Justice, The Saudi Way!

Posted in Misc on November 3, 2009 by filloutthebox

Some call this Draconian justice, but what I notice is the lack of violet crime in the Kingdom.  When it does occur, it is handled swiftly, the penalty is harsh.  Our Justice system is bogged down and justice comes after long battles and appeals.  How would Mumia Abu-Jamal have fared in Saudi Arabia???

Saudi court upholds child rapist crucifixion ruling

Tue Nov 3, 2009 2:22pm IST

RIYADH (Reuters) – A Saudi court of cassation upheld a ruling to behead and crucify a 22-year-old man convicted of raping five children and leaving one of them to die in the desert, newspapers reported on Tuesday.

The convict was arrested earlier this year after a seven-year old boy helped police in their investigation. The child left in the desert after the rape was three years old, Okaz newspaper said.

International rights groups have accused the kingdom, the birthplace of Islam, of applying draconian justice, beheading murderers, rapists and drug traffickers in public. So far this year about 40 people have been executed in Saudi Arabia.

In Saudi Arabia, crucifixion means tying the body of the convict to wooden beams to be displayed to the public after beheading.

(Reporting by Souhail Karam; editing by Inal Ersan)

© Thomson Reuters 2009 All rights reserved

Time to cut Police and Fire???

Posted in Political BS on October 30, 2009 by filloutthebox

So cities that failed to manage budgets for years are going to put their citizens at risk???  Trim the fat at city hall first!!!!  This is outrageous.  I would like to call this alderman to the table.  I for one don’t believe someone called his office to say it was time for police and fire to take furloughs.  That is just political BS.  Produce that person, I want to hear it from their mouth.  We here in Philadelphia have been cut enough.  Seven fire companies closed this year.  Staffing reduced at the airport, betcha didn’t hear about that one.  I’m glad I don’t live in Southwest Philly, my engine company may be going to the airport on a call that was previously handled by the airport units.  That’s another blog…  Stimulus huh???  Looks apparent who got passed over on that deal…

City Mulls Cop, Firefighter Furloughs

By ANDREW GREINER and MARY ANN AHEARN
Updated 10:38 AM CDT, Thu, Oct 29, 2009

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NBC Chicago

One of the more controversial pieces of Mayor Daley’s 2010 budget is the requirement for all city workers to take 24 unpaid furlough days.

The only city workers who have been spared from what amounts to an entire month off without pay are the city’s police and firefighters. But that could change.

A representative for the city budget office says the city is in negotiations with police and fire unions to accept furlough days.

It would mark the first time in Chicago that police and firefighters were forced to go without work.

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Sassy or Trashy: Bikinis

Sassy or Trashy: Bikinis

LOOK

Sassy or Trashy: Bikinis

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Celebrity Twitpics

Celebrity Twitpics

LOOK

Celebrity Twitpics

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2010’s Dreary, Dismal, No-Good Budget in Photos

2010's Dreary, Dismal, No-Good Budget in Photos

LOOK

2010’s Dreary, Dismal, No-Good Budget in Photos

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The idea has caught the attention of more than a few city aldermen.

“I’m getting calls from residents in my ward who work for the city and can’t pay their mortgage,” Alderman Ray Suarez said.  “Why can’t police and fire also join in on the furlough days?”

“We have stayed away from police and fire all of these years,”  Alderman Ed Smith  said. “But we are in a position now where, I believe, that everybody should put in some skin in this game.”

Chicago isn’t the first city to contemplate the idea. Los Angeles, Milwaukee, the state of New Jersey, Cincinnati and Baltimore are just a few of the locales that have considered cutting services like fire and rescue and police to plug holes in the budget.

Let The Dredging Begin!!!

