Ship of Warmist Fools to Get Bill for Rescue

Photo Credit: REUTERS/Pauline Askin

Photo Credit: REUTERS/Pauline Askin

The Federal Government of Australia laid out $2.4 million (Australian dollars) to help rescue the ship full of global warming true believers, who got ice-bound in Antarctic waters they were dead certain had to be melting. And now it wants to paid back for that needless expense. Watt’s Up With That cites this Australian news report:

Federal Environment Minister Greg Hunt yesterday said costs, estimated at about $2.4 million, would be sought from the insurer of the operators of the vessel.

The MV Akademik Shokalskiy, chartered by the University of NSW-associated Australasian Antarctic Expedition to retrace the steps of explorer Sir Douglas Mawson, became stuck in thick sea ice on Christmas Eve.

The 52 passengers were rescued by the Aurora Australis on January 2.

Read more from this story HERE.

Bloomberg Gave $10M Contract to Company Behind Botched ObamaCare Rollout

Photo Credit: AP

Photo Credit: AP

New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s administration awarded a $10-million-plus contract to update the city’s non-emergency call system to the same company fired for the botched ObamaCare rollout, according to The New York Daily News.

The administration awarded the contract to Montreal-based CGI on Dec. 31, just hours before Democrat Bill de Blasio was sworn in as mayor.

The contract was approved because Bloomberg considers the 311 hotline one of the legacies of his three terms, the newspaper said.

Read more from this story HERE.

Michigan Gov. Wants Visas for Immigrants Who’ll ‘Stay for 5 Years’ in Detroit

Photo Credit: AP Photo/Paul Sancya

Photo Credit: AP Photo/Paul Sancya

Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder asked the federal government Thursday to set aside thousands of work visas for bankrupt Detroit, a bid to revive the decaying city by attracting talented immigrants who are willing to move there and stay for five years.

The Republican governor has routinely touted immigration as a powerful potential force for growing Detroit’s economy, saying immigrant entrepreneurs start many small businesses and file patents at twice the rate of U.S.-born citizens.

“Let’s send a message to the entire world: Detroit, Michigan, is open to the world,” Snyder said at a news conference.

The proposal involves EB-2 visas, which are offered every year to legal immigrants who have advanced degrees or show exceptional ability in certain fields.

But the governor’s ambitious plan faces significant hurdles: The visas are not currently allocated by region or state. And the number he is seeking — 50,000 over five years — would be a quarter of the total EB-2 visas offered.

Read more from this story HERE.

Swarms of Drones Could Be the Next Frontier in Emergency Response (+video)

Photo Credit: Carnegie Mellon University

Photo Credit: Carnegie Mellon University

Robots that can buzz, whir, and clamber into some of the most dangerous crime scenes and disaster zones are coming to the aid of police officers and other first responders who put themselves in harm’s way.

In October 2013, a parolee barricaded himself in a Roseville, Calif., suburban home of a young couple and their toddler, taking mother and child hostage. A SWAT team from the local police station captured the alleged offender and took him in, but not before gunfire ripped through the one-story home and injured officers.

Law enforcement officers on the ground had help from bomb squad robots, that helped push aside the furniture the suspect had piled up as a barricade. But two detectives believe that a bit of unmanned aerial backup would have made a big difference.

“Just knowing what’s going on inside a house that we would go into cold — [we could] potentially save officers’ lives and victims’ lives,” Phil Mancini, a detective on the Roseville police desk, told NBC News. Mancini has been advising a group at Carnegie Mellon University that is building a swarm of cheap, small flying helicopters that could come to the aid of officers across the country who find themselves facing off against suspects they can’t always see.

Read more from this story HERE.

Police Disable ‘Crude Attempts’ at Explosive Devices after 3 Die, Including Gunman, in Maryland Mall Shooting

Photo Credit: Fox News

Photo Credit: Fox News

A gunman fatally shot two people at a shopping mall in suburban Baltimore before taking his own life, authorities said Saturday.

Howard County (Md.) Police issued a statement late Saturday saying that they had tentatively identified the gunman at the Mall in Columbia, but were not releasing a name because investigators were still following up on leads. The statement also said that police had found two “crude devices” that appeared to be attempts at improvised explosives. Both devices were disabled.

Police said the gunman killed two employees of a skate shop called Zumiez on the upper level of the mall, which is located in a suburb of both Baltimore and Washington, before turning the gun on himself.

The victims were later identified as Brianna Benlolo, 21, and Tyler Johnson, 25. Police said it wasn’t clear if the shooter and victims knew each other.

