Politicians move to rake in more campaign cash

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Read Time:4 Minute, 27 Second
WASHINGTON — Politicians in states from Alabama to Wyoming will be able to rake in bigger contributions for their campaigns, as states race to boost donation limits in response to the flood of outside money in politics.
 
At least eight states have approved higher contribution limits this year and lawmakers in a ninth, Michigan, approved a measure Thursday that would double to $6,800 the amount of money a candidate for statewide office can accept from individuals.
 
In Wisconsin, meanwhile, a Senate panel will hold a public hearing Wednesday on a measure that would double contribution limits to $20,000 for candidates for governor, state Supreme Court seats and other statewide offices. The measure, which also would increase the amount of money state legislators can receive, passed the state's General Assembly in June.
 
"This is largely a reaction to the changed landscape after Citizens United where so-called outside organizations are able to accept unlimited donations from any source and in some cases can outraise and outspend the candidates and the parties by substantial amounts," said Larry Norton, a veteran Washington campaign-finance lawyer who served as general counsel of the Federal Election Commission.
 
"The motivation in lifting limits on contributions to candidates' committees and to parties is to help make them more competitive with the outside organizations," he said.
 
The Supreme Court's 2010 Citizens United decision struck down a long-standing ban on the use of corporate and union funds for independent political spending. That decision, along with separate federal ruling two months later, helped spur the creation of super PACs that can raise unlimited amounts to elect or defeat candidates.
 
Super PACs reported spending more than $609 million to influence last year's federal elections, according to a tally by the non-partisan Center for Responsive Politics, which tracks political money. Experts say these mega PACs are likely to spread to more states next year when 36 governors' seats are in contention.
 
Thirty-eight states now allow the equivalent of super PACs to participate in their elections, and there is no legal obstacle to their creation in other states, said David Mitrani, an attorney who specializes in federal and state campaign-finance law.
 
Wyoming became the first state this year to increase contribution limits when Republican Gov. Matt Mead signed a bill in March increasing to $2,500 per election the amount of money gubernatorial and other statewide candidates could accept from individuals, up from $1,000. Donations to legislative candidates rose $1,500, an increase of $500.
 
Federal contribution limits are higher, allowing an individual to donate $2,600 for a primary or general election to a candidate for Congress or the White House.
 
Other states that have boosted limits include Connecticut, Maryland, Florida, Minnesota, North Carolina and Arizona, where a court has put on hold the state's new law.
 
"It enables more speech by more people," David Keating, president of the Center for Competitive Politics, said of the increased limits. "We think that part of the spirit of the First Amendment is people being able to speak about what they believe in." Keating, a plaintiff in the federal case that made super PACs possible, would like states to discard limits entirely.
 
Edwin Bender, executive director of the non-partisan National Institute on Money in State Politics, said the higher caps make it easier for candidates to raise money, but they don't necessarily increase the donor pool.
 
In Missouri, state-level candidates raised nearly $2.3 million from small donors in the 2008 election, according to data analyzed by Bender's group. Four years later, after the state dropped all limits on the size of donations, small contributions shrank to $858,000.
 
"Higher limits give candidates with limited time the incentive to go after larger donors and ignore their base," Bender said.
 
Opponents of the measures say they also give a handful of givers a disproportionate influence over politicians and policy.
 
Rich Robinson of the Michigan Campaign Finance Network said few donors are clamoring to give more. In the 2010 election, just 820 Michigan residents hit the limit on the donations they could give to gubernatorial candidates, he said.
 
Big political givers "already exert more influence than 99.99% of the state's population," he said. "They don't need to double their leverage."
 
The Michigan measure increases the frequency of disclosure reports for candidates, but bars extending campaign-finance reporting requirements to so-called "issue ads" that can criticize a political candidate but stop short of calling for the election or defeat of a candidate.
 
Michigan state Sen. Arlan Meekhof,a Republican who sponsored the bill, said the goal was to modernize a campaign-finance system that had not been updated since the late 1970s. Increasing the contribution limits and exempting issue ads from disclosure protect free speech, he said. Donors to issue-ad campaign could be "subject to harassment" for their advocacy of controversial issues.
 
