Monday, August 5, 2013

Et al...























































Our Country in Crisis...


 
 
 When we get 100,000,000, that's one hundred million willing Christians to BOND together, voice their concerns and vote, we can take back America with God's help, Become one of the One hundred million, then lets get 200 million. It can be done by sending this email to your friends. Do the math. It only takes a willing heart and a fed up soul. God Bless America and Shine your light on Her..
In
1952
President Truman
established one day a year as a
"National Day of Prayer." 
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

In
1988
President Reagan
designated the
First Thursday in May of each year as
the National Day of Prayer. 
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

In June
2007
(then)
Presidential 
Candidate Barack Obama
declared that the USA
"Was no longer a 
Christian nation." 
---------------------------------------------------------------
 
This year
President Obama
canceled the 
21st annual National Day
of Prayer ceremony
at the White
House under the ruse 
Of "not wanting to offend anyone" 

------------------------------------------------------------------------ 

BUT... on September 25, 2009
from 4 AM until 7 PM,
a National Day of Prayer
FOR THE MUSLIM RELIGION
was Held on Capitol Hill, 
Beside the White House.
There were over 50,000 Muslims
in D.C. that day. 


HE PRAYS WITH THE MUSLIMS! 

I guess it Doesn't matter
if "Christians"
Are offended by this event - 
We obviously
Don 't count as
"anyone" Anymore. 

The direction this country is headed 
should strike fear in the heart of every Christian,
especially knowing that the 
Muslim religion believes that if Christians cannot be
converted, they should be annihilated. 


This is not a Rumor -
Go to the website 
To confirm this info:
http://www.islamoncapitolhill.com/

 
 
 
 
  


Sunday, August 4, 2013

San Francisco: Just 28 Residents for Each City Worker...Democratic Socialism good until you run out of other people's $$$


Given that one out of every 28 residents in San Francisco is on the city payroll, one can only wonder how a city like San Diego can get by with just one city worker for every 137 residents.

Using the Census Bureau's 2011 Annual Survey of Public Employment and Payroll, the Washington Examiner calculated the ratio of residents to city workers for American cities with a population of at least 200,000.

Washington, D.C., has the lowest ratio, just 25 residents for each city employee, and Bakersfield, Calif., has the highest — 246 residents per employee.

Washington "has the distinction of providing services that in many other places are often split among multiple levels of government, including state, local, and county authorities," the Examiner notes.

"Bakersfield's population has quadrupled in the last 40 years, and its public employee workforce may have lagged behind."

San Francisco is right behind Washington on the list of 107 cities. With a population of 805,235, the city has 28,660 employees, with an average annual salary of $90,702 and an annual payroll of more than $2.56 billion.($90,702 ???!!!!)

New York has the highest payroll, $18.6 billion, with 252,701 city workers — one for every 32 residents — earning an average of $74,270.

But those figures don't tell the whole story. The Census Bureau excludes all teachers and education professionals from being counted as city workers, and yet they make up the largest single group of local government employees. It also doesn't count employees of separate divisions such as the Baltimore City Housing Authority and the Chicago Park District.

Other large cities with low ratios include Baltimore, which has only 43 residents per employee, Denver (49 residents), Cleveland (50), St. Louis (50), Philadelphia (51), Atlanta (51), New Orleans (52), and Seattle (56).

Bankrupt Detroit has 61 residents per city worker, more than 19 cities on the list.

Los Angeles has 73 residents per employee, Chicago has 78, Houston has 95, and Miami, 101.

Bakersfield has 1,410 employees and a population of 347,483.

Other cities with high ratios of residents to workers include Fremont, Calif. (241 residents per employee); Irvine, Texas (233); and Las Vegas (225).

“The American people will never knowingly adopt socialism. But, under the name of ‘liberalism,’ they will adopt every fragment...


House Passes Resolution To Prevent IRS From Enforcing Obamacare


Saturday, August 3, 2013

Arctic Sees Shortest Summer On Record...


North Pole Sees Unprecedented July Cold – Arctic Sees Shortest Summer On Record — ‘Normally the high Arctic has about 90 days above freezing. This year there was less than half that’ | Climate Depot
http://www.climatedepot.com/2013/08/03/unprecedented-july-cold-arctic-sees-shortest-summer-on-record-normally-the-high-arctic-has-about-90-days-above-freezing-this-year-there-was-less-than-half-that/

Friday, August 2, 2013

We Need Your Help! Speak Up for the Caloosahatchee!

