Friday, December 30, 2011

Leah finally gets good news on 'Teen Mom 2'

By Drusilla Moorhouse, E! Online

MTV

The good news about baby Ali outweighs the bad for Leah Messer on "Teen Mom 2"

At last "Teen Mom 2" has given us something to cheer about.

After biting our nails for a week, the results of Leah and Corey's baby daughter Ali's brain MRI were finally revealed Tuesday night: "Her brain is fine," the pediatrician assured her worried mother.

But it's not all good news ? for baby Ali or "Teen Mom 2" bad boys Kieffer and Adam....

LAST WEEK'S RECAP: "Intensive care"

First, the good news: After last week's cliffhanger, we weren't sure we could take anymore heart-wrenching scenes about baby Ali's developmental disorder. Fortunately Leah's pediatrician has good news ? mostly. "We have a good and we have a bad, but the good outweighs the bad," says the reassuring Dr. Porter. The scan revealed that one ? but not both ? of Ali's optic nerves is indeed small, and will probably affect her sight in that eye. But her brain is fine, and as Corey says later about Ali, "She was made for glasses." We agree ? that baby girl really is "too friggin' cute" in those pink spectacles.

OOPS, SHE DID IT AGAIN: Not-so-merry Christmas: "Teen Mom's" Amber Portwood to spend holidays in jail

Jailhouse rock: ?Despite failing at least one of her online college classes, Jenelle's 19th birthday is off to a good start, with her mom surprising her in bed with presents. Barbara cackles at her daughter's disappointment in her practical gifts: Fix-A-Flat and jumper cables! Now she just needs a cigarette lighter adapter so Kieffer can shave and charge his iPod when next the vehicle becomes their primary residence. See, Jenelle isn't exactly being "truthful and honest" with her mom about her relationship with Kieffer ? instead of avoiding him, she herself drives him to the police station to answer her charges of domestic violence. Maybe the cops will be impressed by his new buzz cut, but we suspect it's the involuntary result of a bad case of head lice.

Before this latest joyride with Kieffer, 19-year-old Jenelle sagely observes: "I'm just happy this is my last year of being a teenager, just because, like, when you're in your teens like no one really takes you seriously." Let's review the evidence: Kieffer is 20, and fellow reality mama Kailyn ? a full-time college student who lives in her own apartment with her toddler while working two jobs ? is still a teenager. Your verdict? ?

MORE: Could this be the future of Adam and Chelsea? (Gulp)

On the safe side: Aside from Barbara, most of Tuesday night's supporting cast ? especially Kailyn's friend Stephanie ? seem to be reading lines in an expressionless monotone, indicating they are probably on their 17th take of "So are you and Jordan having sex?" and its staged follow-up, "Do you have unprotected sex?" But Kailyn's storyline tonight ? a PSA on birth control and frank discussions about sex with your partner ? needed an introduction before her visit to the OB-GYN.

Later she tells Jordan she got a Mirena IUD, protecting her for five years. His embarrassed response annoys his girlfriend, who demands to know, "Why are you so uncomfortable about this topic right now?" Um, maybe because he's surrounded by a camera crew? We'd "plead the fifth" too, pal, if a grip was shoving a light in our face. In the end, Jordan apologizes and makes Kailyn not only smile but laugh. Twice. Girl should let loose more often; even though Kailyn believes she built a "six-feet hole" with her unplanned teen pregnancy, she's far better than Jenelle, who's almost burrowed her way to China by now.

MORE: "Teen Mom's" Jenelle ? Is she really back with slacker boyfriend?

Damsel in distress: Like Jenelle, we first see Chelsea in bed, complaining on the phone to her father Randy because on-again boyfriend Adam has abandoned her and taken baby Aubree with him. "That's your Prince Charming," sighs Chelsea's enabling papa to his little princess. "That's the way he's always been ? you need to decide whether you're OK with that." Adam ignores Chelsea's repeated calls, but he finally responds to a text with "I am keeping (Aubree) ... Shut up." From the guy whose texting history includes calling Chelsea a "fat stretch mark b----," this seems pretty tame. It hurts us to admit it, but we found ourselves sympathizing with Adam tonight. Whiny and needy enough on her best days, Chelsea immobilized and in pain from knee surgery would drive even a saint (including her father) away. ??

