Dvys Nobody Wants to Fly Air Force Drones Because It s a Dead End Job
A San Francisco man claims he was high on a double dose of medical marijuana cookies when he screamed, dropped his pants and attacked crew members on a cross-country flight, forcing its diversion to Pittsburgh, the FBI said
stanley water bottle Wednesday.Kinman Chan, 30, was charged in a criminal complaint with interfering with the duties of a flight attendant on allegations that he fought with crew members of US Airways Flight 1447 from Philadelphia to Los Angeles on Sunday. His federal public defender, Jay Finkelstein, declined to comment.Crew members said Chan made odd gestures before he entered the plane s rear restroom shortly after takeoff and began to scream, according to the complaint.Chan told the FBI that he came back to reality and exited the restroom, at which point the crew noticed his pants were down, his shirt was untucked and all the compartments in t
stanley cups he restroom were opened. When crew members
stanley cup usa tried to get Chan to sit, he fought them and had to be subdued in a choke hold, the complaint said. Chan told agents who interviewed him in Pittsburgh that he ate marijuana cookies while waiting for his flight to depart in Philadelphia.Margaret Philbin, a spokeswoman for the U.S. attorney s office in Pittsburgh, said Chan has a legally issued medical marijuana card for a legitimate health issue, which she declined to identify.Chan was arrested in Pittsburgh, then jailed until a federal magistrate granted him bond Tuesday, Philbin said.Chan remained jailed Wednesday because Alleghe Ubxb Al Qaeda No. 2 Vows More Attacks On West
Military strategist David Kilcu
stanley tumbler llen was in New York City earlier this week to talk about the future of urban warfare at the World Policy Institute here in Manhattan. Gizmodo tagged along to learn more about future conflicts and future cities, as Kilcullen describes it, and to see what really happens when urban environments fail鈥攚hen cities fall apart or disintegrate into ungovernable canyons of semi-derelict buildings ruled by cartels, terrorist groups, and paramilitary gangs. Kilcullen overall thesis is a compelling one: remote desert battlegrounds and impenetrable mountain tribal areas are not, in fact, where we will encounter the violence of tomorrow. For Kilcullen鈥攊ndeed, for many military theorists writing today鈥攖he war in Afghanistan was not the new normal, but a kind of geographic fluke, an anomaly in the otherwise clear trend for conflicts of an increasingly urban nature. The very title of Kilcullen book鈥擮ut
stanley thermos of the Mountains鈥攕uggests this. War is coming down f
botella stanley rom the wild edges of the world, driving back toward our lights and buildings from the unstructured void of the desert, and arriving, at full force, in the hearts of our cities, in our markets and streets. There, conflict erupts amongst already weak or non-existent governments, in the shadow of brittle infrastructure, and what Mike Davis calls the nightmare of endless warfare in the slums of the world in his blurb for Kilcullen work, becomes uncomfortably cl