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Blogger musique said...

Cutting things and some israhelli company was involved?

Hmm... even a simpleton like me can solve this puzzle.

Blackwater requirements on the job application:

• " You must have experience in mohelling and that's a must. Our job requires all sorts of cutting things. The more perverted, sadistic & Talmudic you're -- you'll have a bright future with us.

• We done give a sh*t about your other skills."

Saturday, July 18, 2009

Blogger musique said...

• We don't give a sh*t about your other skills."

Blackwater Changing Name To Rebrand Image

Xe

Xe ... that rhymes with satan. How lovely!

Saturday, July 18, 2009

Blogger andie531 said...

I'm not so sure about Broussard:

The most famous of Broussard's post Katrina interviews was one on the television program Meet the Press. In the course of that interview, he was critical of the disaster-response effort. He finished with a tearful account of the death by drowning of his emergency services manager's mother.[2] Broussard's account of that incident was subsequently shown to be inaccurate, in that the long sequence of telephone calls to the mother that he described as having taken place in the aftermath of the hurricane could not have happened, since she apparently drowned before the dates in question. In an appearance on Meet the Press three weeks later, Broussard was questioned about his account. He said that the story had been relayed to him by his staff, and that he had chosen not to ask his emergency manager for the exact circumstances of her death.

Many Jefferson Parish residents joined in a class action lawsuit against Broussard after he followed a years-old "doomsday plan" in the wake of Hurricane Katrina and evacuated more than 200 drainage pump operators north to Washington Parish. The pumps remained off for more than two days and sections of the parish, including Metairie and Kenner, experienced severe flooding as a result of rain water, backflow from Lake Ponchartrain and flood waters from the broken 17th Street Canal. Broussard defended his actions, saying that he wanted to protect the pump operators' lives, even though some pump operators were willing to stay. Other public officials, such as police and fire departments, did not evacuate. Water department workers also stayed.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aaron_Broussard

Sunday, July 19, 2009

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