Benlolo’s grandfather, John Feins, told the Associated Press in a telephone interview from Florida that his granddaughter had a 2-year-old son and that the job at Zumiez was her first since she went back to work after her son’s birth.

Read more from this story HERE.

Arizona Sheriffs Say Border Not Secure as Immigration Reform Looms

Photo Credit: Getty Images

Photo Credit: Getty Images

As Congress prepares to take up immigration reform, two high-profile Arizona sheriffs tell Newsmax the federal government’s effort to secure the border has been a dismal failure.

Pinal County Sheriff Paul Babeu said bluntly: “The border is not secure.”

“I’m telling you that as somebody on the ground, as someone who experiences it every day. This is a lie that is being peddled by those who must convince the American people that it is secure and everything is just fine,” Babeu told Newsmax.

“We have the most active drug and smuggling corridor in the country,” he added, saying that the intersection of major interstates, as well as rural and side roads and vast terrain, make it the perfect area for illegal immigrants coming to this country.

Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio echoes that view: “Drugs are still coming, illegal aliens are still coming into the U.S.,” he told Newsmax.

Read more from this story HERE.

Wal-Mart’s Cuts 2,300 Jobs at Sam’s Club

Photo Credit: Fruitnet.com

Photo Credit: Fruitnet.com

Wal-Mart Stores Inc said it cut roughly 2 percent of total employees, or about 2,300 jobs, at its Sam’s Club retail warehouse chain on Friday, its biggest round of layoffs since 2010.

The action comes on the heels of a lackluster U.S. holiday season and layoffs announced earlier this month from U.S. retailers Macy’s Inc, J.C. Penney Co Inc and Target Corp.

In a review of operations that began before the holiday season, Sam’s Club found that its workforce was the same size, regardless of the revenue reaped by the business, company spokesman Bill Durling said in a telephone interview.

The cuts will include hourly and middle management positions.

Read more from this story HERE.

California Teacher Arrested Over Potluck’s Pot-Laced Food

Photo Credit: Fox News

Photo Credit: Fox News

A Northern California elementary school teacher has been arrested for allegedly serving marijuana-laced food to her colleagues at a potluck dinner without their knowledge.

Benecia Police Department Lt. Frank Hartig said Teresa Gilmete Badger was booked into the Solano County Jail on Friday on suspicion of poisoning. The 47-year-old Badger’s arrest capped a month-and-a-half-long investigation that started with a tip from the Benicia Unified School District’s superintendent.

Read more from this story HERE.

SF Community Activity Proposes Crack Pipe Handouts to Prevent HIV

Photo Credit: AFP

Photo Credit: AFP

Could handing out free crack pipes help roll back the spread of HIV? The San Francisco HIV Prevention Planning Council (HPPC) insists that it could and that crack pipe distribution programs in Canada are doing just that.

“San Francisco has a long history of being at the cutting edge of things that we have turned out to be very right on… and I would like to see this one be another of those things that we were right about before the rest of the country catches on,” says Laura Thomas, HPPC representative.

The HIV community activist admits that this “great program” of offering fresh pipes to crack addicts may seem “counter intuitive.” She points out, however, that unlike dirty hypodermic needles, crack pipes don’t transmit HIV. Thomas explains, “Once you can bring people into your program, make them feel respected, taken care of, then they’re more likely to come back and get on HIV meds and want to be engaged and taking care of their health.”

Read more from this story HERE.

As Tea Party Becomes More Viable, Democrats And GOP Establishment Plan Attacks

Photo Credit: AP

Photo Credit: AP

Perhaps in response to recent buzz that Senator Rand Paul (R-Ky.), a perpetual Tea Party favorite, may be on the verge of becoming the GOP’s most viable 2016 Presidential contender, Senator Charles Schumer is digging up tired Tea Party smears in an effort to turn voters against the small government movement which has embedded itself into the Republican Party.

Schumer argues that Democrats can exploit the Tea Party ties to big money donors in an effort to turn blue collar voters against fiscally conservative candidates within the GOP who eschew big government spending.

“The tea party elites, with little rebuttal, have been able to make government the bogeyman,” Schumer said during a speech at the liberal Center for American Progress in Washington, D.C. “They have convinced too much of America that government is the explanation for their ills.”

Schumer also said that Democrats must double down on their support of government programs.

“We must stop playing defense and go on offense when it comes to the need for government. We must state loudly and repeatedly that we believe government is often a necessary force for good,” said Schumer.

Read more from this story HERE.