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The Washington Examiner is your best source for top news stories in the National News. Get breaking American news articles from around the country.
  • New ways to kill wolves sought despite species' return to endangered list

    Government agencies are seeking broad new authority to ramp up killings and removals of gray wolves in the Northern Rockies and Great Lakes, despite two recent court actions that restored the animal's endangered status in every state except Alaska and Minnesota.

    Various proposals would gas pups in their dens, surgically sterilize adult wolves and allow "conservation" or "research" hunts to drive down the predators' numbers.

    Once poisoned to near-extermination in the lower 48 states, wolves made a remarkable comeback over the last two decades under protection of the Endangered Species Act. But as packs continue to multiply their taste for livestock and big game herds coveted by hunters has stoked a rising backlash.

    Wildlife officials say that without public wolf hunting, they need greater latitude to eliminate problem packs. Montana and Idaho held inaugural hunts last year but an August court ruling scuttled their plans for 2010.

    "As the wolf populations increase, the depredations increase and the number of wolf removals will increase. It's very logical," said Mark Collinge, Idaho director for Wildlife Services, the U.S. Department of Agriculture branch that removes problem wolves, typically by shooting them from aircraft.

    "You just have to accept that part of having wolves is having to kill wolves," he said.

    But wildlife advocates and animal rights groups contend the response to depredating wolves has become too heavy-handed. They say a string of court decisions in their favor underscores that the species remains at risk.

    "The draconian lengths they are poised to take really are a throwback, to when the same agency was gassing wolf pups in their dens almost a century ago and setting poisoned baits and trapping them," said Michael Robinson with the Center for Biological Diversity.

    At least 1,700 wolves now roam Idaho, Montana and Wyoming. There are more than 4,000 in Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota. New populations are taking hold in Oregon and Washington, and wolves have been sighted in Colorado, Utah and New England.

    Some of the most remote wilderness habitats are becoming saturated with the animals. As a result, packs are pushing into agricultural and residential areas where domestic animals offer an easy meal.

    One of the more extreme proposals — burying wolf pups in their dens and then poisoning them with carbon monoxide gas — would be used only infrequently, in cases where the rest of the pack had been killed for preying on livestock, officials said.

    More established practices, including shooting wolves from the air and ground, would be expanded.

    In Montana and Idaho, officials hope to revive hunting seasons by rebranding them as "conservation hunts" or "research hunts." Also, Montana Democrat U.S. Senator Max Baucus wants ranchers to have more freedom to shoot wolves harassing livestock.

    A novel, non-lethal approach to wolf control is being considered in Idaho, according to a Department of Agriculture proposal. After being surgically sterilized, pairs of wolves would be radio-collared and released — "to maintain and defend their territory against other wolf packs that might be more likely to prey on livestock."

    Killing marauding wolves is nothing new in some parts of their range: In the Northern Rockies, more than 1,400 have been killed by wildlife agents and ranchers since the first 66 wolves were reintroduced to Yellowstone National Park and central Idaho in the mid-1990s.

    But Wisconsin and Michigan in the past avoided wolf killings, instead relocating plundering animals or taking defensive measures such as fencing in livestock. Under applications pending with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the states want new authority to remove up to 10 percent of their wolves annually, equal to about 110 wolves a year.

    Government statistics back up critics' claims that wolves account for a small proportion of livestock losses caused by predators. They kill fewer sheep and cattle than coyotes, bears, mountain lions or even dogs.

    Yet where packs get onto ranchlands, the results can be brutal for both wolves and livestock. That was illustrated in a string of recent cattle killings and reprisals outside the small town of Ennis, Mont.

    Since late July, at least six ranches near Ennis have suffered cattle killings by a wolf group known as the Horse Creek pack, which lives at the base of the Gravelly mountains.

    Within two weeks of the first calf being killed, wolf specialists with Wildlife Services killed two adult members of the Horse Creek pack in hopes of deterring the others.

