Tag Archives: IED

How About An Assault Pressure Cooker Ban?

By Fred Weinberg

Here’s an idea.

How about an assault pressure cooker ban?

In view of last week’s events in Boston, it makes more sense than an assault rifle ban. (Keep in mind that Obamacare probably will not pay for the surgical removal of my tongue from my cheek.)

It’s now well known that a cheap pressure cooker (Wal Mart has them as low as $42.87 for a T-Fal model) can be turned into an IED, which can kill or maim a lot faster than a Bushmaster 223 with a 30 round magazine.  Ask the folks who were gathered near the finish line of the Boston Marathon last week.

Where are the “if we can just save one life” folks on this one?

I’m pretty sure that the Second Amendment does not cover pressure cookers, so why not ban them in addition to ball bearings and printed circuit boards that can receive radio signals and switch something on?

A more reasonable question to ask, of course, would be if those folks in the Boston area, who were ordered back into their houses during the manhunt for the two Chechnyan punks who apparently set off the IEDs at the Boston Marathon, would have felt more comfortable with a handgun or an assault rifle to protect themselves and their families?

I know that if this had happened in Northern Nevada, there would have been a whole lot of weapons being loaded and cocked and kept handy until the manhunt was over.

At the risk of being accused of politicizing a tragedy, this is the exact reason we do not and should not ban guns in this country.  You have a guaranteed constitutional right to defend yourself from nutjobs like these clowns and, for that matter, anybody else who would do your family and yourself any harm.

Understand that you are not required to do so.  But you have the right to do so.  And, should you wish to be pro-active in a situation such as this, the nanny staters should not be standing in your way.

One such nanny stater is our own Harry Reid (D-Washington DC Ritz Carleton), who has now completed his transition from a one-time blue dog Democrat who understood exactly the nature of the state he represented to a Barney Frank limousine liberal who could care less about who actually sent him to Washington because he’s above all that.

In last week’s Senate votes on the President’s gun control bill, Reid actually voted FOR an assault weapons ban.

That’s right, Dirty Harry voted to stop me from owning my M1 Carbine, the assault rifle that won World War Two.  The rifle we made six and a half million of and sold surplus to citizens’ marksmanship groups in the 50s and 60s for around $21.

He lost by a good 20 votes because even in a Senate run by Harry Reid, there’s enough good sense to realize such a bill was going nowhere.

California Senator Dianne Feinstein poo

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Remarks by the President Welcoming the Wounded Warrior Project's Soldier Ride

By The White House

South Lawn

3:54 P.M. EDT

THE PRESIDENT: Thank you, everybody. (Applause.) Thank you. Welcome to the White House. Thank you, Rick, for your introduction and for your leadership at the VA. And I want to thank all of you for coming out today.

This is actually good — a little overcast to keep you guys not too hot. This is one of my favorite events of the year.

AUDIENCE MEMBER: I love you, Mr. President!

THE PRESIDENT: I love you back. (Laughter.)

We obviously meet at a time when our thoughts and prayers are with the people of Boston. Our hearts are with the families of the victims. And now we send our support and encouragement to people who never expected that they’d need it — the wounded civilians who are just beginning what will be, I’m sure for some of them, a long road to recovery.

It’s a road that the remarkable warriors and athletes here know all too well. And, as a consequence, they’re going to serve for all of the families as well as all Americans a continued inspiration.

We do this every spring, and as all of you know, it started in a bar — where a lot of good ideas start. (Laughter.) Chris Carney and some of his buddies, who are here today, were talking about what they could do to support our wounded warriors, and Chris came up with the idea of biking coast-to-coast to raise money and awareness.

Now, even he has admitted in hindsight, “It may have been the beer muscles talking.” But he followed through, and he started in Long Island, he ended in San Diego. Along the way, he inspired people all across the country. And since then, more than a thousand wounded warriors have joined soldier rides across America. This is the fourth time I’ve had the chance to welcome these rides here at the White House. And, as always, we’ve got Army. (Applause.) We’ve got Navy. (Applause.) We’ve got Air Force. (Applause.) And we’ve got some Marines in the house. (Applause.)

