Utterly fascinating. Hurricane Andrew was possibly Bush I's downfall, after 
similar failure to act quickly or identify with victims. If you can find the 
time, events and failures practically mimic what occurred in N.O. 
recently--failures at all levels, with the underlying need for preparedness at 
top gov't levels. Check out the costs thirteen years ago for a much smaller, 
though 'biggest disaster ever' at the time. The accusations are amazingly 
almost word for word what were tossed around for Katrina. They ignored 
everything they learned.

Er, yes. Also included below: The new head of FEMA is the guy who recommended 
duct tape to Americans post 9/11.

BTW: I also learned that the New Orleans Museum was well protected by armed 
police and also by its staff. Nothing allowed to be looted, unlike the open 
door event at Baghdad's museum...Of course, another country's heritage, which 
in this case housed the largest ancient world collection of Earth's heritage, 
defies by its existence alone that the mighty US is creator/God's chosen people 
of the modern world, and like so much other evidence that exposes America as a 
child prone to rejecting facts when they do not conform to its will or 
delusional self-image, must be ignored or trashed. 

Natalia

All mail scanned by NAV
----- Original Message ----- 
From: Progressive Review <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, September 13, 2005 7:43 AM
Subject: UNDERNEWS SEP 13


| UNDERNEWS
| SEP 13, 2005
| FROM THE PROGRESSIVE REVIEW
| EDITED BY SAM SMITH
| Since 1964, Washington's most unofficial source
| 
| E-MAIL: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
| LATEST HEADLINES & INDEX: http://prorev.com
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| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| WORD
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
| Things are going to get a lot worse before they get worse - Lily Tomlin
| 
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| KATRINA
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
| DEJA VU ALL OVER AGAIN:
| DADDY BUSH MISHANDLED A HUGE HURRICANE
| 13 YEARS BEFORE HIS SON DID
| 
| GENERAL ACCOUNTING OFFICE, JULY 23, 1993 - The nation's management of
| catastrophic disasters was intensely criticized after Hurricane Andrew
| leveled much of South Florida and Hurricane Iniki destroyed much of
| the Hawaiian island of Kauai in 1992. . . The response to Hurricane
| Andrew raised doubts about whether FEMA is capable of responding to
| catastrophic disasters . . .
| 
| The federal strategy for responding to catastrophic disasters is
| deficient because it lacks provisions for the federal government to
| immediately
| 
| (1) assess in a comprehensive manner the damage and the corresponding
| needs of disaster victims and
| 
| (2) provide food, shelter, and other essential services when the needs
| of disaster victims outstrip the resources of the state, local, and
| private voluntary community.
| 
| Moreover, the federal strategy - encompassing 26 different agencies -
| does not promote adequate preparedness when there is advance warning
| of a disaster because preparatory activities are not explicitly
| authorized until the President has issued a disaster declaration. . .
| 
| To improve the federal response, the nation needs presidential
| involvement and leadership both before and after a catastrophic
| disaster strikes. To underscore the commitment of the President,
| responsibility for catastrophic disaster preparedness and response
| should be placed with a key official in the White House. This would
| institutionalize the direct presidential involvement that occurred on
| an ad hoc basis in Hurricane Andrew and other recent major disasters. . .
| 
| Within FEMA, a disaster unit is needed to provide the White House and
| the Director of FEMA with information, analysis, and technical support
| to improve federal decision-making on helping state and local
| governments before, during, and after catastrophic disasters. . .
| 
| Current federal law governing disaster response does not explicitly
| authorize federal agencies to undertake preparatory activities before
| a disaster declaration by the President, nor does it authorize FEMA to
| reimburse agencies for such preparation, even when disasters like
| hurricanes provide some warning that such activities will be needed.
| Federal agencies may fail to undertake advance preparations because of
| uncertainty over whether costs incurred before a disaster declaration
| will ultimately be reimbursed by FEMA. . .
| 
| FEMA needs to use its existing resources to better prepare state and
| local governments for catastrophic disaster response so that they are
| as effective as possible. . .