"You shouldn't be attacked for having a personal view on an issue," he said.

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Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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Victim of Colorado school shooting clinging to life

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Read Time:3 Minute, 54 Second
ARAPAHOE COUNTY, Colo. — A stunned community had a prayer vigil Sunday in support of Claire Davis, 17, who was clinging to life after being shot in the head Friday by a fellow student at Arapahoe High School.
 
The horse lover, babysitter and "great student" remained in critical condition at Littleton Adventist Hospital. Her school cancelled Monday classes.
 
Colorado's governor asked the nation Sunday for prayers for Claire.
 
Gov. John Hickenlooper credited security procedures adopted after the 1999 massacre at nearby Columbine High School for helping put a quick end to the shooting.
 
"We all have to keep Claire in our thoughts and prayers," he told CBS' Face the Nation.
 
Claire's parents "are remarkable people. I feel so directly their suffering. … They raised this beautiful young woman who had her whole life ahead of her," Hickenlooper told the Associated Press.
 
August Clary, a classmate and friend, said horsemanship is a big part of Claire's life. She spends long hours training her horse, Graphite, August said.
 
"A very sweet girl. She's really smart, really bright," said August, who has known Claire since freshman year. He had government class with her Friday morning.
 
"She wouldn't hurt a fly. She's just a really great girl, and we hope she's gonna be OK."
 
Pierson was "a funny kid," August said. "He's smart. He's in the Eagle Scouts, a very intelligent kid. Did not like being wrong. If you're arguing with him … that's a feat if you win an argument against him."
 
Hundreds of students, parents and community members filled a local park Saturday night for a candlelight ceremony, expressing shock and pain at the tragedy that unfolded at the Centennial school.
 
"It didn't feel real until you see everybody" at the vigil, said Summer Skrzypek. "She was a good friend and was always there if you needed her."
 
Students sang the school fight song and reminded each other that "Warriors" stick together. They shouted out words of encouragement, held a moment of silence and prayed.
 
Claire's neighbors were trying to process news of the shooting. Walter Bushnell told The Denver Post that Claire's grandmother had told him Claire was the victim.
 
"I just thought, 'Oh, my God, it's her' — it's just tragic," Bushnell said. "I'm just in shock."
 
Matt DeNero, who lives across the street from the Davis home, told the Post she was outgoing, a good athlete and great student.
 
"We've watched her grow up since she was 2," DeNero said.
 
On Saturday, Arapahoe County Sheriff Grayson Robinson called Davis "a young woman of principle. She is a young woman of purpose…. She was an innocent victim of an evil act of violence."
 
Robinson said Karl Pierson, 18, who died of a self-inflicted gunshot, entered the school armed with a shotgun he bought legally, rounds of ammunition strapped across his body, a machete and a backpack with three Molotov cocktails.
 
Pierson, in less than two minutes, fired five shots and ignited one of the Molotov cocktails before running to the back of the school library and killing himself, Robinson said. Robinson credited the quick response of a sheriff's deputy assigned to the school with stopping a mass murder.
 
"The shooter knew the deputy was in the area," Robinson said at a news briefing. "We believe that the response … was absolutely critical to the fact that we did not have additional injury or deaths."
 
Tracy Murphy, a librarian and debate team coach, was believed to have been the gunman's target. Pierson was unable to find Murphy, who coached Pierson and had disciplined him in September. Robinson said Claire's shooting appeared to be random.
 
The Davis family issued a statement Saturday saying Claire "has severe head trauma as a result of a gunshot. She needs your continued prayers."
 
The statement thanked family, friends, the community and the equestrian community for their outpouring of love and support, as well as the school for their continued support of the students and teachers."
 
The family also thanked first responders and medical personnel for "saving our daughter's life."

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Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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Michelle Bachelet easily wins Chile presidency

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SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) — Chile's once and future President Michelle Bachelet won Sunday's runoff election after promising profound changes in society in response to years of street protests.
 
With 90% of the votes counted, Bachelet had an unbeatable 62% to 38% for the center-right's Evelyn Matthei, who conceded defeat.
 
