September 01, 2007

Looks Like They Are Terrorists

And somehow I don't expect CAIR and the other Muslim groups to retract their claims of innocence and racial profiling -- even after the convictions come based upon these indictments.

wo Egyptian students at the University of South Florida were indicted Friday on charges of carrying explosive materials across states lines and one was accused of teaching the other how to use them for violent reasons.

Ahmed Abdellatif Sherif Mohamed, 24, an engineering graduate student and teaching assistant at the Tampa-based university, faces terrorism charges for teaching and demonstrating how to use the explosives.

He and Youssef Samir Megahed, 21, an engineering student, were stopped for speeding Aug. 4 in Goose Creek, S.C., where they have been held on state charges.

The two men were stopped with pipe bombs in their car near a Navy base in South Carolina where enemy combatants have been held. They were held on state charges while the FBI continued to investigate whether there was a terrorism link.

Mohamed was charged with distributing information relating to explosives, destructive devices, and weapons of mass destruction, which is a terrorism-related statute, a Justice Department official said. The crime carries a maximum of 20 years in prison.

He and Megahed both face with charges of transporting explosives in interstate commerce without permits, which carries a 10-year prison penalty. Their defense attorney, Andy Savage, did not immediately return a call seeking comment.

And it appears that there is a third suspect who fled to Canada. Could we have ANOTHER international terrorist plot centering around the Muslim community in Florida?

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Loans

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Debt is a two-edged sword. It can allow you to acquire things you want or need right no, but it can also strangle you economically over the long term if you are not careful.

I look at the situation some friends found themselves in not too many years ago. They are a nice couple -- he in his 50s and her in her 40s, with two wonderful kids approaching college age. Unfortunately, they had allowed themselves to live a lifestyle that was well beyond their means. They were in serious financial trouble. They had lots of unsecured and secured loans -- everything from student loans to car loans to credit cards to a mortgage, not to mention almost weekly use of payday loans just to keep up with it all. And then he lost his job as an executive with a local company, and they nearly lost it everything. Fortunately, a new job quickly materialized and the opportunity to refinance the mortgage loans to lower monthly payments and tap into their equity in their house allowed them to recover and live a more scaled-back life.

If you are facing financial need and you are looking for a way to restructure your debt to better manage it, might I suggest Rebuild.org?

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John Warner Retiring

A man who never should have been US Senator has now announced he is leaving the US Senate after three decades in office.

John William Warner, who was best known for marrying actress Elizabeth Taylor when he entered the Senate 28 years ago but who grew into an elder statesman and Republican maverick highly regarded for his expertise in defense matters, announced his retirement Friday.

Warner, 80, chose the north steps of the Rotunda at the University of Virginia, where he studied law a half-century ago, to reveal his widely anticipated decision not to seek a sixth term next year.

"So I say that my work and service to Virginia as a senator . . . will conclude upon the 6th of January, 2009, when I finish . . . my career of . . . 30 years in the United States Senate," Warner said. The former Navy secretary and past chairman of the Armed Services Committee said he wrestled with the question, coming to closure only "in the last day or two." He postponed a decision, he said, until completing a trip to Iraq last week. Warner has been a leading GOP critic of the Bush White House's war policy.

The rigors of Senate service as he enters his 80s and the importance of letting the next generation of Senate leaders step up drove his choice, he said.

"I'm going to quietly step aside," he said as his third wife, Jeanne, stood at his side.

Warner's departure triggers a round of political jockeying that will change the political landscape nationally and in Virginia.

Some view this departure as a negative for Republicans. I do not. And not just because of Warner's mushy moderation in recent years. At age 80 and finishing his fifth term in the office, Warner needs to step aside so that a new generation of Republican leaders can step to the lead.

For my own part, I have mixed emotions about John Warner.

I met his several times, the first when I was twelve and he visited Guam during the Bicentennial celebrations, which he headed up under President Ford. Later, as a student at Warner's alma mater, I met Senator Warner at a number of GOP events while I was active in the College Republicans. And in the years since, I've encountered him a time or two. My mpression is one of a decent man who has been a competent public official -- but whose views I don't always agree with.

And I remember, too, that he was not the man who should have become US Senator from Virginia in 1978. Only the unspeakable tragedy of August 2, 1978 allowed Warner to become the GOP candidate for US Senate in 1978, when Dick Obenshain the man who can rightly be called the father of the modern Virginia Republican Party was killed in a plane crash. I knew Obenshain's son, Mark Obenshain, several years later through the state College Republicans, and have always wondered how the presence of his more consistently conservative father in the Senate would have changed the face of America.

And yet that historical reminiscence and speculation is today less important than determining how we as a party can hold on to the Senate seat Warner is vacating next fall.

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