Ashley Madison

A Tale of Two GOP Priorities towards Veterans & Congressmen

WoodPeckr

Protuberant Member
May 29, 2002
46,949
5,746
113
North America
thewoodpecker.net
If only our recent past US Veterans of both Iraqi Gulf wars and Afghanistan were 'protected' as well as Congressmen in DC.
........and then a report follows on how past war Veterans 'strange illnesses' are being 'swept under the rug' and hidden. Depleted uranium munitions used in all these wars continues to be the real dirty secret that continues to be ignored.....


Nerve Agent Scare Clears Senate Building

By LARA JAKES JORDAN, Associated Press Writer
10 minutes ago

WASHINGTON - At least eight senators were among 200 people being held in a Capitol parking garage Wednesday night after a security sensor indicated the presence of a nerve agent in their office building. A later test proved negative.


"Tests initially indicated a nerve agent," said Capitol Police Sgt. Kimberly Schneider. "A subsequent test indicated it is not a nerve agent."

Schneider said the senators were among 200 people who were asked to remain in the West Legislative Garage. Senate aides inside the garage said they were told they would be held for up to an hour as authorities awaited the results of a third test for more conclusive results.

Sen. Chuck Hagel (news, bio, voting record), R-Neb., was among the lawmakers inside the garage. He and several of his staff were headed out of the Russell Senate Office Building around 7 p.m. EST when security closed the doors and told everyone to go to the garage, said his spokesman, Mike Buttry.

"We're stuck until they get the results back," Buttry said.

Schneider said none of the people gathered in the garage was showing any signs of sickness or other adverse symptoms, such as a runny nose, that might indicate the presence of a nerve agent.

She did not know whether sensors positioned in the attic of the Russell building, which picked up the suspicious material, were able to tell whether it was in powder, liquid or gas form. Earlier, police said they had discovered a suspicious powder in the attic.

The
Homeland Security Department did not have an immediate comment, but a senior counterterror official said it did not immediately appear to be an emergency.

Among the senators in the building according to aides were: Mike Enzi, R-Wyo., Gordon Smith, R-Ore., Richard Burr, R-N.C., Larry Craig, R-Idaho, John Thune, R-S.D., Jeff Sessions, R-Ala., Chuck Hagel, R-Neb., and Christopher Dodd, D-Conn.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060209/ap_on_go_ot/capitol_evacuation

Soldiers Face Debilitating Diseases

POSTED: 10:40 am EST February 8, 2006
UPDATED: 11:21 am EST February 8, 2006

They served their time in the military in places like Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, and more recently, Iraq and Afghanistan.

Most returned in good health.

But an NBC 30 investigation has found that for some soldiers, their service has meant a long and debilitating death sentence with mysterious diseases.

"I have good days, I have bad days," said M. Sterry, of New Haven. "There were eight of us that served together. Six of my friends are dead."

She looks healthy, but Sterry is a very sick woman who has no idea how much longer she will live.

"I've had three heart attacks, two heart surgeries. I have chronic headaches, chronic upper respiratory infections. I get pneumonia two or three times a year," she said. "I have chronic fatigue, joint aches, muscle aches. I have a rash that migrates all over my body."

Sterry figures the initial symptoms began in Saudi Arabia in September of 1991 while she was serving with the National Guard. Three years later, after completing her tour of duty and coming back home, the symptoms were still there, but much more severe.

State Sen. Gayle Slossberg said one of the sources of the diseases may be depleted uranium. She was one of those who helped pass legislation last year setting up a health registry in Connecticut, strictly to keep records on our military personnel.

"We'll know where they've served, what they've done, what the scope of the job was," she said. "We'll be able to identify to some extent what they've been exposed to and what their symptoms are."

But it will come too late for David Leighton, of Naugatuck, a Marine who served in Saudi Arabia in Desert Storm. When he came home, the symptoms he had had for quite some time would not go away.

His mother, Gail Leighton, said that for the next 15 years, she saw her once vital and vibrant son slowly dying before her eyes.

"You would have had to have been there during the journey and see him in bed and sweating and in agony," she said.

She said her son was a patriot, that his dad had been a Marine. She said the federal government did not believe that those coming back became sick because of the conditions in which they served.

"That was the hardest part, I think, more than anything, to have the DOD, the Department of Defense, and the VA spending so much time and energy trying to deny and discount and discredit some of the people who were doing research."

State Veterans Commissioner Linda Schwartz told NBC 30 that making the connection between battlefield exposures and diseases has been a long, ongoing process.

She said the use of depleted uranium has to be studied because, as she put it, we're sending our best people into battle and their well-being must be the top priority.


http://www.nbc30.com/news/6837518/detail.html
 
Last edited:

papasmerf

New member
Oct 22, 2002
26,531
0
0
42.55.65N 78.43.73W
You expect Congress to care? Do you support term limmits?
 

maxweber

Active member
Oct 12, 2005
1,296
1
36
hit the road, jack..

DonQuixote said:
We already have term limits.
For whatever reason we don't exercise them.
Really? Is this state or federal? First I've ever heard of this!

MW
 

maxweber

Active member
Oct 12, 2005
1,296
1
36
when in Rome (county..)

Carcharias said:
Mostly at the State level, though the President is limited to two terms.
Aha, that makes sense. Was this also in the wake of FDR? And would I be right in suspecting that, nationally, it's crazy quilt, like the county option for prohibition?

MW
 

papasmerf

New member
Oct 22, 2002
26,531
0
0
42.55.65N 78.43.73W
maxweber said:
Aha, that makes sense. Was this also in the wake of FDR? And would I be right in suspecting that, nationally, it's crazy quilt, like the county option for prohibition?

MW
Dude

Just enjoy your beer and shut off the computer. It seems to confuse you
 

TOVisitor

New member
Jul 14, 2003
3,317
0
0
More on term limits

Jan. 24, 2006, 10:05PM
Is scandal so bad we need term limits? Some say yes
By CRAGG HINES
Copyright 2006 Houston Chronicle


WADE around the outer edges of what could be done to clean out the congressional swamp and before long you kick over a rock under which rests that old fungal growth known as term limits.

Term limits were most recently the rage in the 1990s, as one state after another limited the tenure of state legislators and other officials, almost always as the result of voter-instigated ballot initiatives. Even congressional limits were hot with some Republicans before they took control of the U.S. House and Senate as a result of the 1994 elections. Then, amazingly, once in power their interest virtually evaporated.

The promise of a vote on terms limits was in the Contract with America, the House Republican's 1994 election manifesto, but with a big wink. In March 1995 there was a perfunctory House vote on the so-called Citizen Legislature Act, a proposed constitutional amendment to limit members to four House terms and two Senate terms (which would amount to 12 years in each body). Republicans knew it would fail to get the required two-thirds vote, and they were correct, as 40 GOP members sided with a vast majority of Democrats in opposition.

"They made no effort to pass it," recalled Paul Jacob, a research fellow with U.S. Term Limits. "They weren't honest with the American people about it."
How do you spell H-Y-P-C-R-I-S-Y? IOKIYAR.
 
Ashley Madison
Toronto Escorts