Disarray, millions without power in Sandy's wake
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PITTSBURGH (AP) — The most devastating storm in decades to hit the country's most densely populated region upended man and nature as it rolled back the clock on 21st-century lives, cutting off modern communication and leaving millions without power Tuesday as thousands who fled their water-menaced homes wondered when — if — life would return to normal.
A weakening Sandy, the hurricane turned fearsome superstorm, killed at least 50 people, many hit by falling trees, and still wasn't finished. It inched inland across Pennsylvania, ready to bank toward western New York to dump more of its water and likely cause more havoc Tuesday night. Behind it: a dazed, inundated New York City, a waterlogged Atlantic Coast and a moonscape of disarray and debris — from unmoored shore-town boardwalks to submerged mass-transit systems to delicate presidential politics.
"Nature," said New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, assessing the damage to his city, "is an awful lot more powerful than we are."
More than 8.2 million households were without power in 17 states as far west as Michigan. Nearly 2 million of those were in New York, where large swaths of lower Manhattan lost electricity and entire streets ended up under water — as did seven subway tunnels between Manhattan and Brooklyn at one point, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority said. The New York Stock Exchange was closed for a second day from weather, the first time that has happened since a blizzard in 1888. The city's subway system, the lifeblood of more than 5 million residents, was damaged like never before and closed indefinitely, and Consolidated Edison said electricity in and around New York could take a week to restore.
"Everybody knew it was coming. Unfortunately, it was everything they said it was," said Sal Novello, a construction executive who rode out the storm with his wife, Lori, in the Long Island town of Lindenhurst, and ended up with 7 feet of water in the basement.
The scope of the storm's damage wasn't known yet. Though early predictions of river flooding in Sandy's inland path were petering out, colder temperatures made snow the main product of Sandy's slow march from the sea. Parts of the West Virginia mountains were blanketed with 2 feet of snow by Tuesday afternoon, and drifts 4 feet deep were reported at Great Smoky Mountains National Park on the Tennessee-North Carolina border.
With Election Day a week away, the storm also threatened to affect the presidential campaign. Federal disaster response, always a dicey political issue, has become even thornier since government mismanagement of Hurricane Katrina in 2005. And poll access and voter turnout, both of which hinge upon how people are impacted by the storm, could help shift the outcome in an extremely close race.
As organized civilization came roaring back Tuesday in the form of emergency response, recharged cellphones and the reassurance of daylight, harrowing stories and pastiches emerged from Maryland north to Rhode Island in the hours after Sandy's howling winds and tidal surges shoved water over seaside barriers, into low-lying streets and up from coastal storm drains.
Images from around the storm-affected areas depicted scenes reminiscent of big-budget disaster movies. In Atlantic City, N.J., a gaping hole remained where once a stretch of boardwalk sat by the sea. In Queens, N.Y., rubble from a fire that destroyed as many as 100 houses in an evacuated beachfront neighborhood jutted into the air at ugly angles against a gray sky. In heavily flooded Hoboken, N.J., across the Hudson River from Manhattan, dozens of yellow cabs sat parked in rows, submerged in murky water to their windshields. At the ground zero construction site in lower Manhattan, sea water rushed into a gaping hole under harsh floodlights.
One of the most dramatic tales came from lower Manhattan, where a failed backup generator forced New York University's Tisch Hospital to relocate more than 200 patients, including 20 babies from neonatal intensive care. Dozens of ambulances lined up in the rainy night and the tiny patients were gingerly moved out, some attached to battery-powered respirators as gusts of wind blew their blankets.
In Moonachie, N.J., 10 miles north of Manhattan, water rose to 5 feet within 45 minutes and trapped residents who thought the worst of the storm had passed. Mobile-home park resident Juan Allen said water overflowed a 2-foot wall along a nearby creek, filling the area with 2 to 3 feet of water within 15 minutes. "I saw trees not just knocked down but ripped right out of the ground," he said. "I watched a tree crush a guy's house like a wet sponge."
