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LuckyTheDog

(6,837 posts)
Tue Mar 29, 2016, 12:00 PM Mar 2016

Why US drivers can thank ISIS for some potholes being filled

The recently refurbished tarmac at Maine’s busiest airport contains the usual mixture of gravel, water and chemical binder, but what gives this asphalt its jet-black color is crude oil supplied by the Islamic State group. The Portland International Jetport’s new pavement isn’t the only blacktop of its kind on American soil. Four hundred miles south, highways outside Philadelphia are lined with the same mixture, as are hundreds of potholes on the streets of New York City.

These are but a few of the many places where ISIS’ oil ends up as part of an illicit business that helps fund the group’s reign of terror. Part of what makes the Islamic State group so difficult to defeat is its diverse revenue stream. The Sunni militant group draws income from taxes it levies on the people in conquered lands, kidnapping ransoms and other forms of extortion. But it also makes money to fuel attacks like the ones in Brussels last week by selling a steady stream of oil that flows from ISIS-controlled territories in Iraq to the U.S., parts of Europe and Israel. It’s a constant source of money — as much as $1 million per day at its height — that U.S. and Iraqi officials have failed to halt.

In the aftermath of the Belgium attacks, U.S. President Barack Obama said his priority is defeating ISIS. “There’s no more important item on my agenda than going after them and defeating them. The issue is, how do we do it in an intelligent way,” Obama said at a press conference following the attack last Wednesday. But the U.S. administration, though it has pursued a strategy of striking ISIS’ oil supply centers and mobile refineries, has not choked off the group’s oil reserves completely. It has not hit the pipeline that the terrorist group uses to export its oil or the major roads that serve as trading routes.

MORE HERE: http://yonside.com/can-thank-isis-potholes-filled/





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Why US drivers can thank ISIS for some potholes being filled (Original Post) LuckyTheDog Mar 2016 OP
Then I'm proud to say that my small town doesn't support ISIS in the slightest Orrex Mar 2016 #1
That's what your local government would like to hear you say. 21st Century Poet Mar 2016 #2

21st Century Poet

(254 posts)
2. That's what your local government would like to hear you say.
Tue Mar 29, 2016, 12:50 PM
Mar 2016

Now there is an even bigger excuse for not filling those potholes: "We don't support ISIS".

That's something to think about during your bumpy rides around town. "Take that, ISIS, I'm enjoying the jiggles!"

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