Paris is Burning, and it ain’t no Song and dance:
“Explosions, Gunfire at Paris Restaurant; “Several” Dead
Update: Multiple Attacks in Paris, At Least 18 Dead
60 HOSTAGES BEING HELD AT CONCERT HALL”
The Associated Press ✔ @AP
BREAKING: Police official: Around 100 hostages taken at Paris theater; 35 dead.
2:21 PM - 13 Nov 20.
“Ahh to be in Paris in the Fall, where you can stop and smell the fragrance of DEATH!!!”
Pity he never saw or felt anything first. Quick death too good for the cowardly, murderous bastard.
Did either of you, or anyone surfing thru bmews at the moment, hear the statement made by the idiot mother of poor James Foley?
Puke inducing. Chalk on a blackboard, cringe worthy and toe curling. What a damn fool.
“I’m not happy” says she. “It’s sooo saaaaaaaad”. Then she goes on to tell us why it’s sad he died the way he did. Not her son .... she’s referring to his killer. Taken alive he could have been questioned, seems to be her thinking. Overall she’s one of these ALL lives are precious loons.
As JD says one can only hope that it took hours for this piece of human excrement to die in agony. This story cheered me up as well. http://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2015/11/04/436205/Video-Yemen-daesh-half-terrorist
"Mohammed Emwazi, was ‘evaporated’ near a clock tower where ISIS staged public executions.”
How ironically fitting.
Oh look, in other news, the World is awash in oil and there isn’t a damn thing any of the major players can do about it,Bwahahaha,,,,,,,
“Peak oil” concerns seem like something out of the distant past at this point, as today’s discussion of the global oil market centers on the seemingly ever-growing supply of crude. . . .
In fact, the world has so much oil that abundance is actually becoming a logistical problem: We’re not sure where to stash all the crude sloshing around the global market. Most onshore storage sites are full-up at this point, so producers have taken to offloading their cargo onto tankers and anchoring the ships off the coasts of major oil ports. Houston, for example, had some 41 tankers idling outside its port last week. . . .
Brent crude is currently trading below $44 per barrel, and America’s West Texas Intermediate benchmark is barely above $40. When we look at the supply side of the market, it’s not hard to see why prices have fallen so dramatically, and, with demand unlikely to rise enough to offset this glut, prices seem set to stay a bargain for the foreseeable future. Producers like U.S. shale firms and OPEC’s petrostates will be discouraged by this news, but consumers, at least, ought to be delighted.
h/t to WRM at American Interest.