In a measure of its massive size, waves on southern Lake Michigan rose to a record-tying 20.3 feet. High winds spinning off Sandy's edges clobbered the Cleveland area early Tuesday, uprooting trees, closing schools and flooding major roads along Lake Erie.
Most along the East Coast, though, grappled with an experience like Bertha Weismann of Bridgeport, Conn.— frightening, inconvenient and financially problematic but, overall, endurable. Her garage was flooded and she lost power, but she was grateful. "I feel like we are blessed," she said. "It could have been worse."
The presidential candidates' campaign maneuverings Tuesday revealed the delicacy of the need to look presidential in a crisis without appearing to capitalize on a disaster. President Barack Obama canceled a third straight day of campaigning, scratching events scheduled for Wednesday in swing-state Ohio, in Sandy's path. Republican Mitt Romney resumed his campaign with plans for an Ohio rally billed as a "storm relief event."
And the weather posed challenges a week out for how to get everyone out to vote. On the hard-hit New Jersey coastline, a county elections chief said some polling places on barrier islands will be unusable and have to be moved.
"This is the biggest challenge we've ever had," said George R. Gilmore, chairman of the Ocean County Board of Elections.
By Tuesday afternoon, there were still only hints of the economic impact of the storm. Airports remained closed across the East Coast and far beyond as tens of thousands of travelers found they couldn't get where they were going.
Forecasting firm IHS Global Insight predicted the storm will end up causing about $20 billion in damages and $10 billion to $30 billion in lost business. Another firm, AIR Worldwide, estimated losses up to $15 billion — big numbers probably offset by reconstruction and repairs that will contribute to longer-term growth.
"The biggest problem is not the first few days but the coming months," said Alan Rubin, an expert in nature disaster recovery.
Sandy began in the Atlantic and knocked around the Caribbean — killing nearly 70 people — and strengthened into a hurricane as it chugged across the southeastern coast of the United States. By Tuesday night it had ebbed in strength but was joining up with another, more wintry storm — an expected confluence of weather systems that earned it nicknames like "superstorm" and, on Halloween eve, "Frankenstorm."
It became, pretty much everyone agreed Tuesday, the weather event of a lifetime — and one shared vigorously on social media by people in Sandy's path who took eye-popping photographs as the storm blew through, then shared them with the world by the blue light of their smartphones.
On Twitter , Facebook and the photo-sharing service Instagram, people tried to connect, reassure relatives and make sense of what was happening — and, in many cases, work to authenticate reports of destruction and storm surges. They posted and passed around images and real-time updates at a dizzying rate, wishing each other well and gaping, virtually, at scenes of calamity moments after they unfolded. Among the top terms on Facebook through the night and well into Tuesday, according to the social network: "we are OK," ''made it" and "fine."
Around midday Tuesday, Sandy was about 120 miles east of Pittsburgh, pushing westward with winds of 45 mph, and was expected to turn toward New York State on Tuesday night. Although weakening as it goes, the storm will continue to bring heavy rain and flooding, said Daniel Brown of the National Hurricane Center in Miami.
Atlantic City's fabled Boardwalk, the first in the nation, lost several blocks when Sandy came through, though the majority of it remained intact even as other Jersey Shore boardwalks were dismantled. What damage could be seen on the coastline Tuesday was, in some locations, staggering — "unthinkable," New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie said of what unfolded along the Jersey Shore, where houses were swept from their foundations and amusement park rides were washed into the ocean. "Beyond anything I thought I would ever see."
Resident Carol Mason returned to her bayfront home to carpets that squished as she stepped on them. She made her final mortgage payment just last week. Facing a mandatory evacuation order, she had tried to ride out the storm at first but then saw the waters rising outside her bathroom window and quickly reconsidered.
"I looked at the bay and saw the fury in it," she said. "I knew it was time to go."
A weakening Sandy, the hurricane turned fearsome superstorm, killed at least 50 people, many hit by falling trees, and still wasn't finished. It inched inland across Pennsylvania, ready to bank toward western New York to dump more of its water and likely cause more havoc Tuesday night. Behind it: a dazed, inundated New York City, a waterlogged Atlantic Coast and a moonscape of disarray and debris — from unmoored shore-town boardwalks to submerged mass-transit systems to delicate presidential politics.
