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Greg Brown's Weekend Reading and Other Things.. 05/21/2017
DEAR FRIEND
</a
<=p>
Consider This
</=pan>
Trying to come to terms with=President Trump's proposal to increase the US military budget by an additional $54 billion
I ran across a 2015 article in ProPublica — We Blew $17 Billion in Afghanistan. How Would You Have Spent It? —=/b> And
boy did it blow my mind. It is estimated that the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq will eventually cost American taxpaye=s
$4 to $6 trillion, if not more. The truth is that everything we spent in these unnecessary wars is a waste but =he $17
billion that fell through the cracks is unconscionable, especially when=the President wants to cut programs for the poor,
children and elderly to give =he military an additional $54 billion.
The U.S. government has wasted b=llions of dollars in Afghanistan, but until ProPublica in 2015, no one has added it all
up.40=A0 Project after project blundered ahead ignoring history, culture and warnings of failure. And Congress has
barely bli=ked as the financial toll has mounted. Here's just what the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan
Reconstruction found.Q=A0 ProPublica listed all of the US programs in Afghanistan and their waste and across the page
government programs where the money wou=d have been better spent. See for yourself how that money could have
been use= at home as well as the actual ProPublica article in its entirety via the web t=nk below.
Web Link: Behold, American taxpayer, what happened to nearly a half billion of your dollars i= Afghanistan:
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=p class="MsoNormal">One example of the many: In 2008, the Pentagon bought 20 refurbished cargo planes for the
Afghan Air Force, but as one top U.S. officer put it, "just about everythi=g you can think of was wrong." No spare parts,
for example. The planes were a=so "a death trap," according to the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan
Reconstruction. So $486 million was spent on worthless planes that no one c=uld fly. We did recoup some of the
investment. Sixteen of the planes were sold =s scrap for the grand sum of $32,000. That's six cents a pound.=/span>
And what a bill it is. There4,=99s a widely held idea of "just" as in "just a few million." Like the military officer who
wrot= that the $25 million blown on a fancy headquarters nobody used was "probably not=bad in the grand scheme of
things." But those millions add up. To billions.
The problem, contrary to popular=assumptions, is not unscrupulous contractors. Follow the long trail of waste and
you'll=be standing at the doors of the military, the State Department and the U.S. Agency for International
Development. It's their bad decisions, bad purchases =nd bad programs that are consistently to blame.
ProPublica examined more th=n 200 audits, special projects and inspections done by SIGAR since 2009 and built a
database to add up the tot=l cost of failed reconstruction projects. Looking at the botched projects collectively — rather
than as one-off headlines — reveals a=grim picture of the overall reconstruction effort and a repeated cycle of mistakes.
•
In just six years, the IG has tallied at least $17 billion in questionable spending. This includes $3.6 billion in
outright wa=te, projects teetering on the brink of waste, or projects that can't =E2404) or won't — be sustained by the
Afghans, as well as an additional $13.5 billion that th= average taxpayer might easily judge to be waste. Exhibit A for
"=ou be the judge": $8.4 billion was spent on counter-narcotics programs that were so ineffective that Afghanist=n has
produced record levels of heroin — more than it did before the =ar started.
•
Often the programs' ambitions were o=t of whack with the reality of life in Afghanistan. After the invasion, the
U.S. rushe= forward with bold plans to create a democratic, fiscally secure, ethical go=ernment and society — out of
whole cloth. It was the same country-building =ravado that had earlier tripped up the U.S. in Iraq when it dismissed the
local culture=and ignored corruption.
•
"Pie in the sky" projects, as one USAID worker called them, were routinely =aunched without any thought to the
financial and technological ability of the Afgha=s to maintain them. It turned out that the Afghans couldn't afford mo=t
of them, so even the best programs could end up becoming waste.
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•
<=pan style="font-size:12ptline-height:107%;font-family:georgia,serif">No=e of the programs were required to
prove they had even limited success. Officials tracked dollars spent, not impact. For instance, no one evaluated whether
Afghan security forces actually learned =o read and write after going through a $200 million literacy program.<=r>
•
Those who signed off on the failed projects appeared to suffer no consequences. As head of SIGAR John Sopko
puts it: Reconstruction efforts are "like a child sports game where everyone=gets a trophy."
If this a=counting wasn't bad enough, consider this: SIGAR has only examined a small percentage of the $110 billion
effort to rebuild and remodel Afghanistan. The waste totals are likely much higher. Still, =t's often hard to grasp what
this kind of money means to the average American. Perhaps the most meaningful wa= to underscore what has been lost
is to look at what the money could have paid =or at home.
To set the scene, in 2010, as the U.S. was drastically increasing its investment in Afghanistan, a quarter of America's
ho=eowners — more than 11 million — were underwater on their mortgages, and the =ountry hovered near a 10
percent unemployment rate. Congress was routinely gutting federal programs.
•
The $14.7 million spent=on a storage facility the military never used? That could have paid for about 9,800 rape
kits to be tested — enough to clear the backlog for the entire state of Tennes=ee.
•
The $456,000 police-training facility that was=so poorly constructed it literally melted in the rain? That could
have funded =ore than 180,000 dinners for low-income kids, enough for an entire summer.
•
The $335 million spent on a power plant that the Afghans don't use? That could have paid for permanent
housing for 3=,000 homeless Americans and $250,000 grants to 20 small-business owners to help =hem commercialize
new technologies.
Take the money wasted on those worthless planes, plus that spent on an unused consulate, and fixing the buildings
constructed with hazardous materials. That could have restored the $714 million cut from the National Institute of
Health's budget, which funds scientific resea=ch into new treatments for disease. Despite such trade-offs, there's been
little collective outrage from either the =ublic or Congress about the massive waste in Afghanistan.
The military, the S=ate Department and USAID provided detailed public responses to the findings in each of SIGAR's
reports, sometimes disputing the conclusions and recommendations. The reports and their =esponses can be read here.
This week a Defense Department spokesman told ProPublica that the Pentagon "disagrees with the ass=rtion that $17B
in projects are 'questionable.'" Often those responsible for t=e failed projects treat SIGAR's findings like unnecessary
niggling. Their rejoinder, in essence: "Hey, it's a war zone, what do you e=pect?" There's little time spent on pondering
the bigger question: If it's a war zone, why were we pouring billions i=to reconstruction?
Under the chapter 4)=93 Fingers in Ears: Ignoring History, Advice and Culture Link<=i> — the ProPublica article points
out that the U.S. is a slow learner= Again and again, the U.S. disregarded expert advice, the local culture or past
mistakes in both Afghanistan and Iraq 40=8040 sometimes, ignoring all three in a single failed project. First of al=, large-
scale projects are almost impossible to achieve success when there was still active fighting, as anyt=ing big drew the
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attention of the insurgency. "Very frequently on those PowerPoints you would see this pipeline t=at already had been
reconstructed had been blown up again. Or an electri=ity grid," said former U.S. Ambassador William Taylor, who
worked as director of the Iraq Reconstructio= Management Office from 2004 to 2005. "That led us to several lessons in
Iraq that have general applicability, which ar=: Smaller projects at the local level, by and large, are to be
preferred.Q=80Q
That didn't stop the U.S. years later from trying to =uild a nationwide electricity system in Afghanistan that crossed
through Taliban strongholds at the height of fighting. Or sinking billions into roads that spanned the country and were
routinely blown up by insurgents. Offici=ls also identified over-gifting as a problem in Iraq. Iraqis would give a "head
nod" to whatever the U.S. offered, because they weren't=footing the bill, former U.S. Ambassador Ryan Crocker told
Iraq's inspector general. =nce the projects were built, the Iraqis couldn't pay to operate or maintain=them. And yet in
Afghanistan, the military, the State Department and USAID repeatedly defended unsustainable projects by sa=ing that
the Afghans had agreed to them.
Corruption also prominently und=rmined the security forces in Iraq and many efforts at governance. SIGAR, however,
said the U.S. moved forward for years in Afghanistan with no strategy in place to deal with corruption, a failure
investigators found baffling. "Somethin= that quite's pertinent to Afghanistan that we could have learned in Iraq is the
problem of the local culture of corruption," said Charles Tiefer, who investigated recon=truction on the Commission for
Wartime Contracting in Iraq and Afghanistan. Then =here was the military, the State Department and USAID's frequent
failures to consider the local cult=re in either country, a costly misstep that caused many ill-considered projects t= tank.
=/b>
The chapter — =b>Building in our Image: An Overly Ambitious Effort from the Start Link — speaks for itself. In 2011, a =ask
force of financial gurus brainstorming business projects for the military had an idea: Alternate fuels! That's what
Afghanistan needs to jumpstart its economy and bring in foreign investors.c=pan>
A few years earlier a geological survey had found that the northern part of the country was blessed with natural gas
reserves. C=mmercializing that resource would be a boon for Afghanistan, the task force figured, particularly since the
country rel=es on imported gasoline it can barely afford.
It seemed like a good id=a on paper. But, as expert after expert has noted, Afghanistan is not the U.S. It's not even
Pakistan. Getting the gas=out of the ground and moved around the country would be a feat. There is no dist=ibution
system in Afghanistan for that kind of compressed gas — and building one in a war-torn co=ntry that has trouble
keeping the lights on with generators was an expensive, if not laughable, notion. But that didn't seem to matter. The
task force sunk $43 million into a proof-of-concept gas stat=on anyway.
