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Author: _ G O D __ G O D _
Date: May 4, 2008 10:25
>>
>> "nimue" yahoo.com> wrote
>> news:481dd7c5$0$12925$4c368faf@roadrunner.com...
>>> Chocolic wrote:
>>>> "Bo Raxo" gmail.com> wrote
>>>> news:0fCdnWtKzLBRw4TVnZ2dnUVZ_r-vnZ2d@comcast.com...
>>>>>
>>>>> She was imprisoned on a drug charge, with a twenty year
>>>>> sentence. She escaped one year in to the sentence.
>>>>>
>>>>> Now compare her fate to the many who sat in a cell for twenty
>>>>> years - the war on drugs wastes money, devastates lives, and
>>>>> keeps people from having and raising children as this woman
>>>>> did - we'll be paying for this stupidity for generations.
>>>> ...
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Author: _ G O D __ G O D _
Date: May 4, 2008 07:33
> Social engineering.
>
> Remember, once you get in the system, society either
> doesn't want you back or never wanted you in the first place.
>
> Keep that in mind.
I hope you know what you're talking about, Mike.
Because gulag economy have existed as long as
the incarceration industry and its institutions have
existed - which is way before the US was created...
Only now its expansion is going at a faster rates,
and went out of control far beyond its boundaries...
--
_____________________________________________________
I intend to last long enough to put out of business all COck-suckers
and other beneficiaries of the institutionalized slavery and genocide.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Author: The Lone WeaselThe Lone Weasel
Date: May 4, 2008 07:15
Contractors Still Electrocuting Troops
by: Brandon Friedman
Sat May 03, 2008 at 23:33:01 PM EDT
The Pentagon has provided $30 billion in contracts to KBR
during the Iraq War. Apparently that's just the Basic Troop
Support Package, however, because it's not enough money to
keep the contractor from electrocuting a dozen troops in
showers and elsewhere throughout Iraq and Afghanistan.
If we want soldiers to be able to shower without the fear of
death, perhaps KBR could offer us a Premium Package for
another $20 billion or so, that could guarantee troops their
safety when they try to do seemingly standard things: like
cleaning up after all-night missions.
The accidental deaths and close calls, which are being
investigated by Congress and the Defense Department's
inspector general, raise new questions about the oversight of
contractors in the war zone, where unjustified killings by
security guards, shoddy reconstruction projects and fraud
involving military supplies have spurred previous inquiries.
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