Together, with your outstanding families, you represent what’s best in America. When we needed patriots to defend our freedom, you have answered the call. You’ve risked everything for our country and for each other. And you’ve made sacrifices most of us can barely imagine.

So thanks to your courage and your resolve, we’ve been able to end one war; we’re beginning to wind down another. But for you, as is true for all of our wounded warriors, coming home doesn’t mean that the fight is over. In some ways, it’s just begun.

You think about folks like Sergeant Sean Karpf. I first met Sean last June at Walter Reed — he had just lost his left leg to an IED in Afghanistan, he knew that there was a long

From: http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2013/04/17/remarks-president-welcoming-wounded-warrior-projects-soldier-ride

One Guy Could Have Pulled Off Boston Bombing: Expert

By Evann Gastaldo As investigators follow up on leads in the Boston Marathon bombing , the Boston Herald talks to security experts who say the attack may have been nearly impossible to prevent. That’s because the use of an IED is “hard to stop … in a free and open society,” one expert explains. The…

From: http://www.newser.com/story/166302/one-guy-could-have-pulled-off-boston-bombing-expert.html

A dual tale of love and sacrifice

By Cristina Corbin

Nothing says spring like a good love story — and nothing says love like the life shared by Ian Ralston and Nicole Sanders.

This June marks one year since the couple wed in an outdoor ceremony in Waterloo, Iowa — a celebration that would have seemed impossible back when Ralston, a 27-year-old U.S. Army soldier, was wounded by an improvised explosive device in Iraq, leaving him a quadriplegic.

Sanders, wearing a vintage-looking gown, walked down the aisle to Frank Sinatra‘s, “The Way You Look Tonight,” meeting her groom, wheelchair-bound and hooked up to a breathing tube, at an altar adorned with blue and cream hydrangeas.

“It was euphoric … watching her come down the aisle,” said Ralston, a former combat medic whose neck was struck by a ball bearing when an IED exploded underneath an over pass in Iraq in 2009.

“We went through a lot to get there,” he said. “It was very special.”

The June 23 ceremony, held at the Sunnyside Country Club, was officiated by Eric Lewis, an Army chaplain whom Ralston had befriended while in service.

Ralston, an Iowa native, met Sanders at an Irish pub in Tacoma, Wash., in January 2009 when he was stationed at Fort Lewis. The couple spoke about marriage before Ralston set off on his second deployment in Iraq eight months later.

Within three days of Ralston’s injury, Sanders was a constant presence at his bed at Walter Reed Hospital in Washington.

“She was there the whole time,” Ralston said. “And we just kept growing closer and closer.”

A wedding proposal came at an unlikely moment, recalled Sanders. The 25-year-old was packing the couple’s suitcase for a trip in March 2010 to Minneapolis VA Health Care System, a hospital that provides special care for U.S. veterans wounded in combat. Within one of the locked pockets of the large suitcase was a diamond engagement ring, which took Sanders four hours to find after she was tipped off by Ralston’s father, Stephen.

“She pretty much hit the floor when she found it and I asked if she would marry me,” Ian Ralston told FoxNews.com.

Last month, the Ralstons sent more than 100 “thank you” notes to friends and family members – including a few strangers – who bought out the couple’s entire registry at Crate & Barrel and Target.

Stephen Ralston, a groomsman in his son’s wedding, said despite the extraordinary challenge faced by the couple, their story of love is one that others would be lucky to find.

“She never wavered once,” he said of his daughter-in-law. “It was amazing to see such a young woman like that totally commit herself and do whatever was needed to help Ian – putting her own life aside.”

“You only do that if you love somebody with all your heart,” he said.

