This 11th-Gen Kindle Paperwhite Is Under $100 Right Now
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For folks who read often or want a travel-friendly refurbished e-reader
that won’t mind a splash.
5 hours ago
discoveries from the internets and some stuff I wrote too
the video isn't quite as lecherous - for Obama at least - sarkozy is another story...
Economy May Force Politicians to Have Sex with Their Own Wives
http://www.instructables.com/id/VERTICAL-VEGETABLES-quotGrow-upquot-in-a-smal/
Abjeez is an Iranian music band based in the Swedish town Östersund. Perhaps "world pop" best describes Abjeez music. The Abjeez unique sound is influenced by wide mixture of styles like Reggae, Flamenco, SKA, Rock and Latino mastered to its' own description of original melody and songs. The lyrics are in Persian.
Its lead singers are sisters Safoura and Melody Safavi.
i try to avoid the gazillion cute animal videos on youtube but this one made me smile enough to repost here:
a teen horror flick with the Transformer's chick and Amy Sedaris, Looks cheesy/fun enough for me to maybe see:
Tthirteen-year-old reviews the walkman 30 years late:
So, once upon a time I was a great admirer of Ronald Reagan.
It was around 7th or 8th grade when Mondale was running against him. At this point in time almost every American was an admirer of Reagan - he won EVERY SINGLE STATE - even commie Vermont! - except for Mondale's home state, that radical bastion of corn and dairy farmers called "Minnesota." Reagan won 49 states to 1.
I remember the night watching it on TV and it will certainly be the ultimate definition of a landslide for the rest of US history. (In my middle school we had one of those "mock" elections at lunch time. At the end of the day they announced the votes over the loudspeaker system - I don't remember how many people had voted for Reagan but I will always remember how many voted for Mondale - 1! When a candidate wins 50 - 0, call Iran okay, because only they can explain that. It wasn't me who voted for Mondale and I wonder how those results might have scarred that poor lone voter for life!
Somewhere around Bush I vs Clinton I, I began to change my mind. Yes, free markets are a wonder, but there has never been a 100% free market that has ever survived the test of time - if you want a 100% free market try Somalia or parts of Afghanistan, without regulation there is no freedom, I'm sorry. One can be free to sell and trade and pollute and rape and murder and pillage as much as one wants in Somalia at the moment but how does that equal freedom for those who are the subjects of the grain monopolies, the murderers and the gangs of rapists who call themselves militias? Without protection from abuse at least half, if not the great majority become the subjects of the inscrupulous and immoral few. This is why I am not an Anarchist.Anarchy exists, if you want to try it out immigrate to Somalia or the south of Afganistan or the north of Pakistan... any takers? I thought not.
As the 80s moved into the 90s we all began to see what massive and careless deregulation had wrought. What "free trade" without any conditions had brought about. Detroit crumbled before our eyes. Nearly every manufacturing job in America moved overseas. It is a downright challenge to find something, anything in Walmart that is made in America. Not even Walmart but try HomeDepot, or better yet, try your local Ford, GM, or Chevy dealer - try to find the vehicle made with 100% American labor - sorry charlie, it doesn't exist.
A funny thing about the so called "conservative movement" as it exists today - it almost always looks back at the 1950s as America's Golden Age. Orderly, simple, friendly, moral. Guess what the tax rate for the top earners in America was in the 1950s? 91% for anyone making over 400,000 dollars per year. Talk about "socialism!" Know what it is after Reagan and Bush "restored" us to the bygone "values" of the 50s? 35%, and still Joe the Plumber whines and whines. For even more enlightening statistics complete with color charts and graphs check out this site: http://www.stanford.edu/class/polisci120a/immigration/Federal%20Tax%20Brackets.pdf. Now, tell me how much you want to go back to the 1950s?
OK, some may say, but that wasn't the golden age after all. The 1950s were after FDR and his new deal brought socialism, however weak or strong, to our shores. The Real golden age was the time of the revolution and the founding fathers!
Lets pick 1790 as the specific date for this golden age. Most all of the founding fathers were still alive and many were now politicians.
