[Abel-tasman] abel-tasman, can this 10 Second Trick Help Prevent YOUR Heart Attack?

OmegaK OmegaK at calmcapitalllc.com
Tue Jul 30 11:49:29 CEST 2013


Can this 10 Second Trick Help Prevent YOUR Heart Attack?

http://www.calmcapitalllc.com/1721/127/265/1101/2351.12tt62883642AAF9.php







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This undated photo, provided by the victim's family, shows 18-year-old Kelsey 
Smith, who was abducted outside a Kansas shopping mall in 2007 and 
murdered.This undated photo, provided by the victim's family, shows 18-year-old 
Kelsey Smith, who was abducted outside a Kansas shopping mall in 2007 
and murdered.When 18-year-old Kelsey Smith was abducted in broad daylight 
outside a Kansas shopping mall in 2007, the teen's parents spent four 
harrowing days searching for their daughter, whose body was found after 
police scoured an area close to a tower where her cellphone last 
pinged.But the search for the young woman would have ended much sooner 
had Verizon Wireless promptly handed over cellphone records to authorities, 
according to Smith's mother as well as a U.S. congressman  both 
of whom are calling for legislation mandating that all cellphone carriers 
provide police with a customer's location information in an emergency.Current 
federal law allows cellphone companies to release information to police 
in certain situations, but it does not require them to do so. 
Kelseys Law seeks to mandate it on the state and ultimately national 
level.We want to create a national standard to make it very clear 
and easy for law enforcement and families of victims in the case 
of an emergency to be able to locate their missing loved one, 
Rep. Kevin Yoder, R-Kan., told FoxNews.com. In Kelseys case, they had the 
information but they weren't releasing it because t
rsation about how to get China to 
join the United States in putting pressure on Pyongyang, according to a 
senior administration official who was present. The debate encapsulates 
America's struggle to come up with a strategy   based on 
sticks, carrots or a combination of both    to convince 
China to police its own backyard.As Kerry heads to East Asia for 
his first time as America's top diplomat, some progress has been made 
in convincing Beijing, North Korea's biggest benefactor, to start getting 
tough with its neighbor. The question is whether it will make a 
difference.North Korea's government agency said Thursday that it has "powerful 
striking means" on standby for a launch, amid speculation in Seoul and 
Washington that North Korea will test-fire a mid-range missile designed 
to reach the U.S. territory of Guam in the Pacific Ocean. It 
was the latest warning from the North, which launched a long-range rocket 
in December and conducted an underground nuclear test in February.For years, 
Washington has been putting its hopes in Beijing to rein in the 
provocative behavior and combative rhetoric from North Korea. China has 
more leverage over the North than any other country, having massively boosted 
trade ties with the isolated regime in recent years and maintaining close 
military relations.But the U.S. has been frustrated by the reaction from 
a government that in many ways has different priorities. China, analysts 
and officials often say, f

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