A moderate socialist, Bachelet served as president in 2006-2010, then ran the United Nation's women's agency from New York as her successor, conservative Sebastian Pinera, was confronted with widespread demonstrations for change.
 
She has a new center-left coalition and promises to finance education with higher corporate taxes, reduce the wealth gap, protect the environment and reform the constitution.
 
But concerns that turnout would be low had worried Bachelet, who needed a strong mandate to make good on her promises.
 
"This is an important day and I hope people can come and participate and through their vote give a clear expression of the kind of Chile where they want to continue to live," Bachelet said after voting in her Santiago neighborhood of La Reina. "The changes we need can't be produced through skepticism."
 
Bachelet, 62, left office with 84% approval ratings despite failing to achieve any major changes.
 
This time, activists are vowing to hold her to promises to raise corporate taxes to help fund an education overhaul and even change the dictatorship-era constitution, a difficult goal given congressional opposition.
 
Many Chileans blame policies imposed by Gen. Augusto Pinochet's 1973-1990 dictatorship for keeping wealth and power in few hands. Pinochet effectively ended land reform by selling off the nation's water, and preserved the best educations for elites by ending the central control and funding of public schools.
 
Opinion polls had pointed to a bruising defeat for Matthei, a former finance minister, because of her past support for Pinochet and her ties to the current president. Pinera, a billionaire entrepreneur, was Chile's first center-right president since democracy's return, and with just 34 percent support in the latest CEP poll, the most unpopular.
 
This was Chile's first presidential election after voter registration became automatic, increasing the electorate from 8 million to 13.5 million of the country's nearly 17 million people. But voting became optional with the change, and only 50% of voters turned out in the first round, frustrating both the major coalitions.
 
It also was Chile's first choice between two women, both with long careers in politics.
 
Bachelet, a pediatrician, and Matthei, an economist, share a dramatic history: Playmates while growing up on a military base, they found themselves on opposite sides of Chile's wide political divide after the 1973 military coup.
 
Matthei's father became a member of Pinochet's junta while Bachelet's father was tortured to death for refusing to support the strongman. Bachelet was imprisoned herself and forced into exile.
 
The two women remained cordial over the years while they rose through the ranks of the right and left.
 
Matthei, 60, had campaigned with a call to continue business-friendly policies that she credited for Chile's fast growth and low unemployment under Pinera. She backed Pinochet in a 1988 referendum on continuing his rule and now opposes changing the Pinochet-era constitution. She's also against gay marriage, abortion and higher taxes.
 
Bachelet is seen as having more charisma and empathy, but her critics say she's made mistakes.
 
When a devastating earthquake struck in 2010 killing more than 500 people just 11 days before the end of her term, the national emergency office failed to issue a tsunami warning. Many coastal dwellers had figured they were safe, and failed to run to higher ground.
 
"I want change and I don't like Mrs. Bachelet. She did so many bad things when she was president," said Olga Espinoza, 62, a maid who voted for Matthei. "How many people died in the quake because of her? We're the same age, we have the same zodiac sign, but I don't like anything about her."
 
Chile is the world's top copper producer, and its fast-growing economy, low unemployment and stable democracy are the envy of Latin America. But many Chileans are insisting that more of the copper wealth be used to fix the underfunded public education system.
 
"Abroad you often hear that this country has been growing and progressing more than others in Latin America, but it can't be just a matter of growth," Paola Bustamante, a 40-year-old sculptor, said after voting for Bachelet. "We need urgent educational reform, improvements to health, and I feel Bachelet can fulfill promises of deep changes this time around."

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Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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US: Father sticks by son accused of killing family

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Read Time:8 Minute, 39 Second
OKLAHOMA CITY — Raymond Green doesn't regret letting his 40-year-old son live at his home, even after his beloved "Danny" allegedly turned the shared space into a crime scene, gunning down the family.
 
On Aug. 14, Daniel Green, a diagnosed schizophrenic, spared no one as he picked up a semiautomatic handgun and meticulously put bullets in the heads of his mother, sister, 16-year-old niece and 6-month-old nephew, police said. Obsessed with actress Selena Gomez, Green told officers his family was keeping him from his "one true love."
 