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Then there was another very key problem: no customers...A0 The average Afghan would have to shell out more than
an entire year's worth of salary to convert their cars to=run on compressed natural gas. It costs about $700 and most
Afghans bring home $69= annually. So unsurprisingly, the only people who used the station were the 120 Afghans the
U.S. paid to convert t=eir cars.
The scale of what that project wanted to achieve was inappropriate in almost every aspect, and ProPublica found, it
wasn4>=99t unique in that regard. Afghanistan is at the bottom of almost every conceivable development ranking. Yet
much of t=e reconstruction effort has seemed as if the U.S. and its allies were trying to create a new Afghanista= in their
own image — both in the Western ideals superimposed on the Af=hans and in the sheer ambition of the projects.
These 80 Countries Had a Lower GDP Than the $17.1 Billion We Blew in Afghanistanapan>
The chapter: Over-Gifting: Af=hans Can't Afford, Don't Need What They Got — is self-explanatory. Q=A0In a 14-year
flurry of giving, the U.S. built the Afghans an array of big-ticket projects, but whether they could afford to maintain, or
even operate, this largess was rarely considered in any meaningful way. The World Bank r=nks Afghanistan's ability to
pay its bills as one of the world's(GB1] lowest. Right now, the country is significantly propped up by foreign aid whose
future is uncertain. International donors have so far only committed at current levels through 2=17.
A former SIGAR official listed three key tests for sustainability: Do they have the money? The technical capacity? The
p=litical will? "Afghanistan generally fails all three." American "over-gifting" was a problem on virtually every project.
Consider health care. In 2011, the inspector general for USAID issued a bleak assessment of=the ability of the Afghans to
sustain any of the agency's health progra=s. The Afghan government paid the tab for just 6 percent of the nation's
h=alth care expenditures.
<= class="MsoNormal">Yet USAID replaced a hospital in Gardez with a new, la=ger facility, saddling the Afghans with at
least a 180 percent, and possibly as much as a 524 percent, increase in that annual bill. (Or it will when the hospital is
finally completed. It's years behind schedule.) Not far from that hos=ital, USAID replaced another that had cost $98,000
per year to run with one that costs $587,000 annually — nearly six times as much.</=>
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Sure, the Afghan Ministry of Public Health agreed t= fund the new hospitals, but USAID didn't address a fundamental
question: Cou=d it actually afford to do so? Without donor money, the answer is unequivocally "no." And that's the
answer for almost every single=aspect of the Afghan government, according to a dozen of military and civilian Afghan
experts.
One of the largest, most notorious, capital projects in Afghanistan is roads. So far the U.S. and other donors have spent
more than=$4 billion total on multiple projects to build more than 5,700 miles of them. =et the U.N. says 85 percent of
the country's roads are undrivable.Q=A0 The Afghans do little to care for them. USAID tried to mold the Ministry of
Public Works into a competent bureaucracy, bu= so far it remains ineffective. There's about a "$100 million
m=intenance gap and inadequate technical staff" at the ministry for "routine= periodic, preventive, emergency and
winter maintenance," USAID told SIGAR. Adding to their quick deterioration: the roads were built to U.S. weight
standards, but Afghan tr=cks are notoriously overweight, Sopko said.
The chapter: </=pan>Doomed to Repeat: An Afghan Security Force That Can't Maintain Its Numbers, Buildings,
Equipment. Even Its Fro=t Lines. — suggests that if Afghans can't maintain their own military whatever=we do will fail.
One only has to look to Iraq, where the Pentagon spent more than $20 billion to build an army and hailed =t a
resounding success. Until ISIS came and the Iraqi security forces crumbled.=span>
Meanwhile in Afghanistan, a f=r poorer and less sophisticated country, the military has replicated that training program,
but tripled the investment, spending $65 billion — nearly 60 percent of the entire reconstruction budget. The plan:
Create a well-schooled, 352,000-strong national Army and police force, and a robus= air force able to secure the country
on its own — all in a matter o= years.
But this formidable objective ignored the Afghans' =ervasive corruption, fledgling leadership, and rudimentary
capabilities. Not t= mention Afghanistan's complete inability to pay the bills of such a large, modern military —
which=costs upwards of $5 billion per year (If the Afghans spent every cent they collected in revenue on security and
noth=ng else, they still couldn't cover the cost.) The Pentagon=has also had a perplexing tendency to repeat mistakes
made in Iraq.
The chapter= "A" Is For Effort: In Afghanistan No One Has To Prove Success —=means that whatever we do will fail. For
five years, USAID poured $150 million into a project with warm, but fuzzy, aspirations: helping isolated, unstable Afghan
communities grow and feel mo=e connected to their government. It was a part of the military's broa= campaign to win
"hearts and minds." In all that time, t=ough, USAID was never able to define what, exactly, the objectives of the "Local
Governan=e and Community Development" program were, let alone if it had met them.=C24> The agency also had a
hard time keeping track of what contractors were actually doing, SIGAR reported.
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That, howev=r, didn't stop USAID from literally doubling down on the program in 2009, increasing its budget to $373
million. SIGAR=E244ks conclusion: scattered, small successes but no wins on any overarching goals. Ashley Jackson, a
longtime non-governmental organization worker, was blunter. USAID, she said, &=uot;would have been better off
setting the money on fire."
The chapter: Consequence-Free Zone: No One Is Ever Blamed For Failure Link — obviou=ly when there is no
consequence of failure don't expect success. =As an example that site an unfinished courthouse in North of Kabul, which
is a shell of rebar and cracking concre=e. So instead of being the centerpiece for Afghan national security trials, a
prominent place to prosecute suspected insurgents, judges preside over a makeshift courtroom in a nearby building =ith
fold-out tables.
The Afghan contractor hired to build the courthous= had only been in business for about six months and there was very
little documentati=n on why his company was chosen to do the work, Harmon said. The contra=tor hired a
subcontractor that military commanders knew actively supported the Taliban. But since th=se commanders failed to
share this information throughout the organization, the subcontractor had access =o a U.S. military-controlled area for
two days — a serious security lap=e, according to a SIGAR report. With just basic foundation work done on the justice
center, the contractor disappeared, tak=ng almost $400,000 of U.S. taxpayers' money with him. The military
subsequently abandoned the project. The consequences for those mismanaging this misbegotten project? Nothing.
Th= final chapter: Success or Failure: =e Spent $8 billion and There's Now More Heroin Than Ever — sums up o=r success
in Afghanistan. Today Afghanistan is the king of heroin. It sits on a narco throne as "the global leader in illicit opium
cultivation and produ=tion," according to SIGAR. After a 13-year effort by the U.S.to <http://U.S.to> end Af=hanistan's
drug trade, it is now the world leader in heroin production. Plans to promote alternative farming and eradicate poppy
fields have only led to more poppie= planted. Law enforcement training has been insufficient. About $109 million was
spent on substance abuse treatmen= programs and education.
</=pan>
And that $8.4 billion the U.S. spent to end =ts reign over the last 13 years appears to have only enhanced its standing.
The Pentagon, USA=D and the State Department had a grand plan to eradicate poppy fields, develo= Afghan law
enforcement and promote alternative farming livelihoods. Yet the drug trade still "poisons the Afghan financial sector
and undermines t=e Afghan state's legitimacy by stoking corruption, sustaining crimina= networks, and providing
significant financial support to the Taliban and other insurg=nt groups," SIGAR found.
=br>
The drug trade feeds corruption. Deali=g with both are intrinsically tied to reconstruction success, which is why the
failure to h=ve an effective strategy. When a farmer grows poppy, he pays off the local officials, and the money goes up
the cha=n and leads to corruption of entire institutions. Part of the program was to demonstrate to the Afghans that was
why they shouldn't let the drug=trade go on. Didn't we learn from the disastrous "War On Drugs" here in America and
Nancy Reagan's laugha=le "Just Say No" drug campaign? Obviously not. And this is indicative to why our hold strategy
under both Presidents Bush and Obama has failed. We are tryi=g to force a square peg through a round hole and we
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seem surprised that it is not working. But back to ProPub=ica's initial premise, think about what we could have
accomplished with the billi=ns of taxpayers' dollars wastes in Afghanistan. </=>
<=>So True</=>
Prejudices are what fools use for reason.
Francois Voltaire
=/span>
A new 'No Fly' List
The Treasury Department =ssentially has a 1,000-page financial no-fly list.
I am old enough to remem=er Richard Nixon's famous 'Enemies List" an= later watched the Federal Government's 'No
Fly List4>=8000 which grew in response to the 9/11 attacks in 2001 from 16 people deemed "no transport&qu=t;
because they "presented a specific known or suspected threat to aviation" to more than 103, 440 today. A=d because
so many "False Positives" started to occur 41=80. when a passenger who is not on the No Fly List has a name that
matches or i= similar to a name on the list — denying these passengers from board=ng a flight unless they can convince
the airline that they are not that person. =C240n an effort to reduce the number of False Positives, DHS announced on
April 28, 2008 th=t each airline would be permitted to create a system to verify and store a passenger's date of birth, to
clear up watch list misidentifications.
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False Positive passengers will not be allowed to board a flight unless they can differentiate themselves from the actual
person on t=e list, usually by presenting ID showing their middle name or date of birth.=C24:0 In some cases, False
Positive passengers have been denied boarding or have mis=ed flights because they could not easily prove that they
were not the person o= the No Fly List. But what if you don't know that your name is on the list? And if it is, how do you
get your name off this list, if indeed it is a False Positiv=? And what do you do if you are on another list that you have
never heard about?
