Showing posts with label Photos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Photos. Show all posts

Photos of Car Bomb Attack on French Embassy in Tripoli, Libya

April 23, 2013 - A car packed with explosives blew up in front of the French embassy in Tripoli, Libya just past 7:00 AM local time (5:00 AM GMT). Two embassy guards were injured. Here are some amazing photos taken moments after the blast by Ehab (Twitter @Eh4b10). Ehab tweeted this about the photos: "General Statement: if anyone wants to use the photos & to credit, thats fine." These were the first photos used by all of the major media in reporting the story. See our earlier post about the bombing.
Click images to enlarge them
Car bomb damages French embassy in Tripoli, Libya
The explosion burst water and sewage pipes. Source: @Eh4b10
Car bomb damages French embassy in Tripoli, Libya
No remains of the bomb car were left outside. Source: @Eh4b10
Car bomb damages French embassy in Tripoli, Libya
Waiting for firefighters at the French embassy. Source: @Eh4b10
Car bomb damages French embassy in Tripoli, Libya
Embassy staffer asses damage, attend to wounded. Source: @Eh4b10
Car bomb damages French embassy in Tripoli, Libya
Guard pulled from embassy on a make-shift stretcher. Source: @Eh4b10 
Car bomb damages French embassy in Tripoli, Libya
Bursting water and sewage pipes. Source: @Eh4b10 
Car bomb at French embassy in Tripoli, Libya damaged nearby homes
Nearby homes suffered heavy damage. Source: @Eh4b10

Exclusive: The Scene at Obama's Press Conference

CHICAGO, Nov. 8, 2008 (The Bench) - Barack Obama held a press conference at 1:30 p.m. yesterday (Friday, Nov. 7, 2008), his first since becoming the president-elect. The event was held in the Continental Ballroom of the Hilton Chicago at 720 South Michigan Avenue. The hotel is across the street from Grant Park, where on Tuesday night about 250,000 Obama supporters gathered on an unseasonably warm November evening to wait for the election results.

The Bench was there and presents exclusive photos of the scene, inside and outside of the Hilton Chicago. News media and excited Obama admirers waited patiently to catch a glimpse or get a photograph of Obama and his team. See the exclusive slide show here (or click on this link): The weather on Friday, in contrast, was chilly with scattered sleet and rain. Even with the more seasonal weather, however, the small size of the crowd that gathered outside of the Hilton to catch a glimpse of Obama was a surprise. The Bench estimates the crowd at approximately 250, scattered around the block that the hotel fully occupies. The few who were hanging around, however, were all smiles and excited to be there. It was a well-dressed crowd that seemed to be mostly under 40 years old, and nearly everybody had a camera. Some people had expensive, professional grade cameras. Most held up camera phones. Obama’s press conference started late. It was scheduled for 1:30 p.m., but did not get underway until about 1:50 p.m. Television crews outside were unhappy about it, but shrugged their shoulders. After all, Obama has a reputation for being late to Senate hearings and other meetings, so why not his first post-election press conference, too? (See: The Late Mister Obama ) The Hilton Chicago has a lot of history inside and outside of its walls. It has hosted presidents and dignitaries from around the world. During the 1968 Democrat Convention in Chicago, Hubert Humphrey stayed at the Conrad Hilton, as it was known then.

