Thursday, December 31, 2009
Embark on a journey into the dark heart of the American judicial system
bush was a bastard in disguise you know! XD
Wednesday, December 30, 2009
Tuesday, December 29, 2009
Monday, December 28, 2009
Sunday, December 27, 2009
Saturday, December 26, 2009
There is a reason I posted this article here that I`ll mention later
Charlie Sheen arrested in domestic dispute, police sayDecember 25, 2009 11:08 p.m. EST
Actor Charlie Sheen stars in the TV show "Two and a Half Men."STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Actor charged with several offenses with a domestic violence component, police say
Aspen, Colorado, police say alleged victim was not taken to hospital
Sheen has been married to Brooke Allen since May; they have twins
Charlie Sheen
Domestic Violence
(CNN) -- Actor Charlie Sheen was released from a Colorado jail Friday after he was arrested on domestic-violence-related charges, Aspen police said.
Sheen, 44, was charged with second degree assault and menacing, both felonies, and criminal mischief, a misdemeanor, police said. Additionally, Colorado law mandates a protective order between someone arrested for domestic violence and the victim.
Police said the alleged victim, whom they did not identify, did not require a trip to a hospital.
Sheen was released from the Pitkin County Jail at 7 p.m. local time after posting $8,500 bond. He is scheduled to appear in court February 8.
His spokesman, Stan Rosenfield, cautioned against jumping to conclusions.
"Do not be misled by appearance," Rosenfield said. "Appearance and reality can be as different as night and day."
Sheen has been married to sometime actress and real estate investor Brooke Mueller Sheen, his third wife, since May 2008. The couple has twin sons born in March.
Sheen -- whose real name is Carlos Irwin Estevez -- is the son of actor Martin Sheen. He has two brothers and a sister -- Emilio, Ramon and Renee Estevez -- who are also actors.
Actor Charlie Sheen stars in the TV show "Two and a Half Men."STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Actor charged with several offenses with a domestic violence component, police say
Aspen, Colorado, police say alleged victim was not taken to hospital
Sheen has been married to Brooke Allen since May; they have twins
Charlie Sheen
Domestic Violence
(CNN) -- Actor Charlie Sheen was released from a Colorado jail Friday after he was arrested on domestic-violence-related charges, Aspen police said.
Sheen, 44, was charged with second degree assault and menacing, both felonies, and criminal mischief, a misdemeanor, police said. Additionally, Colorado law mandates a protective order between someone arrested for domestic violence and the victim.
Police said the alleged victim, whom they did not identify, did not require a trip to a hospital.
Sheen was released from the Pitkin County Jail at 7 p.m. local time after posting $8,500 bond. He is scheduled to appear in court February 8.
His spokesman, Stan Rosenfield, cautioned against jumping to conclusions.
"Do not be misled by appearance," Rosenfield said. "Appearance and reality can be as different as night and day."
Sheen has been married to sometime actress and real estate investor Brooke Mueller Sheen, his third wife, since May 2008. The couple has twin sons born in March.
Sheen -- whose real name is Carlos Irwin Estevez -- is the son of actor Martin Sheen. He has two brothers and a sister -- Emilio, Ramon and Renee Estevez -- who are also actors.
Friday, December 25, 2009
Thursday, December 24, 2009
Wednesday, December 23, 2009
Challenge the bull-shit!
Havana, Cuba (CNN) -- The United States is out to destabilize Cuba, President Raul Castro charged Sunday in an address to the National Assembly.
The accusation comes on the heels of the island nation's recent detention of an American who is said to have distributed communications equipment to Cuban dissidents.
"The U.S. government has not renounced its goal of destroying the revolution," Castro said. "The enemy is as active as always. Proof of that is the detention, in the last few days, of an American citizen."
The U.S. State Department announced the detention a week ago, but declined to provide details.
"I don't want to comment on any of the details as to what he may or may not have been doing, simply because we don't want to -- we don't want to cause any harm, frankly," said State Department spokesman Ian Kelly.
