Friday, August 13, 2010

President Obama signs $600 million border security law that increases agents along Mexican border

With little fanfare, President Obama inked a $600 million border security law Friday that adds more agents and equipment on the Mexican border.

The law adds 1,000 more Border Patrol agents and will increase the number of unmanned drones used for surveillance. More...

Saturday, August 7, 2010

well isn't this nice

POLITICS

First Lady, Sasha Obama Hit Spanish Beach With Help From Police

Published August 06, 2010

| Associated Press

ESTEPONA, Spain -- Spanish police cleared off a stretch ofbeach for U.S. first lady Michelle Obama and daughter Sasha to relax by the Mediterranean Friday after a busy day of sightseeing.

Police used palm trees to mark off the boundaries of a 100-meter (100-yard) expanse for the American delegation. On either side, onlookers gawked.

As the first lady rested inside a canvas hut by the shore, her 9-year-old daughter splashed around in the sea and a security guard swam with her.

The Obamas arrived Wednesday for a five-day stay in southern Spain that is being described as private, although Mrs. Obama is to meet with King Juan Carlos and Queen Sofia Sunday at their summer residence on the island of Mallorca.

On Thursday they toured Granada, taking in the Alhambra palace — the exquisite reddish citadel that was the seat of Moorish rule in Spain — and the city's cathedral, and also watched a flamenco show in a hillside cave turned into a tavern.


"She did it well. This woman has rhythm," said Juan Andres Maya, leader of the flamenco troupe.At that performance, the first lady clapped along with the booming chords of the guitarists and rapid-fire, clicking heels of the dancers.

Some Spanish media outlets have covered the visit in extreme detail, reporting on the first lady's every move — from where she window-shops and what she buys to what flavors of ice cream she and her daughter had before going into the cathedral in Granada (for the record, chocolate for Mom, melon and raspberry for her daughter.)

President Obama and the couple's elder daughter Malia stayed in the United States.

The newspaper El Mundo ran a lengthy story Friday on the Obamas' dinner their first night in Spain. Sasha ate pasta, and her mother and the rest of the U.S. delegation had tapas that included sea bass tartare, strawberry gazpacho and sardines, followed by a main course of lobster with seaweed risotto.

The meal cost about euro50 ($66) a head, the paper said.

The Obamas have also been showered with gifts, including a typical Spanish fan, a traditional veil known as a mantilla, books on the cities they have visited, and a copious assortment of local food including cheese, olives, wine and even two legs of salt-cured Spanish ham. It is questionable whether the ham will clear U.S. customs because the producers lack permission to export to the United States, media reports said.




Where does she get off having the US TAXPAYER covering her trip to spain.. We are paying over $375,000 for this trip.. but all hail her for her covering her meals!!!!

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

WELL DUH

Pentagon blocks Rolling Stone reporter from embed

By Michael Calderone

Rolling StoneThe last time reporter Michael Hastingspublished a major piece on Afghanistan, the commander on the ground resigned.

Maybe that's why the military's skittish about letting Hastings return.

The Associated Press reports that the Pentagon has denied permission for Hastings to embed with U.S. troops in Afghanistan.

Hastings offered a clarification on the AP's reporting via Twitter, writing that "the embed had already been approved for September," but "now it has been disapproved."

So, according to Hastings, it's not as if he just asked for permission to embed yesterday and was denied.

Defense Department spokesman Col. David Lapan defended the decision yesterday, telling reporters that "there is no right to embed."

"It is a choice made between units and individual reporters, and a key element of an embed is having trust that the individuals are going to abide by the ground rules," Lapan said. "So in that instance the command in Afghanistan decided there wasn't the trust requisite and denied this request."

Hastings, who wrote the Rolling Stone profile of Gen. Stanley McChrystal as a freelance reporter, has long defended his methods. And McChrystal never pushed back on the story, which included some derogatory statements made by him and other aides.

But some military officials anonymously told news organizations that Hastings reported details from conversations that were supposed to be off-the-record.

An ongoing probe may shed more light on what happened during the reporting of the story. McClatchy reported yesterday that the Army is investigating whether McChrystal's aides "were insubordinate" when they made caustic remarks about the civilian leadership to Hastings.

The Army is reportedly speaking to some Rolling Stone staffers, too. But Hastings, now a contributing editor at the magazine, said he declined to be interviewed for, or otherwise participate in, the Army's investigation.



LIKE I SAID WELL DUH!!