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- ‘When I saw the light I shouted save me brother,’ says Dhaka survivor

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Dubbed the miracle girl in Bangladesh, Reshma Begum was pulled from the rubble of the Rana Plaza factory building in Dhaka 17 days after it collapsed. The last survivor has been speaking about her fight for life buried beneath eight storeys.

“There was a man beside me, he was telling me 
‘sister, save me,’” she said.

“I said, ‘How can I save you, I am also dying?‘ Then 
he was asking me for water. I was searching in the
darkness. I did not find anything, then that man died.”

Later wrenching a metal stick from her sewing machine, 19-year old Reshma dug through the debris to find biscuits and water. Thinking she would never make it out alive, she recalled the moment she was finally found.

“When I saw the light I shouted. I shouted: ‘Save me brother.’ They heard me. Then I thought how can I go outside without (wearing something), I’m not a man. I was trying to find a solution. It was all dark inside.

“A brother among the rescuers gave me a torch and told me to search inside (for clothes). I searched with the torch and found a shirt. I wore that,” she continued.

“I was always calling Allah, Allah,  please save me.”

Last Friday was a moment of celebration as Reshma surfaced from the wreckage of the building. She has vowed never to step foot in another garment factory.

The death toll in the disaster stands at 1,127, making it the country’s worst industrial accident.

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Term limits ‘encourage legislative myopia’ and jeopardize fiscal health: study

Conservatives have pushed for term limits to rein in government largesse and a majority of Americans support the idea. But the cure could be worse than the disease. Research by Jeff Cummins, a political science professor at California State University in Fresno, found that term limits for…

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Rand Paul slams Rubio’s immigration plan

When Sen. Rubio (R-Florida) first endorsed the bipartisan immigration reform bill being touted by the so-called congressional “Gang of Eight,” the up-and-coming lawmaker’s approval was signaled as a sign that conservative colleagues on Capitol Hill would soon follow suit. Rubio has since warned that the bill isn’t guaranteed to get all the way to US President Barack Obama’s desk, though, and the immigration act has found an opponent in Sen. Rand Paul (R-Kentucky).Speaking before the Senate Homeland Security Committee Hearing on Tuesday this week, Sen. Paul said that not only does he have his doubts the bill will pass but that he’s concerned over with what the act would actually do.“It may pass the Senate [but] may not pass the House,” said the senator. “I want to be constructive in making the bill strong enough that conservatives, myself included, conservative Republicans in the House will vote for this because I think immigration reform is something we should do.”“In this bill I am worried, though, and this is similar to what Senator [Ron] Johnson (R-Wisconin) said, that it says, well, you have to have a plan to build a fence, but you don’t have to build a fence,” he continued. “And if you don’t have a plan to build a fence, then you get a commission. I don’t know what happens if the commission doesn’t do anything. That’s the story of Washington around here.”Sen. Paul previously lashed out at fellow lawmakers for failing to read the bills they’re elected to vote on, insisting “Congress has a 10 percent approval rating and one of the reasons is that we don’t even obey our own rules.” On Tuesday, though, he condemned the latest efforts at immigration reform as being all too like another controversial bill that was disputed in Congress.“To me, it’s a little bit like Obamacare,” Paul said at this week’s hearing. “I hate to bring that up, but 1,800 references to the secretary shall at a later date decide things. We don’t write bills around here. We should write the bill. We should write the plan. We should do these things to secure the border whether it be fence, entry, exit, we should write it, not delegate it. What’s going to happen in five years if they don’t do their job — maybe not even them, maybe somebody else who doesn’t do their job in five years, and the border is not secured? We will be blamed for the next 10 million that come here illegally.”Just days before those remarks, the immigration effort came under fire over other concerns. A Heritage Foundation study released on Monday accused the Gang of Eight’s efforts as costing a minimum of $6.3 trillion over the lifetime of the estimated 11 million aliens currently residing in the US illegally.According to the New York Times, Heritage alleged that the bill, if enacted, would not consider the comparably meager $3.1 trillion in taxes those immigrants would pay under a path-to-citizenship plan, all the while receiving an estimated $9.4 trillion in government benefits and services.“Heritage, I think, is the king of dynamic scoring, and in many respects we’ve advocated for dynamic scoring here because of the positions that they’ve taken,” Rubio, a chief author of the legislation, told the Times. “They are the only group that’s looked at this issue and reached the conclusion they’ve reached. Everybody else who has analyzed immigration reform understands that if you do it, and we do it right, it will be a net positive for our economy.”One week earlier, Sen. Rubio told radio host Mike Gallagher, “The bill that’s in place right now probably can’t pass the House.” Foreshadowing Sen. Paul’s warning this week, Rubio said at the time of the bill he co-wrote that “It will have to be adjusted because people are very suspicious about the willingness of the government to enforce the laws now.”Both Rubio and Paul were at one time considered likely running mates for former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney during his unsuccessful bid for president in 2012. Both lawmakers were also elected to respond to Pres. Obama’s 2013 State of the Union: Rubio on behalf of the GOP, and Paul as a representative of the Tea Party faction. They have since each been rumored to be potential Republican Party nominee for a White House run in the next presidential election. Read More