Posted in Political BS on October 26, 2009 by filloutthebox

Well, this kind of came up out of nowhere again!  Back door politics, and the usual closed to the public discussions.  While I favor dredging the river to keep competitive with other ports, I don’t care for the lack of transparency.  This is a very large, costly project that affects citizens in three states!  It seems to me that the governors of NY and NJ are hell bent on the state permit issue.  After all, the state has to get their cut !!!  Looks like some more red tape to get through.  Down economy, a project that creates good paying jobs, it will help the region in the years to come, lets grind this thing to a screeching halt!  Just another reason to dislike NY and NJ politics, with DE just being a pain in the ass as usual…

(Gov. Rendell is flanked by US senator Arlen Specter and PRPA head John Estey at Monday’s press conference.)

Posted: Monday, 26 October 2009 2:21PM

Army Corps Ready to Move Ahead With Delaware River Dredging

by KYW’s Ian Bush

The long-planned dredging of the Delaware River has gotten the go-ahead from the feds, despite objections from the State of Delaware.

The “First State” has long voiced concern that the deepening project could stir up toxic gunk and harm drinking water.

But the US Army Corps of Engineers played the federal trump card — stressing shipping needs, and pointing out that maintenance dredging has been going on for years with no ill effects.

The project would deepen the Delaware River shipping channel by five feet, to 45 feet, and would put local ports on par with New York and Baltimore.

Governor Ed Rendell says he expects no bad blood with their counterpart in Delaware:

“We could be producing tens of thousands of new jobs that you don’t have to be a college graduate to hold, that pay $75,000-$90,000 a year.  It’s a huge plus — not only in Pennsylvania, but also in the tri-state area.”

But Delaware’s governor, Jack Markell, says the decision “raises significant concerns,” as officials worry about the impact on water quality and safety.  Delaware Attorney General Beau Biden says in a statement that his office is prepared to take “necessary legal action” to ensure the Corps applies for and obtains required state permits.

And New Jersey Governor Jon Corzine says he is disappointed that the Corps plans to go ahead with dredging plans without obtaining state permits.

Corzine says he has directed Attorney General Anne Milgram to prepare legal action to stop the work unless the Army Corps allows the environmental review process to be completed.

The project is expected to begin by January, and last about five years.

(Photo by KYW’s Ian Bush)

Material from The Associated Press was used in this report.

Nobel Prize for Effort

Posted in Political BS on October 9, 2009 by filloutthebox

This makes me wonder how Greg Mortenson feels.  There is a man who built something, brick by brick, with calloused hands.  He risked his life to make a difference.  President Obama received the award for: “for his extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation between peoples” as stated on the Nobel Prize web site.  So we reward effort with a Nobel Prize? I guess I have a different view on things.  I don’t consider negotiating, or opening the doors to negotiating, with rogue dictators as strengthening international anything.  Unbelievable…

http://news.yahoo.com/s/time/20091009/us_time/08599192939500

Obama’s Nobel: The Last Thing He Needs

Time.com

'Humbled' Obama wins Nobel Peace Prize AFP – US President Barack Obama speaks after winning the Nobel Peace Prize. Obama sensationally won the Nobel …

By NANCY GIBBS Nancy Gibbs 1 hr 1 min ago

The last thing Barack Obama needed at this moment in his presidency and our politics is a prize for a promise.

Inspirational words have brought him a long way – including to the night in Grant Park less than a year ago when he asked that we “join in the work of remaking this nation the only way it’s been done in America for two-hundred and twenty-one years – block by block, brick by brick, calloused hand by calloused hand.” (See pictures of Obama in Grant Park.)

By now there are surely more callouses on his lips than his hands. He, like every new president, has reckoned with both the power and the danger of words, dangers that are especially great for one who wields them as skillfully as he. A promise beautifully made raises hopes especially high: we will revive the economy while we rein in our spending; we will make health care simpler, safer, cheaper, fairer. We will rid the earth of its most lethal weapons. We will turn green and clean. We will all just get along. (See pictures of eight months of Obama’s diplomacy.)

