“They were shooting at us like if we were birds.”

Is This is what bird hunting has led us to?http://www.cnn.com/2015/11/13/europe/bataclan-paris-shooting-witness/index.html

Shooting us ‘like birds’

Pearce said he was near the top of the stage when the shooting began.

He saw two people, terrorists, he said, enter the theater, “very calm, very determined” and firing “randomly.”

They wore black clothing but no masks. He saw the face of one shooter, who was very young — a maximum of 25 years old.

“He was like a random guy holding a Kalashnikov. That’s all.”

Paul Ryan And Friends?

Just wondering… (with the KKK-type hoods, there’s no way to know for sure)…

Newly elected Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives Paul Ryan wields the speaker's gavel for the first time on Capitol Hill in Washington October 29, 2015. REUTERS/Gary Cameron1384140_564330240283396_857016214_n

When Geraldo comes to town: KKK fight put Janesville in national spotlight – See more at: http://www.gazettextra.com/20150803/when_geraldo_comes_to_town_kkk_fight_put_janesville_in_national_spotlight#sthash.veQaCYNi.dpuf

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Marcia Nelesen
August 31, 2015
 Janesville has found itself in the national spotlight repeatedly through its history.

The hometown boy is serving his ninth term representing the First Congressional District and is also the chairman of the powerful House Ways and Means Committee. He captured the world’s attention when he became the 2012 Republican vice presidential candidate.

Ted Cruz Ends Big Week Pheasant Hunting in Iowa

http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/ted-cruz-ends-big-week-pheasant-hunting-iowa/story?id=34888067

After a breakout moment at the third Republican presidential debate, Sen. Ted Cruz ended his week with a bang — literally — by hunting pheasants with Rep. Steve King while in Iowa.

Trekking through Iowa cornstalks in a bright orange vest, the Texas senator pondered where he might be a year from now.

“I may be hunting in Iowa but it may be for swing votes up north in October of 2016,” Cruz joked with King. “Who knows. We may have a big enough lead that come October, we figure this [hunting] is the best thing we can do.”

Cruz seemed to revel in the momentum his campaign has seen, gloating in Des Moines on Saturday that his website’s server crashed during last week’s primary debate.

“During the debate, so many people went to our website,” he said at Growth and Opportunity Party organized by the Republican Party of Iowa. “Our website is built for speed and it crashed for the first time, down about two minutes. It’s a good problem to have. It had our IT folks angry that we crashed the website, but we had it up two minutes after.”

Cruz’s big moment at the debate came when he criticized the CNBC moderators.

“The questions asked so far in this debate illustrate why the American people don’t trust the media. This is not a cage match,” he said.

Those fiery remarks drew applause and gave Cruz one of the most talked about debate moments.

His campaign quickly capitalized, issuing a fundraising blitz that it said raised $1.1 million in the first 22 hours following the debate.

Cruz said he was taking some of his donors to a Dallas Cowboys game Sunday to treat them for hitting a target the finance team set. He also described the fundraising success his campaign has seen in blue cities like Seattle, Washington.

King, a powerful conservative in Iowa, hosted Cruz along with Rick Santorum and Gov. Bobby Jindal at his annual pheasant hunt in Akron, Iowa. All three are courting King’s endorsement.

As Cruz shot two pheasants with a shotgun like the one he said he has at home, he continued his attack on the current presidential debate model. Cruz argued that conservatives should be moderating Republican primary debates.

“I’ve suggested how about a Republican primary moderated by Sean Hannity, and Rush Limbaugh and Mark Levin. Now, I guarantee you would get incredible ratings for that,” Cruz said. “How about bringing in people like Glenn Beck. How about bringing in Hugh Hewitt and letting him actually ask real and substantive questions. There are a host of strong conservatives you could bring in that would engage and we’re not talking about pussycat questions. We’re not talking about easy questions. We’re talking about questions that are relevant to what Republican primary voters are trying to decide.”

On Sunday, several Republican presidential campaigns will meet to come up with a list of suggestions for remaining debates. When asked if his campaign was participating, Cruz paused and said, “Time will tell.”

While Cruz’s week ended in Iowa, it began in his hometown of Houston where he jabbed at the man many once thought had the best chance to be a frontrunner in the Republican field: Jeb Bush. While Bush met with worried donors, across town Cruz unveiled the endorsement of Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick and the addition of several wealthy CEOs to his finance team.