| 
| Our review of Hurricanes Andrew and Iniki uncovered several problems
| with the response efforts, virtually all of which were revealed in
| South Florida because of the magnitude of the disaster there: an
| economic loss of about $30 billion, the largest loss from a natural
| disaster in U.S. history; the destruction of or serious damage to at
| least 75,000 homes and 8,000 businesses; and the newly created
| homelessness of more than 160,000 people. In Florida alone, federal
| assistance is expected to exceed $1.8 billion, making Andrew by far
| one of the most costly disasters to which FEMA has ever responded. . .
| 
| While we clearly see a major role for DOD in providing mass care, we
| do not advocate turning over the entire disaster response, relief, and
| recovery operation to the military. DOD'S role in disaster response
| needs to remain under the direction of a civilian authority outside of
| the Department for two important reasons. First, DOD'S foremost
| responsibility is to deal with those military matters affecting
| national security; a full-time DOD mission of managing disaster
| preparedness and relief could detract from the Department's primary
| responsibility. Second, DOD officials strongly believe, and we agree,
| that assuming overall management responsibility could create the
| impression that the military is attempting to make or direct domestic
| policy, which runs contrary to principles that have guided the
| military's role in the United States. . .
| 
| Federal response time could be reduced by encouraging agencies to do
| as much advance preparation as possible prior to a disaster
| declaration. When there is early warning, as there is for hurricanes,
| DOD and other federal agencies need to mobilize resources and deploy
| personnel before the catastrophe strikes. However, current law does
| not explicitly authorize such activities.. . . DOD officials told us
| that they take some actions to prepare for a disaster when there is
| warning-such as identifying quantities, locations, and transportation
| requirements for mass care supplies-but they take no additional
| measures because the Department might have to pay for the expenses if
| FEMA ultimately does not request its assistance. . .
| 
| We may well face disasters or emergencies that could affect even more
| people than Hurricane Andrew did. As devastating as this disaster was
| to South Florida, experts agree that we were fortunate it was not far
| worse both in terms of the loss of life and monetary damage. These
| experts also predict that we are entering a period of increased
| hurricane activity and that we need to take action today at the local,
| state, and federal levels to prevent greater loss of life and
| property. The problems we found with the federal strategy for
| catastrophic disasters-such as inadequate damage and needs
| assessments, miscommunication, unclear legislative authority, and
| unprepared, untrained state and local responders-are more systemic
| than agency-specific. Thus, they require solutions that cut across
| agencies and levels of government.
| 
| Presidential leadership and an immediate, massive response to a
| catastrophic disaster are key elements in a successful effort to
| meeting victims' immediate, life-sustaining needs. . .
| 
| We have concluded that the nation's disaster response
| strategy-particularly for devastating, catastrophic disasters-needs
| substantial, across-the-board improvement. . .
| 
| http://archive.gao.gov/t2pbat5/149631.pdf
| 
| HERBERT A. FRIEDMAN, PSYWARRIOR - NOAA released [a] report entitled
| "Hurricane Andrew  10 Years Later." This report updated and finalized
| the extent of the hurricane in cost and lives, "Hurricane Andrew was
| the most destructive United States hurricane of record. It blasted its
| way across south Florida on August 24, 1992. NOAA's National Hurricane
| Center had a peak gust of 164 mph, measured 130 feet above the ground,
| while a 177 mph gust was measured at a private home. Andrew caused 23
| deaths in the United States and three more in the Bahamas. The
| hurricane caused $26.5 billion in damage in the United States, of
| which $1 billion occurred in Louisiana and the rest in south Florida.
| The vast majority of the damage in Florida was due to the winds."
| 
| I have always believed that Hurricane Andrew was one of the major
| reasons that President George Bush failed to be reelected. Nightly
| television news showed American citizens living among the rubble for
| days. The television anchors implied that the federal government did
| very little to ease their suffering. Partisan politics may have been
| involved, since the Democratic Governor of Florida apparently
| hesitated before asking for federal aid. Three days passed between
| Andrew's assault and the arrival of federal help. Kate Hale, the Dade
| County emergency director, went on live national television on 27
| August with tears in her eyes and castigated the federal government.
