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A Walmart employee and the mother of a Marine deployed in Iraq was sent home from work for wearing a Marine shirt on Veterans Day.
Blue Collar Philosophy reported on this from KSDK:
A Walmart worker in Wisconsin claims she was punished on Veterans Day for wearing a Marines T-shirt.
But the corporation disputes the allegation, saying it was all a big misunderstanding.
Charyl Effle's son, Sgt. Aaron Nelson was a Marine deployed in Iraq for more than a year. During that time, Effle worked where she still does, a Walmart in Mount Pleasant.
"He would call me at work. I told everybody, Iraq calls, I'm there. Haha," she said of her son while laughing.
Effle, an employee of 12 years, said what happened to her on Veterans Day at the store is no laughing matter.
The assistant manager, Terry, came up to me and said you are not in work apparel — you need to go home (sniff)," Effle explained.
Fighting back tears and clasping a picture of Aaron the entire time, Effle said she was sent home five hours into her shift for wearing a black Marine T-shirt under her blue uniform.
"They really took me by surprise and I just, I'm in shock."
In a statement, a corporate Walmart spokesman said the associate manager simply approached Effle about a dress code violation.
More hope and change…
The Obama Administration recently handed out 111 Obamacare waivers to US companies… And, they're hiding this from the American public. It takes 6 clicks to find out this information on the government's health care website.
Unfortunately, if you're a small business or you don't have the right connections you can't get a waiver for your company.
That's the new reality under the Obama-Pelosi regime.
Unbelievable.
Via Cost of Freedom:
FOX News contributor Tracy Byrnes said it best:
"The bottom line here is that they gave out waivers is an admission of guilt. Basically they're saying, "You're right. We screwed up." That's the bottom line here. They did not create a law that benefits all of us."
A convicted sex offender has been given an award by a local business group in Calhoun County for his work with a community band.Apparently, he was convicted for touching an 10 year old girl in said Albion Community Band, and spent a couple of months in the can. It could have been worse though. The Albion Chamber of Commerce could be the governor of Michigan holding a public event where they gave a convicted embezzler more than $9 million of our money: Granholm gives convicted embezzler and scam artist $9.1 million tax break
TV station WWMT says the Albion Chamber of Commerce didn't know about Ken Fourn's past. He pleaded no contest to second-degree criminal sexual conduct in 1999 and is on the Michigan sex-offender registry.
Fourn was recently honored with a "Good Neighbor" certificate for more than 30 years of work with the Albion Community Band, 45 miles southwest of Lansing. He tells WWMT that he wouldn't have accepted it if he knew it would cause criticism. ...
ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) — A married pair of top officials in a Maryland county is accused of tampering with evidence after FBI agents said they recorded the husband telling his wife to flush a $100,000 check from a real estate developer down the toilet and to stuff almost $80,000 in cash in her underwear.
Prince George's County Executive Jack Johnson, whose second term expires next month, and his wife, Leslie, who was recently elected to the County Council, were charged with witness and evidence tampering and destruction, alteration and falsification of records in a federal investigation.
The charges grew out of a 5-year-old investigation into allegations of real estate developers in the county offering rewards to county officials in exchange for personal and business favors.
In an affidavit filed in federal court, FBI agents wrote that they recorded a mobile phone conversation between the Johnsons after agents went knocking on their door.
After Johnson told his wife, "Don't answer it," he instructed her over the phone to go upstairs to their bedroom and destroy the check, the affidavit said.
"Tear it up! That is the only thing you have to do," Johnson told his wife, according to the affidavit.
Leslie Johnson then could be heard asking her husband, "Do you want me to put it down the toilet?"
The county executive responded, "Yes, flush that," according to the affidavit, which noted that monitoring agents heard a flushing sound in the background.
Johnson then told his wife to put cash in her underwear, according to the affidavit. After FBI agents entered the home, they searched Leslie Johnson and recovered $79,600 from her underwear.
The Johnsons were arrested at home and released later on personal recognizance. Jack Johnson was placed on home detention with electronic monitoring. They both face a maximum of 20 years in prison.
Jack Johnson swore his innocence after being released: "To all the citizens of Prince George's County, you know me. I've served you long and I've served you well and most of you know me well. I cannot go into these allegations because my lawyers will kill me if I do. I'm innocent of these charges. I just can't wait for the facts to come out. When they come out, I am absolutely convinced that we will be vindicated."
Roland Patterson, Leslie Johnson's attorney, said she is asking for prayers and support "through the ordeal of fighting to disprove the allegations that are pending against her now."
U.S. Attorney Rod Rosenstein said authorities have tapped Jack Johnson's phone since January 2010. Prosecutors expect more charges to be filed and more people to be charged.
Jack Johnson, 61, has been county executive since 2002; his term ends in three weeks. The Democrat was the county state's attorney for eight years before that. Born in Charleston, S.C., Johnson attended Benedict College and got his law degree from Howard University, where his wife was also a law student.
Leslie Johnson, 58, worked for the District of Columbia government for nearly three decades before running for a seat on the council. She has been honored for her work in education and for a program she co-founded that provides support for women in jail. The couple has three children.
Prince George's County borders Washington D.C. and is the wealthiest county in the U.S. with an African-American majority.
___
Associated Press writers Sarah Brumfield in Greenbelt and Jessica Gresko in Washington contributed to this story.
