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Reservist fighting his fifth war call-up

Posted on July 9th, 2007 at 15:09 by John Sinteur in category: Mess O'Potamia

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Erik Botta believes he’s done right by his country.

Days after 9/11, as a young Army reservist, he volunteered to go to war. He was soon in Afghanistan.

The next year, he was sent out again, this time to Iraq, part of a Special Operations team.

In the next two years, he was sent to Iraq again. And again.

He thought he was done. But now, the Army wants Sgt. Botta one more time.

The 26-year-old Port St. Lucie man has been ordered to report to Fort Jackson, S.C., on July 15 for his fifth deployment. And that has compelled Botta, a first-generation American who counts himself a quiet patriot, to do something he never thought he’d do: sue the Army.

”I’m proud of my service,” he said. “I never wanted it to end like this.”

Nearly seven years into his eight-year commitment to the reserves, the personal costs are higher for Botta. He could lose his home. His job at Sikorsky, working on the Black Hawk military helicopter, could be on the line. He’s halfway to his electrical engineering degree, planning a career in defense work, but his professors say he’ll suffer a significant setback if he is deployed. He doesn’t mention the danger another deployment would bring, but his wife and parents do.


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Quote

Posted on July 9th, 2007 at 10:25 by John Sinteur in category: Quote

The illegal we do immediately. The unconstitutional takes a little longer.

Henry Kissinger (1923 - ), New York Times, Oct. 28, 1973


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Three men in jail over bomb at church

Posted on July 9th, 2007 at 9:19 by John Sinteur in category: Pastafarian News

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Three Burleson men who belong to a “radical Christian activist group” were in the Johnson County Jail on Friday night after a church deacon caught two of them attempting to ignite an explosive device on Independence Day at a church under construction in north Burleson, authorities said Friday.

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Cmdr. Chris Havens, the Police Department spokesman, said the suspects boasted about belonging to a leaderless group of 10 or 15 who share a belief that society has become too focused on self-improvement and self-gratification and has lost focus on the glorification of God.

“They admit to being Christian and being brought up Christian, but they believe there should be one denomination and one church, not multiple denominations,” Havens said.

“They did not say they had a name for their group, other than they were a radical Christian activist group. That was the way they explained their group,” he said.

The suspects said the group has three levels of involvement: Bible study, consensual fighting and destructive acts. Because one of their beliefs is free thought, however, participation in all three levels is not mandatory, they told police.

The three admitted to being in a core group of seven that created the explosive weapon as a test to draw attention to the demise of society and to see whether the device would work, Havens said.

“They believe that the past generations have accumulated trash and are responsible for making younger generations clean up their mess,” he said. “They’re trying to make a statement and get society’s attention regarding that.”


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Music licensing companies come calling for royalties

Posted on July 9th, 2007 at 7:58 by John Sinteur in category: Intellectual Property

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Six months after raising the curtain on their gourmet coffee shop in the beachside Indian Harbour Place shopping center, Laurie and Jim Hall decided to offer live music on Friday and Saturday nights.

The performers, normally duos, mainly covered songs written and made famous by other musicians. There was no cover charge, no pay for the musicians, no limit to how long patrons could sit on a couch with their coffee, playing chess and enjoying the music.

No problem.

Then a few months later, music industry giant ASCAP started calling and sending letters saying East Coast Coffee & Tea was in violation of copyright laws. The fee to continue the music was $400 a year.

“At the time, the shop was losing money, so we had to break it up into payments,” said Laurie Hall. But the Halls paid, and the music continued.

Six months later, other music copyright companies began calling the Halls and demanding money. Most days there would be three or four phone calls from each company, Hall said. Finally, unable to afford the fees, she had to call most of her musicians — those who did not play original music — and tell them they would not be allowed to continue performing.

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Andrus said he pays BMI and ASCAP about $3,000 a year but is ignoring the smaller companies that seek royalties from him.

“There are so many damned companies you don’t know who to pay,” he said. “One guy called and said I had to pay him if I played any gospel music at all. It’s really a mess.”

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But ASCAP’s Reimer said the licensing fees are “affordable for any small nightclub, restaurant, tavern or coffee house.” He said there was little option available other than seeking permissions directly from the songwriters.

Andrus agreed business owners really don’t have a choice.

“It’s extortion, it’s intimidating. It’s such a scam.”


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