"Nature," said New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, assessing the damage to his city, "is an awful lot more powerful than we are."
More than 8.2 million households were without power in 17 states as far west as Michigan. Nearly 2 million of those were in New York, where large swaths of lower Manhattan lost electricity and entire streets ended up under water — as did seven subway tunnels between Manhattan and Brooklyn at one point, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority said. The New York Stock Exchange was closed for a second day from weather, the first time that has happened since a blizzard in 1888. The city's subway system, the lifeblood of more than 5 million residents, was damaged like never before and closed indefinitely, and Consolidated Edison said electricity in and around New York could take a week to restore.
"Everybody knew it was coming. Unfortunately, it was everything they said it was," said Sal Novello, a construction executive who rode out the storm with his wife, Lori, in the Long Island town of Lindenhurst, and ended up with 7 feet of water in the basement.
The scope of the storm's damage wasn't known yet. Though early predictions of river flooding in Sandy's inland path were petering out, colder temperatures made snow the main product of Sandy's slow march from the sea. Parts of the West Virginia mountains were blanketed with 2 feet of snow by Tuesday afternoon, and drifts 4 feet deep were reported at Great Smoky Mountains National Park on the Tennessee-North Carolina border.
With Election Day a week away, the storm also threatened to affect the presidential campaign. Federal disaster response, always a dicey political issue, has become even thornier since government mismanagement of Hurricane Katrina in 2005. And poll access and voter turnout, both of which hinge upon how people are impacted by the storm, could help shift the outcome in an extremely close race.
As organized civilization came roaring back Tuesday in the form of emergency response, recharged cellphones and the reassurance of daylight, harrowing stories and pastiches emerged from Maryland north to Rhode Island in the hours after Sandy's howling winds and tidal surges shoved water over seaside barriers, into low-lying streets and up from coastal storm drains.
Images from around the storm-affected areas depicted scenes reminiscent of big-budget disaster movies. In Atlantic City, N.J., a gaping hole remained where once a stretch of boardwalk sat by the sea. In Queens, N.Y., rubble from a fire that destroyed as many as 100 houses in an evacuated beachfront neighborhood jutted into the air at ugly angles against a gray sky. In heavily flooded Hoboken, N.J., across the Hudson River from Manhattan, dozens of yellow cabs sat parked in rows, submerged in murky water to their windshields. At the ground zero construction site in lower Manhattan, sea water rushed into a gaping hole under harsh floodlights.
One of the most dramatic tales came from lower Manhattan, where a failed backup generator forced New York University's Tisch Hospital to relocate more than 200 patients, including 20 babies from neonatal intensive care. Dozens of ambulances lined up in the rainy night and the tiny patients were gingerly moved out, some attached to battery-powered respirators as gusts of wind blew their blankets.
In Moonachie, N.J., 10 miles north of Manhattan, water rose to 5 feet within 45 minutes and trapped residents who thought the worst of the storm had passed. Mobile-home park resident Juan Allen said water overflowed a 2-foot wall along a nearby creek, filling the area with 2 to 3 feet of water within 15 minutes. "I saw trees not just knocked down but ripped right out of the ground," he said. "I watched a tree crush a guy's house like a wet sponge."
In a measure of its massive size, waves on southern Lake Michigan rose to a record-tying 20.3 feet. High winds spinning off Sandy's edges clobbered the Cleveland area early Tuesday, uprooting trees, closing schools and flooding major roads along Lake Erie.
Most along the East Coast, though, grappled with an experience like Bertha Weismann of Bridgeport, Conn.— frightening, inconvenient and financially problematic but, overall, endurable. Her garage was flooded and she lost power, but she was grateful. "I feel like we are blessed," she said. "It could have been worse."