So when reality bites, it chomps down hard. The Nobel committee cited “his extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation between peoples.” His critics fault some of those efforts: those who favor a missile shield for Poland or a troop surge in Afghanistan or a harder line on Iran. But even his fans know that none of the dreams have yet come true, and a prize for even dreaming them can feed the illusion that they have. (See the Top 10 Obama Backlash Moments)

Maybe the prize will give him more power, new muscles to haul unruly nations in line. But peacemaking is more about ingenuity than inspiration, about reading other nations’ selfish interests and cynically, strategically exploiting them for the common good. Will it help if fewer countries come to the table hating us? To a point. But it’s a starting point, not an end in itself.

At this moment many Americans are longing for a president who is more bully, less pulpit. The president who leased his immense inaugural good will to the hungry appropriators writing the stimulus bill, who has not stopped negotiating health care reform except to say what is non-negotiable, whose solicitude for the wheelers and dealers who drove the financial system into a ditch leaves the rest of us wondering who has our back, has always shown great promise, said the right things, affirmed every time he opens his mouth that he understands the fears we face and the hopes we hold. But he presides over a capital whose day-to-day functioning has become part-travesty, part-tragedy, wasteful, blind, vain, petty, where even the best intentioned reformers measure their progress with teaspoons. There comes a time when a President needs to take a real risk – and putting his prestige on the line to win the Olympics for his home town does not remotely count.

Compare this to Greg Mortenson, nominated for the prize by some members of Congress, who the bookies gave 20-to-1 odds of winning. Son of a missionary, a former army Medic and mountaineer, he has made it his mission to build schools for girls in places where opium dealers and tribal warlords kill people for trying. His Central Asia Institute has built more than 130 schools in Afghanistan and Pakistan – a mission which has, along the way, inspired millions of people to view the protection and education of girls as a key to peace and prosperity and progress.(See an interactive guide to Obama’s first 100 days.)

Sometimes the words come first. Sometimes, it’s better to let actions speak for themselves.

Firefighters lose large U.S. grant to ACORN

Posted in Political BS on October 7, 2009 by filloutthebox

So let me get this right.  A group that has been investigated in the past for voter fraud, and who were caught on tape advising a prostitution and pimp ring, gets nearly 1 million dollars for fire prevention!!!!  Last time I checked, the men and women who ride on the back step are the fire prevention experts!  Has ACORN been to your house to install smoke detectors???  This is a prime example why our economy is in shambles.  Ever hear of checks and balances?  Firefighters around the country are facing layoffs and station closings.  Yet the money keeps flowing, but evidently not to where it is needed.  Good job by the Washington Times to pick up on this.  Remember, this is Fire Prevention Week.  Those sirens you hear tonight are our bravest, not ACORN.  Change your clock, change the battery in your smoke detector. Practice home fire drills with your children.  Have a plan, develop it tonight!  BB

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2009/oct/07/firefighters-lose-large-grant-to-acorn/

By Audrey Hudson

Nearly $1 million in Homeland Security funding typically earmarked for fire departments has been awarded to ACORN, despite a clear signal from Congress that it intends to cut off federal funding to the embattled group.

The grant to ACORN’s Louisiana office became public on Oct. 2, less than three weeks after the House and Senate voted to cut off ACORN funding after employees were caught on video advising a fake prostitute and pimp on scams.

It was one of only three such grants issued to the state and made up almost 80 percent of the firefighting money earmarked for Louisiana, prompting one of the U.S. senators from the state to demand that the funds be taken back.

“I request that you rescind this grant based on a history of abuse of federal dollars by ACORN and their clear lack of expertise in this area,” said Sen. David Vitter, Louisiana Republican.

The group has headquarters in Louisiana.

When asked how the money would be spent, ACORN spokesman Brian Kettenring issued a statement criticizing the senator, who confessed in the past to having used an escort service.