Raymond Green, who could have been killed had he not been at work that night, doesn't dwell on his son's actions. Instead, he puts $50 a week into his son's Oklahoma County Jail account and prays he will get help. For two decades, Daniel Green's father tried to get his son committed to mental hospitals, but health officials routinely released him. His father's continued devotion illustrates the complicated nature of the most common form of mass murders: family homicides.
 
"What am I supposed to do, kick him out and onto the streets? Let him sleep under a bridge?" Raymond Green, 65, said. "You love your children. You care about your children. You want the best for them, regardless of their mental status."
 
Family mass killings make up about half of all mass killings since 2006, according to a USA TODAY database. This year, 56 people died in 13 family mass killings.
 
When loved ones kill each other, it's often behind closed doors, over intense emotions, trivial arguments or after a long battle with mental illness.
 
Mothers have killed their children to start new lives with their boyfriends. Children have taken out their parents and siblings after feeling neglected. Fathers, angry over divorces or ashamed of financial struggles, have annihilated whole generations.
 
In most cases, the family violence comes as a shock and doesn't receive the same attention as mass public shootings, said Jack Levin, a sociology and criminology professor at Boston's Northeastern University.
 
"You almost never see it coming," he said. "Most family annihilators are seen as decent, gentle, devoted and dedicated family members."
 
The stories are complicated, and those left behind must decide whether to support family members or turn their backs on accused murderers.
 
Daniel Green's niece and father have conflicting views about whether the accused murderer was ever violent before August.
 
According to police, Raymond Green told officers Daniel Green had a history of being violent and "deep down inside," the father thought his son could murder his family.
 
Raymond Green insisted to USA TODAY that he never told police his son was violent.
 
"Danny never verbally or physically threatened anybody," he said. "Sometimes, he would say, 'I'm a gangster. I'm a Blood. I'm a Crip. I'm a member of the mafia. I'm a hit man.' That was about the extent of it."
 
Laquana Cizek, 19, told USA TODAY her uncle Daniel Green was regularly drunk and gave his family warning signs. Cizek, who lost her grandmother, mother, sister and brother, also lived in the home and left for college about a month before the murders.
 
"My uncle Danny threatened us before," she said, explaining that at least once she had seen her uncle push her grandmother onto a couch.
 
Another time, Cizek and her sister found a bottle of alcohol with a piece of fabric inside it and thought Green might blow up their home. She said her uncle would often talk about incest and would say that in his past life, he had been with her mother, his sister.
 
No one feared her uncle, though her mother had planned to move out the week she was killed, Cizek said.
 
"We tried to stay away from him, but we didn't ignore him," she said. "We were like his daughters. He would say he would do anything for us."
 
Gerald Grosso, clinical director at Morningside Recovery, a mental health and addiction treatment center in California, understands the father's decision to stand by his son.
 
"This sounds like a father that has a good understanding of mental illness," Grosso said. "It's not rare. People love their kids, and because of that love, they don't give up on them."
 
Raymond Green keeps photos of his previous happy life in a red cardboard box in the back of his car.
 
There's one of his wife with long brown hair staring at a younger Raymond Green. Scrawled on the back of the photo are the words "The Look of Love." In another photo, a much younger Daniel Green surrounded by family sits laughing at a colorfully decorated Christmas tree.
 
Looking at the photos keeps him from thinking about what police say happened.
 
Raymond Green's wife, Sallie, 57, was shot in her head sometime between 8:30 and 10:30 p.m. Their daughter, Rebecca Cizek, 34, died after several shots to the head and chest. Her daughter, Katherine, 16, was killed by bullets in her back and head. A single bullet, which came through the forehead, was found lodged in the head of Rebecca Cizek's baby, Amario Dominguez III.
 
Raymond Green's niece discovered the carnage around 10:30 p.m. and called police.
 
Detectives picked up Raymond Green, who was working as a truck driver during the killings. He last talked to his wife around 8:30 p.m. He reminded her that he had left a chicken teriyaki sub in the refrigerator for her.
 