I say all of this because I recent=y read a story in the Huffington Post by Ben Walsh —=Your Financial Life Could Be Ruined
If Your Name Is On This Massive Government List — about another gov=rnment list that I had never heard of. Take the
case of Muhammed Ali Khan tried to do one of the most boring, responsible things an American taxpayer can do: set up
a government-guaranteed retirement savings account.=He was rejected because the Treasury Department thought he
might be a terroris=. But he isn't. He's a software consultant from Fullerton, =alifornia. But he shares a first name (with
a different spelling), last name and middle initial with a financier of a Pakista=i terror group.
=p class="MsoNormal">That man, Mohammad Naushad Alam Khan, is on the Treas=ry Department's Specially
Designated Nationals and Blocked P=rsons List (SDN). 4,=A0The 1,026-page catalog lists people and organizations that
U.S. citizens and residents are barred from doing busine=s with because of their ties to terror cells, drug cartels or rogue
states.=C2* The SDN is essentially a financial no-fly list that cuts people off from U.S. banks — and, as a result, t=e
global financial system. The SDN has more than doubled in length in the last five years.
Khan later found out tha= his credit reports from Experian and TransUnion had also been flagged as a potential match.
Luckily the tr=uble that caused him, was relatively minor — after he got over the shock of seeing a terrorism flag on h=s
credit report, he spent a few hours navigating customer service lines with the Treasury Department and the two credit
bureaus. He got his retirement=account set up and his credit reports cleared after providing some personal information
to show th=t he was not the man who had financially supported the 2008 Mumbai attacks. <=pan>
Some other people wrongly believed to be on the SDN — either because they share a name with someone who is or
because their name partial=y matches an alias used by someone on the list (and international criminals often have a lot
of aliases= — are hurt far worse than Khan. As a result they can have their airli=e ticket purchases rejected or hotel
reservations declined. Their bank account= can be frozen. Loans to buy a home or a car can be declined. =ire transfers
can be seized and held for up to a year while the freeze is litigated, which can destroy small businesses= block real estate
transactions or delay inheritances. <=p>
Such delays impose "a tremendous burden," said Peter Djinis, a former anti-money laundering regulato= at the Treasury
Department. "It can become a business disadvantage to people whose =ame just happens to be similar to that of
someone actually on the list," he =aid. "This is a real problem."
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"Bank accounts can be frozen. Loans to buy a home or a car can be declined. Wire transfers can be seized and held for
up to a year."
The Treasury Department's Offi=e of Foreign Assets Control, or OFAC, maintains the SDN list. The catalog=was created in
1940, but the department massively increased its efforts to bloc= terrorist financing after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.
OFAC is a rela=ively small office compared to other parts the law enforcement and national security apparatus, although
t=e Treasury Department claims that OFAC has enough staff and that its size is appropriate relative to U.S. sanctions
programs. However, OFAC is esp=cially small relative to its mission of blocking thousands of people from the U.S.
financial system. This means day-to-day enforcement is largely left up to the private sector.</=>
A Treasury D=partment spokesman said that OFAC manages individuals and entities on its list in coordination with
relevant U.S. government agencies, and has processes in place to ensure that designations=are applied appropriately,
and to assist and provide due process to anyone who believes they should be removed. And due to a backlog a whole
industry has popped up around this, producing what=is known as interdiction software — programs that banks use to
see if = customers name matches one on the blocked list. This software produces a staggering volume of hits and leads
to lots of false positives, like Khan's.
Banks tend to be conservative in their risk management, and cast as wide a net as possible to try to stop anything
improper. This=is because sanctions are enforced under the legal standard of strict liability, meaning any transaction
with anybod= on the list is illegal, regardless of intention. Fines are steep, too: either $284,000 per violation, or twice the
value of the transaction — whi=hever is higher. Companies that peddle interdiction software turn banks' worries into a
selling point.4)=A0 Yet the software's results often don't live up to its promises, and financial institutions are struggling
to deal with the mountains of data the software produces. The Treasury Department declined t= comment on
interdiction software.
Realize that that big banks, credi= card companies and payment processors at most, only have between 200 and 500
employees to sift through=hits and gather information to try to clear false positives from the OFAC list.=C2* When a
potential client's name matches one on the list, the financial institution staffers then have to call OFAC to figu=e out if
the person really is on the SDN or if they are dealing with a false positive. The SDN doesn't provide much in the way of
specifics — a name, a few aliases, a nationality=and sometimes a date of birth. Financial institutions complain that they
would like=more identifying information about the people on the SDN so they could vet their customers more quickly.
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But the government is often =amstrung because it has limited personal information about the people on the list, often
because the SON targets are concealing as much about their lives as possible. The Tre=sury Department says that it
compiles and releases as much identifying information about the people on the list a= it can in order to reduce the
number of false positives. The department =eclined to release data on the number of transactions or transfers halted
due to false positives.
=/p>
=span style="font-family:georgia,serif">"It can become a business disadvantage to people whose name just happens to
be similar to that of som=one actually on the list."
Peter Djinis, a former anti-money laundering regulator at the Treasury Department
False hits — people like Khan — are 4>=9Ca bigger problem, not a smaller problem," explained Djinis, the former
regulator. And=clearing up false hits is a labor-intensive process. The safe, simple option for the financial institution is
often to just stop doing business with a customer whose name gets flagged.
The complex nature=of financial transactions makes this process even more difficult for customers with names that are
likely to get wrongly flagged. For instance, a simple money transfer abroad might involve two retail banks and an
intermediary ba=k to facilitate. The transfer can be held up if software run by any of =he three banks flags any party
involved.
Some financial institutions have tri=d to fix this by buying more software to help sort through the results — which is
great for=the software providers, and could help the people the system has wrongly flagge=. "We are going to make so,
so much money selling them stuff to fix this," the software executive said. =The application of the SDN list has become
"guilt by association," said Shereef Akeel, a civil rights lawyer in Michi=an who has worked on the issue. The Treasury
spokesman said the department wasn=E244t worried that enforcing the list raised any civil rights issue. =/p>
The vast num=er of false positives, Akeel said, "actually compromises our national security ... because everyone is busy
lookin= at all these other names, they don't have enough time to really catch the =ad guys." Instead, Akeel said, the
burden falls on people like Khan, who have to try to prove that they are not someone else. =lthough Khan succeeded in
setting up his retirement fund, but there's no way for=him to proactively tell every U.S. financial institution that he isn't
Moh=mmad Naushad Alam Khan.
=/p>
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In response to 9/11 we have allowed the governmen= to extend the reach of Big Brother broad surveillance far beyond
the levels permitted=by the US Constitution and the Bill of Rights. And because so many of th= programs overlap and
interrelate among one another without a central server and intense backbone monitoring false positives will continue if
not increase. So if you find yourself in a similar position of Muhammad Ali Khan there are ways to cure the problem that
you can do yourself.
4)=A0
The Great Show on Earth
<=span>
=C24)
4)=A0
=C24)
4)=A0
After 146 continuous years of entertaining and amazin= generations of audiences across America the Ringling Brothers
and Barnum=& Bailey Circus affectingly known as "The Greatest Show on Earth" will give its farewell show toda=, May
21st, in Uniondale, N.Y.
<=p>
The Ringling brothers (originally Rungeling) were seven American siblings of German and French descent =ho
transformed their small touring company of performers into one of America&#=9;s largest circuses in the late 19th and
early 20th centuries. The broth=rs were born between 1852 and 1869 with a sister Ida, (whose two s=ns John Ringling
North and Henry Ringling North guide the circus into the mode=n age and under their management, the circus switched
from tents to air conditioned venues in 1956) were born in McGregor, Iowa and raised in Baraboo, Wisconsin. The
siblings were children of German and French immigrants, August Frederick and Marie Salome Rungeling, who simplified
his name to Ringling once in America.
In 1884 five of the seven Ringling brothers: Albert, =ugust, Otto, Alfred T., Charles, John, and Henry founded a small
circus in Baraboo= Wisconsin, United States. This was about the same time that Barnum & Ba=ley were at the peak of
their popularity. Similar to dozens of small circ=ses that toured the Midwest and the Northeast at the time, the brothers
moved their circus from town to town in small animal-drawn caravans. Their circus=rapidly grew and they were soon
able to move their circus by train, which allowed them to have the largest traveling amusement enterprise of that time.
Bailey's European to=r gave the Ringling brothers an opportunity to move their show from the Midwest to the eastern
seaboard. Faced with the new competition, Bailey took his show west of the Rocky Mountains for the first time in 1905.
He died the next year, and the circus was sold to the Ringling Brothers.
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<=pan style="font-size:12ptline-height:107%;font-family:georgia,serif">
The Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus is = combination of the Barnum & Bailey's Greatest Show on Earth, a
circus created b= P. T. Barnum and James Anthony Bailey, was merged with the Ringling Bros. World&#=9;s Greatest
Shows and debuted in New York City. The Ringling brothers had purchased Barnum & Bailey Ltd. following Bailey's
death in 1906, but ran the cir=uses separately until they were merged in 1919 debuted in New York City. T=e posters
declared, "The Ringling Bros. World's Greatest Shows and the Barnum & Bailey Greatest Show on Ear=h are now
combined into one record-breaking giant of all exhibitions." Charl=s E. Ringling died in 1926, but the circus flourished
through the Roaring Twenties. In 1927 John Ringling move the circus' headquarters to Sarasota, Florida. And in 1929,
the American Circus Corporation signed a contract to perform in New York City. John R=ngling purchased American
Circus, owner of five circuses, for $1.7 million.