GOP ‘Party Animal’ unmasked as Holocaust revisionist

Republican Party Animals operator David Stein says he is really David Cole, and that he still holds controversial views To those who knew him, or thought they they knew him, he was a cerebral, fun-loving gadfly who hosted boozy gatherings for Hollywood’s political conservatives. David Stein…

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Conservatives rally behind MSM’s Howard Kurtz

You would expect Howard Kurtz’ departure from the Daily Beast to be fodder for conservative critics of the liberal mainstream media, but probably not in this way.The problem they seem have with the incident is not that Kurtz falsely accused openly-gay NBA player Jason Collins of concealing his engagement to a woman, or that he spread himself too thin and let the quality of his work suffer, but that the Daily Beast fired Kurtz for it. Here’s popular conservative blogger Ace of Spades, spelling out what many saw as a double standard:Clearly Kurtz erred, and rather dumbly. But he does this a lot, and no one’s had a problem with it in the past. Why now? I think it’s pretty obvious — Jason Collins is now the Gay Black Sandra Fluke, and therefore now An Hero, and the Left protects its heroes.And John Nolte of Breitbart News:Kurtz’s sin was making this error with a sacred cow. Had he made EXACT same error with a Palin or Bachmann, media & Beast woulda shrugged. — John Nolte(@NolteNC) May 2, 2013Continue Reading… Read More

Tea Partyers want Sarah Palin to run for Senate

A group of Tea Partyers is hoping Sarah Palin will challenge Democratic Sen. Mark Begich in 2014, when he is up for reelection. “We know that, with Sarah in the Senate, conservatives across America can rest a little easier at night knowing that she’s at the watch,” said Todd Cefaratti of the Tea Party Leadership Fund, in a fundraising email to supporters.”You and I both know that Sarah Palin is a fighter who will stand up to Harry Reid and his pals in the Senate to protect our Constitution in issues like amnesty, gun control and our nation’s crushing debt,” Cefaratti wrote.But the Los Angeles Times, which obtained the email, reports that Palin might not have the “clear path” to victory that the Tea Party Leadership Fund says she does. A February PPP poll had Begich’s approval rating at 49 percent, and winning in a potential match-up against Palin by a margin of 54-37 percent.Continue Reading… Read More

Iowa lawmakers to slash justices’ pay by 80 percent for 2009 LGBT marriage ruling

A group of conservatives in the Iowa state House have filed a measure that would cut the pay of state Supreme Court Justices by around 80 percent — but only for the ones who voted to legalize same sex marriage in 2009. On Monday, five state House Republicans attempted to amend Senate File 442…

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