“Senator Vitter knows a lot more about prostitution rings than anyone here does, so we’ll defer to him on any matters pertaining to the videos attacking ACORN,” the statement read. It did not explain how the group plans to spend the Federal Emergency Management Agency grant.

Mr. Vitter, who was routinely notified of the grant before it became public, sent his letter to Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano on Sept. 22, saying the money should be given “to a more deserving group of first responders.”

One such group might have been the St. Tammany Parish Fire District No. 3, which applied for a $120,000 grant to purchase smoke alarms for low-income families after a January fire killed four childrenin a home that had no working detectors.

“We wanted to buy smoke detectors to spread to homes all over the community to prevent that from happening again,” Chief Charles Flynn said in an interview Tuesday.

“I have no problem with not getting a grant, I’ve lost grants before,” said Chief Flynn, one of the fire officials who complained to Mr. Vitter in a letter.

“My issue is ACORN in New Orleans. Their mission statement says nothing about fire safety or fire prevention. It bothered me that ACORN got $1 million and there are so many smaller and bigger departments that have a need for that money.”

The Monroe Fire Department was the only squad in Louisiana to receive a grant and will be awarded $192,000. The Louisiana State Fire Marshal’s Office will receive $62,000.

ACORN received $997,402, slightly less than the maximum allowable grant of $1 million. A total of $35 million was available for the grants project to fire districts across the country this year.

“Several Louisiana fire departments have voiced their serious concerns to me over the award of these funds to ACORN,” Mr. Vitter said in the letter.

“We can all understand that there are never enough funds to allocate for all the deserving requests of fire departments, and each year there are many more requests than funds available,” he wrote. “But when so many fire departments throughout the nation are struggling for funding for important and lifesaving projects, how is it that a non-fire department with no clear expertise in fire safety and prevention is given such a large award for fire safety?”

“These firefighters that put their lives on the line for the safety of their communities deserve a full explanation of this award,” Mr. Vitter said.

The money, formally awarded for fiscal year 2008, was given to the ACORN Institute, which bills itself as a research and training facility “to combat the poverty, discrimination and community deterioration that keeps low-income people from taking advantage of their rights and opportunities.”

This is the second year ACORN has been awarded the fire prevention and safety grant. In the 2007 fiscal year, ACORN received $450,484 out of Louisiana’s $859,596 share.

Matthew Chandler, Homeland Security spokesman, said Ms. Napolitano will respond directly to Mr. Vitter.

“The department does not respond to correspondence through the media,” Mr. Chandler said.

Mr. Vitter’s office said the senator had not received a response as of Tuesday afternoon.

FEMA spokesman Clark Stevens said no funds had been distributed.

FEMA’s Web site says that in addition to fire departments, the grants are sometimes awarded to community organizations that are “recognized for their experience and expertise in fire prevention and safety programs and activities.”

Out of 200 fire-prevention and research grants announced last week to fire organizations, governments and universities primarily, a half-dozen went to community groups that included ACORN; Safe Kids of Clark County, Nevada; Geneva County Children’s Non-Profit Council of Alabama; and the Healthy Homes Coalition of West Michigan.

The money can be used for purchasing smoke detectors, media campaigns, arson-prevention programs, and wildfire prevention.

Republicans had long been critical of ACORN, which also is under investigation in several states on voter-fraud and other corruption charges. But Democrats have begun abandoning the group since the series of sting videos were released on Andrew Breitbart’s investigative Web site biggovernment.com starting in early September.

The Senate voted Sept. 14 to cut off funding for ACORN in response to the release; the House followed suit three days later. The two bills will have to be combined before a final vote takes place.

However, the Internal Revenue Service says it will eject ACORN from the agency’s volunteer tax assistance program, and the Census Bureau has excluded the group from helping with the 2010 census.

The FEMA grant was revealed as ACORN Chief Executive Officer Bertha Lewis and Louisiana Attorney General Buddy Caldwell sparred over how much money was embezzled from the group by a top official nearly a decade ago.