Action Alert
August 2, 2013
We Need Your Help!  Speak Up for the Caloosahatchee!
Wow!  The rains of 2013 are on track to set wet season records and have broken the string of drought years Florida has suffered since 2007.   SCCF is redfish by SCCFmonitoring and tracking water conditions and, with our west coast partners, we are providing information about what is happening to our river, estuary and coastal waters to educate and empower water managers and elected officials to take action.  
Photo right above:  Redfish Pass on July 10

We need your help now to speak up for the health of our natural communities, our local economy and our quality of life.   Here is a synopsis of what’s happening, why it’s happening and what we can each do to change the current course.  We hope you will help us and take action.

What's Going On with Our Water 
A wet spring and very wet early summer have delivered more rain than the greater Everglades ecosystem -- that stretches from Orlando to Florida Bay, Fort Myers to Stuart -- can hold.   So a lot of freshwater is running into the Kissimmee River and then into Lake Okeechobee, where water levels are high and endangering the Dike around the lake.   The excess water, no longer able to flow south because of sugarcane and crops growing in the EAA (Everglades Agricultural Area), is shunted west to the Caloosahatchee estuary and east to the St. Lucie estuary.   The impact is the same on both coasts: lethal levels of freshwater are killing and displacing marine life including oysters and seagrass that cannot move out of the way and fish and shellfish nursery is lost, washed out into the Gulf of Mexico and Atlantic Ocean.  

This excess freshwater is running off the land so fast it carries tannins from plants and other organic material with it, causing the unusually dark water.   Flood control projects that began in the 1940s were designed to drain water off the land to accommodate growth and development in south Florida.  So the high rainfall this year has saturated the land with water, raised water levels in Lake Okeechobee and necessitated water releases to lower the lake.   

The excess water is coming from both the Caloosahatchee watershed in Lee, Hendry and Glades Counties as well as from Lake O releases.  The solutions are twofold:  to increase storage throughout the system and redirect water to more historic flow patterns. 

Thanks for stepping up and speaking out.  Together we can change the way it’s always been done!

How You Can Help! 
Drainage projects created 70 years ago for flood control no longer serve our state or community interest or economies.   Short term and long term solutions are needed at both the Federal and State levels to change the outcomes and prevent devastation of our marine life, beaches, local economies and quality of life.  This is our legacy; this is our heritage to next generations.  Changes are needed NOW.
 
Take Action!  Attend Trey Radel's Listening Session
Attend U.S. Representative Trey Radel's listening session Wednesday, August 7 at Edison College,  6-7 pm, Building U Room 102, 8099 College Parkway

Tell him we need the U.S. House to pass a WRDA bill.  A Water Resources Development Act bill is the only way to get water projects approved for construction and funding across the nation.  It has been six years since the last WRDA and it is needed to authorize long term storage projects to help reduce high flow conditions.  Two needed projects are the C43 reservoir for the Caloosahatchee and Central Everglades Planning Project (CEPP), to once again flow water south to the Everglades.  

Come, speak up on Wednesday and write a letter to our U.S. House Representatives (form for Trey Radel)  (form for Thomas Rooney
 
Take Action!  Demand the SFWMD Deliver on Promises
Demand that the SFWMD Implement Planned Storage Projects and Update their Operations
Since 2005 when the South Florida Water Management District (SFWMD) promised new storage projects to prevent the disaster of 2004-2005, there is not one project constructed or operational in the Caloosahatchee watershed.  
Please email:  (SFWMD Governing Board and Interim Executive Director Ernie Barnett)  (Governor Scott)   (DEP Secretary Herschel Vinyard)   (Senator Benacquisto)   (Rep. Matt Caldwell)
  • Explain that too much water is coming from both the Caloosahatchee watershed and Lake O.
  • Demand that storage projects in planning over the past seven years be operational by next year’s wet season in the Caloosahatchee and Kissimmee watersheds to capture, store and treat water to reduce these high flows. 
  • Request that they revise operational schedules to change the timing and increase storage in the Kissimmee Chain of Lakes and increase water held in the EAA (Everglades Agricultural Area), and stop all backflowing/pumping into Lake O.
 
Take Action!  Follow Senator Negron's Senate Committee
The first hearing on the Indian River Lagoon and Lake Okeechobee basin is August 22nd  from 1-9 pm  in Stuart at the Charles and Rae Kane Center, 900 SE Salermo Road, Stuart, Florida  24997     Tel:  772.223.7800

Insist that the Caloosahatchee be included in the scope of the hearings, and press for the implementation of federal and state solutions to these issues.
 


Sanibel-Captiva Conservation Foundation 
3333 Sanibel-Captiva Road  |  Sanibel, FL 33957

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