"Angela Merkel has the best angry face of all world politicians" .. lol .. a person interviewed on radio said that this morning .. he said, your president's blackberry is encrypted as there are many who would be trying to listen in, and that if Merkel's isn't it should be .. also, he said if she really didn't think she was being monitored she was being naive .. as for the general rest of your article .. excerpt ..
"gee .. the UN/US has not supported war with Syria and Iran, and did not support Saudi Arabia in it's anti-democracy positions seen in it's opposition to those against the government in 2011 Bahrain, and in their always opposition to the democratically elected government in Egypt.
So it seems the anti-democratic Saudis are upset over the lack in the UN of the desire to go to war. That's funny as the UN was set actually set up to avoid war between countries, wasn't it?"
lolol .. it's about look at it's crouch .. perfect for you .. yeah, it's a coocoo bird ..
oh .. i guess in time we will learn whether if only the 'data' on Merkel's was being collected, or if they were on to the content, too .. time will tell ..
Catherine Thompson – October 28, 2013, 10:35 AM EDT461
Kentucky Secretary of State Alison Lundergan Grimes, the Democratic challenger to Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), slammed the senator for his role in the government shutdown in a new web ad released Monday.
"Mitch McConnell can't light the house on fire, then claim credit for putting it out, especially while it's still burning," the 30-second spot's narrator said over an image of a burning home.
Despite telling constituents that a government shutdown "won't stop Obamacare," McConnell had refused to intervene in the shutdown fight until a debt crisis reared its head. He has since vowed that the government will not be shuttered again over the health care law.
The ad's narrator went on to argue that McConnell's shutdown politics hurt Kentucky's economy and pointed out that McConnell called himself a "proud guardian of gridlock," blocking Congress over 400 times.
A survey from Public Policy Polling, released a day after McConnell struck a deal with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) to avoid a debt default, showed Grimes leading McConnell 45 percent to 43 percent.