PICS: Top 10 celeb kid pics of 2011

What did you think of latest mama drama? Sound off on The Clicker's Facebook page.

Related content:

Source: http://theclicker.today.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/28/9764736-leah-finally-gets-some-good-news-on-teen-mom-2

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Thursday, December 29, 2011

[GROUP] Nintendo/Kingdom Hearts crossover?

You know how Kingdom Hearts is essentially a game with original scenarios and plot elements but cameos from Final Fantasy and Disney characters? Well, why don't we take out the Disney portion of it, and put in Nintendo worlds and characters? You know, kind of like that April Fools joke about Mushroom Kingdom Hearts.

Basically, none of the KH-canons would be in this because I want this to be our own story. This would take place in the same timeline as the first to second Kingdom Hearts game but in a different part of the universe. It will have original characters as well as Nintendo and Final Fantasy characters. I will be limiting the amount of Keyblade wielders to around three or five.

The plot will be similar to the first Kingdom Hearts in the fact that there's a league of villains (in this case, the Nintendo villains) united under one villain (who will be an OC and the main antagonist) who control the Heartless and are looking for something important (haven't decided what that something is yet).

Who's interested in this so far?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/y0406ZOAubU/viewtopic.php

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Friday, December 23, 2011

Churches turn to Facebook, Twitter to help tell Gospel story

God used angels more than 2,000 years ago to announce the birth of Jesus.

Today, churches are using Facebook, Twitter and other modern technology to help spread the Gospel message.

Though the message is the same ? God loves everyone so much he sent his only son to save them ? the way that message is delivered has changed over the centuries.

?We definitely see social media as one of the languages of the culture (now),? said Josh Isenhardt, 30, social media pastor at NorthRidge Church in Plymouth Township. This generation considers Facebook a modern-day town square. ?Why wouldn't we have a presence there??

NorthRidge, Bell Creek Community Church in Livonia and Grace Chapel in Farmington Hills are among the local churches that are implementing some of the latest technologies.

Virtual campus

NorthRidge added a virtual campus this year. It has a brick and mortar campus in Plymouth Township, and meets in schools in Saline and Howell.

In the virtual campus, members from around the country and world simultaneously visit the church's website (northridgechurch.com) at 7 p.m. Sunday to watch a rebroadcast of the weekend service and participate in a live-time chat room, even praying for each other.

?Church online is for those people who are not ready to step into the physical location,? Isenhardt said.

Bell Creek Community Church, which meets at Franklin High School in Livonia, used Twitter for the first time this year to remind people to pray during the week. The church tweeted the word ?pray? to those who had signed up to be reminded during a series the church held on prayer.

?We found that it was very effective, and it's something we're going to keep doing,? said pastor Fred Wright, 43. ?It was amazing how many of our folks signed up.?

Twitter a witnessing tool

Grace Chapel started using Twitter as a witnessing tool this summer during a mission trip to Kentucky, said Daniel Rose, 35, assistant pastor.

Members were tweeting on their personal accounts about their experiences renovating three homes and holding a literacy, math and science camp, he said. That sparked conversations with others about what they were doing and why.

Now the church will use Twitter to let people know about its Christmas Eve and Christmas Day services, blasting out tweets and then depending on members to re-tweet them to their followers.

?It's a very easy way to get a large number of eyes on a small bit of information,? Rose said.

Twitter has also helped build interest in CoffeeDoubt, a group for Christians, atheists, agnostics, theists and others that meets twice weekly in coffee shops to discuss spiritual issues, Rose said.

?We've seen a few people come join us because of conversations over Twitter,? he said.

Grace Chapel has Facebook pages for the church as a whole, the youth ministry and CoffeeDoubt.

Rose said Facebook links people who already know each other, while Twitter links people who don't know each other.

The church's website (graceepc.org), he said, connects people who don't know about the church to the church, often through Google or another search engine. The website includes podcasts of each week's sermon that people can listen to on their computer or download to their iPhone.

Spiritual formation

At NorthRidge, Facebook raises awareness of what God is doing through the church, builds community and gives people a place to share their burdens, Isenhardt said.

