Topic:
Cheating
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well asking if it's in the ,ale dna to cheat then that would put it in
any males dna if it's based on sexual gender, so in a roundabout way it would be safe to assume that it is meant as all men cheat. but surely we know that's not the case same as with female of the species. |
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Topic:
gonzales
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LOL
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Topic:
astrology=)
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Leo:
The energy and gravity and stars and alignments and all point towards downtown. 3rd street is what it’s all about. You gotta be on third street, around third street, anywhere down by third street. Your energy in the vicinity of third street is so ****ing powerful Just driving down third street you’re likely to meet someone or end up in some kind of lucky situation. If you actually get out of the car and walk up or down third street your chances of increasing your luck and energy will be greatly multiplied. For some reason the later at night you do this the better as well. Show up on third street in the middle of the night, 3:30 am. Bring sandwiches, soda and portable chairs. Pull up a seat. Kick it. Something good is going to happen. Something real good. You are safe from all harm this week. You can come up quick and easy just by hangin’ out on third street. You are so lucky. |
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Topic:
astrology=)
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THESE ARE FOR FUN ONLY
Gemini: It’s time to start paying more attention to your health. You may have some problems lurking under the surface that you are unaware of or have just plain pushed out of your head. It’s time to discover what’s really going on with your body. Visit your physician. Do a complete examination. This examination might reveal evidence that eases your mind, but more than likely you have a serious problem that truly needs to be addressed. Stop avoiding it. It’s not just going to go away because you don’t pay it any attention. Whatever the case things don’t look good. Spend as much time with your loved ones as you can, because you really never know when your time here on earth could be spontaneously cut short. Life’s crazy like that. With your level of health it’s even crazier. Tell everyone you love them. Now’s a good time to put your will in writing. Lose some weight to extend what time you do have and give yourself more energy. Sorry. It’s in the stars. Virgo: Most people don’t think about the little things, the details, like you do. Most people just cruise through life consuming and urinating and ****ting and eating and ****ing and working and dancing and listening to various musicians and watching television and movies occasionally and dancing and playing and visiting family and masturbating. But not you. You look at the deeper details, issues and workings of the world. That is why this week you will invent a new invention that could possibly revolutionize the world. Well, you’ll at least have the idea for a new invention that could revolutionize the world. It’ a up to you whether or not you actually take that idea and do something with it. Get a patent. Build a prototype. Make schematics and blueprints. It’s worth it. It is so worth it. You need to do this before your clarity on the topic fades. |
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Topic:
Teething???
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3 kids here and never had a big problem with thiswe used baby oragel
when necessary and it seemed to do the trick. |
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Topic:
Ads in the News...
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LOL
well with the popularity the internet has gained just in the past decade it's no wonder advertisers are turning to internet advertising. All websites cost money to operate and maintain, therefore most are going to require some sort of income generation to help foot the bill for it. You want convenience, you got it but at a price. I don't think a few pop ups now and then are too much but some websites go overboard. I believe that most people would look at ads embedded within a site over pop up ads. I could be wrong. |
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Topic:
Mate's secret spending
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there should be no secrets. what the money was spent on could be a total
lean to either direction, if she is buying you something and don't want you to know about it, that's awesome but if it's buying stuff for another man/men then hell I hope you don't need to ask. |
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Topic:
A Day of Death in Iraq
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A Day of Death
