me with my ESPY award this year, and we kind of
chatted. I said, "If you want to come up to Vail and ski, let me know."
Robby invited me to one of their games a few weeks ago. Then we ended up
being able to race at Beaver Creek, so he came up for that last
Wednesday.
I pretty much know their whole family now. They're great people. It's
pretty awesome to be able to hang out with them — and to be able to
witness the amazing things Tim and the Broncos can do.
We could have told you that nothing was going on between Lindsey and Tim. Everyone already knows that Vonn is already taken by this young man.
Chest bump to Off the Bench. Source: yardbarker.com
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Then it is possible that the patient was alive when you began the autopsy? An attorney, anxious to impress the judge with the detail, asked the ...
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