[Vtigercrm-commits] Internet Marketing Is Dead...
Profit Siege
ProfitSiege at chipchipcookieda.info
Sat Aug 3 09:20:07 UTC 2013
PayPal Insider Discovers Lucrative Home Business...
http://www.chipchipcookieda.info/1742/79/156/738/1407.11tt74660321AAF13.php
Unsub- http://www.chipchipcookieda.info/1742/79/156/738/1407.11tt74660321AAF8.html
iStockOn Tuesday morning, a frustrated passenger on Delta Air Lines Flight
1452 from Seattle Tacoma International Airport to New York's JFK International
Airport took luggage fee resentment to a new level. The traveler apparently
simply gave up his bags.Rather than face $1,400 in overweight baggage fees,
the flier opted to leave his belongings behind at the Delta check-in
kiosk in Seattle, reports NBC News. As a result, the Delta lobby
was closed down for more than two hours while security inspected the
unattended luggage.Eventually Seattles airport security determined the discarded
bags were not a threat and were able to identify their owner
and the owner's flight.Law enforcement officials with the Port Authority
of New York/New Jersey met the flight and interviewed the passenger upon
arrival at JFK, TSA spokesperson Ross Feinstein told NBC News.Upon interviewing
the traveler, officials determined there was no criminal intent by the passenger.While
this is an extreme case, Delta admits that they find unattended bags
on a regular basis, according to Yahoo Finance.This does not come as
a surprise after examining the airlines rates for checking luggage. Delta
currently charges $25 for the first checked bag, $35 for the second
checked bag on domestic flights. A checked bag costs $125 and bags
4-10 cost $200 each.Even worse, the airline charges fees on top of
fees.According to Delta's website, If an extra piece of baggage exceeds
the weight
One exhibit is a blood-stained gray shirt that belonged
to a slain protester. It is emblazoned with, "He left his shirt
to you. Don't leave his president."During a funeral, a weeping wife took
the stage at Rabaah to recount the last words of her late
husband, telling the crowd how he saw the Prophet Muhammad in his
sleep and was invited to hold prayers with him."You think I am
lying? I swear to God, no," the wife said as she wept.
Her words triggered chants of "No God but Allah" while many
of her listeners held back tears.Photos of bloodied faces of slain protesters
are posted in every corner and tent. Some banners provide information such
as the dead demonstrator's background, hometown and profession."The more
blood spilled, the more people join in," said Saad el-Husseini, a former
governor of Kafr el-Sheikh province and prominent Muslim Brotherhood figure.
The security forces "are very stupid because they don't take gradual measures
in their repression."But the group is facing a bigger challenge than state
repression: loss of popular support. Last week, millions marched in demonstrations
giving a mandate to charismatic military chief Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi
upon his request to confront "terrorism" and potential
violence.Losing public sympathy in Egypt, the Rabaah tent city is plastered
with signs in English appealing to the outside world. A large banner
reads: "No to military rule." Many tents bear signs that suggest the
pro
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.vtigercrm.com/pipermail/vtigercrm-commits/attachments/20130803/8b910756/attachment.html>
More information about the vtigercrm-commits
mailing list