For every soldier or Marine who dies in Iraq, at least 20 Iraqis are killed. Some of their stories. By Rod Nordland and Babak Dehghanpisheh Newsweek April 2, 2007 issue - Describing Jalal Mustafa to a reporter, the first thing his family mentions is "that long love story of his." The young mechanic's dream was to wed his fiancée, Laila, and "have as many kids as they could." But running a small auto-repair shop, it took Mustafa a long time to save up enough for the wedding, let alone a house. On Feb. 4, he finally went to the courthouse to apply for a marriage license. As he was walking through the gates, a car pulled up next to the building. Before the vehicle came to a full stop, the driver detonated a suicide bomb. Four bystanders died, including Mustafa: burned over much of his body, a piece of shrapnel lodged in his head. The bombing didn't even make the news; it was an ordinary day in Baghdad. For each U.S. service member killed in Iraq, at least 20 Iraqis die violently. Feb. 4 was no exception. That day in Baghdad, roadside bombs killed four Iraqi policemen in one incident and two soldiers in another, and an Army colonel lost his life to assassins in the southern suburbs. But most of the day's 81 victims of violent deaths—about the usual daily toll this past winter—were civilians like Mustafa, the softest of soft targets. Forty-two of them were gunned down execution style, many of their corpses bearing signs of torture: hallmarks of Shia death squads. Most of the other deaths appeared to be the work of Sunni and Al Qaeda extremists. NEWSWEEK talked to the families of four of the Feb. 4 victims. Among them were a street vendor, a former TV journalist and a truck-parts dealer. Two were Shia, and two were Sunni. And in each case their families lost not only loved ones but breadwinners. None of their killers has been identified: Jawad Jasem, 44, was serving a customer at his pushcart outside the courthouse when the bomb exploded. The son of a poor Shia farmer, Jasem had wanted to be an engineer. When he was 18, family friends got him into the Air Force, where he earned good money working on jets—until the Army, desperate for infantrymen in the war with Iran, sent him to the front. He was wounded four times. He was not allowed to return to civilian life after the war, even though he had a wife and five children. "He used to tell everyone that the last day of his military service would be the happiest day of his life," says his younger brother, Kareem, a shopkeeper. "He said he'd celebrate with a great party in which he would make a feast for the entire city." It didn't turn out that way. His last day of duty was April 8, 2003, when U.S. troops entered Baghdad. Jawad was among thousands of Iraqi soldiers who stripped off their uniforms and fled. He started over, buying his pushcart and setting up in front of the courthouse. He built a good business. It was a predominantly Shia neighborhood, but the bomber killed members of both sects indiscriminately. "Evil has no eyes," says Kareem Jasem. "Jawad's shop had turned into just a big hole ... and his body was smashed into a wall." Abdul Salam, 47, was a pious Sunni who believed in sectarian harmony. The father of six, he had refused to join Saddam's Army, and worked instead in defense factories. After the invasion, he started a truck-parts business; he hired two Shia apprentices and set up shop in Al Yousifiyah, a mostly Sunni suburb. Driving home from work one night with his two assistants, Salam stopped at a police checkpoint. A van full of gunmen pulled up and abducted all three. Shia friends tried to intercede for Salam at the local Mahdi Army office, but on Feb. 4, Salam's corpse was found dumped in a field a few miles from his home, shot repeatedly in the head and chest. His Shia apprentices were freed. "He was beloved by his friends, colleagues and all of his neighbors, most of them Shiites," says Salam's brother, Naser Zaidan. "He used to say Islam is the unifier of Iraqis." For Suhad Shakir, 36, her new job was a dream come true. She had always wanted to work with Americans, and she loved helping people. Last September she quit her post as a journalist at state-owned TV and jumped at an opening with the Iraqi Assistance Center, a Coalition-run office in the Green Zone that works with U.S. and Iraqi agencies to provide social services. It seemed safer than reporting, and it paid better. On Feb. 4 she was on her way to work, waiting in the queue at a checkpoint near an entrance to the Green Zone which is often targeted by suicide bombers. Shakir was in the slow lane, for Iraqi cars that are subject to careful searches. A convoy of armored vehicles came roaring up and got stuck at the checkpoint. One of the bodyguards in the first vehicle threw a bottle of water at the driver in front of Shakir to signal him to move. The driver panicked and backed into Shakir's car. She tried to get out of the way but backed into the car behind her. Someone aboard the fourth vehicle in the convoy, seeing Shakir's sudden move, opened fire, hitting her once. The vehicle slowed and a goateed Westerner in khaki leaned out his window and shot her again in the face at close range. Then the convoy raced off into the Green Zone. Iraqi cops think Shakir's killer mistook her for a suicide bomber, but they say they're continuing to investigate. "It is very important I know why she is killed and who killed her," said Shakir's mother, Salima Kadhim, dressed in black a month after her daughter's death. Like many Iraqis, she still waits. |
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Topic:
Enemies
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Gary 2 pts. here, 1 some of the 9/11 highjackers met with saddam hussein
in a short period of time before 9/11.there was al qaeda in iraq and training facilities. whatever reason we went in the fact remains that they were there. 2. We met another hungarian on here too that was a very weird person. Are all hungarians this way? like you I mean. |
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Topic:
How much is missing?