Daniel Green, driving his sister's car, was arrested near Sunny Lane Cemetery, his favorite hangout, his father said. A gun was on the passenger seat.
 
Police said Daniel Green would not directly say he had murdered his family. He told officials he didn't remember because he blacked out and it was a blur.
 
He told officers he was heading to California to be with his "one true love." Raymond Green says his son was talking about actress Selena Gomez, a woman he had become fixated on in recent years.
 
Green's faded blue eyes look straight ahead as he recalls speaking with his jailed son over the phone.
 
"The very first thing he said when he got a phone call was 'Dad, tell me they're lying to me. I couldn't have done anything like this.' "
 
Green, a tall, thin man with deep wrinkles, shrugs his shoulders. For years, he said, he tried unsuccessfully to get his son committed to a full-time inpatient facility.
 
John Sharp, a psychiatrist and faculty member at Harvard Medical School, says similar experiences are playing out all over the country. The mental health system exists so people can try to get help for their loved ones, but there's a catch, he said.
 
"It takes a strong amount of advocacy," he said. "It's our American way which grants people a lot of individual liberties."
 
In most cases, people must be a clear danger to themselves or others to be kept in a facility, Sharp said.
 
In Daniel Green's case, it took about 18 years for that to happen.
 
Daniel Green's schizophrenia began in 1994 when his wife moved out of the couple's home and took their child, his father said.
 
Schizophrenia was familiar to the family. Daniel Green's medicated mother, uncle and eventually institutionalized grandfather also had it. Only Daniel Green's disease ended in violence, his father said.
 
Before being diagnosed, Daniel Green was an active student who got good grades, earned a black belt in karate, graduated from high school and became a stocker at a wholesale store, his father said.
 
Three years after marrying, Daniel Green, struggling with the reality of an impending divorce, tried to burn his house down, Raymond Green said. The incident landed him in a psychiatric center for 30 days. When Daniel's Green's time was up, Raymond Green got a call to come get his son who had been formally diagnosed with schizophrenia.
 
"They thrust him upon me, and from that point on, I've been caring for him to the best of my ability," Raymond Green said. " He could be talking to you about 'the corn is growing tall right now,' and then in a blink of an eye, he would be talking about 'In the other world, I was Darth Vader.' "
 
During the divorce proceedings, Raymond Green was appointed guardian ad litem for his son, representing him in court because Daniel Green was "mentally ill" and was not "mentally competent to manage his own affairs," according to records.
 
It was Dec. 7, 1994, and Raymond Green's new role would stretch on for years.
 
Records show that on March 15, 1995, Daniel Green's wife, Rayanna, was granted a divorce by default judgment and given custody of their 1-year-old daughter, Cassondra Raelynn Green.
 
Daniel Green has pleaded not guilty to four counts of first-degree murder.
 
Raymond Green struggles to deal with his new reality. He is a Vietnam veteran with lingering post-traumatic stress disorder and a cancer survivor who is alone. He avoids the obvious question: What if he had been home?
 
Instead, he speaks out against a mental health system that he says could have saved his family.
 
"When I say my prayers at night, I cry out to God and say forgive my son," Green said. "He knew not what he did."
 

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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Groom killed helping motorist in snow

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Read Time:1 Minute, 23 Second
CHICAGO (AP) — A man married less than seven hours was killed along with a stranded motorist he stopped to help in the snow when they were struck by several vehicles, authorities say.
 
The man was on the way back from his wedding reception to a hotel when the accident happened.
 
William "Riley" Knight, 49, of Crown Point, Ind., was driving with his wife, Nikki, about 11:45 p.m. Saturday when they saw a woman who had slid off the road in the snow near Crown Point.
 
"He said, 'We've got to stop, it's late and they need help,'" Nikki Knight told the Chicago Sun-Times on Sunday.
 
He pulled his truck into a nearby driveway and Nikki Knight waited inside while he went out to help Linda Darlington, 42, of Crown Point. They were standing by the side of the road when they were struck by one vehicle, and then two more, the Lake County sheriff's office said.
 
