Susan Roesgen Will Likely Not Survive Revolution-IF She Does She Should Get 2X Zundel-Mahler Prison Time-CNN Chicago Tea Party
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Posted: Fri, 17/04/2009 - 06:22
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Uploader: Chain
Reputation: 9745 Rank: Ubermogul
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Posted: Fri, 17/04/2009 - 06:22
141 views
Uploader: Chain
Reputation: 9745 Rank: Ubermogul
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Local reports indicate that
Local reports indicate that the practice of mailing actual tea bags to legislators has repeatedly raised security concerns, and sometimes forced the evacuation of congressional offices in anthrax-like scares.
Brian Sperry, a spokesman for the U.S. Postal Service, told the Salt Lake (Utah) Tribune that tea bags in the mail "cause us some concern. ... They could pose a problem if the tea bag is mailed in a regular envelope instead of a padded bag."
The Chicago Tribune reports:
In Boulder, Colo., the district office of U.S. Rep. Jared Polis recently called for help after a lumpy white envelope with no return address arrived in the mail. The Boulder County Hazardous Materials Response Team found a tea bag and a note reading "We the People, 1773."
Earlier this month in Manchester, N.H., a hazmat team descended on the office of U.S. Rep. Carol Shea-Porter after employees opened an envelope marked "tax protest" and found a bunch of tea leaves.
And two days later, the office of Rep. George Radanovich in Modesto, Calif., was evacuated "after an intern in the mailroom came upon a suspicious package that was later found to contain tea." A haz-mat team and the FBI were were called in.
About 20 people from the building, including those in the congressman's office and two mortgage firms, were evacuated as a precaution.
Modesto Fire Battalion Chief Rich Sasser said the envelope held a granular substance. It did not have a return address.
About 3 p.m., the Stanislaus County Hazardous Materials Response Team went into the office. Sasser said their monitors showed there was nothing dangerous, so the hazmat team double-bagged the sealed envelope and turned it over to the FBI.
"We can't control who mails what to wherever," Sgt. Kimberly Schneider, a Capitol Police spokeswoman, told the Salt Lake Tribune. "At all times, [United States Capitol Police] will investigate and take the appropriate police action in response to any calls to us for any suspicious items that congressional staff might be concerned about."
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Hahaha ... think the "media"
Hahaha ... think the "media" is on YOUR side? Hahaha... Watch Roesgen ask KGB-like how they found out about it, i.e. got informed. She wants to know, because it's NOT "all over the news". WRONG lady. She knows it wasn't CNN or the other networks. She WORKS for the networks. She IS the news. She wants to know, so it can get SHUT DOWN and you can go back to 'Fo-ball games.
in 2005, though, according
in 2005, though, according to a Fox News source, Roesgen really wanted to work for that right-wing conservative network. She sent a tape of her on-air work to Fox's then-programming chief Kevin Magee in January 2005, and followed up with another reel to Magee's successor Bill Shine in September 2005. Needless to say, she didn't get the gig.
Roesgen didn't respond to an e-mail request for comment, and a CNN spokeswoman said, "I don't know anything about that."
So next time you see CNN or MSNBC talking heads—like Fox News alum David Shuster, for instance—talking about how awful Fox is (which it is!), just remember: It's all business, kids.
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