Like most other businesses the circus suffered during=the 1930s due to the Great Depression, but managed to stay in
business. A=ter John Nicholas Ringling's death, his nephew, John Ringling North, managed the indebted circus twice, the
first from 1937 to 1943. Special dispensation was given to the circus by President Roosevelt to use the rails to operate
in 1=42, in spite of travel restrictions imposed as a result of World War II. =any of the most famous images from the
circus that were published in magazine and posters were captured by American Photographer Maxwell Frederic Coplan,
who traveled the world with the circus, capturing its beauty as well as its harsh realities. North's cousin Robert took over
the president of the s=ow in 1943. North resumed the presidency of the circus in 1947.
A fire occurred on July 6, 1944, in Hartford, Connect=cut, during an afternoon performance that was attended by
approximately 7,500 to 8,700 people. It was one of the worst fire disasters in the history of the United States. Although
the Hart=ord Fire Department responded quickly, the fire was fanned by the fact that the canvas circus t=nt had been
waterproofed through a mixture of highly flammable paraffin and gasoline. During the ensuing panic Emmett Kelly, the
tramp clown, threw a bucket of water at the burning canva= tent, and a poignant photograph of his futile attempt was
transmitted aroun= the world as news spread of the disaster. At least 167 people were killed in the disaster, and
hundreds more were injured. Some of the dead remain unidentified to this day, even with modern=DNA techniques.
<=pan style="font-size:12ptline-height:107%;font-family:georgia,serif">
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In the following investigation, it was discovered tha= the tent had not been fireproofed. Ringling Bros. had applied to
the Army, which had an absolute priority on the materi=l, for enough fireproofing liquid to treat their Big Top. The Army
had r=fused to release it to them. The circus had instead waterproofed the=r canvas using an older method of paraffin
dissolved in gasoline and painted =nto the canvas. The waterproofing worked, but as had been repeatedly shown it was
horribly flammable. Circus ma=agement was found to be negligent and several Ringling executives served sentences in
jail. Ringling Br=thers' management set aside all profits for the next ten years to pay the claims f=led against the show
by the City of Hartford and the survivors of the fire.
The post-war prosperity enjoyed by the rest of the na=ion was not shared by the circus as crowds dwindled and costs
increased. Publ=c tastes, influenced by the movies and television, abandoned the circus, which gave its last
performance under the=big top in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on July 16, 1956. An article in Life magazi=e reported that "a
magical era had passed forever". In 1956, when John Ringling North and Arthur Concello moved the circus from a tent
show t= an indoor operation, Irvin Feld was one of several promoters hired to work the advance for select dates, mostly
in the Detroit and Philadelphia areas.0=A0 Irvin Feld and his brother, Israel Feld, had already made a name for
themselves marketing and promoting DC area rock and roll shows. In 1959, Ringling Bros. started wintering in Venice,
Florida.
In late 1967, Irvin Feld, Israel Feld, and Judge Roy =ark Hofheinz of Texas, together with backing from Richard C. Blum,
the founder =f Blum Capital, bought the company outright from North and the Ringling famil= interests for $8 million at
a ceremony at Rome's Colosseum. I=ving Feld immediately began making other changes to improve the quality and
profitability of the show. Irvin g=t rid of the freak show so as not to capitalize on others' deformations and to become
more family orientated= He got rid of the more routine acts.
<=pan style="font-size:12ptline-height:107%;font-family:georgia,serif">
In 1968, with the craft of clowning seemingly neglect=d and with many of the clowns in their 50s, he established the
Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Clown College. A circus in Europe was purchased for $2 million just to have its star
animal trainer, Gunther Gebel-Williams, for the core of his revamped circus. =Soon, he split the show into two touring
units, Red and Blue, which could tour the country independently. The separat= tours could also offer differing slates of
acts and themes, enabling circus goers to view both tours where possible. The company was taken public in 1969. In
1970, Feld's only son Kenneth joined the company and became a co-producer. The circus was s=Id to the Mattel
Company in 1971 for $40 million, but the Feld family was retained as management.=/span>
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After Walt Disney World opened near Orlando, Florida,=in 1971, the circus attempted to cash in on the resulting tourism
surge by opening Circus World theme park in nearby Haines City, which broke ground on April =6, 1973. The theme park
was expected to become the circus's winter home as well as to have the Clown College lo=ated there. Mattel placed the
circus corporation up for sale by December 1973 despite its profit contributions, =s Mattel as a whole showed a $29.9
million loss in 1972. The park's=opening was then delayed until February 1974. Venture Out in America, Inc., a Gulf Oil
recreational subsidiary, agreed to buy the combined shows =n January 1974, and the opening was further pushed back
to 1975. While =he Circus Showcase for Circus World opened on February 21, 1974, Venture Out placed the purchase
deal back into negotiations, and the opening of the whole complex was moved to an early 19=6.
By May 1980, the company expanded to three circuses b= adding the one-ring International Circus Festival of Monte
Carlo that debuted in l=pan and Australia. The Felds bought the circus back in 1982. Irvin Feld died in 1984 and the
company has since been=run by Kenneth. Circus World was never successful, as its standard carnival-type rides were no
match for Disney -=;s state-of-the-art attractions and was out of the way. The circus sold the pa=k to Arizona developers
James Monaghan and Brian Burstein in 1984.
<=pan style="font-size:12pt;line-height:107%;font-family:georgia,serif">
When in 1990 the Venice rail tracks could not support=the show's train cars, the combined circus moved its winter base
to the Flo=ida State Fairgrounds in Tampa. In 1993, the clown college was moved from the Venice Arena to Baraboo,
Wisconsin. =n 1995, the company founded the Center for Elephant Conservation (CEC)<=pan style="font-size:12pt;line-
height:107%;font-family:georgia,serir>.=C2* Clair George has testified in court that he worked as a consultant in the
early 1990s for Kenneth Feld and the Ringling Brothers and Barnum & Bailey Circus. He was involved in the surveillanc=
of Jan Pottker (a journalist =ho was writing about the Feld family) and of various animal rights groups such as PETA.
After three years in Baraboo, the clown college opera=ed at the Sarasota Opera House in Sarasota until 1998 before the
program was suspended. On February 26, 1999, the circus company started previewing Barnum's Kaleidoscape, a one
ring, in=imate, upscale circus performed under the tent; designed to compete with similar upscale circuses such as
Cirque du Soleil, Barnum's Kaleidoscape was no= successful, and ceased performances after the end of 2000.
Nicole Feld became the first female producer of Ringl=ng Circus in 2004. In 2009, Nicole and Alana Feld co-produced the
circus. In 2001, a group led by the Humane Society of the United States, sued the circ=s over alleged mistreatment of
elephants. the suit ended in 2014 with the cir=us winning $25.2 million in settlements. On March 3, 2015, the Circus
announced that all elephants would be retired in =018 to the CEC. The retirement date was subsequently moved
forward to May 2016.
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On January 14, 2017, it was announced that the circus=will be closed in May 2017, and would lay off more than 462
employees between March=and May 2017. Declining attendance combined with high operating costs and loss of the
elephants are among the reasons f=r closing. On May 7, 2017, its "Circus Extreme" =our will be shown for the last time
in Providence, Rhode Island. The circus's last perf=rmance will be its "Out of This World" tour at Nass=u Veterans
Memorial Coliseum on May 21, 2017, and will be its first (and only) performance at Nas=au Coliseum.
<=pan style="font-size:12pt;line-height:107%;font-family:georgia,serif">
I =emember as a child during the 1950s and 60s going with my mother to the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus
at the old Madison Square Gar=en. I also remember that when=the circus came to town, we would go to see the Circus
Parade with its elephants, other animals and clowns walking up 8th Avenu= from the Penn Station yards, up to the old
Madison Garden on 49th Street and 8th Avenue. I remember goingrearly to see the 'side show' with its Bearded Lady,
World's Stron=est Man, midget cl=wns and all sorts of strange and wonderful animals. I remember being mesmerized
by =i style="font-family:georgia,serif;font-size:l2pt">The Flying Wallendas<=i>, amused by the clowns, charmed by the
jugglers and enchanted by the elephants. And like most children, a t=ip to the circus wasn't complete without popcorn,
cotton candy and a circus light th=t you swung around on a string. As Bob Hope would have said and on this last day,
Thanks for the memoriesvery-very4,=A0best.
<=>
Donald Trump's disastrously bad week in Washington
No Mr. President this isn't White Noise nor is it =oing Away
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If you follow U.S. politics this =ast week was a doozy. Because for Donald Trump the week was the most damaging of his
presidency. Except that I thought that last week was the worst week of the Trump Administratio=, starting with Sally
Yates' damning testimony about Michael Flynn and ended with = series of wild tweets and an ever-changing story about
exactly why he chose to fir= FBI Director James Comey. But this week began with the continued shockwaves from
Trump's decision to fire F=l Director James Comey.... still being felt. With critics of the President describing the decision
as 'Nixonian*=80. and then Trump hinting that there may be 'tapes=E24 of their meetings which only heightened
the Watergate comparisons.
Even by Trumpian standards, th= wild swings, erratic messaging and general chaos was beyond the pale -- raising real
concerns about whethe= Trump was losing control of the ship of state. Each day, a fresh scandal appeared to engulf
Trump's administration=at a speed not seen since he took office.
=onday: We learned that then-President Obama warned Trump not to hire former National Security Adviser Michael
Flynn. We =lso learned that Trump gave the Russians highly classified information.
Tuesday: Trump fired FBI Di=ector James Comey, which Comey found out about on TV and that Trump asked Comey to
shut down the FBI investigation into Michael Flynn.