Patrick called Cruz an “outsider” and perhaps hinted at the way the senator planned to model himself and his campaign to overcome the current frontrunners.

“People want someone to be bold,” Patrick said last Monday. “He is the outsider in this race but who understands the inside and how things work and how to achieve victory in Washington. Other people can be outsiders but we don’t really know that they’ll follow up and do what they say.”

After a week where his campaign found new interest from some voters, Cruz plans to keep the momentum going by doing what he says he has done all along.

“In every election cycle, there are candidates who shoot to the top and then fall down just as quickly,” he said. “Our strategy has always been to build on a foundation of rock and not of sand. To play the long game based on fundamentals and deep support from the grassroots.”

Hunters defending themselves from bears are the No. 1 cause of death of grizzly bears in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem ‏

Documents detail outcome of bear, hunter conflicts in Greater Yellowstone
The Jackson Hole News and Guide’s Freedom of Information Act requests to the agencies that deal with grizzly bears in the Greater Yellowstone Area found that hunters defending themselves from bears are the No. 1 cause of death of grizzly bears in that ecosystem, and that bear spray is mentioned in only a quarter of the 24 investigations of a hunter’s killing a grizzly in self defense.
Jackson Hole News & Guide; October 7

 Wildlife Photography ©Jim Robertson

Wildlife Photography ©Jim Robertson

Texas game warden wounded while illegally hunting avoided felony charges, kept job

http://www.dallasnews.com/news/state/headlines/20150705-texas-game-warden-wounded-while-illegally-hunting-avoided-felony-charges-kept-job.ece

AUSTIN — A Texas Parks and Wildlife game warden who was illegally hunting when he was shot in 2013 was allowed to keep his job and face a fine rather than felony charges, according to a newspaper report Sunday.

Off-duty Game Warden Chris Fried was bow hunting without a permit when he was shot in December 2013. But he had also hunted without permits at least three times during the 2013-2014 license year, an investigation by the Austin American-Statesman found.

Instead of facing felony charges or dismissal upon his shooting, though, Fried got a ticket for about $800.

That’s because a Parks and Wildlife Department-led investigation found Fried transitioned “into a game warden law enforcement mode” just before he was shot. That let him file for workers’ compensation for the injury.

The state agency that issues workers’ compensation won’t say whether Fried received money. However, state rules say an insurance carrier isn’t liable for an injury suffered during off-duty recreational activity.

Two men from Illinois were charged in connection with Fried’s shooting, but their lawyers say it was an accident.

Parks and Wildlife Department spokesman Josh Havens said the agency “stands by the accuracy of its internal investigation.” He said Fried didn’t receive preferential treatment.

Fried disclosed his violation of hunting rules while still hospitalized and recovering from the shooting. Last fall, he got a reprimand from his Parks and Wildlife Department superiors.

In a response from last July to state inquiries about why he violated hunting rules, Fried wrote, “I have no excuses for my actions.” Among his hunting violations: killing a white-tailed buck on public land without a permit, which is punishable as a state jail felony.

Instead, authorities filed misdemeanor charges against Fried that resulted in a fine of $769.88. Havens said that’s consistent with how Texas typically prosecutes illegal hunting.

Over the past five years, there have been 10 charges filed for hunting on public lands without the proper permit that also involved the illegal taking of a deer. And all were misdemeanors that required restitution to be paid for the illegal harvest of dear.

State officials also eventually directed that Fried be suspended without pay for 30 days and be made ineligible for promotion or pay increases for two years. He also was banned from hunting on any Texas wildlife management area as long as he remains a Texas Parks and Wildlife employee. But the workers’ compensation wasn’t addressed.

This past January, Fried also was ordered to attend the ethics class at the game warden training academy as part of continuing discipline for his hunting violations.

Police reports say the shooting occurred when the men arrested were in the barn at a private ranch and one of them fired a rifle at a sign attached to the boundary fence separating the private property from the state wildlife management area. Just then, Fried was making his way through the woods.

The shooter, initially charged with a felony, eventually received two years of deferred adjudication, but only for damage to the fence. Other charges were dismissed, attorneys said.

The shooter’s friend still faces a misdemeanor charge of not reporting the accident.