The presidential candidates' campaign maneuverings Tuesday revealed the delicacy of the need to look presidential in a crisis without appearing to capitalize on a disaster. President Barack Obama canceled a third straight day of campaigning, scratching events scheduled for Wednesday in swing-state Ohio, in Sandy's path. Republican Mitt Romney resumed his campaign with plans for an Ohio rally billed as a "storm relief event."
And the weather posed challenges a week out for how to get everyone out to vote. On the hard-hit New Jersey coastline, a county elections chief said some polling places on barrier islands will be unusable and have to be moved.
"This is the biggest challenge we've ever had," said George R. Gilmore, chairman of the Ocean County Board of Elections.
By Tuesday afternoon, there were still only hints of the economic impact of the storm. Airports remained closed across the East Coast and far beyond as tens of thousands of travelers found they couldn't get where they were going.
Forecasting firm IHS Global Insight predicted the storm will end up causing about $20 billion in damages and $10 billion to $30 billion in lost business. Another firm, AIR Worldwide, estimated losses up to $15 billion — big numbers probably offset by reconstruction and repairs that will contribute to longer-term growth.
"The biggest problem is not the first few days but the coming months," said Alan Rubin, an expert in nature disaster recovery.
Sandy began in the Atlantic and knocked around the Caribbean — killing nearly 70 people — and strengthened into a hurricane as it chugged across the southeastern coast of the United States. By Tuesday night it had ebbed in strength but was joining up with another, more wintry storm — an expected confluence of weather systems that earned it nicknames like "superstorm" and, on Halloween eve, "Frankenstorm."
It became, pretty much everyone agreed Tuesday, the weather event of a lifetime — and one shared vigorously on social media by people in Sandy's path who took eye-popping photographs as the storm blew through, then shared them with the world by the blue light of their smartphones.
On Twitter , Facebook and the photo-sharing service Instagram, people tried to connect, reassure relatives and make sense of what was happening — and, in many cases, work to authenticate reports of destruction and storm surges. They posted and passed around images and real-time updates at a dizzying rate, wishing each other well and gaping, virtually, at scenes of calamity moments after they unfolded. Among the top terms on Facebook through the night and well into Tuesday, according to the social network: "we are OK," ''made it" and "fine."
Around midday Tuesday, Sandy was about 120 miles east of Pittsburgh, pushing westward with winds of 45 mph, and was expected to turn toward New York State on Tuesday night. Although weakening as it goes, the storm will continue to bring heavy rain and flooding, said Daniel Brown of the National Hurricane Center in Miami.
Atlantic City's fabled Boardwalk, the first in the nation, lost several blocks when Sandy came through, though the majority of it remained intact even as other Jersey Shore boardwalks were dismantled. What damage could be seen on the coastline Tuesday was, in some locations, staggering — "unthinkable," New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie said of what unfolded along the Jersey Shore, where houses were swept from their foundations and amusement park rides were washed into the ocean. "Beyond anything I thought I would ever see."
Resident Carol Mason returned to her bayfront home to carpets that squished as she stepped on them. She made her final mortgage payment just last week. Facing a mandatory evacuation order, she had tried to ride out the storm at first but then saw the waters rising outside her bathroom window and quickly reconsidered.
"I looked at the bay and saw the fury in it," she said. "I knew it was time to go."
All the countrys are getting together and sending us aid...............................................not
Damage estimates are now up to $50 billion - the biggest natural disaster in US history. Insurance losses alone projected at $15 billion. Eight million customers, not people, customers without power. A customer could be an individual homeowner, or a 50 story apartment building in New York City. Seventeen states dealing with power outages. Damage from South Carolina to the Canadian Maritimes, to Chicago, to western Tennessee. Fifty people dead and climbing. The Battery Street Tunnel in New York City filled with 43 million gallons of sea water. Ten major subway lines flooded. Power out due to flooded substations and blown transformers from 39th to the Battery. The Boardwalk in Atlantic City - gone. Talking hand of God, gone. Not just the boardwalk, the buildings, everything. All that remains are pilings, foundations and crumbling bricks. LaGuardia Airport shut down indefinitely due to major flooding damage. JFK and Newark (EWR) will be up and running tomorrow with very limited service. Over 18,000 flights canceled, at a cost of over 1/2 a billion to the airline industry alone. Estimated 4Q2012 hit to US GDP - 2% and that is conservative.