The detained American is a subcontractor for Maryland-based Development Alternatives Inc., an economic development organization, the company's chief said. The man, who hasn't been publicly identified, was arrested by Cuban officials on December 5.
The American was involved in a new USAID program aimed at helping the U.S. government "implement activities in support of the rule of law and human rights, political competition, and consensus building, and to strengthen civil society in support of just and democratic governance in Cuba," DAI President and CEO Jim Boomgard said a week after the arrest.
DAI was awarded the USAID contract, called the Cuba Democracy and Contingency Planning Program, in 2008.
The U.S. Interests Section in Havana has requested to meet with the American as soon as possible, the State Department said in a statement. As of Sunday, U.S. officials said they haven't been granted access.
In his speech, Castro said the man was distributing "sophisticated satellite communications equipment" to dissidents, which he said shows the Obama administration is bent on regime change.
The president also accused Washington of organizing protests to make it appear that the communist-run island is cracking down on opposition.
Last week, a couple hundred government supporters surrounded a group of protesters on a silent march to commemorate International Human Rights Day.
"Fidel, Fidel," they chanted, invoking the name of former Cuban leader Fidel Castro.
Their target was Las Damas de Blanco or Women in White -- the mothers, sisters and friends of jailed dissidents.
Castro issued a warning for dissidents in Sunday's address.
"I will simply remind you here, that there is a people willing to protect, at any price, the conquests of the Revolution," Castro said. "I advise these and others to stop provocations of all kind."
When Barack Obama was elected U.S. president, Castro indicated he would take a wait-and-see approach with the new government to see if there were any changes from past administration.
Not seeing any changes to his liking, Castro has declared the honeymoon period over.
At a recent summit of leftist Latin American leaders, Castro warned that old frictions with Washington will not disappear.
"The times we live in reflect that in Latin America and the Caribbean the confrontation between historic forces is getting worse," he said.
We recommendFidel Castro: U.S. is on offensive
Subcontractor for U.S. company detained in Cuba
Protesters mark Human Rights Day in Cuba
The accusation comes on the heels of the island nation's recent detention of an American who is said to have distributed communications equipment to Cuban dissidents.
"The U.S. government has not renounced its goal of destroying the revolution," Castro said. "The enemy is as active as always. Proof of that is the detention, in the last few days, of an American citizen."
The U.S. State Department announced the detention a week ago, but declined to provide details.
"I don't want to comment on any of the details as to what he may or may not have been doing, simply because we don't want to -- we don't want to cause any harm, frankly," said State Department spokesman Ian Kelly.
The detained American is a subcontractor for Maryland-based Development Alternatives Inc., an economic development organization, the company's chief said. The man, who hasn't been publicly identified, was arrested by Cuban officials on December 5.
The American was involved in a new USAID program aimed at helping the U.S. government "implement activities in support of the rule of law and human rights, political competition, and consensus building, and to strengthen civil society in support of just and democratic governance in Cuba," DAI President and CEO Jim Boomgard said a week after the arrest.
DAI was awarded the USAID contract, called the Cuba Democracy and Contingency Planning Program, in 2008.
The U.S. Interests Section in Havana has requested to meet with the American as soon as possible, the State Department said in a statement. As of Sunday, U.S. officials said they haven't been granted access.
In his speech, Castro said the man was distributing "sophisticated satellite communications equipment" to dissidents, which he said shows the Obama administration is bent on regime change.
The president also accused Washington of organizing protests to make it appear that the communist-run island is cracking down on opposition.
Last week, a couple hundred government supporters surrounded a group of protesters on a silent march to commemorate International Human Rights Day.
"Fidel, Fidel," they chanted, invoking the name of former Cuban leader Fidel Castro.
Their target was Las Damas de Blanco or Women in White -- the mothers, sisters and friends of jailed dissidents.
Castro issued a warning for dissidents in Sunday's address.
"I will simply remind you here, that there is a people willing to protect, at any price, the conquests of the Revolution," Castro said. "I advise these and others to stop provocations of all kind."