Nikki Knight, a registered nurse, said when she got to the wreck, neither Knight nor Darlington had pulses. They were pronounced dead at the scene early Sunday.
 
"I went from a being a newlywed to a widow in less than 48 hours — the highest high to the lowest low," Nikki Knight said. "It's a blur."
 
Police said all drivers involved in the crash remained at the scene. No charges had been filed as of Sunday afternoon.
 
Knight also is survived by two his two daughters, a stepdaughter and stepson.

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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The U.S. Treasury Department Will Put Nelson Mandela’s Likeness On A New U.S. Dime

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WASHINGTON, D.C. – President Obama says that he has given his approval for the United States Treasury Department to go ahead with plans to make a brand new dime with the likeness of South African President Nelson Mandela on it.
 
Presently President Franklin Delano Roosevelt is on the U.S. dime but plans are to eventually phase out those Roosevelt dimes.
 
Relatives of Nelson Mandela have expressed their appreciation; especially his great grandson who is a popular comedian in South Africa and who goes by the stage name of Lion Boy.
 
President Obama has stated that he will personally give the first 200 minted Mandela dimes to the Mandela family as a symbol of the financial goodwill that exists between the United States and South Africa.
 
In Other News. Outspoken actor Alec Baldwin has hinted that he may be moving to Colorado to see if the air there will make him a little more mellow so that he stops having his ridiculous grade school meltdowns.
 

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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New York City To Build A 113 Story Parking Garage

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Read Time:1 Minute, 2 Second
NEW YORK CITY – The City Council of New York City has finally approved a bill that would allow for the construction of a 113 story parking garage.
The city council had been discussing the idea for the past six months and they finally approved it when they learned how much revenue it would bring to the city treasury.
Councilwoman Gladys Swindello, 46, stated that she had no idea the tremendous amount of money that a 113 story parking garage would generate.
She also said she loved the idea that every member of the city council would be able to park at the city owned garage free of charge.
The construction firm that will most probably be awarded the contract to build the mammoth parking garage is The Mrs. Goliath Construction Firm of Hackensack, New Jersey.
When asked why the city council would give the contract to a company in New Jersey instead of one from New York, Councilwoman Swindello stated that although the firm is located in New Jersey, it is owned by New York City resident Donald Trump.
SIDENOTE: Unlike most parking garages, this one will allow for RV parking and it will also have three stories set aside for 18-wheeler trucks.
 

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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New York Mets Already Eliminated from the 2014 Playoffs

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Read Time:1 Minute, 37 Second
Flushing, New York – Due to an accounting error, the New York Mets baseball club has been mathematically eliminated from the 2014 National League playoffs.
Mets principal owner Fred Wilpon took full responsibility for the arithmetic mishap. He said that he was "redoing" the team's books last Thursday, when he inadvertently dropped a decimal point.
"I also was carrying a six at the time and everything kind of slipped. I've looked everywhere," he lamented. "I haven't slept for days trying to make it all add up. We even had the FBI and the SEC in, but it turns out that they are not really that good at math."
The dilemma reminded Wilpon of a situation his friend Bernie Madoff was confronted with a few years ago. "Bernie's job was to help investors grow their money," he said. "But one morning he woke up and realized that he had forgotten to make the actual investments. Boy, was his face red."
The Mets team psychiatrist, Dr. Thomas John, explained that Wilpon was signing multimillion dollar checks for the team's new free agent stars when the latest mathematical mixup occurred. "It must've been a shock to his system to suddenly have to deal with so many zeros at one time," he said.
Providing a general diagnostic overview, Doctor John reported: "The x-rays show that Mr. Wilpon has a torn ATM, but no fractures. He'll be back playing catch with Bernie in the exercise yard by the end of next week."
Meanwhile, Mets general manager Sandy Alderson Is looking beyond Wilpon's recovery, exploring ways to "make the numbers work for the Mets so that we're still mathematically in the playoff equation."
"Maybe we can trade Ike Davis for an integer or two."