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Lowest barometric pressure ever measured in a storm making landfall in New Jersey.
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Highest wave ever recorded IN New York Harbor, 32.5, shattering the old record of 16. 5 feet.
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Highest storm surge ever measured in Manhattan, 13.88 feet shattering the old record of 10.5 feet.
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Strongest winds recorded in New York city, gusts over 100 MPH, since 1804.
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First time in the NYC MTA Subway history tunnels have flooded.
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First time in NYC history that all bridges and tunnels were closed (at the height of Sandy) isolating the city to a true island.
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Worst storm to ever hit the state of New Jersey
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The first storm as far back as hurricane paths have been tracked, to veer west like it did and slam into the east coast - no other storm has followed that track.
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Largest kinetic energy forecast for storm surge in history - scoring a 5.8 on a scale of 1 to 6.
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Second largest hurricane in terms of wind field ever recorded.
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Largest hurricane ever recorded in terms of seas over 12 feet, extending 1,560 miles in DIAMETER.
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This was a monster - you could live a lifetime and never see another storm of this composition, size, and intensity hit anywhere in the United States.
 @Howard Beale I thought Katrina topped $100 billion, although this one will likely come close or just smash it in the coming weeks. But, it is astounding the amount of devastation that this has brought. In my life I have seen storms hit the U.S. with greater intensity - Hugo, Andrew, Katrina, and now Sandy.
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It was a big one all right. Historic by many measures. Kindâa makes you wish that Obama's stimulus money had gone toward something useful, like upgrading the power-grid or something, instead of getting vaporized in his crony's âgreen energyâ scams.
 @RN1 Oh I'll bite on this piece of troll bait. Why not. Because in one sentence you have come up with so much crap it is mind blowing.
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Let see - who owns the electrical grid in the first place. The government? Oh no, no, no, no, my small minded friend. That would be private enterprise that owns the grid. So it seems to me your advocating corporate welfare. Now lets see, the grid that is impacted is where, where, where, oh that's right - underground. And Con-Ed has made huge investments in NYC infrastructure in particular. Apparently you don't go to NYC that often. Now where is the safest place for a power grid again? Oh that's right - underground. But hey, you twist a 108 year old event into please give our corporate welfare. What "improvements do you suggest? Flood proof tunnels? When you invent that please let me know.
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Now lets see, where on earth did the Energy Department get the authority to start all these loans? Hmmmmmmmmmm??? Obama and the Democrats. Oh my so small minded one, how wrong can you get. Ever heard of the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007??? Who was President in 2007? Who controlled the House in 2007? Who's signed that Act when it went across his desk? Obama? BWHAHAHAHAHA! He was busy making a false birth certificate in 2007 if I follow your school of thinking, certainly wasn't a Manchurian Canidate with mind control over the President - that was Dick Cheney's job!!!
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So why on earth did George Bush sign it?!? WHY! Well it was his own promotion silly. How quickly you forget his State of the Union Address of 2007 when he made his Twenty In Ten Challenge. What's that? Why it was George W. Bush that said he challenged the United States to reduce gasoline consumption by 20% in 10 years. In December of 2007, he signed the legislation that finally became the Renewable Fuels, Consumer Protection, and Energy Efficiency Act of 2007.
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Among the provisions? Billions upon billions of dollars earmarked for the funding of research for renewal energy sources, improved battery technology and electric cars.
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You see - the sad thing is - all of this is public record. No political spin. No partisanship. Any tax paying citizen can dig through the voting records and the history of any bill that goes through the House and Senate.
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You see my silly friend, as you cry for corporate welfare for magic non-flooding tunnels, or maybe you suggest we clear cut the forests east of the Mississippi to protect all powerlines, and then go on to blame Obama for simply using a law George W. Bush CREATED.