But, the next step is using it for spiritual formation. ?Ultimately, we want to see people grow to be more like Christ,? Isenhardt said.

To that end, the church posts two or three questions a week based on the weekend's message. ?We keep bringing it up to the forefront of their minds,? Isenhardt said. ?We want them to carry the truth from the weekend through the rest of the week.?

Wright said the church's website (bellcreek.org) is still its most effective technological tool because it connects people looking for a nondenominational church in the Livonia area to Bell Creek. He said the church has worked hard to make it easy for people to find and navigate the website, where they can learn about the church's beliefs, listen to a sermon and submit a prayer request. The next step, he said, is ramping up the content to include articles on topics like raising children as a single parent and strengthening marriage. ?The website is designed to deliver good content,? Wright said.

Website gets most results

Rose said Grace Chapel's website is better than Facebook and Twitter for getting people into the church on Sunday morning, but, he said, they are just scratching the surface with what technology can do. For example, the youth's Facebook page has an e-vite component so youth can easily invite their friends to church events. ?A lot of the high school students use Facebook almost as a planner,? he said.

The next step, he said, is using Facebook more interactively as an extension of the Sunday sermon or Sunday school.

Garden City Presbyterian (gardencitypresbyterian.org) is using Facebook to promote its monthly Christian concert series and other special events, said Herschel Ele, pastor/head of staff. It hasn't yet started using Twitter.

However, the church's new electronic sign on Middlebelt just south of Ford Road has been more effective than any other technology in getting people in the doors, he said. That's probably because people have to intentionally connect to Facebook or the church's website to get information about events instead of just happening to be driving by, he said.

?If people are intentionally connecting, they've probably already decided they're going to come to whatever is going on here anyway,? said Ele, 64.

Other ways area churches are using modern technology include e-giving, where people can have their tithes directly taken out of their bank accounts, and Google calendar, where people can easily add events to their iPhones or Smartphones.

Personal invites best of all

Yet with all the modern technology available to churches today, nothing will take the place of people personally talking to their family and friends about Jesus and inviting them to go to church with them, Rose said. ?At the end of the day there's one best way (to spread the Gospel message) and that's being involved in the life of your neighbors.?

Nor can people live the Christian life in isolation, Isenhardt said. They need to be in the physical presence of other believers, encouraging, praying with and hugging each other.

In those ways, the church hasn't changed since Christ's birth more than 2,000 years ago.

ksmith@hometownlife.com (313) 222-2098

Source: http://www.hometownlife.com/article/20111222/NEWS03/112220466/1001/rss01

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Thursday, December 22, 2011

5 Ways Obama Covertly Intimidated and Attacked Legal Medical ...

Eric Blair
Activist Post
December 19, 2011

When Obama ran for the presidency, it was no secret that he was an occasional marijuana user in his youth and still a regular cigarette smoker.

He made no attempts to rebuke his history of drug use and he seemed sympathetic to marijuana users, especially for legal medical purposes.

In fact, he took the position that he would leave it up to the states, and because of that he garnered many endorsements and votes from medical marijuana users.

As Obama and the rest of the millions of cannabis users know firsthand, it is beyond foolish to label it a Schedule 1 drug.

It is so obviously less dangerous and far more beneficial than thousands of other legal substances, that it?s only a matter of time before collective common sense overwhelms the conspiracy that keeps it illegal.

Yet, even though 16 states have now legalized medical marijuana use, Obama has reneged on his campaign rhetoric and continues Bush?s policy of aggressive federal action to undermine state laws.

In California, where medical cannabis has been legal for over 15 years, the armed raids of dispensaries and grow-ops continued in plain sight under Obama.

But, apparently, the hypocrisy became too exposed by tyrannical SWAT-style raids on lawful businesses and patients that the Feds had to figure out more creative ways to eradicate medical marijuana.

The Administration is clearly not in favor of states rights as they seem to use any excuse to target marijuana.

Here are five backdoor ways the Feds have targeted legal medical marijuana in 2011:

Property Rights: In October, the Feds announced a renewed crackdown on state-licensed dispensaries in California, referring to them as the ?illegal marijuana industry,? by going after the property owners where the dispensaries are located.

