[Vtigercrm-commits] Vydox can get you the erection of your life! Check!

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Tue Jul 16 22:46:50 UTC 2013


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pot butterflies and streaked horned larks."Although our 
primary mission is fighting wars and military training, like other federal 
agencies, we have a requirement to support the recovery of listed species," 
said Jeffrey Foster, a civilian ecologist at JBLM and wrote the grant 
proposal.The Endangered Species Act does allow the military to appeal for 
exemptions from the land use restrictions on designated critical habitats.Glen 
Morgan, of the Freedom Foundation based in Olympia, Wash., has represented 
landowners who have been fighting what he calls the government takeover 
of private land. He said the Mazama pocket gopher is not distinct 
from gophers that are thriving throughout the Midwest and indeed survive 
remarkably well even on the JBLM artillery ranges."It shows our government 
is out of control and our priorities are completely out of whack," 
Morgan said. "And they're skewed in a strange way that has no 
benefit for people who live here or even the animals they claim 
they're trying to protect."In addition to the $12 million in federal and 
state funding to buy 2,600 acres around JBLM, the Department of Defense 
also issued a $1.75 million REPI grant to Eglin Air Force Base 
in Florida to protect tortoise habitat.A DOD spokesman said the program 
accounts for a relatively small amount of money and provides a buffer 
around bases to lessen conflicts with human neighbors over training. JBLM 
commander, Col. Charles Hodges, would not comment on
The debate over the Benghazi terror attack flared once again Thursday as 
senators grilled a diplomatic nominee over her role in massaging the Obama 
administration's initial story-line on the attack.Republican senators repeatedly 
challenged Victoria Nuland, nominated as chief U.S. envoy for Europe, during 
her confirmation hearing before a Senate panel. The post typically would 
not receive this much scrutiny, but Nuland's prior job was as the 
top spokesperson in the State Department -- she was the face of 
the department in the days and weeks following the Benghazi attack.Republicans 
say the full truth has not yet been told, and prodded for 
answers on the role Nuland played in pushing to change the so-called 
"talking points" after the attack. Those notes were ultimately used by then-U.N. 
Ambassador Susan Rice to give a faulty account to the public about 
the nature of the attack."It is pretty remarkable how sanitized they really 
were," Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., said of the talking points.He accused Nuland 
of being more interested in protecting her bosses' image than getting the 
truth out.Nuland denied actually changing the talking points, noting she 
was acting in a "communications role" at the time and wanted to 
make sure all agencies were consistent in their message."I did not make 
any edits," she said.In one testy confrontation, Nuland tried to explain 
why, in the drafting of the talking points, she objected to references 
to prior securit
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