NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL VERSION WITH TRANSLATION

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Oops!

Obama's Chief Of Staff Sorry For 'Retarded' Quip

White House chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, has apologized for using the word "retarded" to describe liberal activists whose tactics on health care he questioned.

Emanuel made the apology last week in a phone call to Tim Shriver, CEO of the Special Olympics, the White House said Tuesday.

The apology followed a Wall Street Journal account of a private White House meeting involving liberal groups and administration officials. In it, Emanuel reportedly grew exasperated at plans by some groups to run ads against Democratic lawmakers who were balking at Obama's health overhaul.

Emanuel's call wasn't the first time Shriver got an Obama administration apology. The president himself telephoned in March after telling Jay Leno on the "Tonight Show" how awful his bowling scores were. "It was like the Special Olympics or something," Obama said.

Editor's note: All we can is WOW. So it seems the Dems aren't as politically correct as they would like to appear. While we certainly have our choice of words to describe the subversive Left-wing, 'retarded' doesn't come to mind. However, anyone who has read the book "Liberalism is a Mental Disorder" will become quickly acquainted as to why these people are dangerous in their radical viewpoints. Emanuel wasn't far off the mark; just his choice of words.

Man Saved On Frozen Sea By Webcam Spotter

A woman admiring the sunset on a tourist webcam in northern Germany spotted a man who was lost on the frozen North Sea and probably saved his life by alerting authorities, police said Wednesday.

The man had climbed over pack ice off the coast to photograph a sunset near the town of St. Peter-Ording, then became disoriented on the ice, Husum police spokeswoman Kristin Stielow said.

Unable to locate the beach, the man began using his camera to flash for help. That got the attention of a woman hundreds of miles (kilometers) away in southern Germany who was watching the sunset over the sea on her computer.

The woman contacted police, who located the man's signals and guided him into shore by flashing their car lights. Officiers then lectured him on the dangers of trekking on the ice.

Police would not identify the man or the woman who spotted him. Stielow said he was a German tourist in his forties. She said locals are well aware of the risk of disorientation as darkness falls and the beach becomes hard to identify, but vivid sunsets over frozen landscapes often draw people away from the shore.

At the time the man lost his bearings, the air temperature was below freezing. He could have frozen to death or fallen through the ice, Stielow added.

St. Peter-Ording is popular tourist destination known for its beaches and sailing, and the local tourism board runs a Web site with a webcam. The board, however, said images from the webcam are routinely erased and the dramatic flashes from the man's camera were not saved before the story came to light.

Editor's note: Talking about being at the right place at the right time. This is no different however from watching the DOT cams during rush hour. Anyone watching is obligated to call 911 after watching all the wrecks.

Link: St. Peter-Ording