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But wait, there is more. You and people in your party LOVE trotting out the signing of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 as a boon doogle. But just like it was George W. Bush who bailed out the auto industry - not Obama (and Bush declared he would do it again if he had to in February of this year) ARRA was put on Obama's desk on February 17, 2009.
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How long had he been in office? Oh that's right - 26 days. So you're telling me in 26 days Obama thought up all by himself a complex $800 billion bailout package. Gee, George W. Bush and Dick Cheney would be awful mad at you. All Obama did is push through the package the Bush Administration created - and Obama and his team worked closely with the Bush Administration on ARRA.
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Again - not partisanship. A matter of public record. The meetings, the transcripts, the decisions, and what was finally slapped on his desk.
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So while you yearn for corporate welfare, magical tunnels, and blame Obama, there is a long paper trail that exists that shows - your argument is beyond silly.
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Finally, for even bringing it up in the first place. To politicize the death of American citizens, the destruction of symbols of America like the Atlantic City Boardwalk (would your magic non-flooding tunnels help there???).
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Here is one for you. Instead of the GOP blocking any discussion on climate change being real, and ignoring the increasing number of natural disasters and undeniable evidence of sea level rising - wouldn't it have been a Hell of a lot cheaper to give money to coastal US cities to build better seawalls to take higher storm surges?
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Nah - because that would mean admitting you're on the wrong side of the equation. Far better to point fingers and go, "whhhhaaaaaa," when the architects of your ire are sipping beers in Texas, and an undislcosed bunker respectively.
 @Howard Beale AANNNND He bites! Whoo-hoo! Looks like a BIG'N!
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Seriously, though, you do make some very reasonable points, and there have been plans and calls for upgrading our aging electrical grid for the better part of three decades, both the rural long-range distribution portions, AND the main urban parts, as well as doing things on the generation capacity side of things (which is a whole 'nuther argument). It's been a bi-partisan failure, as WELL as a corporate thing, to kick the problem down the road as long as it can continue to be patched together piecemeal. Yes, it's mostly private, but they respond to tax incentives just like all other industries, and if the FedGov IS going to be writing many huge checks to get pissed down the drain (cough SOLYNDRA cough), it may as well go to something we KNOW we need (better power grid), because regardless of of what changes there are in the things that get plugged into it, it will still be here for a LONG time.
Psst. What about Benghazi? Why the blackout?
 @LockesChild Seriously? You want to talk about Benghazi when MILLIONS are struggling to restore their lives out in the East Coast?
 @Necrobio  @LockesChild His point is that like all good Democrat media organs, KOMO is studiously ignoring the topic, because it would damage the chances of The ONE winning re-election, and they'd rather focus on him looking presidential while actual rescue crews do their jobs. I'll admit, he's pretty good at LOOKING presidential, just not very hot at ACTING presidential.
 @LockesChild Because Obama is offended by it. Also, he used the line "we don't leave anyone behind" in reference to the SANDY disaster, not the BENGHAZI debacle.
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Or, as a SEAL site put it:Obama called the SEALS, and they got bin Laden ; When the SEALS called Obama, they got DENIED.
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http://www.thetreeofliberty.com/vb/showthread.php?p=1989789
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Now, back to the storm coverage - after all, talking about the weather is never political, my mom always said.
 @RN1  @LockesChild The fun part is that he had to link some loony backwoods blog to try and support his utterly ludicrous point. These fools try to hijack all kinds of articles on these news sites for their lame agendas. If there's a milk truck rollover in Fife, they are like... "You know, there were milk trucks in Pakistan, and Bin Laden got milk and Obama refused to stop that!!! Here's the link!!! http://www.milktruckrolloverinPakistan.Obamadontstopmilksupply.com/wearenutjobs
 @RN1  @LockesChild That was fun!
 @LockesChild You are disgusting.
 @WhatRJDid  @LockesChild Although I agree with you 100% - it is better not to feed the trolls. They eventually leave when they don't get the attention they want.
 @WhatRJDid  @Howard Beale  @LockesChild well... this is kind of "all" he has... ya know?
 @Howard Beale  @LockesChild It hasn't previously stopped this one. He goes way back.