Laptop shooting Dad gets visit from Law Enforcement

Posted: 6:40 a.m. Monday, Feb. 13, 2012

YouTube Dad who shot daughter’s laptop says he got visit from authorities

 

Facebook dad new blurb image photo
Tommy Jordan, from Stanly County, got mad after his daughter complained about doing chores on her Facebook page.
Tommy Jordan's Facebook post Saturday photo
Tommy Jordan’s Facebook post Saturday

STANLY CO., N.C. —

A local father who captured worldwide attention after posting a YouTube rant about his daughter is now making local city leaders mad.

Tommy Jordan, from Stanly County, got mad after his daughter complained about doing chores on her Facebook page.

In the video, Jordan pulls out a gun and shoots his daughter’s laptop.

RAW: Dad responds to daughter, shoots laptop (WARNING: explicit language)

The video received more than 21 million views in four days.

“Pay you for chores?” Jordan said in the video.  “Are you out of your mind?”

The former Marine wrote on his Facebook page that Child Protective Services officials came to his home in Stanly Co. on Saturday and interviewed him and his daughter — separately — after viewers of the video called with concerns about his actions.

He said the police also stopped by.

Neither authority decided to pursue anything against Jordan.

“The police by the way said ‘Kudos, sir,’ ” Jordan wrote. “I actually had a “thank you” from an entire detectives squad. And another police officer is using it in a positive manner in his presentation for the school system. How’s about those apples? Didn’t expect THAT when you called the cops did you?”

Channel 9 is working to confirm that police and Child Protective Services did show up at Jordan’s house this weekend, but has not been able to confirm yet.

Jordan also made reference to the Albemarle Police Department approving his acts, but the police chief said Jordan does not live in the city limits.

The chief said it is unfortunate that the media is identifying Jordan as a resident.

The city manager told the Stanly News and Press Jordan’s comments about the department do not reflect the opinion of the police department.

In the Saturday Facebook post, Jordan said he does not regret making the video and stands by his decision to post it.

His post also said if he had to do it again he would,  “Not be smoking a cigarette … not have used the word “ass” in my comment directed at my daughter … would have worn my Silverbelly Stetson, not my Tilley hat if I’d known that image was going to follow me the rest of my life and I’d probably have cleaned my boots.”

http://www.wsoctv.com/news/news/local/youtube-dad-who-shot-daughters-laptop-gets-visit-a/nHbcR/

This Is Enough To Curl Your Hair, Senate Barbers……..

……..are Govt Employees, Get Taxpayer Bailout

A LOT OFF THE TOP

Taxpayers fleeced in bailout of Senate barbershop ‘institution’

By Mark Stricherz Monday, February 13, 2012
America’s most distinguished leaders get their hair cut at the Senate barbershop, but taxpayers are the ones really getting clipped.The barbershop ran almost $300,000 in the red last year but received an infusion from Senate coffers that is keeping it in business, the Senate sergeant at arms, Terrance Gainer, told The Daily.

A federal bailout isn’t that unusual since the economic downturn, but some senators didn’t even know their salon was in hot water — and don’t think it should be, considering what they pay for a little off the ears.

A shampoo, cut and blow dry is $27 and highlights are $105, according to the barbershop’s website. A trim costs $20, more than double what Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., gets charged when he goes to his barber back home.

“I give him $12 with a tip,” Leahy said.

When Sen. Benjamin Cardin, D-Md., learned about the shortfall, he said, “It did? It shouldn’t. It should pay for itself.”

A Senate barbershop subsidized by the government is a sore point with GOP members, too.

Former Sen. Peter Fitzgerald, R-Ill., blames the money woes on the stylists, who are federal employees. He contends they’re overpaid compared to their private-sector counterparts.

“They are using union labor, and so their benefits and wages are higher than those of many jobs,” Fitzgerald said.

To support his argument, Fitzgerald contrasts the salaries and benefits of the Senate’s stylists to what is offered by Capitol Barber, three blocks away.

Capitol’s four barbers and stylists made $22,000 to $30,000 last year with no benefits, manager Lynn Dang said. At the Senate barbershop, formally called Senate Hair Care Services, the top four barbers and stylists made more than twice that — $54,761; $70,349; $73,658; and $81,641 — plus they have a generous 401(k) plan, health care and paid vacation. In all, the government contributed $230,000 in benefits for the barbershop, said Eve Goldsher, a spokeswoman for the Senate Appropriations Committee.

Gainer acknowledged the barbershop’s staff members “are well paid, and it gives them a leg up on their nongovernment counterparts.”

Regardless of where they stand on lending the barbershop a financial hand, senators agree the barbershop is first rate.

One of the barbershop’s most loyal customers is Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., who has been going there since he was the Navy’s liaison to the Senate in the late 1970s. McCain told The Daily he is fond of all the stylists, especially longtimer Mario D’Angelo.

“I call him the butcher. He is a butcher, and I’ve got the scars to prove it,” McCain joked. “I’m lucky to be alive and have needed several blood transfusions to survive.”

Sen. Kent Conrad, D-N.D., called D’Angelo “an institution.”

“I’ve been going to him for 20 years. He is so real. I know his extended family, which is Italian, of course,” Kent said. “We’re very close.”

Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, described D’Angelo as “one of the finest people in the whole Senate.”

As a sign of appreciation, Hatch said he sends D’Angelo’s family a card and candy every Christmas.