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Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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Bryan Cranston to Run in 2016 Presidential Election as Walter White

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Read Time:2 Minute, 52 Second
ALBUQUERQUE – Bryan Cranston, in an exclusive interview earlier today, revealed that his next big project will be to run for president in 2016 in character as Walter White. And, interestingly enough, he already has backing to prove it as a worthy cause, as White has already won the states of Arizona, New Mexico, and California, without the voting booths or prediction polls even opened yet.
"The people down here, they love me. I provide them with a product, and they respond pleasurably." He announced that he has a long list of things he wants to change on his first day in office, and warned not to get him started on how he would whip Washington into place. "Have you seen my show? Then you know how I negotiate. I don't." He also explained that in order to establish his dominance, he would begin every speech by forcing everyone in attendance to "Say my name."
While most of the people in the room were too terrified to ask Cranston any questions, a couple reporters were able to nervously burble some pre-written statements while looking at their feet. When one journalist asked how Cranston was so sure his tactics would work on Washington's arrogant incompetents, he stated smugly, "Because I say so." It can't be denied that he has a brash attitude that inhibits fear into his opponents, but more importantly, White's schemes always seem to turn out successful in one way or the other, a fact that he seems to be aware of and only serves to balloon his inflated ego.
Although he admitted that it would be a match made in heaven to have Aaron Paul as Jesse Pinkman for his running mate, he had to accept the fact that when paired up as a team, Walt and Jesse have a bad habit of taking situations "one step forward and two steps backward." White asserted that it would be more beneficial to the country to have someone more familiar with the government's ass-backward political procedures, like a lawyer.
"Better call Saul," White said slyly, hinting that Bob Odenkirk as Saul Goodman might be the perfect fit for his vice presidential nominee.
Not only are fans of Breaking Bad excited with the news of Walter White's candidacy, even members of congress admit that they'd be happy to have someone of his stature occupying the Oval Office.
"It's obvious that White has a certain way with words that kind of force you to be compulsory with what he's asking you to do," observed Senator Ted Cruz (R) of Texas. "I wouldn't fuck with him."
White noted that he wouldn't refrain from using his ruthless character to accomplish his goals in DC, and if necessary, won't hesitate to execute his presidential ambitions as Heisenberg. "I am the one that knocks?heads on the floor if you refuse to sign this bill," White was heard rehearsing in his changing room. "I'm going to be running a tight, tight, tight ship around here from now on, so tread lightly."
When asked what party he aligns himself with, Red, Blue, or Green, Cranston simply stated "White."
 

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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Justin Bieber May Take A Whole Year Off

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Read Time:1 Minute, 24 Second
DETROIT – Justin Bieber performed at The Carburetor Coliseum to a less than packed house.
The little Canadian singer was quite upset at the fact that his fans are starting to abandon him due to his hip hop wannabe ways.
After the concert Bieber sat down with Calcutta Cotton of Music Moments Magazine.
She asked him why he insists on trying to act like he's a black rap artist.
Bieber took a bite out of his Moon Pie and said that he does it to honor his black friends and to show them that just cause he's a little white boy from Canada doesn't mean he can't have a little bit of soul.
Miss Cotton giggled and told him that she was going to be honest with him. He said that was fine with him.
She then said that he has about as much hip hop rhythm in him as boxing champ Floyd Mayweather has female hormones.
Justin's chin just about hit his chest. He then thought for a moment and told Miss Cotton, that he has really been thinking about going back home to Canada and taking a whole year off to gather his thoughts and see what he really wants to focus on.
SIDENOTE: Interestingly enough talk show host Chelsea "The Skank" Handler said about two weeks ago that Bieber needs to take a break and get away from the hip hop life and go off somewhere and realize that he is a little white boy and that he will never, ever be a black rap artist no matter how many times he grabs his crotch.

About Post Author

Anthony-Claret Ifeanyi Onwutalobi

Anthony-Claret is a software Engineer, entrepreneur and the founder of Codewit INC. Mr. Claret publishes and manages the content on Codewit Word News website and associated websites. He's a writer, IT Expert, great administrator, technology enthusiast, social media lover and all around digital guy.
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