| Some of her comments were:
| 
| "Enough is enough. Quit playing like a bunch of kids. Where in the
| Hell is the cavalry? For God's sakes, where are they? We are going to
| have more casualties, because we are going to have more people
| dehydrated. People without water. People without food. Babies without
| formula. If we do not get more food into the south end of Dade County
| in a very short period of time, we are going to have more casualties!
| 
| "We have a catastrophic disaster. We are essentially the walking
| wounded. We have appealed through the State to the Federal Government.
| We've had a lot of people down here for press conferences, but Dade
| County is on its own. Dade County is being caught in the middle of
| something and we are being victimized. Quit playing like a bunch of
| kids and get us aid! Sort out your political games afterward!
| 
| "We are all about ready to drop, and the reinforcements are not
| getting in fast enough. We need better National Guard down
| here...President Bush was down here. I'd like him to follow up on the
| commitments he made."
| 
| At the time of the speech, three days after the storm, 250,000 Florida
| residents were struggling to survive without foot, water and shelter.
| The nationwide uproar reached Washington DC and President Bush
| immediately ordered 30,000 troops to the disaster area. Lieutenant
| General Samuel Ebbeson (a former deputy of General Schwarzkopf during
| the Persian Gulf War) was placed in charge of the military relief effort.
| 
| On the same day, Miami Herald staff writers Martin Merzer and Tom
| Fiedler wrote:
| 
| "The question echoed through the debris Thursday: If we can do it for
| Bangladesh, for the Philippines, for the Kurds of northern Iraq, why
| in God's name can't we deliver basic necessities of life to the
| ravaged population of our own Gold Coast?"
| 
| President George Bush contended that Florida Governor Lawton Chiles
| hadn't formally asked for help. Chiles countered that the need for a
| formal request seemed silly with the world watching images of 250,000
| flattened homes.
| 
| An example of the way the nation saw the relief effort can be found in
| Hurricane! - The Rage of Hurricane Andrew, Patricia Lantier-Sampon,
| Gareth Stevens Publishing, Milwaukee, WI, 1993. Some of the author's
| comments are:
| 
| August 25 - President Bush had flown in for a two-hour visit, but so
| far there was no federal relief. Electric power lines were down, food
| and clean water were in short supply, and people were sleeping outside
| with no place to wash up and no way to begin cleanup.
| 
| On Tuesday, September 1, President Bush made a second visit to Dade
| County, but it was two weeks after the storm before 22,000 National
| Guard members finally came to southern Florida.
| 
| The photographs of President Bush depict him walking stiffly and
| surrounded by military personnel. Photographs of candidate Clinton
| show him visiting the homeless without accompaniment, hugging
| children, and "feeling their pain."
| 
| Whatever the reason, the result was that American citizens were
| depicted nightly sitting under the stars by the wrecked remains of
| their homes while well-fed Haitian boat people were shown living in
| clean military tents in the U.S. base at Guantanamo, Cuba. Since that
| time, every U.S. President has made a point of personally visiting and
| being photographed at a domestic disaster scene.
| 
| http://www.psywarrior.com/PSYOPHurricaneAndrew.html
| 
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
| NEW FEMA BOSS IS 'DUCT TAPE MAN'
| 
| KEITHER OLBERMANN, MSNBC -  If Michael Brown's resignation this
| afternoon as the head of FEMA was supposed to end the political
| controversy over the administration's response to Hurricane Katrina,
| it probably won't.
| 
| In another gesture symbolizing the continued confusion of the federal
| response, the man President Bush immediately named to succeed
| "Brownie," proves to have been the same FEMA official who,
| two-and-a-half years ago, suggested that Americans stock up on duct
| tape to protect against a biological or chemical terrorist attack.