Housed in Room 70 of the Russell Senate Office Building, the barbershop is easy to get to from the Senate floor. All a customer has to do is take the elevator and to the basement, hop on an underground Senate train and walk a few hundred feet.

Sen. Kelly Ayotte, R-N.H., had her well-coiffed dark hair cut done at the barbershop once — simply for the convenience.

“Usually, I get my hair cut at Posh Hair Studio in Concord [her home state’s capital], but it was right there,” she said.

For the barbershop’s first 110 or so years of operation, from 1859 through the early 1970s, senators were its only customers — and they didn’t hand over a dime for their dos, according to Senate historian Donald Ritchie.

Today, the barbershop is open to the public and had 27,000 customers last year. Legislators are still special, though. Hanging on one wall is a white 2-foot-by-3-foot sign stating: “Members and employees of the Senate shall have priority in this shop.” On other walls hang two photos that show the exclusiveness of the barbershop’s clientele: One is a color photo of President Obama, inscribed: “Best wishes!” The other is a signed photo of John F. and Jacqueline Kennedy.

Perhaps a future president gets his — or her — hair done now at the salon; it’s anybody’s guess. What is certain is that the barbershop is an institution — and Gainer wants to make sure it survives, however he has to.

After struggling to stabilize the barbershop’s finances for the five years he’s been on the job, Gainer has decided privatization is the only answer.

“There’s no way to sugarcoat” the barbershop’s fiscal woes, he said.

“If you put aside [the employees’] livelihoods, it’s costing the government money, and that includes taxpayers like you and me. That’s the way it is,” he said. “I just have not pulled the trigger. That’s on me.”

http://www.thedaily.com/page/2012/02/13/021312-news-senate-barbershop-1-4/

Obama proposes $800 million in aid for “Arab Spring”

By Susan Cornwell

WASHINGTON | Mon Feb 13, 2012 12:39pm EST

(Reuters) – The White House announced plans on Monday to help “Arab Spring” countries swept by revolutions with more than $800 million in economic aid, while maintaining U.S. military aid to Egypt.

In his annual budget message to Congress, President Barack Obama asked that military aid to Egypt be kept at the level of recent years — $1.3 billion — despite a crisis triggered by an Egyptian probe targeting American democracy activists.

The proposals are part of Obama’s budget request for fiscal year 2013, which begins October 1. His requests need the approval of Congress, where some lawmakers want to cut overseas spending to address U.S. budget shortfalls and are particularly angry at Egypt.

Obama proposed $51.6 billion in funding for the U.S. State Department and foreign aid overall, when $8.2 billion in assistance to war zones is included. The “core budget” for the category would increase by 1.6 percent, officials said.

Most of the economic aid for the Arab Spring countries — $770 million — would go to establish a new “Middle East and North Africa Incentive Fund,” the president said in his budget plan.

Analysts said it was difficult to tell how much of the proposal was actually new money.

“As presented it’s very difficult to determine if the Arab spring fund is new wine in new bottles or old wine in new bottles,” said John Norris, a former U.S. foreign aid worker now at the Center for American Progress.

The Middle East and North Africa Incentive fund “will provide incentives for long-term economic, political, and trade reforms to countries in transition — and to countries prepared to make reforms proactively,” the White House budget document said.

The proposal said this approach “expands our bilateral economic support in countries such as Tunisia and Yemen, where transitions are already underway.”

It would also build on other programs for the area, including up to $2 billion in regional Overseas Private Investment Corporation financing, up to $1 billion in debt swaps for Egypt, and approximately $500 million in existing funds re-allocated to respond to the region last year, the budget document said.

It did not say how the Middle East and North Africa Incentive Fund would be divided between countries, or give any other details of the plan.

Egypt has long been among the top recipients of U.S. aid, getting about $1.6 billion annually, mostly in military assistance. In fiscal 2012, $250 million of aid approved for Egypt was economic; $1.3 billion was military and there was a $60 million “enterprise fund” approved by Congress.

No U.S. assistance is moving to Egypt at the moment, U.S. lawmakers and their aides said last week. Some legislators favor cutting off aid to Egypt entirely if it does not drop accusations against American democracy activists and lift a travel ban on them.

Obama continued the practice of putting proposed foreign assistance for war zones in a separate account. This account, known as the “Overseas Contingency Operations,” includes $8.2 billion for the State Department and foreign aid.

It includes $3.3 billion for Afghanistan, $1 billion for Pakistan, and $4 billion for Iraq, where U.S. troops have left the country but the State Department has picked up some of their functions such as police training.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/02/13/us-usa-budget-foreign-idUSTRE81C1C920120213

STOP Blaming Obama……

totally, he’s not the lone culprit in this mess, he didn’t destroy this country all by himself, he had lots and lots of help from both sides of the aisle.

This mess started with Bush and is continuing with Obama and will continue under Romney, Gingrich and/or Santorum.

It started with the Patriot Act, followed by extension of the Patriot Act, the development of the Dept of Homeland Security, the govt run TSA, the NDAA and now 30,000 spy drones.  Did Bush and Obama succeed alone?  NO!!!  They had a vast amount of help from the traitors commonly referred to as Senators and Representatives.

Santorum voted in favor of the PATRIOT Act and its reauthorization, the Military Commissions Act of 2006, and the legislation that created the department of Homeland Security and has said that he would have voted for NDAA.

It’s not just Obama that needs to go, it’s also the 87% (ballpark figure) that voted for all of these things that need to go.

WAKE UP AMERICA

“Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves.”