Wow, that’s not racist or anything
It’s true, but I don’t think a political candidate should drop a Dunkin Donuts of 7-11 joke.
what’s racist about that?
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Wow, that’s not racist or anything
It’s true, but I don’t think a political candidate should drop a Dunkin Donuts of 7-11 joke.
what’s racist about that?
Continue reading…
Muslim protesters for independence from India have been growing louder since a land dispute erupted in June. Al Jazeera’s Clayton Swisher reports how demonstrations took a violent turn when security forces in Indian-administered Kashmir fired on protesters in the city of Srinigar.
It’s incredible to me sometimes that these stories rarely ever reach me on the idiot box.
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Absolutely no new drilling (even though EVERY other country in the world does it).
No new nuclear plants.
His answer to high gas prices is windfall profits tax. Whatever the fuck that is…sounds like something that will just result in higher prices at the pump.
….and now his most brilliant new solution to the energy problems yet!
Whats the best place to live? What kinds and levels of supplies should we be hoarding? Should I have a different vehicle that doesn’t run on gas?
Zombie survival crew could put some good input in here.
Well there’s nothing to survive. Unless you mean all the idiotic laws and regulations that will be enacted to fight a non-problem.
My God. China is so evil. That government is so bad. I can’t believe how people have sold there souls to the Chinese government.
I mean, what a great bunch of guys. They build the schools so substandard that they fall down in a quake where other shacks are left standing.
Then the government gives you permission to replace your lost valuables (under there one child policy) that you lost in the quake.
That is so fucking wrong.
But I think it paints a pretty accurate picture of how the Chinese government views there citizens. There citizens are commodities. Nothing else.
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By Alan Greenspan
Published: August 4 2008 18:54 | Last updated: August 4 2008 18:54
The surprise of recent months is not that global economic growth is slowing, but that there is any growth at all. The credit crunch of the past year has not followed the path of recent economically debilitating episodes characterised by a temporary freezing up of liquidity – 1982, 1989, 1997-8 come to mind. This crisis is different – a once or twice a century event deeply rooted in fears of insolvency of major financial institutions.
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