The violence that broke out in 1968 in Grant Park, across the street, overflowed onto the streets and surrounded the Hilton. There was, at that time, a street-level restaurant with large plate glass windows that gave a nice view of Michigan Avenue and Grant Park. During the rioting, however, the view just outside those windows was mayhem: Police beating rioters, rioters beating police, people going crazy and bent on destruction. At one point, rioters on the sidewalk crashed through the windows and into the restaurant. Back to the present, and another contrast: There were no protesters at the Hilton today, no broken windows, and very few police. A few days ago, Grant Park, the scene of violent anti-government protest 40 years ago, was the scene of peaceful submission to a pro-government cult of personality. Everybody was surprised when the press conference ended around 2:50 p.m. One or two local personalities exited the ballroom and walked into the crowd. Mary Mitchell, a local race-baiting columnist for the Chicago Sun-Times, pauses to coo over somebody’s baby. The real VIPs, of course, left via another, more secure portal. I took a few photos of the crowd, then left the building. Walking along the north side of the hotel, on E. Balbo, I tried to find another angle from which to take photos. I heard a sudden outburst of loud – very loud – cheering. A woman with a camera walked near me. She heard the cheering too. “He’s here!” she said, and we both broke into a run toward East 8th Street, on the south side of the hotel. We got to the corner of E. 8th and just in time. Obama’s motorcade drove by, slower than one might expect. Security was lax at the hotel, and was even more lax as the vehicles drove between two columns of onlookers. The Chicago police officers were not numerous, and Secret Service was less so. The cars were literally inches from over a hundred people. No barricade, no line of security people, nothing in the way of security between us and Them. Note to Secret Service: Get with the program. Note to CPD Commander Jody Weis: Get with the program. Had there been a lunatic with a grenade or a .50 caliber rifle under a long trench coat, nobody would have known until it was too late.

Unlike millions of Democrats who still openly wish death on President Bush, I wish no harm to Barack Obama. And so, I hope that his security will be beefed up at future events. The last thing we need is another tragedy - JFK's assassination produced no riots. God forbid, if something happened to President Obama there would be blood in the streets of every large city in the US.

People ran alongside the motorcade vehicles, snapping pictures. After most of the motorcade had passed, one CPD officer seemed (finally) to realize how bad the security situation was. He ran down the street, ready to keep people back and away from the high-carbon footprint vehicles. After running about 20 feet, however, he realized how futile his effort was. He stopped, stared for a moment at the potential security disaster, shook his head, and walked onto the sidewalk. A young man cheerfully said to the officer, “Hey man, you running like that, you’re like a Secret Service agent.” I couldn’t help thinking that, no, that lone cop is better than the Secret Service. The Secret Service agents should be more like that cop, and Commander Weis should take note. I wonder if any of Obama’s people noticed how poorly they were being “protected.” Directly across from the Continental Ballroom, where Obama held his first press conference since being elected President of the United States, is a humble shoe shine stand (photo). The contrast and the significance was not lost on me. Behind me, our first Black president addressed the world. In front of me, as I took a photo of it, was a symbol of the Old Days. Not that shoe shines are passé, mind you, but that so many young black men have for so long operated shoe shine stand just like this one because they had no other opportunity. Barack Obama did not change that; he’s not officially the president until he is sworn to office in January. Democrat Lyndon Johnson and the Republicans in the Congress shoved through the Civil Rights Act in spite of the Congressional Democrats’ objections at the time. Today, young black men have many choices other than shining shoes. I did not support Obama in the election. It had nothing to do with race. It had everything to do with his ideology. Nevertheless, I do appreciate the symbolism of a Black person being elected to the presidency, even if I do not rejoice in a neo-Marxist taking the Oval Office. I hope, I truly hope, that the child of the man who operates that shoe shine stand in the Hilton will grow up knowing that – as Republicans are so fond of saying – anybody can become anything they want in this nation, with hard work and the right approach.

I also hope that when that man’s child is grown up, the same respect for the concepts of individualism and personal freedom that made it possible for Obama to achieve what he has still exists. Ironically, Obama’s ascension to power, along with a Congress controlled by a Democrat Party dominated by the far Left, threatens to smother those concepts.