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News

Should You Buy Textron Near Its 52-Week-high?

By Steve Symington, The Motley Fool

TXT Chart

Filed under:

Textron has always been an intriguing beast to me.

After all, in 2006 the aerospace conglomerate acquired the comparatively small software outfit by which I was hired straight out of college, effectively taking us under its massive wings.

Consequently, thanks to an impending financial meltdown and Textron’s own overexposure to its struggling financial segment, I learned some fantastic lessons about keeping too much of our own company’s stock in my 401(k) plan during that time.

TXT data by YCharts

Luckily, my retirement accounts were still relatively young (read “small”), so the lesson couldn’t have come at a better time. 

The products
Still, that gave me plenty of excuses to dig into my new parent company’s operations, helping me learn of its incredible global reach thanks to its ownership of Cessna, Bell Helicopter, and unmanned aircraft specialist AAI. In addition, Textron builds golf carts through its E-Z-GO subsidiary, commercial lawn mowers through Jacobsen, and hand tools through Greenlee. What’s more, thanks to its ownership of Kautex, we can add to the list automotive parts like gas tanks, windshield washer systems, camshafts, and catalytic converters.

But what really caught my attention were some of Textron’s other military-centric products, including it’s armored security vehicles (known for their IED-deflecting “V” shaped hulls), RPG protection systems, a self-righting 47-foot rescue boat, and a giant, widely used hovercraft capable of carrying a 75-ton payload at speeds of over 40 knots — for all you non-seafolk, that’s a ridiculous amount of weight to push at 46 miles per hour!

We also can’t forget Textron’s “Lightweight Tactical Small Arms” tech, which promises to reduce the weight of traditional carbine rifles and ammo by 50%, thanks largely to the use of high-tech caseless ammunition. If that’s still not enough, you might take a peek at its Sensor Fuzed Weapon — a “smart” cluster bomb capable of selectively destroying dozens of targets via munitions which contain built-in logic to either self-destruct in the air or render themselves inert within minutes of hitting the ground if they don’t find a suitable target. The result? A clean battlefield with zero civilian casualties to date, and a few pretty amusing first-hand accounts of the weapon’s effectiveness. 

The numbers
To be fair, however, the best product portfolio in the world isn’t worth much if the company can’t turn a profit. Luckily for Textron shareholders, after struggling mightily through the end of 2010, the company has managed to post respectable profits in seven of its eight most recent quarters, with the sole outlier being its fourth quarter of 2011, during which the company metaphorically ripped off its bandages and took $0.55 per share in charges. Fortunately, the bulk of those charges were the result of mark-to-market adjustments related to the winding down of its troublesome finance segment.

Meanwhile, Bell Helicopter continues to fire on all cylinders as the company sold 24 of its H-1 helicopters …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Agent Sneaks Dummy Bomb Past Two TSA Checkpoints

By B. Christopher Agee

TSA Logo SC Agent sneaks dummy bomb past two TSA checkpoints

The Transportation Security Administration is tasked with keeping the flying public safe after 9/11 by using sometimes intrusive measures to ensure that dangerous individuals with potential weapons never make it on board an airplane.

While TSA agents have an unsavory reputation for focusing too much attention on searching babies, the handicapped, and the elderly instead of, say, realistic security threats, many Americans still believe the agency is doing its job overall.

Unfortunately, that assumption might have been proven wrong during a recent undercover operation by fellow TSA agents.

Four agents took part in the operation, posing as ordinary civilians attempting to make their way through Terminal B at Newark Airport.

In one case, a member of the team was able to stroll past security with a simulated explosive device similar to that used by Richard Reid, the so-called shoe bomber.

According to one source, the agent got through a magnetometer and physical pat-down without the fake bomb tucked away in his pants being discovered.

Though the agency has not released details of the incident, reports indicate just one of the undercover agents was stopped as a result of the operation. Reports note the individual had “a simulated IED inside … a child’s doll,” which was found by security only because of “wires sticking out” of the doll.