| 
| David Paulison, then the government's Fire Administrator, joined with
| the then-head of Homeland Security Tom Ridge, on February 10th, 2003,
| to say that duct tape and plastic sheeting should be part of any
| home's "survival kit" in preparation for a terrorist attack. That set
| off a run on duct tape at stores, and widespread criticism of the
| administration. It might have been the first time after 9/11 that a
| large number of Americans wondered if the government really knew what
| it was talking about when it came to disaster preparedness.
| 
| And the man behind that politically explosive proposal, has just been
| named to succeed the man who had been the face of the politically
| explosive response to Hurricane Katrina.
| 
| http://msnbc.msn.com/id/8514671/#050912a
| 
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
| WHITES DENY ETHNIC BIAS IN KATRINA RECOVERY
| 
| USA TODAY - A USA TODAY/CNN/Gallup poll finds a stark racial divide on
| other issues, including attitudes toward the hurricane's victims, the
| performance of President Bush and the reasons the government's early
| response was so wanting. Six in 10 African-Americans say the fact that
| most hurricane victims were poor and black was one reason the federal
| government failed to come to the rescue more quickly. Whites reject
| that idea; nearly 9 in 10 say those weren't factors.
| 
| http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2005-09-12-katrina-poll_x.htm
| 
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
| ROBERT LEBLANC, INTERDICTOR -  Jeff Rau, a family and now personal
| friend to whom I will forever be linked, and I were volunteering with
| a boat and pulling people out of the water on Wednesday. . . In my
| opinion, everything that is going on in the media is a complete
| bastardization of what is really happening. The result is that good
| people are dying and losing family members. I have my own set of
| opinions about welfare and people working to improve their own lot
| instead of looking for handouts, but what is occurring now is well
| beyond those borders. These people need help and need to get out. We
| can sort out all of the social and political issues later, but human
| beings with any sense of compassion would agree that the travesty that
| is going on here in New Orleans needs to end and people's lives need
| to be saved and families need to be put back together. Now.
| 
| I will tell you that I would probably disagree with most of the people
| that still need to be saved on political, social, and cultural values.
| However, it must be noted that these people love their friends and
| families like I do, desire to live like I do, and care for their
| respective communities (I was even amazed at the site of seemingly
| young and poor black people caring for sickly and seemingly well-to-do
| white people and tourists still needing evacuation from New Orleans'
| downtown area) the same way I care for mine.
| 
| http://www.livejournal.com/users/interdictor/
| 
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
| POTENTIAL TOXIC CHEMICAL SITES IN NEW ORLEANS
| http://www.ombwatch.org/article/articleview/3088/1/97?TopicID=1
| 
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| POLITICS
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
| NYC'S VOTING POPULATION GAINS MINORITY MAJORITY
| 
| SAM ROBERTS, NY TIMES - Today's Democratic primary is the prelude to a
| potentially revolutionary turning point in New York City's traditional
| tribal politics: In November, for the first time, non-Hispanic whites
| are projected to constitute a minority of the voters in a mayoral
| general election. . .
| 
| But rather than guaranteeing minority domination of New York
| government, the demographic changes have just made the city's politics
| more complex. A surge of new immigrants - many of them not bound, like
| their predecessors, to the Democratic Party - has so diversified
| black, Hispanic and Asian voters that some of the monolithic blocs and
| natural coalitions once taken for granted among those minority groups
| no longer apply.
| 
| Non-Hispanic whites became a minority of the city's overall population
| in the 1980's, but still made up a majority of voting-age citizens,
| registered voters and, according to exit polls and other surveys, New
| Yorkers who actually turned out on Election Day. It is estimated that
| non-Hispanic whites were 52 percent of the electorate in the 2001
| mayoral race and 51 percent of the city's voters in last year's
| presidential election.
| 
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
| DANA MILBANK WASHINGTON POST - Yesterday's opening of the John Roberts
| confirmation hearings was a time for historic firsts. Sen. Charles E.
| Schumer (D-N.Y.) made 49 first-person references in a 10-minute
| statement that was, ostensibly, not about himself.