Wednesday: He met in the=Oval Office with Russian diplomats, including an accused Russian spy, where the President
bragged ab=ut firing the FBI Director.
Thursday: He admitted he fired Co=ey specifically because of the Russian investigation.
Friday: He threatened Comey with 'secret tapes' of t=eir conversation.
Further clouding the=issue, on Monday night the White House trotted out national security adviser H.R. McMaster on
Monday night to issu= a statement saying that the Post's story that the President had shared hi=hly classified
information with the Russian Foreign Minister and their Ambassador, 44=9Cas reported, is false." Deputy national
security ad=iser Dina Powell also denied the story. "This story is false," she said. "The president only discusse= the
common threats both countries faced." In Trump's tweets, he isn't denying anything, as McMaster and Powell were;
instead= he's pointing out that he was within his legal rights to share such information =ith Russia, throwing both under
the bus.
<1=>
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The constant state of bedlam is beg=nning to sink this White House, even as the President continually launches people
overboard in an attempt to keep his ship afloat. Even if he survives The Russian Connection and The Comey Memos and
all the rest, you have to wonder if anyone will survive working for him. Oh, and wh=t happens when there's a scandal he
didn't create himself?
=or any president, one of these headlines would be very bad news. For President Trump, they all came in a span of 12
hours:
'=span style="font-variant-numeric:normal;font-stretch:normal;font-size:7pOine-height:normal;font-family:"Times
New Roman""> =C2*
"Justice Department to appoint special counsel to oversee probe of Russian meddling in 2016
election"
' *=A0
"House majority leader told colleagues last year: 'I think Putin pays' Trump"
=p class="gmail-MsaistParagraphCxSpMiddle">
* =C2* "Flynn stopped military plan Turkey opposed — =fter
being paid as its agent"
=C24). "Trump Team Knew Flynn Was Under Investigation Before He Came to White House"
'
=C' "Israeli Source Seen as Key to Countering Islamic State Threat"
"Trump campaign had at least 18 undisclosed contacts with Russians — sources"
It was a dizzying Wednesday night for political reporte=s and followers alike, with a bevy of new information being
thrown at them on multiple fronts. And it continued into early Thursday morning with that las= headline, from Reuters.
Trump's opponents have often accused the media of allowing Trump to distract them w=th the insignificant, shiny
objects that Trump dangles in front of them. At th=s point, the bigger problem may be that there are too many very real
stories =o keep up with. So here's a quick summary of why each of these stories is significant, and what it means going
forwar=.
1) The special prosecutor
<=pan style="font-size:12ptline-height:107%;font-family:Georgia,serir>Th=s is the day the White House — and
apparently congressional Republicans — hoped would never come. The White House said just three days ago that there
was "frankly no =eed" for a special investigator to look into Russian meddling, and very few in the GOP signed off on
one, even after the drama o= Trump firing FBI Director James B. Comey last week.
=p class="MsoNormal">The reasons they didn't want one are: a) The inve=tigation had previously been handled only by
Republicans, who control both chambers of Congress, and by the FBI, which is at least within the chain of command in
=he Trump administration. A special prosecutor lends much more seriousness to t=e proceedings and carries the kind of
independence from political influence t=at simply didn't exist before.
And as I argue, it's a pretty direct rebuke from Trump's own Justice Department of his heavy-handed approach to this
whole thing, someth=ng opponents have argued amounts to obstruction of justice.
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2) Kevin McCarthy's 'Putin pays' Trump line
Even if you acknowledge this was a jo=e, which House GOP leadership say it was, it shows that Republicans were joking
about Trump colluding with Russia even before WikiLeaks. That's a story line =ven Democrats didn't really pick up until
much later. It's not difficult to see Democrats using this to argue that Republicans buried what=ver curiosity they had
about ties between Trump and Russia as they were working=to elect him president.
3) Flynn dire=tly influenced White House policy in a pro-Turkey direction after Turkey paid him
Michael T. Flynn, who was forced to resign a= Trump's national security adviser, is the opposite of the gift that keeps on
giving. He'= the infestation that no exterminator can get rid of. We've gradually learned m=re and more about his work
for the Turkish government, which he failed to disclose and could face legal troubl= for. Now McClatchy points out that
he not only did not disclose the $500,00= he was paid, but he also pushed the White House in a pro-Turkey direction
very early on. Here's more:
<=p>
The decision came 10 days before Donald Trump had =een sworn in as president, in a conversation with President
Barack Obama's na=ional security adviser, Susan Rice, who had explained the Pentagon's plan=to retake the Islamic
State's de facto capital of Raqqa with Syrian Kurdish f=rces whom the Pentagon considered the U.S.'s most effective
military partners= Obama's national security team had decided to ask for Trump's sign-off, sin=e the plan would all but
certainly be executed after Trump had become president.=/span>
=) White House counsel knew Flynn was under investigation even before he was hired4=pan>
This arrangement ma= not have been known to the public, but the New York Times reports that not only was the Trump
team aware, but that=it knew he was under investigation for it.
Here's the crux:</=pan>
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Michael T. Flynn told President Trump's transition team weeks before the inauguration that he was u=der federal
investigation for secretly working as a paid lobbyist for Turkey during the campaign, according to two people familiar
with the case. ...q=pan>
Mr. Flynn=E2404$ disclosure, on Jan. 4, was first made to the transition team's chief lawyer, Donald F. =cGahn II, who is
now the White House counsel. That conversation, and another one two =ays later between Mr. Flynn's lawyer and
transition lawyers, shows that=the Trump team knew about the investigation of Mr. Flynn far earlier than has been
previously reported.
This makes t=e above and everything that came before it just remarkable. How could Trump hire Flynn for a national
security job knowing this? How could the White House let him weigh in on policy affecting Turkey= How could the White
House have waited so long to terminate Flynn when his problems grew on that second big issue, his contacts with
Russia? And very troub=ing for Vice President Pence, who led Trump's transition, how in the world do you explain this?
class="MsoNormal" align="center" style="text-align:center">g=pan>5) T=e source whose highly classified
information Trump shared with Russia is a valuable Israeli one
From the Wall Street Journal:
The classified information that President Donald Trump shared with Russian officials last week came from an Israeli
source described by multiple U.S. officials as the most valuable so=rce of information on external plotting by the Islamic
State.
"The most valuable source of information on external plotting by the Islamic State." S=me officials think Trump
compromised this source with what he shared with Russ=a. Whether he did that or not, it's becoming clear that it was a
hugely significant source of intelligence from a top ally.
=p class="MsoNormal" style="text-indent:O.Sin">
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6)<=pan style="font-size:12ptline-height:107%;font-family:Georgia,serir> =C*18 undisclosed contacts between the
Trump campaign and Russiaaspan>
Anonymous officials tell Reuters that=there were at least 18 previously undisclosed phone calls and emails between the
Trump campaign an= Russia during the final seven months of the 2016 campaign. Several of these involved Flynn and
Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak. The Trump team =as previously denied any contact with the Russians during the
campaign on multiple occasions. =ere's a sampling:
"There wa= no communication between the campaign and any foreign entity during the campaign." =E244, Trump
campaign spokeswoman Hope Hicks in November
"The campaign had no cont=ct with Russian officials." — Hicks, also in November<=span>
"This i= a nonstory because, to the best of our knowledge, no contacts took place, so it's hard to =ake a comment on
something that never happened." — White House de=uty press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders in February
And here's the money quote in=the Reuters story from Richard Armitage, a former top State Department official in the
George W. Bush administration: "It's rare to have that many phone calls to=foreign officials, especially to a country we
consider an adversary or a hostile power.Q=9D Add this to the long paper trail of contradicted White House statements
on Russia. So Paul Ryan you are wrong this is not just "white noise".=C2* I am not saying that the President has done
anything illegal but he has admitted to trying to obstruct justice and pass=d top secret information to a Russian
spymaster in the Oval Office where the =nly media allowed were Russian.
Someone recently said, "a>George Washington never told a lie. Richard Nixon never told the truth. And Donald Trump
doesn't know the difference." In an his op-ed this week in the New York Times, conservative columnist David Brooks'
article — When the World is Led by = Child — "Our institutions depend on people who =ave enough engraved character
traits to fulfill their assigned duties. But there=is perpetually less to Trump than it appears. When we analyze the
President's utterances we tend to a=sume that there is some substantive process behind the words, that it is part of
some strategic intent. But Trump's statements don't necessarily come from anywhere, lead anywhere or have a
perma=ent reality beyond his wish to be liked at any given instant. We've got t=is perverse situation in which the vast
analytic powers of the entire world are being spent trying to understa=d a guy whose thoughts are often just six fireflies
beeping randomly in a jar.=E2.4>
Trump has built his presidency on his unpredictab=lity and unorthodoxy. But his policy of just saying and doing
whatever comes to mind isn't, of course, a policy at a=l. Which became frighteningly apparent -- again -- this week. If
Barack Obama or Hillary Clinton had done these same things Ryan, Pence and Trump himself would be calling for
impeachment and it is this hypocrisy that upsets me today, as t=e most dangerous thing that is happening is that
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Republican are continually p=acing party over country. With Paul Ryan describing last week's White House shenanigans
as "White=Noise" while Trump and his inner-circle parade around Saudi Arabia hoping that all will go away
Both are
delusional and this is dangerous because no one is acknowledging that something is rotten in Denmark
and this is my
rant of the =eek....