YOKOHAMA, Japan (AP) — President Barack Obama claimed a stronger hand on the world stage Friday despite electoral defeats at home, failure to get a free-trade agreement with South Korea and lackluster international support for his get-tough policy with China on trade and currency disputes.
"It wasn't any easier to talk about currency when I was first elected and my poll numbers were at 65 percent," Obama argued at the close of the G-20 summit, after bluntly accusing Beijing of undervaluing its currency.
The president flew to Japan for the APEC summit without the coveted trade pact with Korea or a united front with other countries against China's currency policy. He also endured a gusher of criticism from other countries about a decision by the U.S. central bank to pump $600 billion into the U.S. economy, something China, Germany and others believe could weaken the dollar and lead to inflation.
After the talks here beginning Saturday, Obama will return to the U.S. to confront Republicans empowered by their gains in this month's midterm elections.
Even so, the president contended that his standing with world leaders is not diminished.
"When I came into office people might have been interested in more photo-ops," the president said, because of the "hoopla surrounding my election."
But he contended he has now developed genuine friendships with leaders including Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and South Korean President Lee Myung Bak — and even Chinese President Hu Jintao.
"That doesn't mean there aren't going to be differences," the president added.
Those have been on stark display throughout the G-20 summit, which resulted in a final document in which leaders agreed on various measures to achieve economic stability, none of them enforceable or specific.
Obama contended this constituted victory nonetheless, even as he acknowledged that America's place in the world has changed — and even if he wouldn't say his had.
Whereas the U.S. had been the dominant superpower, "We are now seeing a stiuation where a whole host of other countires are doing well and coming into their own and naturally they're going to be more assertive … and that's a healthy thing," the president said.
Obama told a news conference here that progress was made in stabilizing and strengthening the global economy, saying it is now back on "the path to recovery." But he also said that nations "risk slipping back" into peril if they don't work harder to foster sustained growth, end unfair trade practices and currency manipulation and argued that "countries with large surpluses must shift away from unhealthy dependency on exports" and said that exchange rates "must reflect economic realities."
Obama said China's currency "is undervalued." He added that Beijing "spends enormous amounts of money" to keep the yuan in that condition and said it's critical for China, "in a gradual fashion," to let markets set the currency's value.
But Obama's summit partners declined to endorse his position, issuing a watered-down statement saying only they agreed to refrain from "competitive devaluation" of currencies. Using a slightly different wording favored by the U.S. — "competitive undervaluation" — would have shown the G-20 taking a stronger stance on China's currency policy.
Of criticism from Germany and other quarters that the Federal Reserve Board engaged in what amounts to currency manipulation by purchasing $600 billion in U.S. Treasury bonds, the president said the move "was not designed to have an impact on the currency, the dollar. It was designed to grow the economy."
Of the global economy generally, Obama said that while improvements have been made in a number of areas, he and other leaders recognize "progress hasn't come quickly enough," particularly in the area of job creation.
"We have a recovery," he said when asked about lingering high joblessness in America.
"It needs to be speeded up. Government cannot hire back the 8 million people that lost jobs," he said. "That needs to be done by the private sector," he said of the economic woes back home in the United States.
Obama reiterated his intent to finalize a long-sought trade agreement with South Korea. A major sticking point remains access to the South Korean market for U.S. autos, but the president expressed confidence that the deal will get done.
"I think that we can find a sweet spot that works both for Korea and the United States," he said, adding that he was not interested in a trade agreement for the sake of having one.
Obama started this Asian trip in the wake of a political battering at home, as Republicans recaptured the House and significantly curbed the Democratic majority margin in the Senate.
Although he had some deja vu moments in visiting Indonesia, where he spent four years growing up, and announcing a series of confidence-building agreements with both India and Indonesia, the president struck out in his attempt to close a new free-trade pact with Seoul.
It was an embarrassing setback for a president who stressed that the top objective of this trip was to cement agreements that would help create jobs at home, particularly through new trade opportunities with fast-growing economies like China, India and Indonesia.
Obama will confront the same vexing trade and currency issues when he arrives in Yokohama, Japan, later Friday for the summit of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation, which is expected to move on creation of a Pacific-wide free trade zone that would encompass more than half the world's economic output.
He sought to deflect talk of missed opportunities.
"The work that we do here is not going to seem dramatic. It is not always going to be world-changing. But step to step, what we're doing is building stronger international mechanisms and institutions" that will help stabilize the world economy "and reduce tensions" among nations," Obama said.
"The easiest thing for us to do would be to take a passive role and just let things drift," the president said. He acknowledged that "some countries push back" in response to his suggestions about global economic strategy, but said that he will continue to push "to bring about changes."
On extending Bush-era tax cuts at home, he said, "I want to make sure that taxes don't go up for middle-income families on January 1. That's my top priority." He reiterated that he opposes a permanent extension of those tax breaks for the wealthy.
"I'm not going to negotiate here in Seoul on those issues, but I've made very clear what my priorities are," he said.
He said he hopes to reach agreement with congressional Republicans, when he flies home, on the fate of the tax cuts set to expire next month.
What will be the next move from the hard left if their Moonbat Messiah is successful at destroying our economy with the Cloward-Piven strategy by crushing it under massive government debt? Glenn Beck offers some ideas:
On a tip from Rich.