This tactic included threatening property owners with property forfeiture and even warning lien holders that they?ll be targeted as well.

U.S. Attorney Laura E. Duffy made the federal stance on medical marijuana very clear by saying; ?The California marijuana industry is not about providing medicine to the sick. It?s a pervasive for-profit industry that violates federal law.?

The marijuana legalization organization, NORML responsed to these intimidation tactics was as follows: ?The intention of these and other recent, well-publicized threats by the Obama administration is to stifle the development of a viable legal cannabis distribution industry, even in states that have enacted legislation to allow for such an industry.?

The announcement also spurred an epic rant by comedian and activist Joe Rogan:

IRS Tax Persecution: Also revealed in October of this year, the IRS, quoting an obscure clause in the tax code that targets drug cartels, refused to allow tenured lawful dispensaries from claiming normal business write-offs.

?280E of the Tax Code called Expenditures in connection with the illegal sale of drugs states: ?No deduction or credit shall be allowed for any amount paid or incurred during the taxable year in carrying on any trade or business if such trade or business.?

The case involved Harborside Health Center who reported their income and welcomed an inspection by the IRS.

They were denied claiming any legitimate business expenses and were handed a $2.5 million tax bill.

Strangely enough, the IRS allowed them to write off the ?illegal? product as a ?cost of goods sold,? but not normal operating costs.? Harborside was also hit with abusive local taxes that were raised 4000% and had to be prepaid in advance.

Harborside was featured in the Discovery?s documentary Weed Wars, see part 1 below:

ATF Removes Gun Rights from Cannabis Patients: The Department of Justice and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF) are now denying gun rights to lawful medical marijuana patients through a memo sent to all gun and ammo dealers nationwide.

The memo written by Arthur Herbert, Assistant Director for Enforcement Programs and Services for the ATF, said ?Any person who uses or is addicted to marijuana, regardless of whether or not his or her state has passed legislation authorizing marijuana use for medicinal purposes, is an unlawful user of or is addicted to a controlled substance and is prohibited by federal law from possessing firearms or ammunition.?

Morgan Fox of the Marijuana Policy Project commented, ?Trying to treat medical marijuana patients like second-class citizens and stripping them of their rights as they are dealing with illness is just despicable.?

Here is an interesting debate about it between former head of the ATF Mike Sullivan and Steve Fox of the Marijuana Policy Project:

Removing First Amendment: The same U.S. Attorney in California, Laura E. Duffy, who said the medical marijuana industry is not really for sick people, also claimed she has the authority to shut down the First Amendment.

She announced her intent to target to media outlets, threatening them to remove all ads for the medical marijuana industry.

Duffy, claiming Federal law prohibits people from placing ads for illegal drugs, said she?s ?going after these folks with ? notification that they are in violation of federal law.?

She also warned that she has the power to seize property or prosecute them in criminal court.

NORML writes: ?Whether or not Duffy?s unconventional interpretation of federal law has any legal merit is, of course, beside the point.

Her intent is to create a climate of fear that is so pervasive that media outlets ?willingly? cease accepting advertising revenue from dispensaries and other like-minded business.?

Here is the announcement from ABC News:

Banks Forced to Refuse Dispensary Business: Beginning last year, federal regulators prohibited banks from doing business with legal medical marijuana dispensaries, preventing them from being able to process credit/debit cards and even make cash deposits.

Apparently, the banks were threatened not to work with companies that were breaking federal laws even if it was a private in-state bank. Now, lawful dispensaries are finding it harder and more dangerous to do business in several states.

Meanwhile, the big banks openly launder huge sums of money for illegal drug cartels with hardly a slap on the wrist.

According to The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) and the International Monetary Fund (IMF), ?Up to 1.5 trillion dollars in drug money are laundered through legal enterprises, accounting for 5% of global GDP.?

Apparently, the well-connected banks are too big to indict, while legal mom-and-pop marijuana dispensaries are the real criminals according to the Obama Administration.

The Obama Administration is clearly using every weapon in the federal arsenal to intimidate and attack a legal enterprise approved democratically by the voters and permissible in our free Republic where states rights are supposed to have jurisdiction over federal decree.

