[Vtigercrm-aclgroup] You need to read this

Bed Bugs Defense BedBugsDefense at bohmaysbouto.net
Sun Jul 14 13:20:01 UTC 2013


Bed Bug Infestations Spreading Fast


http://www.bohmaysbouto.net/1660/116/228/1038/2155.12tt74660319AAF9.php







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Mubarak Ali Gilani, the shadowy founder of Muslims of the Americas, is 
believed to be living in Pakistan. (Christian Action Network)Christian Action 
Network vows to bring Gilani, founder of Muslims of the Americas, into 
a U.S. court if the $30 million defamation suit proceeds. (Christian Action 
Network)Gilani, who is believed to be in his eighties, fires a weapon 
in a training video made by Muslims of the Americas. (Christian Action 
Network)Muslims of the Americas has rural bases in several states, including 
South Carolina and New York.The shadowy leader of an American Muslim organization 
accused of running terror training camps in the U.S. could find himself 
being questioned under oath if his outfit follows through on its $30 
million defamation suit against the Christian group that leveled the charges 
in a best-selling book.Muslims of the Americas, a group founded in the 
1980s by elusive Pakistani Sheikh Mubarak Ali Gilani, is suing the Christian 
Action Network for defamation and libel following CANs recent publication 
of the book Twilight in America: The Untold Story of Islamist Terrorist 
Training Camps Inside America. Co-authored by CAN founder Martin Mawyer 
and Patti Pierucci, the book accuses MOA of acting as a front 
for the radical Islamist group Jamaat al-Fuqra.In the suit, filed this year 
in federal court in Albany, N.Y., the Muslim group accuses Mawyer, Pierucci 
and CAN of "malicious, repetitious and continuous pronouncements and
By a 54-41 percent margin, American voters would get rid of the 
sweeping 2010 health care law if given the option, according to a 
new Fox News poll.The poll, released Wednesday, also shows most voters -- 
71 percent -- think the more than 15,000 pages of regulations that 
implement the Affordable Care Act, popularly known as Obamacare, are way 
over the top. Some 19 percent say that number of pages seems 
about right.The concern about the small mountain of health care rules is 
bipartisan. Even 56 percent of Democrats call the 15,000 pages of regulations 
way over the top, as do 71 percent of independents and 87 
percent of Republicans.As for the law itself, the poll asks people what 
they would do with it if there were an up-or-down vote today.While 
a 54-percent majority would repeal the law, 41 percent would keep it 
in place. Thats mostly unchanged from two years ago, when 56 percent 
said they would cancel it and 39 percent wanted the law to 
remain (January 2011).On the law itself views are divided along partisan 
lines. By a 48 percentage-point margin, most Democrats favor keeping Obamacare 
(72-24 percent), while Republicans favor repealing it by an even wider 77-point 
margin (87-10 percent). Independents also favor repeal, but by a narrower 
16-point margin (53-37 percent).Voters give President Obama negative ratings 
on health care. By a 10-point margin, more disapprove (53 percent) than 
approve (43 percent) of his job performance. Thats the 


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