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the bible also states to be wary of false prophets increasing in numbers
in the end times |
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Topic:
How much is missing?
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no man should add or take away from the bible, so I'd say it's not for
man to choose if genesis or anyother book were to be removed. |
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Topic:
Modern Day Slavery
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daniel who said anything about terrorism, it does state terroristic
threat, and that can be directed at one or more individuals. One person can be terrorized alone. In fact, Id bet almost anyone would be more terrorized all alone in a sitution like that than if there were others sharing the same grief and torture. |
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Topic:
And the WatchList Grows
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LOL
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Topic:
And the WatchList Grows
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Each day, thousands of pieces of intelligence information from around
the world -- field reports, captured documents, news from foreign allies and sometimes idle gossip -- arrive in a computer-filled office in McLean, where analysts feed them into the nation's central list of terrorists and terrorism suspects. Called TIDE, for Terrorist Identities Datamart Environment, the list is a storehouse for data about individuals that the intelligence community believes might harm the United States. It is the wellspring for watch lists distributed to airlines, law enforcement, border posts and U.S. consulates, created to close one of the key intelligence gaps revealed after Sept. 11, 2001: the failure of federal agencies to share what they knew about al-Qaeda operatives. Watch list sets low bar But in addressing one problem, TIDE has spawned others. Ballooning from fewer than 100,000 files in 2003 to about 435,000, the growing database threatens to overwhelm the people who manage it. "The single biggest worry that I have is long-term quality control," said Russ Travers, in charge of TIDE at the National Counterterrorism Center in McLean. "Where am I going to be, where is my successor going to be, five years down the road?" TIDE has also created concerns about secrecy, errors and privacy. The list marks the first time foreigners and U.S. citizens are combined in an intelligence database. The bar for inclusion is low, and once someone is on the list, it is virtually impossible to get off it. At any stage, the process can lead to "horror stories" of mixed-up names and unconfirmed information, Travers acknowledged. The watch lists fed by TIDE, used to monitor everyone entering the country or having even a casual encounter with federal, state and local law enforcement, have a higher bar. But they have become a source of irritation -- and potentially more serious consequences -- for many U.S. citizens and visitors. |
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Topic:
evolution vs creationism
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well if man evolved from primates what happened to the rest of the
primates we still have? Why did they not evolve? fitnessfanatic insects and viruses do not evolve, they mutate, there is a difference. They adapt, the bird flu virus does not change to become something else like aids. Insects don't turn into birds. THAT would be evolution. |
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Topic:
evolution vs creationism
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prussia who the hell is Darvin? at first I thought maybe it was a missed
key but w and v are not even close on the keyboard, so I assume you meant Darwin? |
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Topic:
terrorism
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statistic? No I hope not, I believe a change will come about soon
enough and as long as the draft is not enacted how can these boys be sent over there unless they so choose to join the military? |
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Topic:
police
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LOL
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Topic:
Enemies
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very well put Kristi. Yes we have always had enemies and we always will
no matter what we do. If Islam is the religion being spoke of as not having the same God we do, actually they do. |
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Topic:
Enemies
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satin? does that mean he's soft and elegant?
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