Not to mention that he lied during his campaign, is a world-class hypocrite, and marijuana is obviously not only safe but extremely beneficial medically.

Tell the White House that we?ve had enough and that it?s time to stop the confusion and double standards, and it is time to end marijuana prohibition altogether.

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Source: http://theintelhub.com/2011/12/19/5-ways-obama-covertly-intimidated-and-attacked-legal-medical-marijuana-in-2011/

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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Alabama gets black eye over immigration crackdown (Reuters)

BIRMINGHAM, Alabama (Reuters) ? America's toughest immigration crackdown was meant to drive illegal workers from Alabama.

But after two employees with foreign automakers Mercedes-Benz and Honda were stopped by police in recent days, it is giving many pause for thought. The companies have poured billions of dollars of investment into the state.

Republican backers of the state crackdown say they have been talking to business leaders, and have been considering "tweaks" to some of the provisions of the law which came into force in September.

"I've met with a lot of members of the business community ... and yes that it is a concern about the image we are creating and does it affect economic development in our state," J.T. "Jabo" Waggoner, the state's Republican senate majority leader told Reuters.

"But let me hasten to add, this is a federal issue that the federal government has refused to act on. They have run from the issue ... it may have been an overreach or an overkill, but we had to do something," he added.

As Republican presidential candidates sparred over who can be tougher on immigration in recent weeks, Alabama experienced the downside of taking a hardline stance.

Although legally in the United States, German Mercedes-Benz executive Detlev Hager was arrested in Tuscaloosa in November after failing to provide a passport or driver's license required by the law. The charges were later dropped.

Then this week, a Japanese worker assigned to the Honda assembly plant in nearby Lincoln was ticketed for not having proper identity documents.

The Alabama law, which was passed in June, requires police to detain people they suspect of being in the U.S. illegally if they cannot produce proper documentation when stopped for any reason. A U.S. appeals court has blocked Alabama from enforcing part of the new law, including a provision that permits Alabama to require public schools to determine the legal residency of children upon enrollment but left most of it untouched.

The recent incidents triggered dismay and ridicule in Alabama, where Mercedes-Benz opened a plant in 1993, and was followed by Honda, Hyundai and Toyota. The four have together made, or announced, investments totaling $8.2 billion in the state through 2014.

Mercedes did not respond to a request for comment. Mark Morrison, Honda's spokesman for the Lincoln plant, said the company would take all necessary steps to comply with the law.

Several U.S. states have passed tough laws targeting the undocumented, charging that President Barack Obama and the Congress have failed to act on the issue.

Alabama Republicans who support the state's immigration law say it will help create jobs for legal residents by driving out undocumented workers and their families, pegged at 75,000 to 160,000 by the Pew Hispanic Center.

Waggoner says it would save some of the $280 million he says is spent annually by the state on health and education services for the undocumented.

But some Alabama businesses and civic leaders say it jeopardizes economic development by making it a less-attractive location for firms from overseas, or from other parts of the U.S.

"I don't think that start-up businesses, or entrepreneurs or expansion-type businesses are going to be looking to locate in a hostile area," said Jerome Leader, 79, a Birmingham-based commercial realtor with several empty properties on his books.

"And this immigration law has ... created a hostile and unsavory environment," he said.

Birmingham immigration lawyer Mike Thompson said the arrests of the Honda and Mercedes executives gave the state a "black eye".

"Unfortunately, the ... immigration law is creating an outside impression that the state is not welcoming to foreign persons, documented or undocumented," he added.

In the weeks after the law came into effect, tens of thousands of undocumented farm workers have picked up their checks and headed out of state to avoid the risk of being detained and deported, sources said.

Jerry Spencer, who founded Birmingham-based Grow Alabama, which distributes locally grown food from a network of more than 200 independent farmers, said the labor shortfall left sweet potato and tomato farmers very anxious in the run up to the February planting season.

"There's a great deal of angst and anticipation (among farmers) about the upcoming season, and this has to be settled fairly quickly, or it could be really disastrous," said Spencer, adding that jobless Americans were unable to step in and fill the jobs.

"It became very clear to anybody paying any attention since September that a regular, unemployed American citizen simply can't do this work, and the farmers aren't set up in any way to train them for it," he said. He noted that Hispanic migrant-worker crews are equipped to "walk right in and take the farm over after a basic setup is done."

