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An excerpt from What We Saw by CBS News, published by Simon Schuster. Bill Geist is a CBS News correspondent.Ridgewood, New Jersey, is a small community of old homes, old trees, old values. It s where I live. From here you can get a spectacular view of New York s skyline, seventeen miles away.It s a convenient commute to New York s downtown financial district, and early every morning my drowsy friends and neighbors grab coffee and bagels by the old, tiled-roof station and board trains for Wall Street, racing back home in the evening for family dinners, school plays, and soccer games.On a sunny Tuesday in September, many did not come home. Twelve Ridgewood residents and many more from adjacent neighborhoods in towns that border ours were missing i
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As much as we like to gripe about it stateside
stanley cup , our complaints about the drone program are nothing compared to those of Al Qaeda. The terrorists don ;t like drones, because drones are designed to kill terrorists. According to documents leaked by Edward Snowden, however, Al Qaeda about to fight back. The Washington Post gained access to the leaked documents and found some pretty interesting facts about Al Qaeda relationship to drones. In brief, they do not like drones, or as the online jihadist magazine Azan put it, evil missiles designed by the devils of the world. Drones keep the terrorists holed up in their caves and otherwise living in constant fear of an attack, so Al Qaeda been busy over the past few years, exploring ways to fight back and neutralize the threat. At present, Al Qaeda is recruiting engineers to help out in its anti-drone mission, but it also giving guidance about how to evade an attack to all its members. In 2010, for instance, the organization distributed a 8220 trategy guide 822
stanley cup 1; with tips on how to anticipate and defeat drones. According to the Post, Al Qaeda was sponsoring simultaneous research p
stanley thermos rojects to develop jammers to interfere with GPS signals and infrared tags that drone operators rely on to pinpoint missile targets. One idea is to use lasers and dazzlers to blind the drone cameras and disable the GPS. Meanwhile, leaders have been work