ACORN says less than $1 million was stolen, but the attorney general claims the figure is as high as $5 million.

“This is speculation, completely false and not based on any documentation or any audit or anything other than two disgruntled former board members,” Ms. Lewis said Tuesday at a National Press Club news conference during which she accused the group’s critics of racism.

Joseph Curl contributed to this report.

Yonkers LODD Update

Posted in Firefighting on October 6, 2009 by filloutthebox

This is an update to an earlier post.  Thanks Billy G.

A suspected arsonist has been arrested for setting that house fire, that resulted in the Line of Duty Death of Yonkers (N.Y.) Firefighter Patrick Joyce.

Police arrested and charged dirtbag Rafael Rodan today with second-degree murder, second-degree arson and second-degree burglary. Investigators say he set the fire as payback for the landlord evicting him. Roldan is being held at the Westchester County Department of Corrections, until his arraignment Monday.

Investigators called the fire suspicious, adding the fire erupted in multiple locations within the multi-family dwelling.

Firefighter Patrick Joyce was killed in the Line of Duty Friday and flashover like conditions forced FF Joyce and the 2 other Firefighters out that third-story window, or they had no choice but to jump. We have a pic of that structure on our home page.

Firefighter Joyce leaves behind a wife and two little girls. Meanwhile, Lt. Joseph Murray and Firefighter William Kanych are in serious but stable condition.

Take Care-BE CAREFUL.

BillyG

The Secret List 10-3-09 / 2137 Hours

www.FireFighterCloseCalls.com

Billy G politely referred to this guy as a dirtbag.  I can think of a few more not so kind things to say about him!  Firefighting is a tough job.  We understand the risks associated with our chosen profession.  What we don’t need are J-bags running around torching places as payback!  I hope it was worth it for him.

Yonkers Bravest Line of Duty Death

Posted in Firefighting on October 3, 2009 by filloutthebox

Firefighting ranks as one of Americas most dangerous professions.  Today, in Yonkers NY, that point was re-enforced when a veteran firefighter lost his life in the line of duty.  FF Patrick Joyce, 39,  died while searching for occupants at a three alarm fire today.  FF Joyce is a 16 year member of the YFD and the 17th Yonkers Firefighter to die in the line of duty.  He is survived by a wife and two children.  As always, our thoughts and prayers are with the Joyce family, his friends, and our brothers of IAFF Local 628.  Service information is provided via IAFF Local 628.  R.I.P. Brother…

Funeral Services for FF Patrick Joyce

Updated On: Oct 02, 2009 (12:21:00)

FIREFIGHTER PATRICK JOYCE

SERVICES

FUNERAL HOME

MCGRATH & SONS

20 CEDAR STREET

BRONXVILLE, NY 10708

914-337-6770

DIRECTIONS—-> http://mcgrathandson.com/directions.htm

SERVICES ARE

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 4TH, 2009

2PM-6PM

MONDAY, OCTOBER 5TH, 2009

2PM-4PM & 7PM-9PM

FUNERAL

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 6TH, 2009

9:45AM ST. MARGARET’S CHURCH

6000 RIVERDALE AVE & 260th ST , BRONX, NY

SERVICES TO FOLLOW

AT GATE OF HEAVEN CEMETERY

HAWTHORNE ,NY

Welcome to Fill Out the Box!

Posted in Firefighting, Misc on October 2, 2009 by filloutthebox

Hello everyone!  This blog will cover everything from general news items, to sports, politics, weather, and of course as the name implies, the fireground.  I will try to avoid rants, but anyone who knows me understands that they are inevitable!  I am a Navy Veteran, serving about 3.5 years in the Middle East.  A 10 year firefighter, I have worked in Center City, Southwest, and South Philly.  I love to fish, and hope to retire and fish the world.  Cooking and coaching baseball pretty much round me out.  Enjoy Fill Out the Box, and feel free to leave a comment.

BB