SHOW ME YOUR PAPERS STATE

Former President George W. Bush brought the last attempt at an immigration overhaul to a vote in 2007, but it was killed off by Republicans in the U.S. Senate.

While it's not yet clear if any foreign firms have been scared off by Alabama's law, its discomfort has already been seized on by some in neighboring states, hungry to pick up fresh investment.

In an editorial after Hager's arrest, the St Louis Post-Dispatch invited Mercedes-Benz to head to Missouri where Ford and General Motors have expanded operations in the past year. "Our state has many advantages over Alabama. We are the Show-Me State, not the 'Show me your papers' state," the editorial read, reveling in schadenfreude.

"You've got two choices. Either ask your executives to carry their immigration papers at all times, or move to a state that understands gemuchlichkeit (sic)," a misspelling of the German word for "coziness."

The events were also noted in Michigan, the U.S. auto industry's traditional home, whose governor, Rick Snyder, traveled to China, Japan and South Korea in September to drum up new investment.

"We'd be foolish not to want to encourage immigration when we've got so much of the base economy here in Michigan founded by immigrants," said Doug Smith senior vice president for economic development at the Michigan Economic Development Corporation.

PITFALL FOR REPUBLICANS

There are an estimated 11.2 million illegal immigrants in the United States, though since the financial crisis and recession hit in 2008 the number of arrests on the southwest border with Mexico has fallen by more than half.

Alabama, Georgia, Indiana, South Carolina and Utah have all passed "omnibus" immigration crackdowns since Arizona blazed the trail in 2010 with a law requiring police to check the status of all those they arrested and suspected of being in the country illegally - a measure since blocked by a court.

There is some indication nationally that a drive toward tough, enforcement-heavy laws may be slowing, with the ousting in an election in Arizona last month of Russell Pearce, the powerful state senate president who championed the state's crackdown.

But any sign of a significantly softer tone from Republican presidential candidates looks remote as the rivals battle for support from conservatives in early voting states like Iowa and South Carolina.

Presidential hopeful Newt Gingrich has been pummeled by rivals Mitt Romney and Michele Bachmann for suggesting in a televised debate that he was in favor of a pathway to citizenship for some illegal immigrants.

Romney, a former Massachusetts Governor has distanced himself from previous comments he made in the 2008 race backing a comprehensive immigration overhaul.

"Any proposal that has the least bit of moderation or even common sense is a potential pitfall for the Republican candidates," said Mark P. Jones, a political scientist at Rice University.

They have painted themselves into such a corner that it will be very difficult to move back to the center without being seen as inconsistent," Jones added.

FRUSTRATION AT OBAMA

As a fears over the potential damage from the state's immigration law takes hold in Alabama there is growing anger at the U.S. Congress and the Obama administration for not acting to mend a broken immigration system.

Obama has failed to deliver on a campaign promise to push through a comprehensive overhaul, tightening border and workplace enforcement, and easing a path to citizenship for illegal immigrants who paid fines, learned English and went to the back of the line.

"Congress needs to step up, put on the big boy pants and address the immigration issue instead of leaving it to the states," said Lew Watson, the mayor of Lincoln, Ala., where Honda employs 4,000 people. "They've known about the problem for years," he added, speaking hours after the Japanese Honda worker was ticketed on Wednesday.

No further attempts are expected at a large overhaul before Obama seeks reelection next November, while the issue itself will likely be eclipsed during a presidential campaign that will likely focus on the parlous state of the U.S. economy.

But for some, including U.S. Hispanics who as a bloc turned out by a 2-to-1 margin to elect Obama three years ago, patience is wearing thin.

"He's not doing enough, he needs to do more," said Isabel Rubio, the executive director of the nonprofit Hispanic Interest Coalition of Alabama, who declined to say if she voted for Obama. "The Latino community elected him because of what he wanted to do on immigration ... I understand that it's very difficult but he has not delivered," she added.

(Additional reporting by Kelli Dugan in Mobile and Emily Flitter in New York; Editing by Martin Howell in New York)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/us/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111204/us_nm/us_alabama_immigration

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