EXCLUSIVE PHOTO: SALMAN IBRAHIM, SUNRISE EQUITIES CEO

EXCLUSIVE PHOTO: The Bench referred to a photo of Salman Ibrahim in our recent post, "Obama's Connections to Sunrise Equities, Part Two." It is the story of the collapse of Sunrise Equities. In August, 2008 the company mysteriously closed its doors. Phone calls went unanswered. Ibrahim and other officers vanished, apparently with $80 million of investors' funds. In Part Two, we said that we had photos of that event, which indeed we do, and that we were withholdin them due to legal concerns. The Bench has decided to post part of one of those photos, showing Ibrahim's face as he peers over the shoulder of Alderman Joe Moore (49th Ward, Chicago) during a ribbon cutting ceremony for the free office space given to Barack Obama's 2004 US Senate race. As far as we can determine, this is the only photo of Ibrahim to be posted on a public web site ever. If you see Ibrahim, call the FBI. This photo has been added to "Obama's Connections to Sunrise Equities, Part Two."

Photo Bucket

From top to bottom:

Top: Crabs in a Chinese restaurant window on W. Argyle in Chicago's "Little Chinatown" on the north side.

Middle: The failed Westgard Canal Project, designed to drain a large puddle last year in Chicago's Rogers Park neighborhood at W. Lunt Avenue and the beach. The puddle was as large as ever on May 4th.

Bottom: Beautiful tulips in the 1300 block of W. Granville in Chicago's Edgewater neighborhood.

Photos copyright 2008 t.h.mannis. All rights reserved.

Spring Cleaning

A man washes a brick wall on N. Glenwood in Rogers Park, Chicago on May 6, 2008.

Photo copyright 2008 t.h.mannis

Dreaming on Loyola Park Beach

A nice photo by friend George.

Dreaming on Loyola Park Beach, northern Chicago, Illinois.

Challenge: Find This Medallion

George sent us this photo challenge: Find this clover-shaped medallion that is embedded in cement somewhere between the Common Cup at Morse and Greenview and Lake Michigan. (Click for larger image)

March, Out Like a Lion

At Wilson CTA Red Line station in Chicago's Uptown neighborhood, 5:08 p.m. today. The wind and sloppy snow were blowing hard across Chicago.

Morons on Wheels

Photo taken Sunday afternoon, March 16 on Morse Avenue, Rogers Park, Chicago.
This is an all too common site.
Young imbeciles leave their bikes strewn on the sidewalks, creating a hazard for pedestrians.
What kind of assholes are the parents of these little pukes?

Nosy Fellow

Jack Russell terrier
Loyola Park
March 17, 2008

Hanging Around


A window washer does his thing in Chicago's "Loop." Photo taken last week at State and Wacker.

Only In Rogers Park

A mail box on the beach?

Situated on the sands of Loyola Park in Rogers Park, Chicago, some good samaritans keep this former mail box stocked with plastic bags to be used by dog owners. I don't think I need to go into further detail.

Click to see larger image; the scribbles on the mailbox are amusing.

Favorite Photos of 2007, Part 2

As promised, here is Part 2 of The Bench's favorite photos of 2007. The Bench took over 22,000 photos in 2007 (seriously!). Enjoy the slideshow below (92 photos!) or click here to go to the online album. (Also see Part 1 here.)

Photos: Bush in Chicago 01-07-08

President Bush addressed a Chicago lunch crowd of approximately 100 local business people. He arrived a the Union League Club, just off of Dearborn and Jackson in the Loop. He arrived around 10:30 a.m. and left around 1:30 p.m. The protesters were there, but far fewer than one would expect.

Many weren't even protesters; a lot of signs were for Ron Paul. Many of the usual nut cases were in attendance, and dozens were carted off by the Evil Fascist Dictator Bush's Gestapo, then taken away to secret concentration camps. It was a shame to see these people's civil rights and freedom of speech so horribly crushed. You haven't heard about it because Bush controls all of the media. Except for me, of course. He likes me.














Favorite Photos of 2007, Part 1

2007 FAVE BENCH PHOTOS

Yep, it was quite a year. The Bench took over 22,000 photos in 2007 (seriously!), so going through these has been both pain in the butt - and a labor of love. Yes, Dear Reader, I love you, and to prove it you can click on the little picture above. You will be magically whisked to an online album. There, you can stare at the photos, and even download them. Plus, there's a groovy slide show below! Also see Part 2.