Author Topic: News of the Weird  (Read 59451 times)

tyzack

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News of the Weird
« Reply #465 on: March 23, 2009, 09:01:31 am »
Quote from: SlimPickens;223762
this is kinda crazy:

http://action.workingfamiliesparty.org/t/4020/petition.jsp?petition_KEY=551


Quote

Never mind, too, that such punitive laws were expressly deplored by America\'s Founders. In Federalist 44, James Madison warned that "Bills of attainder, ex post facto laws, and laws impairing the obligation of contracts, are contrary to the first principles of the social compact, and to every principle of sound legislation."

In 1827 in Ogden v. Saunders, the U.S. Supreme Court issued a similar warning about legislative limits under Article I, Section 10 of the Constitution: "The states are forbidden to pass any bill of attainder or ex post facto law, by which a man shall be punished criminally or penally by loss of life of his liberty, property, or reputation for an act which, at the time of its commission, violated no existing law of the land," wrote Justice Bushrod Washington.

"Why did the authors of the Constitution turn their attention to this subject, which, at the first blush, would appear to be peculiarly fit to be left to the discretion of those who have the police and good government of the state under their management and control? The only answer to be given is because laws of this character are oppressive, unjust, and tyrannical, and as such are condemned by the universal sentence of civilized man."



Rest of the opinion:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123776465612908965.html
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FrankZappa

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« Reply #466 on: March 23, 2009, 09:12:14 am »
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March 23, 1839 : OK enters national vernacular

On this day in 1839, the initials "O.K." are first published in The Boston Morning Post. Meant as an abbreviation for "oll correct," a popular slang misspelling of "all correct" at the time, OK steadily made its way into the everyday speech of Americans.

During the late 1830s, it was a favorite practice among younger, educated circles to misspell words intentionally, then abbreviate them and use them as slang when talking to one another. Just as teenagers today have their own slang based on distortions of common words, such as "kewl" for "cool" or "DZ" for "these," the "in crowd" of the 1830s had a whole host of slang terms they abbreviated. Popular abbreviations included "KY" for "No use" ("know yuse"), "KG" for "No go" ("Know go"), and "OW" for all right ("oll wright").

Of all the abbreviations used during that time, OK was propelled into the limelight when it was printed in the Boston Morning Post as part of a joke. Its popularity exploded when it was picked up by contemporary politicians. When the incumbent president Martin Van Buren was up for reelection, his facistic supporters organized a band of thugs to influence voters. This group was formally called the "O.K. Club," which referred both to Van Buren\'s nickname "Old Kinderhook" (based on his hometown of Kinderhook, New York), and to the term recently made popular in the papers. At the same time, the opposing Whig Party made use of "OK" to denigrate Van Buren\'s political mentor Andrew Jackson. According to the Whigs, Jackson invented the abbreviation "OK" to cover up his own misspelling of "all correct."

The man responsible for unraveling the mystery behind "OK" was an American linguist named Allen Walker Read. An English professor at Columbia University, Read dispelled a host of erroneous theories on the origins of "OK," ranging from the name of a popular Army biscuit (Orrin Kendall) to the name of a Haitian port famed for its rum (Aux Cayes) to the signature of a Choctaw chief named Old Keokuk. Whatever its origins, "OK" has become one of the most ubiquitous terms in the world, and certainly one of America\'s greatest lingual exports.

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wildcoyote

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News of the Weird
« Reply #467 on: March 23, 2009, 08:54:33 pm »
Quote from: SlimPickens;223762
this is kinda crazy:

http://action.workingfamiliesparty.org/t/4020/petition.jsp?petition_KEY=551


In related news

http://gawker.com/5175745/aig-corporate-securitys-tips-for-surviving-an-angry-mob

Quote from: tyzack;223764
Quote from: SlimPickens;223762
this is kinda crazy:

http://action.workingfamiliesparty.org/t/4020/petition.jsp?petition_KEY=551


I do not understand the public outrage about this entire story.

These people are highly skilled professionals doing a job that none of us can do and deserve to be compinsated for their efforts.

This is all a very unfortunate political theater which is disconcerting to all of us because it sets the precendant that the goverment can, for political reasons, impose punitive taxes on induviuals or groups thereof.


As for this- No. They are not highly skilled professionals. They are the definition of incompetence.  When you go to the government hat in had begging for a bailout on a disaster you created, you do not go and take that money to reward yourself for a job well done.  No.

