Toddler falls from balcony, caught by stranger

Now that's a miracle. Just... period. Now, my question is... why was the child in a position to be able to fall?

 

(CBS/AP) 

ORLANDO, Fla. - A concerned citizen who spotted a toddler clinging to a fourth-floor balcony of an Orlando-area hotel managed to catch the child, who was not injured.

Orange County Sheriff's spokeswoman Denise Rollins said "it was a miracle" the 2-year-old girl, Jah-Nea Myles, wasn't injured in the fall, which happened about 9:15 p.m. at the Econo Lodge on International Drive in Orlando, reports CBS affiliate WKMG.

Watch WKMG report

Helen Beard, a tourist from England, was at the pool and saw the child hanging from the the fourth-floor railing and caught her as she fell, deputies told WKMG. Beard said it appeared that the girl slipped through a railing lining the walkway of the balcony, according to deputies.

See the rest HERE

Governor Mitch Daniels Signs “Parking Lot 2.0” Bill Into Law!

Governor Mitch Daniels Signs “Parking Lot 2.0” Bill Into Law!

 

On April 15, Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels signed into law Senate Enrolled Act 411, a parking lot/employee protection reform also known as the “Parking Lot 2.0” bill.

 

Authored by state Senator and NRA Board Member Johnny Nugent (R-43) and co-authored by state Senator Jim Tomes (R-49), this employee protection expansion legislation prevents workplace discrimination for those employees who exercise their Second Amendment rights before and after work. Under the new law, businesses and employers are barred from requiring employees to disclose information about their private firearm ownership habits, what firearms or ammunition they own or transport in their vehicle, as well as prohibiting forced vehicle searches and the registration of employee firearm serial numbers.

 

This follow-up bill to last year’s parking lot/employee protection battle sailed through the state Senate and House of Representatives without serious opposition. It passed the state Senate by a 38 to 10 vote, while the state House overwhelmingly approved the bill by an 80 to 17 vote.

 

The “Parking Lot 2.0” bill was sponsored in the Indiana House by state Representative Sean Eberhart (R-57) and cosponsored by state Representatives Woody Burton (R-58) and David Cheatham (R-69).

 

The law goes into effect on July 1.


This alert is posted at: www.nraila.org/Legislation/Read.aspx?ID=6645



He's got a gu... umbrella!

Police called after man seen with rifle at mall... turns out it was an umbrella. Idiots.

 

 

Man with umbrella causes rifle scare in Mass. mall

A report of a man with a rifle inside a Nordstrom department store triggered a massive police response and the evacuation of a mall near Boston on Tuesday, but the man turned out to be carrying only an umbrella.

The Burlington Mall was evacuated and closed for more than two hours as a police SWAT team wearing body armor and carrying shields searched for an armed man.

Police had received five calls about a short white man with a gray shirt and a backpack who walked in a bathroom carrying what appeared to be a rifle, Burlington Police Chief Michael Kent said at a news conference. Around 40 local, state and federal officers went to the mall after police received the first call just after 10 a.m., he said. See the rest HERE

I'm screwed

Based on 5 minutes of monitoring ONE of the computers in the house, with nothing going but Yahoo IM, AOL instant messnger, Windows Live messenger, and  5 IRC channels on one server, I am going to use 165gb of my 250gb a month cap assuming no chatting, just logged in watching

8.7 minutes of watching google's doodle today, will use a GB

30.02 hours of 720p youtube (which isn't 720p, it's quite less actually) and you are at 250gb. Screwed. Screwed with AT&T

Senator Lugar replies to my letter about AT&T

Dear Mr. Mercer:

 

Thank you for contacting me regarding AT&T's decision to implement usage caps.  I appreciate this opportunity to respond. 

 

I understand your concerns regarding usage caps, and I encourage you to voice your complaints with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), which maintains a consumer information bureau to handle disputes within the telecommunications industry.  You can file a complaint online at: http://www.fcc.gov/cgb/complaints.html, or write to them at:

 

Federal Communications Commission

Consumer Information Bureau

Consumer Complaints

445 12th Street, S.W.

Washington, D.C. 20554

 

Much has changed since Congress passed the Telecommunications Act of 1996.  As new technologies have emerged - wireless, broadband, Internet-based voice services - each has put strains on the web of regulations that originated more than a decade ago under this Act.  Senators from both parties agree that congressional action is needed in the near future to resolve these issues. 

 

Competition has not taken root as quickly as I would have liked, but it does exist.  Cable companies are losing some customers to satellite services, which offer cost-competitive packages, and the telephone operating companies are gearing up to offer bundled packages of telephone, broadband Internet, and cable television programming. 

 

I will have your concerns closely in mind should Congress discuss usage caps directly.  Again, thank you for contacting me. 

 

 

                              
                              Sincerely,


                                                            Richard G. Lugar
                                                            United States Senator