Friday, February 15, 2008

She's Not Done Yet !!

TGIF for you working Stiffs!
A quote from Mark Penn that should go over extremely well: "Could we possibly have a nominee who hasn't won any of the significant states -- outside of Illinois? That raises some serious questions about Sen. Obama."
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In the words of that famous philosopher from Montclair NJ " It Aint't over till its over"
There remain 12 more primary states, three big ones Texas,Pennslyvainia and Ohio in wjich Hill has substantial leads!
I can't believe that the states of Florida and Michagan will be disenfrachised Hill should get those.
Contrary to what you read in the papers or see or hear on TV or radio she isn't finished.
She has more super delegates then Obama. She is good when under pressure look at her last two days in New Hampshire she was terrific.
The Media are trying to finish her off for their Hero Obama who they hope will be beaten by
McCain in November when all his teeny-bopper voters tire of the game and fail to show at the polls.
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Clinton-Backing Civil Rights Icon Shifts To Obama
MILWAUKEE — Representative John Lewis, an elder statesman from the civil rights era and one of Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton’s most prominent black supporters, said Thursday night that he planned to cast his vote as a superdelegate for Senator Barack Obama

Geeze what a surprise a black civil rights leader backing a black presidential candidate. It's a good thing this election isn't racist!
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Clinton Wins N.M. Caucus Vote »
AP HEATHER CLARK February 14, 2008 at 06:09 PM
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton finally won the popular vote in New Mexico's Democratic caucus and picked up one extra delegate Thursday, nine days after Super Tuesday voting ended.
State Democratic Chairman Brian Colon made the announcement after a marathon hand count of 17,000 provisional ballots that had to be given to voters on Feb. 5 because of long lines and a shortage of ballots. The final statewide count gave her a 1,709-vote edge over rival Sen. Barack Obama,...
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Timber Theft Is a Growing "Business" The Associated Press

Tree rustlers typically victimize owners who are absent, elderly or both. Overseas demand is driving prices up.
Whitesburg, Kentucky - The crime scene - a once-wooded landscape marked by tire tracks and tree stumps - makes the victim, Verna Potter, feel physically violated.
"It's just like someone cut your heart out," says the 77-year-old Potter, who lost an estimated $50,000 worth of generations-old oak trees. They were taken from her property and sold without permission while she was away.
Rogue loggers have long preyed on private properties from coast to coast, taking advantage of the elderly and the absent. And they traditionally had little to fear from law enforcement officials hesitant to pursue criminal charges, instead chalking up most complaints to property disputes. But as timber values have risen, so have the stakes for landowners - and the attitude of law enforcement is adjusting.
"The authorities who have dealt with it as a property matter are starting to look at it as more of a criminal matter," said Joseph Phaneuf, executive director of the Northeastern Loggers' Assn.
In recent years, there has been a steady movement to curb illegal logging. Some states, such as Mississippi and Virginia, have established timber-theft laws, making illegal logging on private property a felony punishable by prison time.
In Kentucky, the problem has resulted in the formation of the Appalachian Roundtable, a nonprofit that joins forestry experts, attorneys, law enforcement and victims to alert landowners to logging scams and pursue criminal charges against thieves. The group is drafting legislation to be introduced in the 2008 Kentucky General Assembly aimed at making timber theft a felony punishable by prison.
"Historically, it's been viewed by local police and the judiciary as a civil complaint," said Keith Cain, president of the Kentucky Sheriffs Assn. "But the theft of timber is a criminal issue and should be prosecuted as such."
With overseas demand for North American hardwoods growing, theft has become costlier for private landowners, whose woodlands make up 55% of U.S. timber production, forestry officials say.
Cain said the same local prosecutors who vigilantly try other felonies are reluctant to get involved in timber cases.
That's because they anticipate questions about property boundaries, and few people have the money or the resources to hire a lawyer, pay thousands of dollars for a survey or hire an expert to place a value on the timber lost.
Timber thieves manipulate these obstacles, experts say. They usually operate along adjoining property lines and claim to have either owner's permission to log.
A couple of years ago, Potter decided to move in with her grown children in Ohio with her husband, who is diabetic and blind. She visits her 25-acre property only a few times a year.
If it hadn't been for nephew Mark Combs, who lives on adjacent property, she might not have known for months that her oaks had been taken down.
Combs confronted a local logger one November day after hearing the sound of a chain saw on his aunt's property. The case is to go before a grand jury next month, though that brings Potter little satisfaction.
"Thirty-two oak trees that have been there for years," said Potter. "It was my turn to give them to my son and daughter - but you can't replace those."

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