Federal debt in 1790, which was $75 million! - and increase it at a compound interest rate of 5.8 percent. The results will match almost exactly actual total public and private debt for the years from 1916 to 1976 - the only years for which the Federal government has published complete data.
The whole gist of her resignation speech - (video) - ("It's energy... God gave us energy.") was that the media picked on her too much. She even said the media had made fun of Down Syndrome Trig - if you can find me ANY examples of that from the mainstream media I will post them below.
The complete text, as posted on Gov. Palin's official website (here), uses 2,549 words and 18 exclamation points. As one blogger on huffpost pointed out: Mr. Jefferson declared our independence in 1,322 words and, again, no exclamation points. Nixon resigned the presidency in 1,796 words
Come on, can anyone says that she's GW Bush minus the secondary male sex characteristics? If she wasn't a sexy cougarmilf in the minds/privatefantasylives of half of the GOP out there would anybody even be listening to her at all at this point?
I know we all have a very short political memory but it was Palin who once tried to attack Hillary for "whining about the media." How our words can come back to haunt us when we are no longer able to take in new information and process it without pre-judice. I would submit that may be the very definition of fundamentalism - the inability to take in new information and process it objectively? Any takers on that definition?
Politics are dirty; it swallows you down and throws you up brain washed
Behind every person, there is a hidden reason
I wanted to go live on a mountaintop, staying away from politics
But I couldn't, because it is so hard to accept what they do...
...I call Iran home because no matter how long I live in France, and despite the fact that I feel also French after all these years, to me the word “home” has only one meaning: Iran.
I suppose it’s that way for everyone: Home is the place where one is born and raised.
No matter how much I am in love with Paris and its indescribable beauty, Tehran with all its ugliness will in my eyes forever be the “bride” of all cities around the world.
It’s a question of geography, of the smell of the rain, of the things we know without ever having to think why we know them. It’s a question of the Alborz Mountains protecting my town. Where are they? Who will protect me now? It’s a question of the unbearable smell of pollution, a smell I know so well. It’s a question of knowing that the blue of the sky is not the same everywhere, nor does the sun shine the same way in every place. It’s a question of wanting to be able to walk under my own blue sky, of wanting my own sunshine to caress my back....
18 days ago, June 12, 2009, something happened, something I never believed I would see in my lifetime: Iranians, crowding into an extremely tiny space of democracy, usually left just large enough for them to vote for a president whom the Guardian Council had already approved, truly voted. The question much of the media asked before the election was: “Are Iranians ready for democracy?” “YES!” came the answer, loud and oh, so clear.
With a voter turnout of 85 percent, they started to dream that change was possible.
They started to believe “Yes we can,” too. It’s likely needless to remind you that this was not the first time Iranians showed how much they love freedom. Look only at the 20th century: They launched the Constitutional Revolution of 1906 (the first in Asia); nationalized the oil industry in 1951 (the first Middle Eastern country to do so); mounted the revolution of 1979; and engineered the student revolt of 1999. Which brings us to now, and that deafening cry for democracy.
Almost 20 years ago, when I started studying art in Tehran, the very idea of “politics” was so frightening that we didn’t even dare think about it. To talk about it? Beyond belief!
To demonstrate in the streets against the president? Surreal!
Criticize the supreme leader? Apocalyptic!
Shouting “Down with Khamenei”? Death!
Death, torture and prison are part of daily life for the youth of Iran. They are not like us, my friends and I at their age; they are not scared. They are not what we were.
They hold hands and scream: “Don’t be afraid! Don’t be afraid! We are together!”
They understand that no one will give them their rights; they must go get them...
This generation, with its hopes, dreams, anger and revolt, has forever changed the course of history. Nothing is going to be the same.
From now on, nobody will judge Iranians by their so-called elected president. From now on, Iranians are fearless. They have regained their self-confidence. Despite all the dangers they said NO! And I’m convinced this is just the beginning....
Top clerical group defies Supreme Leader, calls government illegitimate. This is very significant.
The most important group of religious leaders in Iran has called the disputed presidential election and the new government illegitimate, an act of defiance against the country's supreme leader and the most public sign of a major split in the country's clerical establishment
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