When Barack Obama was elected U.S. president, Castro indicated he would take a wait-and-see approach with the new government to see if there were any changes from past administration.
Not seeing any changes to his liking, Castro has declared the honeymoon period over.
At a recent summit of leftist Latin American leaders, Castro warned that old frictions with Washington will not disappear.
"The times we live in reflect that in Latin America and the Caribbean the confrontation between historic forces is getting worse," he said.
We recommendFidel Castro: U.S. is on offensive
Subcontractor for U.S. company detained in Cuba
Protesters mark Human Rights Day in Cuba
Tuesday, December 22, 2009
Monday, December 21, 2009
Jump jim crow crap continues
...but where are the dark skinned blacks at in leading the way,is in positions of power and authority,huh?
Saturday, December 19, 2009
Thursday, December 17, 2009
Wednesday, December 16, 2009
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
Monday, December 14, 2009
Sunday, December 13, 2009
Stop having "sex"!
really,it`s not that hard,that is unless you are a worm type freak brainwashed person,or unless that`s what you need to validate yourself as whatever you think you are!XD
We teach violence in the u.s.--a culture of violence that is glorified too!
because of the idiot predominate culture of the self-righteous country
Friday, December 11, 2009
Stop blaming Obama for the "f`ed" up economy
He inherited an economy that was in total free-fall,said democratic representative Chris Van Hollen of the state of Maryland
Thursday, December 10, 2009
How is Obama being viewed in Europe?
Oakley: Obama doesn't have to worry yet about his popularity in Europe
Robin Oakley is a political analyst and former political correspondent for CNN and the BBC.
London, England (CNN) -- Few American presidents have been greeted with the enthusiasm Europe demonstrated for Barack Obama on his election. In part, it was a reaction against his predecessor -- George W. was never loved in the EU -- but there was also the feeling that Obama was a genuine multilateralist.
Europeans, who welcomed Obama as the candidate of change, didn't expect him to agree with them on everything, but they believed that he would at least listen to them.
So now that the showroom gloss is beginning to wear off Obama at home, now that U.S. poll respondents are indicating that the first dents and scratches are visible in the previously gleaming bodywork, how is he being seen between Ljubljana and Lisbon?
In Europe's capitals, as in many places, there was something of a gulp when the Nobel Peace Prize was announced, a feeling that it was being bestowed in hope of what was to come rather than in recognition of what had been achieved.
That said, Obama remains far more popular personally than Bush, whose Iraq war adventure with the eager assistance of British Prime Minister Tony Blair led to splits among Europe's leaders. On the diplomatic circuit, the movers and shakers will still fight for invitations whenever the president swings through European cities.
On the plus side, there was a big welcome, except perhaps among some of the Eastern European states, when the president scrapped the missile defense plans with installations in Poland and the Czech Republic, indicating that he wanted to talk to Moscow rather than lob bricks over their neighbor's wall.
Europeans, who don't possess America's military might and who nearly always, in Winston Churchill's words, prefer "jaw, jaw to war, war," also welcomed Obama's early overture to Iran indicating that if Teheran would unclench its fist, then America was ready to extend its
hand.
After the strong influence the climate change deniers appeared to have with the previous administration, Europeans were especially pleased that Obama said he would come to the climate summit in Copenhagen, Denmark. They were impressed with the way he helped to broker a deal at the G20 summit in London in April, something he managed to do without throwing his weight around.
It is a measure of the president's continued pulling power that the Europeans, who have seemingly grudged every extra pair of boots the NATO secretary general has persuaded them to dispatch up until now, are to stump up around 7,000 additional troops for the war in Afghanistan alongside the 30,000 more committed by a president who has now more than doubled the U.S. contingent there.
But while Europe's diplomats and politicians know that the president, too, has to strike political balances, and while they recognize that shared values across the Atlantic won't always mean shared interests, a few niggles are creeping in.
Robin Oakley is a political analyst and former political correspondent for CNN and the BBC.