| 
| http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/09/12/AR2005
| 091200916_pf.html
| 
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HEALTH & SCIENCE
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
| HOW LONG WILL YOU LIVE? A BUNCH OF ANSWERS
| 
| WATCHFUL INVESTOR - So, how long will you live? I set out to find
| answers, and came upon several life expectancy calculators:
| 
| 1. MSN Money. Awful. Not only because it has me dying at age 74 (!).
| The good thing is, it asks you so few questions that you can complete
| it in 2 minutes. But this means it leaves out a lot of important
| questions and the results suffer. It gives no useful information on
| how you can improve.
| 
| http://moneycentral.msn.com/investor/calcs/n_expect/main.asp
| 
| 2. Aging Research. Ah, much better! I get another 13 years and make it
| to 87. This one has many more questions, but it still can be completed
| in 10 minutes. At the end of the survey, for each question you
| answered, it provides background to help you make better choices. For
| example, drinking tea rather than coffee. Unfortunately, this one
| wants me to cut back on desserts, a major flaw.
| 
| http://www.agingresearch.org/calculator/
| 
| 3. BBC Health. This is the digest version of the Aging Research quiz.
| Fewer questions, but many are identically worded. Strangely, it makes
| you go to another page to figure out your BMI index before you start
| the quiz, rather than just doing it for you in the quiz. I also live
| to 87 in the BBC model, so I guess that's acceptable. Also provides
| good information at the end.
| 
| http://www.bbc.co.uk/apps/ifl/health/gigaquiz?infile=health_calculator
| &path=calculator_living
| 
| 4. Wharton. Relatively short, with different questions, but still has
| me living to 87. I'm seeing a pattern here. Also gives lower and upper
| quartile for expected age, giving me an outside shot at 97. The
| analysis at the end allows you to see how many extra years would be
| added by changing some of the variables.
| 
| http://gosset.wharton.upenn.edu/%7Efoster/mortality/perl/CalcForm.html
| 
| Google also finds a calculator at Northwest Mutual Life, but it took
| too long to download and I gave up. And one from a site called
| "Dinkytown", which was even more simplistic than the MSN one.
| 
| And the winner is...The Aging Research calculator. I'm adding it to
| the sidebar. Let me know if any of you can expect to become
| centenarians (or if you are already a centenarian!).
| 
| http://watchfulinvestor.blogspot.com/
| 
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
| REGISTER-GUARD -  Two Oregon State University researchers have
| concluded there is little connection between urban sprawl and the
| expanding waistlines of Americans. Professors Andrew Plantinga and
| Stephanie Bernell say people who are overweight and sedentary tend to
| gravitate toward neighborhoods with fewer opportunities for walking
| because it's not something they care about. "We found very little
| evidence that it was the physical environment causing obesity,"
| Plantinga said. "Rather, it seemed to be more about how people choose
| the types of neighborhoods to live in.". . .
| 
| The researchers found that fit people choose to live in neighborhoods
| that allow them to walk to work or shop and fat people pick places
| where they need a car. The study was adjusted to eliminate differences
| due to income and other factors.
| 
| http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20050913/ap_on_he_me/subur
| ban_obesity_1
| 
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
| BBC - How much TV children watch accurately predicts whether they will
| go on to become overweight, a study suggests. It has previously been
| shown television is linked to weight gain as children are less active
| and eat while watching. . . The International Journal of Obesity study
| found the 41% who were overweight or obese by the age of 26 were those
| who had watched most TV.
| 
| http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/4238386.stm
| 
| HEADPHONE USE MAY WORSEN HEARING LOSS
| http://www.breitbart.com/news/2005/09/12/D8CJ24E83.html
| 
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| THE MEDIACRACY
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
| CNN PRODUCER TO GUEST: GET ANGRY
| 
| MICHAEL KINSLEY - The TV news networks, which only a few months ago
| were piously suppressing emotional fireworks by their pundits, are now
| piously encouraging their news anchors to break out of the emotional
| straitjackets and express outrage. A Los Angeles Times colleague of
| mine, appearing on CNN last week to talk about Katrina, was told by a
| producer to 'get angry.'