<=p>
<=pan style="font-size:12ptline-height:107%;font-family:georgia,serif">
If there was ever an iconic brand it is Riva. T=e company was established in 1842 on the shore of Lake 'sec), Italy, by
Pietro Riva, the great-grandfather of Carlo R=va who was born on February 24, 1922, during the heyday of motor
boating, at t=e time when the first real speedboats were being built. Carlo Riva beca=e a legendary boat and yacht
designer and builder, designing boats and setting the style for others to follow.
The company4)=804,s founder, Pietro Riva - who after moving to Sarnico Laglio, near Como — became the master of his
own destiny =E2,40 moving from repairing damaged boats for the local fisherman to building his own boats.=C2.
These boats quickly stood out for their unmatched style and personality. Riva rapidly gained great respect and
recognition; the boatyard flourished also thanks to the farsightedness of Ernesto Riva, who had succeeded his father
Pietro and introduced internal combustion engines on Riva boats. With this =he era of large cargo and passenger boats
operating on the lake thus began. =span>
After World War =, Serafino Riva gave Riva products their final imprinting and turned the boatyard's precious crafts into
a real =rand, allowing it to take a step into history: production steered from transporta=ion to power boating, which at
the time was still dawning. Between the 19=Os and the 1930s Riva, through its racing yachts, collected a large number
of records and victories in national and international competitions.
In the 1950s, Se=afino's son, Carlo opened a new futuristic shipyard — currently protected by the Italian
Superintendence for A=tistic and Architectural Heritage — and the company began building the type of=boats its name
still conjures to this day: classy, sophisticated, well-crafted pleasu=e boats, starting with the Ariston, then the Tritone
(the first two-engine yacht), the Sebino (the company4k=99s first series), and shortly thereafter, the Florida, made
famous by Brigitte Bardot, Liz Taylor, Sean Connery, and others. Aristocrats and business tycoons alike clamored for the
beautiful wooden boats.
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<=mg src="cid:ii_15b5f4d1ebbc2662" alt="Inline image 2" width="341" he=ght="226">
<=pan style="font-size:12ptline-height:107%;font-family:georgia,serif">
Carlo created Riva's golden era. Even t=day, these jewels preserve intact all the charm of that time, made of paparazzi,
movie stars wearing foulards and glamorous sunshades, celebrity love stories, luxury and timeless elegance. =he 1950s
were the years of Carlo Riva, who had been driven by boundless passio= for boats and the family business since he was a
child. And much like=Ferraris, Rivas had by then become the synonym of elegance, status and per=ection. Selected
materials of the highest quality, a painstaking care for the tiniest details, unparalleled, long-standing exper=ise and
craftsmanship. Riva's creations became the object of desire for the aristocracy, award winning athletes, successful
businessmen and movie stars.
In the decade of=the Italian industrial revolution, dominated by the myth of speed and racing cars, l'Ingegnere, as Carlo
Riva is=called, sensed the importance of this phenomenon and created a series of wooden yac=ts characterized by
unique, unmistakable design features. One of them wa= the Ariston, of which Carlo Riva says it was "designed with love,
born pure and strong like a p=digree horse. Unforgettable! It was my Lord of the Sea". In 1956 Riv= started cooperating
with designer and architect Giorgio Barilani, whose graphic and design activities for the boating industry were then
devoted exclusively to Riva, where Barilani was =he design manager between 1970 and 1996.
In November 1962=another myth was born: it was named Aquarama. Since its presentation, at the third Milan
International Boat Show, the Aquarama became the symbol of Riva par excellence, almost "a brand within the brand".
The name of the yacht drew inspiration from the Cin=rama system, the American experimental wide screens. The
slogan the yacht =as launched with contained several key-words: "Sun, sea, joie de vivre!" The prototype was the
mythical Lipicar no. 1, the evolution of the Tritone. 8.02 meters=in length, 2.62 meters wide, capable of sleeping up to
eight people, two berths at the bow, two 185 hp Chris-Craft petrol engines, a speed of 73 km/h. The price: 10
million=800 thousands liras.
The year 1969 wa= another milestone in the history of the legendary brand: it was then that fiberglass production
started. The =irst two Riva models in composite material were born: the day cruiser Bahia Mar 20' and the cabin cru=ser
Sport Fisherman 25'. The new material was first accurately studied by pur=hasing the hull from the Bertram boatyard.
The hull was subsequently redesigned and bo=h models were then finished with wood details, in line with Riva's
tradit=on. Between the 1970s and the 1990s, more yachts were created, including the St. Tropez - which was produced
until 1992 4>=804> and the Superamerica, the first large cabin cruiser, which was available on the market for more than
20 years. In spite of the success met by fiberglass, Riva's production of wooden runabouts continued until 1996, when
th= last Aquarama Special (hull num=er 784) was built.
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In September 1969, Carlo Riva, frustrated by a tough =nion climate, sells the shipyard to the US company Whittaker,
maintaining the ro=e of Chairman and General Manager, from which he resigned in 1971. Thes= roles are taken on by
Gino Gervasoni, his partner since 1950. Old and new models evolve, Riva's tradition continues. In 1989, one year =fter
the English Group Vickers, of which the brand Rolls Royce was part too, had bought 100% of th= shares of Riva, Gino
Gervasoni, who had married Carlo Riva's sister= left the shipyard after 41 years of activity. This is how the presence of
the =iva family at the shipyard came to an end. In 1991 Riva presented the 58' Bahamas at Genoa International Boat
Show 40=93 it was the first yacht designed by Mauro Micheli.
Most recently, Carlo Riva attended the launch of the =ivamare last spring. He died on April 11, 2017 at the age of 95.
His enthusiasm and creativity will be missed even by those who have only seen a Riva in a Jame= Bond movie and
especially for those of us who have enjoyed the class, sophi=tication, power and fun of zipping around the water on one
of the hippest boats to ev=r grace the seas. There are bigger boats and jazzier boats but few compare to a Riva. Bravo
Carlo.... =C240(www.riva-yac=t.com <http://www.riva-yacht.com> )
Tribal Secrets of raising children
<=pan style="font-size:12ptline-height:107%;font-family:georgia,serif">
=/b>
Web Link: https://www.facebook.com/gordon.cyrus/pos=s/10154119274127134
<https://www.facebook.com/gordon.cyrus/posts/10154119=74127134>
Eight powerful parenting lessons from tribes around t=e world. Have you ever wonder how tribes raised their children?
British photo =ournalist Jimmy Nelson documented 35 indigenous tribes around the world across 28 years of
work.=C2* Here are some lessons about parenting he learned in his journey:
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<=pan style="font-size:12ptline-height:107%;font-family:georgia,serif">
<=pan style="font-sizellptline-height:107%;font-family:georgia,serif">1.=span style="font-variant-
numeric:normal;font-weight:normal;font-stretch:=ormal;font-size:7ptline-height:normal;font-family:"times new
roman&q=otf'>
The healthiest baby food is breast milk. Babies are bre=st feed until they're 4 of 5 years old because
mothers know from a long tradition of maternal wisdom tha= it is the healthiest food for a baby's immune system.
=span style="font-size:12pt;line-height:107%;font-family:georgia,serif">2=
Babies shouldn't know loneliness. From
dusk to dawn, babies are attached to another human being. If parents =re working other family members will carry
them. At night they sleep with their parents or siblings.
=span style="font-size:12ptline-height:107%;font-family:georgia,serif">3=
Babies don't cray if their contact needs are
met. Babies are either being held or in close contact with someone. Tribes know that babies need the warmth and
comfort of touch in order to thrive in all aspec=s of their development.
4.<=pan style="font-variant-numeric:normal;font-weight:normal;font-stretch:n=rmal;font-size:7pOine-
height:normal;font-family:"times new roman&qu=t;">
Babies are nursed on demand. Amongst tribal communities,
y=u rarely hear a baby cry. Babies sleep, normally naked, amongst their love ones.</=pan>
<=pan style="font-size:12ptline-height:107%;font-family:georgia,serif">5.=span style="font-variant-
numeric:normal;font-weight:normal;font-stretch:=ormal;font-size:7pt;line-height:normal;font-family:"times new
roman&q=ot;">
No pushchairs needed. Carrying babies on their body gi=es parents more freedom to move around
and the baby as well becomes more independent, =nd gets to see the world from the prospective of a grown up. <=b>
=span style="font-size:12pt;line-height:107%;font-family:georgia,serif">6=
Co-sleeping is a natural thing. Families,
sometimes even s=rangers, sleep together, especially if it is cold. They put their hands and feet in each other's groins
and armpits in orde= to keep warm.
=span style="font-size:12ptline-height:107%;font-family:georgia,serif">7=
Parenting is shared with the community. In
indigenous tr=bes, parenting duties are shared by the entire community. There is a collective responsibility amongst the
tribe to raise a child. </=pan>
8.<=pan style="font-variant-numeric:normal;font-weight:normal;font-stretch:n=rmal;font-size:7ptline-
height:normal;font-family:"times new roman&qu=t;"> No-punishment parenting. They believe that the role of family
is the "planting of good seed." Acknowledging positive behavior is more powerful punishing "bad" behavior.
</=pan>
We=can learn much from our tribal brothers and sisters. Most importantly, that it takes a vil=age to raise a child and
contact and praise is more powerful than forced self-reli=nce and discipline. =nd of course — Mother's milk is superior to
any Gerber product that you can feed your child.=span style="font-family:georgia,serif;font-size:l2pt"> Finally in our
ultra-m=terialist society, it is good to realize that it is not nearly as important how much you give a c=ild, as how much
time you spend with them.=C24o
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Five myt=s about World War I
No the U.S. wasn't completely neutral before 1917, and not all men rushed to sign up to serve in the military.