    One was shot on July 29 and the second on Aug. 6 — just a day after U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy in Missoula, Mont. ordered the region's wolves back onto the endangered species list.

    After the attacks continued and several more calves died, state officials on Aug. 12 ordered the entire pack removed. Another calf was found dead on Aug. 13, and two on Aug. 17.

    Two more Horse Creek wolves were shot.

    On Aug. 18, three more calves turned up dead, bringing the total dead livestock to at least a dozen.

    The remaining four members of the pack remained at large late last week. But there was little doubt they would be killed, said Carolyn Sime, Montana's lead wolf biologist

    "When we authorize it, we're confident they're going to get it done," she said.

    Rancher Jerry Dickinson said the Horse Creek pack killed at least three calves worth a combined $2,400 on the Granger ranch, which he manages.

    Their carcasses were found on the Beaverhead National Forest, where the calves had been grazing. Others have disappeared without a trace.

    "If they take that pack out, we've bought ourselves maybe two or three years until another pack establishes itself," Dickinson said. "Eventually another bunch of wolves will move in there and we'll get the same problem all over."

  • Ehrlich releases 1st TV ad in Md. governor's race

    Former Gov. Robert Ehrlich's campaign unveiled its first television commercial, telling voters Maryland is in trouble because of debt and higher taxes.

    Ehrlich's campaign says the 30-second commercial entitled "Let's Get to Work" began airing Sunday morning in Baltimore. In the spot, the former Republican governor tells viewers the state is worse off than four years ago because of dangerous debt, higher taxes and not enough jobs. A mother, small businessman, student and waterman also appear in the ad asking for the state budget to be fixed, aid for small businesses and schools, and protection for the Chesapeake Bay.

    Gov. Martin O'Malley's campaign issued a statement following the release, saying the ad was filled with false innuendo and empty promises.

    _____

    Online:

    Ehrlich commercial _

    http://tinyurl.com/28fc665

  • Police: driver shoots would-be robber in Atlanta

    A would-be robber was fatally shot in southeast Atlanta during a gun battle that injured three people in a car.

    Police say the robber pulled a gun on a motorist Saturday night in southeast Atlanta.

    Police Maj. Keith Meadows told WSB-TV that a man in the car had a gun and fired at the robber, hitting him. The robber died at Grady Memorial Hospital.

    The man who reported firing in self-defense suffered an injury to his leg. Two women in the car were wounded in the back.

    The name of the robber and the victims have not yet been released.

    Meadows said police are still probing the robbery, which may be drug-related.

    ___

    Information from: WSB-TV, http://www.wsbtv.com/index.html

  •  
    Citizen USA Reporter
    Whistleblower Documents Uncover Botched Abortion Epidemic
    Written by Press Report   
    Tuesday, 17 August 2010 10:59

    COLUMBUS OH – Last month, as she has so many times before, a pro-life sidewalk counselor saw a young woman leaving Complete Healthcare for Women, an abortion clinic in Columbus, Ohio, after an abortion. But this time, the patient swooned, dropped to her knees, and began to vomit as she bled heavily through her clothing.chw-columbus

    The sidewalk counselor ran to assist the 19-year old abortion patient and drove her to the local hospital where she was treated.

    Read more...
     
    Un-American American History Courses-Commentary
    Written by Phyllis Schlafly   
    Friday, 13 August 2010 18:39

    Arizona's new law that requires the police to ask people to show ID, which was just knocked out by a supremacist judge, may not be the most controversial Arizona law about illegal aliens. Governor Jan Brewer signed another law this year that bans schools from teaching classes designed to promote solidarity among students of a particular ethnic group.

    Read more...
     
    Rifqa Bary’s Attorney Ungagged, Part 2
    Written by Tom Trento   
    Thursday, 12 August 2010 14:45

    playersrifqaRifqa Bary, a teen convert from Islam, was at the center of a custody battle as she fled her home in Ohio for Florida.  She turned 18 last week and has finally been released from custody in Ohio.  Linked here is an exclusive interview conducted with her attorney,  Kort Gatterdam,   who describes the battles that Rifqa endured.  The video comes from the Florida Security Council.In addition to the battle for her rights,  this brave young woman is also fighting cancer.


