It's May 14, 2024, 07:42:00 PM
my throat hurts, its hard to swallow, and my body feels like i got a serious ass beating.
I WENT TO STAPLES CENTER WEN I WAS WALKING MY GOLD RAG FALL OF MY POCKET AND THE GROUND WAS WET TO AND DIRTY MY RAG GOT DIRTY A LIL BIT PULL IT IT BACK AND MAKE SURE IT WOULD NOT DROP AGAIN ROCKING MY RAG AGAIN HOMIE 8
Quote from: Don Rizzle on May 10, 2006, 03:16:12 AMiraq would just get annexed by iranThat would be a great solution. If Iran and the majority of Iraqi's are pleased with it, then why shouldn't they do it?
iraq would just get annexed by iran
Difficult to Discern Who Runs U.S. PortsWho's in charge of security at U.S. seaports? There's no simple answer to that question - a critical part of the debate over the takeover of major port operations by a United Arab Emirates company All seaports are different and the biggest ones are complex. Responsibility for security is spread among government agencies: the Coast Guard, Customs and Border Protection, terminal operators and state and local port authorities. Customs and Border Protection oversees the cargo that arrives in more than 20,000 shipping containers that pass through U.S. ports daily. The Coast Guard approves security plans for 10,000 ships and 5,000 port facilities. Since July 1, 2004, the Coast Guard has been responsible for making sure those plans are carried out. The nation's larger ports have dozens of separate facilities within them, including oil refineries, warehouses, fuel farms, power plants and factories. The terminal operator is responsible for security at its own terminal and the area within the port where cargo is loaded, unloaded or transferred, according to the Homeland Security Department. UAE-based Dubai Ports World would operate some of the terminals at a half-dozen of the nation's largest seaports: Baltimore, Philadelphia, Miami, New Orleans, Houston, and Newark, N.J. "They're required to have a security plan," said Dennis Murphy, former Customs port director at the Port of Norfolk and former Homeland Security spokesman. The plan has to include security measures such as lighting, fencing, locks and background checks on employees, he said. "They have to know who the people are who they're hiring," Murphy said.A fact sheet from the Homeland Security Department said that the "people working on the docks" and security personnel would not change under the pending deal. Murphy said the entire supply chain is scrutinized by a number of people - including the buyer, the seller and the shipper along with federal officials - who want to make sure cargo moves where it's supposed to move. "It's an elaborate ballet of information and machinery," he said. "You don't mess around. If you divert a container here and there, there are investigators who will crawl all over your personal life if they think anything is hinky." Many port security initiatives since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks have been the result of laws passed by Congress. It was the National Maritime Transportation Security Act, passed in November 2002, that put the Coast Guard in charge of tightening port security.