One hundred years ago, on April 6, 1917, Congress vot=d to declare war on imperial Germany. The First World War was
the pivot of the 20th century: It took the lives of 17 million people and resulted in the collapse of three major empires
(=span style="font-family:georgia,serif">the German, the Ottoman and the Austro-Hungarian). In the aftermath,
totalitarian regimes both right and left came to power, leading =o a second, far bloodier global conflict. Alas, for most
Americans, the "Great War" holds little interest, particularly compared with the Civil War, World War =1 and Vietnam —
all conflicts remembered as titanic moral struggles t=at transformed the nation. This neglect has given rise to some
serious misconceptions about the war in which more than 116,000 Americans died.
</=pan>
MYTH NO. 4)=A01
The United States was neutral, in fact as well as name, until 1917.
</=pan>
America was an "exemplar of peace," according to the title of the first chapter of Marga=et E. Wagner's forthcoming
history of the United States during the war, s=onsored by the Library of Congress. The keepers of Woodrow Wilson's
post-presidential home in Washington echo that con=entional wisdom: His "primary goal at the outset of the European
war ... was to maintain American neutrality and to help broker peace between the warring parties." In August 1914,
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Wilson called upon Americans to be "neutra= in fact as well as name," and in 1916, he ran for reelection on the slogan "
" Wilson hoped, at some point, to mediate an end to the carnage=
But his private sympathies were never in doubt. =A German victory, the president told his closest adviser when the war
began, "would change the course of our=civilization and make the United States a military nation." So the federal
government did little to prevent U.S. businesses from selling goods=and lending money to Britain and France.
Bethlehem Steel made arms for the Alli=s, and the investment house of J.P. Morgan and Co. served as the British
government's exclusive purchasing agent in the United States. By wa='s end, the total cost to king and country came to
$3 billion; J.P. Morgan collected a =idy 1 percent commission on every sale. Meanwhile, the Royal Navy was blockading
the North Sea, making it all but impossible f=r American firms to do business with Germany — a disparity Wilson
com=lained about briefly and only in the mildest terms.
MYTH NO. 4)=A02
American= who actively opposed going to war were isolationists.</=>
<=p>
</=pan>
There is no myth more powerful than the notion that m=st Americans resisted intervention because they wanted to
remain aloof from th= problems besetting the rest of the world. In 1952, journalist Walter =ippmann recalled that "the
isolationists were the party of neutrality and of pacifis=." More recently, Wilson biographer A. Scott Berg reflected that
the president was "speaking to an isolationist natio=" when he asked Congress to declare war in April 1917.
But both writers ignore the internationalist creed an= connections held by the key leaders of the antiwar coalition. Jane
Addams presided over a pacifist women's conference in Europe. Morris=Hillquit, a leading socialist, tried to travel to
Stockholm to meet with comrades from other nations to formulate a peace plan. In 1915, Sen. Robert La Follette urged
the Senate to pass a resolution in support of a conference o= neutral nations, and in 1917, in a speech preceding his vote
against a declaration of war, he offered praise for Germany's social and indu=trial reforms. Industrialist Henry Ford
chartered an ocean liner to transport himself and dozens of other activists across the Atlantic, where they lobbied
neutral governments to embrace a pe=ce plan they would press on the warring powers.
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These Americans, like many prominent critics of the w=r elsewhere in the world, wanted a new global order based on
cooperative relationships among nations and gradual disarmament. Militarism, they=argued, isolated peoples behind
walls of mutual fear and loathing. Of course, not all American= who tried to stop the rush to war shared this global
outlook. But they did fear the growth of=a huge standing army that might be used in future conflicts abroad.
MYTH NO. 3
Oppositi=n essentially dissolved once the United States declared war.
=br>
</=pan>
Accounts of wartime politics at home usually focus on=the stringent Espionage and Sedition acts of 1917 and 1918.
Conservative author Wendy McElroy writes that these laws "were used to destroy what was=left of the left wing in
America." Berg reports that the nation "entered a period of repression as egregious as any in A=erican history."
<=p>
Yet, despite the legal challenges, many peace advocat=s refused to remain silent and even thrived for a time. Some
organized the People's Council of America for Democracy and Peace to demand free =peech and oppose the draft. In
late May 1917, the council attracted a crowd of more than 15,000 to Madison Square Garden, des=ite efforts by New
York police to intimidate those who attended. Other an=iwar stalwarts established the National Civil Liberties Bureau
(renamed the ACLU in 1920) to defend Americans prosecuted for exercising their First Amendment rights. And in the fall
of 1917, Hillquit ran for mayor of New York on an antiwar platform; in=a four-man race, he won almost a quarter of the
vote. In several other big ci=ies — Buffalo; Chicago; Dayton, Ohio; and Rochester, N.Y. — soc=alist candidates also
exceeded totals beyond what the party had achieved in prewar contests.=span>
MYTH NO. Q=A04
African Americans eagerly backed the war, hoping to win equal rights by doing so.
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"Many black American leaders, such as W. E. Et= DuBois, supported the war effort and sought a place at the front for
black soldiers=" according to a popular online textbook. "Black leaders viewed milit=ry service as an opportunity to
demonstrate to white society the willingness and abili=y of black men to assume all duties and responsibilities of
citizens..=9D The historian David Kennedy quotes a black assistant to the secretary of war as a stand-in for the
majority of African Americans: "This is not the time to discuss race problems,"=asserted Emmett Scott. "Our first duty is
to fight..40=80... Then we can adjust the problems that remain in the life of the colored man.<=pan style="font-
size:12pt;line-height:107%;font-family:georgia,serif">=E244
But other black leaders, such as A. Philip Randolph a=d Ida Wells-Barnett, refused to encourage African Americans to
join a segregated =rmy to fight for a democracy abroad that they did not enjoy at home. And =uite a few ordinary black
people agreed. In July 1917, marchers took=to the streets in several cities to protest the killing by a white mob of as
many as 100 blac= residents of East St. Louis, Ill. Some of the demonstrators in New York carried posters demanding
that Wilson 4>=804>Bring Democracy to America Before You Carry It to Europe."
In the summer of 1917, a group of black infantrymen s=ationed in Houston who had been attacked by local police
protested in a particularl= grisly fashion. They marched out of their camp and killed 15 white residents, including several
white soldiers. After some of the culprits were executed, Wells-Barnett ordered a batch of buttons describing them as
martyrs. Most black draftees grudgingly joined the ri=orously segregated army, but few saw combat; they were,
instead, assigned to menial labor done in uniform.
MYTH NO. .=A05
Nearly all young men obeyed the new conscription law.
</=pan>
There had been no draft since the Civil War, and most historians are impressed that, as G.J. Meyer puts it in a new book,
41>=9Cmore than nine and a half million men registered" on the day in June 1917=when it was initiated; "it all went as
smoothly as anyone could have hoped.4=8* The Library of Congress history echoes that view: "Predictions of
widespread disorder," Wagner writes, =E24Hoproved unfounded" as those men "signed up with Uncle Sam, cheered on
by their fellow =itizens." It is easy to assume that young Americans rushed to obey the demand of James Montgomery
Flagg's iconic Uncle =am poster: "I want you."
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=br>
But in fact, resistance to conscription was quite str=ng. By the end of the war, the ranks of non•cooperators were
stunningly large.4)=A0 Roughly 3 million eligible men never registered, in violation of the law — compared with the 24
million =ho did. And some 338,000 who did register either failed to obey an induction notice or deserted after they
joined the ranks. The Justice Department was able to arrest only a small percentage of these lawbreakers. A large
number of Mexican Americans and others slipped across the southern border, where prosecutors could not touch them.
Altogether, a higher percentage of American men successfully resisted conscription during World War I than during the
Vietnam War half a century later.<=span>
By Michael Kazin — The Washington Post — April 6, 2017
=/p>
=p class="MsoNormal" align="center" style="text-align:center">Sleep=or Naps
As someone who has poor sleeping habits and often tries to =ake up for missed sleep with naps this article caught my
interest, so I to= wondered.
Can Naps M=ke Up for Sleep Deficits?
Q
There's been lots of coverage =ately about meeting exercise recommendations by completing small chunks of=exercise
throughout the day rather than one, continuous session. Doe= the same hold true for meeting sleep recommendations?
A
No. Unfortunately, sleep does not work that w=y. Substituting periodic naps for one consolidated night of sleep cr=ates
severe sleep deprivation, said Dr. Daniel Buysse, a sleep expert and =rofessor of psychiatry at the University of
Pittsburgh.
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He and his colleag=es once did an experiment in which volunteers agreed to alternate 30 minut=s of sleep with 60
minutes of wakefulness for two and a half days straight= They ended up sleep deprived, he said, because sound sleep is
not e=ually likely at all times of day. People have a better chance of fal= ing quickly into deep, restful sleep at night than
midday, even if they fe=l as though they could fall asleep at any time. "Our biologi=al clocks do not allow us to sleep as
well during the day as at night,40=8040 he said. "All sleep is not necessarily equal."
That=E244s why night workers get less sleep on average than people who work=other shifts — and suffer health
consequences as a result, he said= But it's always a good idea to make up for lost sleep, rega=dless of the time of day,
said Dr. Ruth Benca, a professor of psychiatry a=d director of the Center for Sleep Medicine and Sleep Research at the
Univ=rsity of Wisconsin--Madison. People used to think that it=was better to pull an all-nighter than to break it up with
a short na=, but that isn't true, she said.