Who cares if the TSA can’t identify threats unless wires attached to a bomb are actually exposed? I’m sure the $50 million the agency just spent on uniforms will make your next flight much safer and more enjoyable!

Click here to get B. Christopher Agee’s latest book for less than $5! Like his Facebook page for engaging, relevant conservative content daily.

Photo credit: terrellaftermath

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Policy Statement for Countering Improvised Explosive Devices Announced

By Patricia F.S. Cogswell

Twenty years ago today, an improvised explosive contained in a truck was detonated in the public parking garage below the North Tower of the World Trade Center. Improvised explosive devices (IED) continue to pose an ongoing threat, both here at home and abroad. Our capability to identify and disrupt them before they occur, as well as to respond after an attack, has improved greatly. We have come a long way in twenty years.

Today, with the publication of the policy statement on Countering Improvised Explosive Devices, we both recognize the progress we have made, and rededicate ourselves to the next phase in our efforts to implement measures to discover, prevent, protect against, respond to, recover from, and mitigate IED attacks and their consequences.

We will seek to develop even smarter solutions, and make the most efficient use of our resources, by enhancing our capability to share information regarding these threats, synchronizing standards and procedures, prioritizing and aligning activities according to risk management principles, and leveraging the expertise and resources of industry and foreign partners in pursuit of our shared interests.

The threat from IED use is likely to remain high in the near future, and will continue to evolve in response to our abilities to counter them. A whole-of-government approach that integrates Federal, state, local, tribal, territorial, private sector, and global participation in counter-IED activities will best position the United States to discover plots to use IEDs in the United States, or against U.S. persons abroad, before those threats become imminent.

read more

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at The White House

Official: Alfa Romeo and IED ready Gloria concept for Geneva

By Seyth Miersma

Alfa Romeo IED Gloria concept - front three-quarter view

Filed under:

It just wouldn’t be right for the Geneva Motor Show not to be stocked with exotic concept cars, so this new one from Alfa Romeo and design studio IED should fit right in. Known as the Gloria Concept, the sleek four-door is the result of twenty Master in Transportation Design students at IED, with guidance from Alfa’s own Style Center.

Purely a design exercise, the Gloria Concept carries strong historical Alfa Romeo styling cues, neatly packaged within a slick, athletic body shape. The Italian company’s traditional shield-shaped grille has been set prominently apart from the rest of the front end, and the leather straps near the windscreen are mean to evoke “memorable leather straps for the luggage compartments of the brand’s historic cars.” While chances are good that no actual engine will live under that shapely bonnet come show time, the designers have supposedly made room for a turbocharged V6 or V8 of some capacity.

We anticipate that the taut, curvaceous surfacing will look even more impressive in person, when we report in from the Geneva show next month. Until then, you can click on the image above for an expanded view of the Gloria Concept, or follow on below to browse the Alfa press release.

Continue reading Alfa Romeo and IED ready Gloria concept for Geneva

Alfa Romeo and IED ready Gloria concept for Geneva originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 15 Feb 2013 15:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Autoblog

Displaying text till pattern match found in a line

By Optimus81

Hi All,
From the below line if we want to display all the text till found pattern dot/. I was trying with the below code but couldn’t able
to print text before the pattern. it display texts which is found after pattern.

Code:

awk '/[Pp]assed/{print;getline;print}' file_name | sed 's/^[^:]*. *//'


input line from the file_name looks like

Code:

U12-C02: Software checks is passed. (Latest Software version : IED-2011-S : upgrade_01 4.13.2 (4.10.15_TREP-RT_13.31))


Currently it is displaying like this :

Code:

Software checks is passed. (Latest Software version : IED-2011-S : upgrade_01 4.13.2 (4.10.15_TREP-RT_13.31))


expected output should be like this :

Code:

U12-C02: Software checks is passed.