    Part 1 can be found here,  in case you missed it.

     
    Rifqa Bary’s Attorney Ungagged, Part 1
    Written by Tom Trento   
    Wednesday, 11 August 2010 19:51

    Rifqa Bary, a teen convert from Islam, was at the center of a custody battle as she fled her home in Ohio for Florida.  She turned 18 last week and has finally been released from custody in Ohio.  Linked here is an exclusive interview conducted with her attorney,  Kort Gatterdam,   who describes the battles that Rifqa endured.  The video comes from the Florida Security Council.In addition to the battle for her rights,  this brave young woman is also fighting cancer.

    Part two tomorrow.

    Last Updated on Wednesday, 11 August 2010 20:57
     
    Rifqa Bary celebrates her 18th birthday today in court
    Written by Pendra L. Snyder   
    Monday, 09 August 2010 22:25

    playersrifqaWhile most American teenagers anticipate their 18th birthday, as a magical milestone of liberation from parental rules and regulations, Rifqa Bary’s 18th birthday today, August 10, is a pivotal moment in her quest for liberation from the harsh Islamic life she was born into.

    Last Updated on Tuesday, 10 August 2010 12:01
    Read more...
     
    Editorial: Police Officers Make Big Bucks for Court Appearances
    Written by By Mary McCleary, Policy Analyst   
    Monday, 09 August 2010 17:28

    COLUMBUS-Everyone knows police officers have to go to court.  They write traffic tickets, apprehend accused criminals, and arrest drunk drivers.  It is no secret that appearing in court is part of a police officer’s job.  The real secret, however, is how police officers are compensated for the time they spend in court.  Thanks to the collective bargaining agreement between the Fraternal Order of Police Union (FOP) and the City of Columbus, central Ohio police officers can “earn” up to eight hours of pay for court appearances that sometimes last only 15 minutes.

    Last Updated on Monday, 09 August 2010 17:46
    Read more...
     
    Ohioans ready for Big Fixes
    Written by The Buckeye Institute   
    Monday, 09 August 2010 17:14

    COLUMBUS-On July 28, the Buckeye Institute released a statewide poll of 1,800 registered voters that shows Ohioans are at odds with their government leaders on the major issues of the day, especially regarding government compensation, regulations, and Ohio's pro-union policies.

    Read more...
     
    Ohio Hardest-Hit Fund Plan Approved to stop foreclosures
    Written by Press Reports   
    Wednesday, 04 August 2010 19:38

    $172 million to assist Ohio homeowners facing foreclosure

    COLUMBUS – The U.S. Department of Treasury today announced the approval of the Ohio Hardest-Hit Fund plan. The Ohio Housing Finance Agency will use the allocation of $172 million in federal foreclosure prevention funding to help families struggling to pay their mortgages.

    Read more...
     
    Is it Time to Buy Gold?
    Written by By Bill DeShurko   
    Friday, 06 August 2010 17:18
    It's hard to browse the  web or listen to talk/ news radio without hearing ads for buying gold. Several of the gold sellers and precious metals based newsletters tout gold as the only way to preserve your wealth from the coming, (choose one): hyper inflation, end of fiat (paper) currency, one world government, or whatever global calamity they can cook up. Let's take a look at the fundamentals and maybe shed a rational light on gold's value in an investment portfolio.
    Last Updated on Tuesday, 17 August 2010 19:28
    Read more...
     
    Rethinking the Corporate Income Tax
    Written by By Dr. Mark W. Hendrickson   
    Monday, 09 August 2010 17:20

    It is hard to find anything positive to say about the corporate income (i.e., profits) tax. Economists across the ideological spectrum agree that the corporate profits tax is woefully inefficient:

    Read more...
     
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