=span style="font-size:12ptline-height:17.12px;font-family:georgia,serif=>
On the other hand, it may be help=ul, she said, to take an afternoon nap to compensate for a short night of =leep,
bringing a six- and- a- half hour night up to seven, =or instance. "If you have to stay awake for a prolonged peri=d, you
can mitigate that a little bit by taking some naps, but you can*=804kt live your life like that," Dr. Benca said. 4k=9CAny
sleep is better than no sleep, and more sleep is better than less sl=ep."
9 Karen Weintraub — New York Times — March 15, 2016=/b>
THIS WEEK's QUOTE</=pan>
</=pan>
4 Things That You Can't Get Back
The Stone after it's thrown.
The Word after it's said.
The Occasion after it's missed.
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The Time after it's gone.
</=pan>
THIS IS INTERESTING
=span style="font-size:12.5ptfont-family:georgia,serir>Although this vi=eo is promotional, being someone who at times
has trouble going to sleep I though= that this may being interesting for some of you.... With this, =lease enjoy and let
me know if it works....
THINK ABOUT THIS
<=mg src="cid:ii_15b0954fe9f1cb8a" alt="Inline image 1" width="384" he=ght="382">
</=pan>
BEST =IDEO OF THE WEEK
<=pan style="font-size:12ptfont-family:"times new roman",serif"=
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Dancing in Silhouette
<= class="MsoNormal" align="center" style="margin-bottom:0.0001pttext=align:centedine-height:normal">
Amazing and Wo=derful....
Enjoy....
THIS WE=K's MUSIC
Phil C=llins
<=pan style="font-size:l0ptline-height:107%;font-family:georgia,serif">
The week you are invited to enjoy the music of one of=the most successful pop and adult contemporary singers of the
'80s, 90s and beyo=d the balding and diminutive, former (su=er-group) Genesis drummer-turned-vocalist the
incomparable Phil Collins who was almost 30 years old when his first solo single, "In the Air Tonight," became a number
two hit in his native U.K. as well as a Top 20 hit i= the U.S. Between 1984 and 1990, Collins had a string of 13 straight
U.S. Top Ten hits= Long before any of that happened, however, Collins was a child actor/singer who appeare= as the
Artful Dodger in the London production of Oliver! in 1964. He also has a cameo in A Hard Day's=Night, among other
films. He got his first break in music in his=late teens, when he was chosen to be a replacement drummer in the British
art ro=k band Genesis in 1970. Collins maintained a separate jazz career with the ba=d Brand X as well.
When Collins join the Genesis the group was fronted b= singer Peter Gabriel. They had achieved a moderate level of
success in the U.K. an= the U.S. with elaborate concept albums, before Gabriel abruptly left in 197=. Genesis auditioned
400 singers without success, then decided to let Collins have a go. The result was a gradual simplifying of Genesis' sound
and an increasing focus on Collins' e=pressive, throaty voice. And Then There Were Three... went gold in 1978,=and
Duke was even more successful. Collins made his debut sol= album, Face Value, in 1981, which turned out to be a bigger
hit than any Genesis album. It concentrated on Collins L=; voice, often in stark, haunting contexts such as the piano-and-
drum dirge "In the A=r Tonight," which sounded like something from John Lennon's debut solo album, John
Lennon/Plastic=Ono Band.
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During the '80s, Collins was enormously successful in balancing his continuing solo work with his membership in Genesis.
In=1992, Genesis released We Can't Dance and began an extensive to=r. Upon its completion, Collins released Both
Sides in 1993, and the record became his first album not to produce a major hit single or go multi-platinum. In 1995, he
announced that he was leaving Genesis permanently. The following year, he relea=ed Dance into the Light. Although
the album didn't chart =ighly, its subsequent supporting tour was a success. The Hits' collection fo=lowed in 1998, and a
year later Collins made his first big-band record, Hot Night in Pa=is. The song cycle Testify arrived in 2002, and his next
studio-recorded solo release was 2010's Going Back, whi=h saw him revisiting the Motown hits that so influenced him
and featured three of the surviving Funk Brothers -- guitari=ts Eddie Willis and Ray Monette, and bassist Bob
Babbitt.<=p>
After some time out of the spotlight, much=of it spent recovering from physical ailments, Collins returned in 2014 to
play a couple of songs =t his sons' school and to write songs with Adele. Soon after, he be=an work on reissuing his solo
albums, sorting through the archives for demos and live recordings to =lesh them out. In early 2016, Warner Music
began releasing the discs in pairs, with new portraits of Collins on the co=ers in place of the original images. Collins
returned to the stage in March of 2016, performing at the Little Dreams =oundation Benefit Gala in Miami. He published
his autobiography,=Not Dead Yet: The Memoir, in October of that year, and the double-disc compilation The Singles
appeared during the same month.
When his work with Genes=s, his work with other artists, as well as his solo career is totaled, Collins had more US Top 40
singles than=any other artist during the 1980s. His most successful singles from the period include "In the Air Tonight",
"Against All Odds (Take a Look at Me Now)"= "One More Night", "Sussudio" and "Another D=y in Paradise". Collins'
discography includes eight studio albums that have sold 33.5 million certified units in the US and an estimated 150
million worldwi=e, making him one of the world's best-selling artists. He is one of =nly two recording artists, along with
Paul McCartney, who have sold over 100 million records worldwide both as solo artists and separately as principal
members of a band. <=pan>
Collins has won seven Grammy Awards, six Brit Awards, two Golden Globe Awards, an A=ademy Award, and a Disney
Legend Award. In 1999, he recei=ed a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame and was inducted into the Songwriters Hall
of Fame in 2003, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame as a member of Genesis in 2010, the Modern Drummer Hall of Fame in
2012, and the Classic Drummer Hall of Fame in 2013. Despite his commercial success and his status as a respected and
influential drummer, music critics are divided in their opinion of his work=and he has publicly received both criticism and
praise from other prominent mus=c artists. Although known to be difficult to work with Phil Collins has been a major
influence in Rock/Pop Music arou=d the world and with this you are again invited to enjoy the music of one of =he most
multi-talented musicians and sometimes actor Mr. Phil=Collins....
Phil Collins — In The Air T=night
https://youtu.be/no4qgpb1Q7E <https://youtu.be/no4qgpbJQ7=>
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Phil Collins — Drums & =ake Me Home -- https://y=utu.be/eg1R3K6ULIY <https://youtu.be/eg1R3K6UUY>
Phil Collins — Both Sides O= The Story -- https://y=utu.be/UASOqR9xkFA <https://youtu.be/UASOqR9xkFA>
Phil Collins — Another Day =n Paradise -- https://y=utu.be/FXvBbnZcnHU <https://youtu.be/FXvBbnZcnHU>
Phil Collins — Can't St=p Loving You -- https://y=utu.be/K8inZ2sg6d0 <https://youtu.be/K8inZ2sg6d0>
Phil Collins — Against All =dds
https://y=utu.be/-OiV_5kEt6A <https://youtu.be/-OiV_SkEt6A>
Phil Collins — Easy Lover=C240
https://youtu.be/K3oWdNTzQDc
Phil Collins — Do You Remem=er
https://y=utu.be/Owdv9I1D82M <https://youtu.be/Owdv9I1D82M>
Phil Collins — Doesn't =nybody Stay Together Anymore -- https://youtu.be/mNljiHjKewY=span>
Phil Collins — ColoursQ=A0
https://youtu.be/MpGLINmbl_4
Phil Collins — I Don't =are Anymore -- https://youtu.be/xLpfbcXTeo8 chttps://youtu.be/xLpf=crreo8>
Phil Collins — You'll B= In My Heart -- https://youtu.be/05MykSuOxP0
Phil CollinsQ=A0 — Something Happened On The Way =c) Heaven Live -- https://youtu.be/_OsoY3Dk6=I
Genesis — Mama --=./b> https://youtu.be/xbO6aK=yNIA
Genesis — Dance on a Volcan=
https://y=utu.be/oVeBR-hOT10 <https://youtu.be/oVeBR-hOTIo>
Genesis — Domino I & 11= In The Glow Of The Night -- https://youtu.be/UIa3r12oCo8 <https://youtu=be/Ula3r12oCo8>
Genesis — Turn It On Again=C24)
https://y=utu.be/kfCRv_4NuWk <https://youtu.be/kfCRv_4NuWk>
Genesis — Home By The Sea =C2*-- https://y=utu.be/3AtL_Ko2KNQ<https://youtu.be/3AtL_Ko2KNQ>
Genesis — I Can't Dance -- https://y=utu.be/qOyF4hR5GoE <https://youtu.be/qOyF4hR5GoE>
Genesis — Entangled -- https://youtu.be/eMNO3gjOVHM
Genesis — I Know What I Lik=
=C24,htt=s://youtu.be/eK9a2jLEAfs <https://youtu.be/eK9a2jLEAfs>
BONUS
Eric Clapton &am=; Phil Collins — Layla t>=A0(Live Aid 1985) -- https://yrutu.be/ZialqTFKM7Ws
chttps://youtu.be/ZQIqTFKM7Ws>
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I hope that you enjoyed this week's offering and wish you and =ours a great week....
Sincerely,
Greg Brown
Gregory Brown
Chairman &a=p; CEO
GlobalCast Partners, LLC
US: +1-415-994-7=51
Tel: +1-800-406-5892
Fax: +1-310-861-09=7
Skype: gbrown1970
Gregory@globalcastpartners.com <mailto:Gregory@globalcastpartners.com>
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