| 
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| CIVIL LIBERTIES
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
| GEORGIA CHARGES PEOPLE TO VOTE
| 
| NY TIMES EDITORIAL - In 1966, the Supreme Court held that the poll tax
| was unconstitutional. Nearly 40 years later, Georgia is still charging
| people to vote, this time with a new voter ID law that requires many
| people without driver's licenses - a group that is disproportionately
| poor, black and elderly - to pay $20 or more for a state ID card.
| Georgia went ahead with this even though there is not a single place
| in the entire city of Atlanta where the cards are sold. . .
| 
| Until recently, Georgia, like most states, accepted many forms of
| identification at the polls. But starting this month, it is accepting
| only government-issued photo ID's. People with driver's licenses are
| fine. But many people without them have to buy a state ID card to
| vote, at a cost of $20 for a five-year card or $35 for 10 years. The
| cards are sold in 58 locations, in a state with 159 counties.
| 
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| WAR DEPARTMENT
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
| BUSH REGIME PLANS FIRST STRIKE NUCLEAR ATTACKS
| 
| RUPERT CORNWELL, INDEPENDENT - The Pentagon has drawn up a new
| strategy, built on the 2002 "Bush doctrine" of pre-emptive military
| strikes, that would allow the United States to make first use of
| nuclear weapons to thwart an attack using weapons of mass destruction
| against the country. Under the scheme, developed by the Joint Chiefs
| of Staff but yet to be ratified by Donald Rumsfeld, the Defence
| Secretary, commanders would be able to request permission from the
| President to use nuclear weapons in a variety of scenarios. According
| to The Washington Post, one scenario is of an enemy that is using, or
| "is about to use", WMD against US military forces or the civilian
| population. Another is where nuclear weapons could be used against
| biological weapons that an enemy was close to using, and which could
| only be safely destroyed by nuclear weapons and their after-effects.
| 
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| READER COMMENTS
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
| NOTE: You can post your comments on any of the above stories by going
| to our Undernews site and searching for the headline. Once posted, a
| copy is immediately mailed to the Review and we pick some of the most
| interesting to publish here. http://prorev.com/indexa.htm
| 
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
| PICTURES OF ABORTIONS
| 
| [A READER - The Pope is right-- go to www.100
| abortionpictures.com--Are you brave enough to look at these babies and
| see for yourself- look at the pictures online and tell me if it is right.]
| 
| A READER - If we are to ban abortions because theymake unpleasant
| pictures we'll have to ban heart bypass operations, amputations,
| caesarian births, and several other medical procedures each of which
| is enough to make a viewer sick to his stomach.
| 
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
| KATRINA
| 
| KATRINA - Brown's background with the IAHA made him perfect to play
| one of the four horsemen of the apocalypse.
| 
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| RECENT ADDITIONS TO OUR WEBSITE
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
| ECHOS OF NEW ORLEANS
| http://prorev.com/2005/08/echoes-of-new-orleans.htm
| 
| THE SECOND BATTLE OF NEW ORLEANS
| http://prorev.com/2005/09/second-battle-of-new-orleans.htm
| 
| HOW JOURNALISM WENT BAD
| http://prorev.com/wentbad.htm
| 
| EVANGELICAL ECONOMICS: PUTTING THE MONEY CHANGERS BACK IN THE TEMPLE
| http://prorev.com/temple.htm
| 
| HOW TO KEEP PEOPLE GOING TO MUSEUMS
| http://prorev.com/museum.htm
| 
| GREENER PASTURES & GREENER VOTERS
| http://prorev.com/greener.htm
| 
| AN AMERICAN TIMELINE
| http://prorev.com/indicators.htm
| 
| GOP AND MEDIA FILIBUSTER THE FACTS
| http://prorev.com/filibuster.htm
| 
| WHERE ARE THE CHRISTIAN MODERATES?
| http://prorev.com/moderates.htm
| 
| THE BIGGEST MEDIA SIN
| http://prorev.com/mediasin.htm
| 
| SEVENTH DAY AGNOSTICS ARISE
| http://prorev.com/agnostic.htm
| 
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 
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