Archive for February, 2015

Day of Shining Star Observed by Foreign Papers

Pyongyang, February 24 (KCNA) -- Foreign papers carried special write-ups accompanied with portraits of smiling leader Kim Jong Il on the occasion of his birth anniversary (the Day of the Shining Star).

The February issue of the Bulgarian paper Iskra carried an article titled "Life dedicated to the country". It introduced in detail his energetic activities for the prosperity of the country, happiness of its people, independent and peaceful reunification of the country and the human cause of independence.

The paper in the article titled "Socialism is a science" said:

Kim Jong Il published his work "Socialism Is a Science" when the movement for global socialism faced serous crisis.

In the work he clarified that socialism centered on man, the popular masses would surely win for its scientific accuracy and truth.

The advantages of Korean-style socialism and achievements made in the DPRK prove that socialism is a science and will be invincible.

The Ugandan paper Sun Rise on Feb. 13 devoted one whole page to an article under the headline "Life for future."

The DR Congo paper L'Avenir on Feb. 13 dedicated one whole page to articles under the titles "Unforgettable leader" and "Life for people's happiness".

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Day of Shining Star Observed by Foreign Papers

Play Doh Sofia The First Royal Tea Party At Play Doh Enchanted Garden Disney Junior Prince – Video


Play Doh Sofia The First Royal Tea Party At Play Doh Enchanted Garden Disney Junior Prince
Girls can host a very special Royal Tea Party for Sofia and her two best friends from Enchancia, Ruby and Jade in this Sofia the First Tea for Three Set fr. Play-Doh Sofia The First Enchanted...

By: Ukse Teti

Originally posted here:
Play Doh Sofia The First Royal Tea Party At Play Doh Enchanted Garden Disney Junior Prince - Video

6 Years On, Is The Tea Party Here To Stay?

A man holds up a tea kettle during an Atlanta Tea Party tax protest in April 2009. John Bazemore/AP hide caption

A man holds up a tea kettle during an Atlanta Tea Party tax protest in April 2009.

It was February of 2009. President Obama had been in office less than a full month. His approval rating was over 60 and nearly 60% of the House and Senate seats were held by Democrats. The country seem poised on the edge of a new era, perhaps even another New Deal.

Not a few mainstream Republicans believed their party needed to do some serious soul-searching, house-cleaning and image-adjusting. A task force at the Republican National Committee was hard at work on just such a set of recommendations.

But there was another spirit in the land as well. In Washington state, which had easily gone for the Democrats in November, travelers on Interstate 5 could see a huge billboard reading: "Give me God, guns and gold and you can keep the change." The reference to Obama's 2008 "hope and change" theme could not have been clearer.

That same spirit of determined pushback was evident in plenty of other places, coast to coast, and it got more visible as the weeks went by.

Before Obama had been in office for a month, much of the nation saw an astonishing meltdown by cable TV personality Rick Santelli, an investment analyst on business news network CNBC.

For close to three minutes, Santelli harangued the live host and other on-air contributors with a fiery denunciation of the Obama plan to help homeowners whose property was worth less than its mortgage.

Santelli referred to "paying losers' mortgages" and strongly implied the program beneficiaries had no one but themselves to blame for their situation.

But then he uttered the magic phrase that altered the course of politics, if not history, on that chilly morning: "We're thinking about having a Chicago tea party in July," he shouted. "All you capitalists that wanna show up to Lake Michigan. I'm gonna start organizing."

Originally posted here:
6 Years On, Is The Tea Party Here To Stay?

YOUR VIEWS: What about the Tea Party?

Editor:

Were hearing that the Tea Party is dying away. Dont believe it. The Tea Party wants what We the People and real conservatives want not what Republicans in Name Only (RINOS) or Democrats are doing.

Those multi-term career politicians dont care what the people want. Its about themselves and their power over us. However, most of the newly elected legislators are Tea Party candidates who take their oaths of office seriously and believe that the US Constitution is the Law of the Land.

The Tea Party, these new legislators, and a few others are listening to the American majority and want to: 1) stop bailouts, 2) reduce size and intrusiveness of Government, 3) lower, NOT raise taxes, 4) repeal/replace Obamacare, 5) cease out-of-control spending, 6) bring back American prosperity by securing our borders, saving American jobs from illegals, etc. (Open borders and amnesty benefit large companies wanting cheap labor and Democrats who want more voters). Conservatives supposedly share those same Tea Party goals, plus: 1) strong national defense, 2) inviolability of our Constitution, 3) right to bear arms, 4) value of every human life, 5) freedom of speech, 6) freedom of religion, and 7) importance of the family as the fundamental building block in our society.

These conservatives goals, although quite admirable, are useless if only on paper and not being pursued. Its mostly lip service as they do whatever.

On the other hand, the Tea Party and their newly elected legislators, have to fight RINOS, political business as usual and the administration, in attempting to achieve any of these much needed endeavors.

The Boston Tea Party saved us once and hopefully now the Tea Party along with freedom-loving Americans can save our country once again, this time from our own self-serving government. God Bless America!

Richard Quatman

Lake Havasu City

Read more from the original source:
YOUR VIEWS: What about the Tea Party?

6 Years Ago At CPAC Meeting, The Tea Party Movement Ignited

A man holds up a tea kettle during an Atlanta Tea Party tax protest in April 2009. John Bazemore/AP hide caption

A man holds up a tea kettle during an Atlanta Tea Party tax protest in April 2009.

It was February of 2009. President Obama had been in office less than a full month. His approval rating was over 60 and nearly 60% of the House and Senate seats were held by Democrats. The country seem poised on the edge of a new era, perhaps even another New Deal.

Not a few mainstream Republicans believed their party needed to do some serious soul-searching, house-cleaning and image-adjusting. A task force at the Republican National Committee was hard at work on just such a set of recommendations.

But there was another spirit in the land as well. In Washington state, which had easily gone for the Democrats in November, travelers on Interstate 5 could see a huge billboard reading: "Give me God, guns and gold and you can keep the change." The reference to Obama's 2008 "hope and change" theme could not have been clearer.

That same spirit of determined pushback was evident in plenty of other places, coast to coast, and it got more visible as the weeks went by.

Before Obama had been in office for a month, much of the nation saw an astonishing meltdown by cable TV personality Rick Santelli, an investment analyst on business news network CNBC.

For close to three minutes, Santelli harangued the live host and other on-air contributors with a fiery denunciation of the Obama plan to help homeowners whose property was worth less than its mortgage.

Santelli referred to "paying losers' mortgages" and strongly implied the program beneficiaries had no one but themselves to blame for their situation.

But then he uttered the magic phrase that altered the course of politics, if not history, on that chilly morning: "We're thinking about having a Chicago tea party in July," he shouted. "All you capitalists that wanna show up to Lake Michigan. I'm gonna start organizing."

Continued here:
6 Years Ago At CPAC Meeting, The Tea Party Movement Ignited