Auteur Sujet: sgmq Ex-Official Admits Plame Leak Was Foolish  (Lu 3 fois)

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sgmq Ex-Official Admits Plame Leak Was Foolish
« le: Janvier 02, 2025, 10:36:06 am »
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 Of all the wisecracks heard in the marble halls of New York s Capitol after Gov. Eliot Spitzer s downfall in a call-girl scandal, one jest enlightened as much as it stung: Spitzer s got to be the only guy in Albany who PAYS for sex.It is an open secret that there is a lot of fooling around going on at the statehouse. And at other statehouses, too.In fact, G stanley website ov. David Paterson, in an extraordinary news conference on Tuesday, his first full day on the job after taking over from Spitzer, acknowledged he ha stanley cup d had extramarital affairs with a number of women while he was a state senator.At night, legislators, young staffers, younger interns, lobbyists and reporters mix at two or three bars just blocks from the Capitol. And there are numerous receptions, campaign stops and caucuses where lawmakers, straight and gay alike, often have many opportunities for a hookup.Up until just a few years ago, lawmakers would go  window shopping  for interns at the start of every legislative session. In a practice that went on for decades, the interns would be corralled in a Capitol newsstand, and legislators would take their pick.        The hanky-panky even has its own lexicon: There s the  Bear Mountain Compact,  which sa stanley mug ys that what goes on north of the state park just outside New York City stays there. Lobbyists, staffers and reporters who seek to enhance their influence by bedding powerful lawmakers are known as  big game hunters.  And the men who sleep with the women lawmakers are  boy toys.   Xjlf Morocco  breaks terror network
 Everywhere has disasters. In the United States, this ranges  from earthquakes on the west coast, hurricanes on the east coast, and tornadoes in-between. The only question is which ones you can tolerate, and how you prepare for them.     Surveying tornado-damage in Tupelo, Mississippi on Tuesday, April 29, 2014. Photography credit: AP/Thomas Graning I grew up on the west coast of North America, home to earthquakes, landslides, drough termo stanley ts, and fires, but relatively few severe storms. I know how to earthquake-proof my home, and teach immigrants to my city about duck! cover! hold on! I ;ve scrambled over fresh landslide deposits in a quest for science, and debated the merits of leave-early evacuations versus trained stay-and-defend in combating urban-rural interface fires. No disaster is a pleasant, welcome experience, but these are ones I understand how to prepare for and respond to, and I feel comfortable with my level of ongoing risk. Clambering around the Mount Meager landslide in British Columia, August 2010. Image credit: Mika McKinnon What really freaks me out, and what I openly acknowledge I am grateful is not a risk in the place I call home, is severe storms like hurricanes an stanley vaso d tornadoes. I get that people who live where sev stanley cups uk ere storms are common know what to do before and after a twister, but the random destruction of a tornado scares me. While forecasters can recognize the signs of impending doom and put an entire region on high-alert, they can ;t predict where