London, England (CNN) -- Few American presidents have been greeted with the enthusiasm Europe demonstrated for Barack Obama on his election. In part, it was a reaction against his predecessor -- George W. was never loved in the EU -- but there was also the feeling that Obama was a genuine multilateralist.
Europeans, who welcomed Obama as the candidate of change, didn't expect him to agree with them on everything, but they believed that he would at least listen to them.
So now that the showroom gloss is beginning to wear off Obama at home, now that U.S. poll respondents are indicating that the first dents and scratches are visible in the previously gleaming bodywork, how is he being seen between Ljubljana and Lisbon?
In Europe's capitals, as in many places, there was something of a gulp when the Nobel Peace Prize was announced, a feeling that it was being bestowed in hope of what was to come rather than in recognition of what had been achieved.
That said, Obama remains far more popular personally than Bush, whose Iraq war adventure with the eager assistance of British Prime Minister Tony Blair led to splits among Europe's leaders. On the diplomatic circuit, the movers and shakers will still fight for invitations whenever the president swings through European cities.
On the plus side, there was a big welcome, except perhaps among some of the Eastern European states, when the president scrapped the missile defense plans with installations in Poland and the Czech Republic, indicating that he wanted to talk to Moscow rather than lob bricks over their neighbor's wall.
Europeans, who don't possess America's military might and who nearly always, in Winston Churchill's words, prefer "jaw, jaw to war, war," also welcomed Obama's early overture to Iran indicating that if Teheran would unclench its fist, then America was ready to extend its
hand.
After the strong influence the climate change deniers appeared to have with the previous administration, Europeans were especially pleased that Obama said he would come to the climate summit in Copenhagen, Denmark. They were impressed with the way he helped to broker a deal at the G20 summit in London in April, something he managed to do without throwing his weight around.
It is a measure of the president's continued pulling power that the Europeans, who have seemingly grudged every extra pair of boots the NATO secretary general has persuaded them to dispatch up until now, are to stump up around 7,000 additional troops for the war in Afghanistan alongside the 30,000 more committed by a president who has now more than doubled the U.S. contingent there.
But while Europe's diplomats and politicians know that the president, too, has to strike political balances, and while they recognize that shared values across the Atlantic won't always mean shared interests, a few niggles are creeping in.
Wednesday, December 9, 2009
Tuesday, December 8, 2009
Remember Fred Hampton -and others like him
Last Friday, December 4th,40 years ago,was the anniversary of the "murder" of Fred Hampton.This was carried out by the liars of racist police in chicago illinois.
This murder has been well documented,and can be found on google search.Check it out and see for yourself.
Why do we bring this up and mention it,,,the past is a predictor to the future,,,connect the dots.
This murder has been well documented,and can be found on google search.Check it out and see for yourself.
Why do we bring this up and mention it,,,the past is a predictor to the future,,,connect the dots.
Sunday, December 6, 2009
Friday, December 4, 2009
Climate change blame
Who's to blame is another contentious topic.
Residents of the industrialized world could be considered liable for the climate refugee problem, since they produce the bulk of the greenhouse gas emissions that alter the climate. Some say the government is responsible. Others say it's difficult to prove with absolute certainty that a problem in any single community was caused by climate change because other factors, like land use and natural erosion, could be at play.
The climate refugee problem gets all the more complicated when considered on a global scale. The Environmental Justice Foundation estimates that unchecked climate change will force 150 million people from their homes by mid-century.
Residents of the industrialized world could be considered liable for the climate refugee problem, since they produce the bulk of the greenhouse gas emissions that alter the climate. Some say the government is responsible. Others say it's difficult to prove with absolute certainty that a problem in any single community was caused by climate change because other factors, like land use and natural erosion, could be at play.
The climate refugee problem gets all the more complicated when considered on a global scale. The Environmental Justice Foundation estimates that unchecked climate change will force 150 million people from their homes by mid-century.
Thursday, December 3, 2009
Wednesday, December 2, 2009
Tuesday, December 1, 2009
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