He is lucky to be alive because he should have been blown out of the air, and very well could have been,” Chaffetz, R-Utah, said. “If it was up to me, I would have taken care of the problem
The pilot of the gyrocopter that landed last week on the West Lawn at the U.S. Capitol “should have been blown out of the air,” House Oversight and Government Reform Chairman Jason Chaffetz said today , adding that Doug Hughes is “lucky to be alive” after pulling off the wild stunt.
It is no secret that Google is a massive brand, expanded into countless things. Google always finds a way to make our day entertaining, whether it be from their inspirational logos on their main website, to their small games they include on Google Maps, such as Pac-Man.
When Google decided to send out camera’s around the world to enable the use of ‘Street view’ technology, they managed to find some hilarious, bizarre, shocking and at times even revolting images. Here is a list of 20 candid pictures we would have never been privileged to if it wasn’t for Google.
We have all seen the ‘Seagull coming in for a landing’, but this image captured a massive flock of seagull, probably preparing a white wash for those unsuspecting parked vehicles below.
Jeb Bush, the son of one president and the brother of another, is almost certainly going to pursue a White House bid of his own in 2016. But he wants voters to know one thing: He's his own man.
"I love my brother. I love my dad," Bush told the Chicago Council on Global Affairs in February. "I admire their service to the nation and the difficult decisions they had to make. But I'm my own man and my views are shaped by my own thinking and my own experiences."
But that hasn't stopped the steady stream of questions he fields from reporters and voters alike. They usually go something like this: How are you different from your father and brother?
In New Hampshire last weekend, Bush noted the challenge of differentiating himself to voters, even joking he'd have to prove he wasn't running to "break the tie" between the Bush and Adams family. (Those families, along with the Roosevelts, boast two presidents apiece.)