[Abel-tasman] Get ready for spring cleaning

Hurricane Mop Spins HurricaneMopSpins at flinraynorama.us
Tue Nov 26 17:07:58 CET 2013


Do you know what bacteria and germs are on your old mop?

http://www.flinraynorama.us/3266/153/335/1276/2679.10tt62883642AAF11.php





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Dec. 21, 2010: Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback is shown before taking office 
talking with a reporter in Topeka.APTOPEKA, Kan.  U.S. Attorney General 
Eric Holder has told Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback that a new state 
law attempting to block federal regulation of some guns is unconstitutional 
and that the federal government is willing to go to court over 
the issue.But Brownback replied in a letter Thursday that Kansans hold dear 
their right to bear arms and are protecting the state's sovereignty. Secretary 
of State Kris Kobach, a former law professor who helped draft the 
law, accused the nation's top law enforcement official of "blustering" over 
the issue."The people of Kansas have clearly expressed their sovereign will," 
Brownback said at the conclusion of his letter. "It is my hope 
that upon further review, you will see their right to do so."Kansas' 
law declares that the federal government has no authority to regulate guns, 
ammunition and accessories manufactured, sold and kept only in Kansas. The 
law also makes it a felony for a federal agent to enforce 
any law, regulation, order or treaty covering those items.The new statute 
says that Kansas-only guns, ammunition and accessories aren't a part of 
interstate commerce, which the federal government regulates under the U.S. 
Constitution. But in a letter to Brownback, Holder said the Constitution 
prohibits states from pre-empting federal laws.Holder sent his letter April 
26, the day after the Kansas
ins, 
based on police records.West Fertilizer did not have a fence or security 
guards, and just one security camera was installed, Cawthon said. Besides 
the costs of adding security, the plant was often visited after hours 
by farmers needing fertilizer."If the owner was to spend that money to 
make this a fortress, it would decrease his business because the farmers 
can't come and go," Cawthon said.Daniel Keeney, a spokesman for Adair Grain, 
which owned and operated the plant, declined to answer questions about plant 
security to avoid "misunderstandings or confusions."Last month's explosion 
occurred during the spring planting season, when the plant was especially 
busy, officials in the investigation have said. Two months before the explosion, 
plant officials reported they could store as much as 270 tons of 
ammonium nitrate.Teams from the state fire marshal's office and the U.S. 
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives are hoping to determine 
how much ammonium nitrate was on site when the blast occurred by 
studying the 90-foot-crater left in the explosion and combing through records.
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