Many Thanks,
Optimus

Source: FULL ARTICLE at The UNIX and Linux Forums

First woman to lead in combat 'thrilled' with military's policy change

Former U.S. Army Capt. Linda L. Bray says her male superiors were incredulous upon hearing she had ably led a platoon of military police officers through a firefight during the 1989 invasion of Panama.

Instead of being lauded for her actions, the first woman in U.S. history to lead male troops in combat said higher-ranking officers accused her of embellishing accounts of what happened when her platoon bested an elite unit of the Panamanian Defense Force. After her story became public, Congress fiercely debated whether she and other women had any business being on the battlefield.

The Pentagon’s longstanding prohibition against women serving in ground combat ended Thursday, when Defense Secretary Leon Panetta announced that most combat roles jobs will now be open to female soldiers and Marines. Panetta said women are integral to the military’s success and will be required to meet the same physical standards as their male colleagues.

“I’m so thrilled, excited. I think it’s absolutely wonderful that our nation’s military is taking steps to help women break the glass ceiling,” said Bray, 53, of Clemmons, N.C. “It’s nothing new now in the military for a woman to be right beside a man in operations.”

The end of the ban on women in combat comes more than 23 years after Bray made national news and stoked intense controversy after her actions in Panama were praised as heroic by Marlin Fitzwater, the spokesman for then-President George H.W. Bush.

Bray and 45 soldiers under her command in the 988th Military Police Company, nearly all of them men, encountered a unit of Panamanian special operations soldiers holed up inside a military barracks and dog kennel.

Her troops killed three of the enemy and took one prisoner before the rest were forced to flee, leaving behind a cache of grenades, assault rifles and thousands of rounds of ammunition, according to Associated Press news reports published at the time. The Americans suffered no casualties.

Citing Bray‘s performance under fire as an example, Rep. Patricia Schroeder, D-Colo., introduced a bill to repeal the law that barred female U.S. military personnel from serving in combat roles.

But the response from the Pentagon brass was less enthusiastic.

“The responses of my superior officers were very degrading, like, `What were you doing there?”‘ Bray said. “A lot of people couldn’t believe what I had done, or did not want to believe it. Some of them were making excuses, saying that maybe this really didn’t happen the way it came out.”

Schroder’s bill died after top generals lobbied against the measure, saying female soldiers just weren’t up to the physical rigors of combat.

“The routine carrying of a 120-pound rucksack day in and day out on the nexus of battle between infantrymen is that which is to be avoided and that’s what the current Army policy does,” Gen. M.R. Thurman, then the head of the U.S. Southern Command, testified before the Senate Armed Services Committee.

For Bray, the blowback got personal.

The Army refused to grant her and other female soldiers who fought on the ground in Panama the Combat Infantryman Badge. She was awarded the Army Commendation Medal for Valor, an award for meritorious achievement in a non-combat role.

Bray was also the subject of an Army investigation over allegations by Panamanian officials that she and her soldiers had destroyed government and personal property during the invasion that toppled Panamanian dictator Manuel Noriega

Though eventually cleared of any wrongdoing, the experience soured Bray on the Army. In 1991, she resigned her commission after eight years of active duty and took a medical discharge related to a training injury.

Today’s military is much different from the one Bray knew, with women already serving as fighter pilots, aboard submarines and as field supervisors in war zones. But some can’t help but feel that few know of their contributions, said Alma Felix, 27, a former Army specialist.

“We are the support. Those are the positions we fill and that’s a big deal — we often run the show — but people don’t see that,” Felix said. “Maybe it will put more females forward and give people a sense there are women out there fighting for our country. It’s not just you’re typical poster boy, GI Joes doing it.”

Spc. Heidi Olson, a combat medic, received a Purple Heart for injuries she suffered when an IED exploded in Afghanistan last May.

“It makes it official now,” Olson said. “We don’t have to do the back door way of getting out into a combat zone.”

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox US News