This is the first time in my life when I feel like the government actually gets it, and understands how angry the people are.  For decades (longer?) our government has bent over for the interest of big business, because of lobbyists, campaign contributions, paid for vacations and other nonsense.  The whole purpose of government to serve and protect the people, and for once that is what they are doing.
« Last Edit: March 23, 2009, 08:54:33 pm by wildcoyote »
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tyzack

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« Reply #468 on: March 24, 2009, 07:35:25 am »
Quote from: wildcoyote;223877


As for this- No. They are not highly skilled professionals. They are the definition of incompetence.  When you go to the government hat in had begging for a bailout on a disaster you created, you do not go and take that money to reward yourself for a job well done.  No.


The people who received the bonuses were not the ones that got AIG into that mess in the first place. They are in charge of getting AIG out of the mess.
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Me!

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« Reply #469 on: April 08, 2009, 11:33:16 pm »
If you watch \'House\' and didn\'t see this weeks episode don;t read this.

[SPOILER]\'House\' actor Kal Penn joins White House team

WASHINGTON – The White House has hired actor Kal Penn as a liaison between President Barack Obama\'s administration and Asian constituents. White House spokesman Shin Inouye said Tuesday that the actor who had a recurring role on Fox\'s TV show "House" and has starred in several movies would join the staff as an associate director in the Office of Public Liaison.

His role will be to connect Obama with the Asian-American and Pacific Islander communities, as well as arts groups.

Penn starred as Kumar in the movie, "Harold and Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay." His "House" character committed suicide in Monday\'s episode.

Penn backed Obama during the campaign. The White House says a start date for Penn hasn\'t been set.

The White House did not reveal what Penn would be paid. Aides with similar titles earned between $41,000 and $91,000 last year.

The hire was first reported by Entertainment Weekly.[/SPOILER]
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Me!

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« Reply #470 on: May 02, 2009, 02:20:31 am »
Quote
Dad finds Ecstasy in used Grand Theft Auto IV game case
Lydia Sung - Wednesday, April 8th, 2009 | 11:27AM (PT)


Of all the games, of all the things to find...

Richard Thornhill of Gloucester is pretty upset.  He recently bought a used copy of Grand Theft Auto IV from a Gamestation in Cheltenham, only to find four Ecstasy tablets in plastic wrap tucked inside the instructions manual.

The 34-year-old store manager for tool hire company Hirebase is an "Xbox enthusiast" and went to the game store on Sunday, purchasing two used GTA games.  Thornhill said he felt a lump in the case when it set it down, and the neatly wrapped tablets fell out when he opened the case to investigate.

"I know they are Ecstasy tablets because they have the Mitsubishi sign on top of them," explained the father of two.  "I have two children and my son plays on the Xbox all the time. He could easily have opened the box and found them.  I dread to think what the consequences would have been if he had. He\'s only 12. He could have died."

Now he\'s pissed the employees at Gamestation didn\'t check their inventory more carefully.

"It was a used game, but that shouldn\'t make a difference. My wife is beside herself over this because she keeps thinking about what could have happened," he added.

The store did offer to give Thornhill a refund for his purchase, but he\'s not backing down quietly.

"The store asked us to bring back the game and the tablets and told us we\'d get a refund, but that\'s not good enough. They shouldn\'t be asking us to give the tablets back – what are they going to do with them? Their attitude has been awful. It was as though they didn\'t really believe us."

A spokesperson for the Gamestation store stated, "We have rigorous procedures for accepting pre-owned titles and checking them before they are put back on sale. We have launched an immediate investigation and will work closely with Cheltenham police to find out what happened."

The Gloucestershire police have collected the tablets and "will be destroying them at a later date."  They believe the drugs are Ecstasy pills and are currently investigating the situation.
« Last Edit: May 02, 2009, 02:22:48 am by Me! »
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jocelyn

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Father tries to cash in on daughter\'s fame

THE poverty-stricken father of Slumdog Millionaire child star Rubina Ali plans to become a millionaire himself-by SELLING his nine-year-old daughter.

In a bid to escape India\'s real-life slums, Rafiq Qureshi put angel-faced darling of the Oscars Rubina up for adoption, demanding millions of rupees worth £200,000.

As he offered the shocking deal to the News of the World\'s undercover fake sheik this week, Rafiq declared: "I have to consider what\'s best for me, my family and Rubina\'s future."

Rafiq tried to blame Hollywood bosses for forcing him to put his daughter up for SALE.

As he tried to fix the illegal adoption deal, real-life slum dweller Rafiq declared: "We\'ve got nothing out of this film."

Then, almost embarrassed to speak it out loud, he whispered to an accomplice the price tag he has put on his innocent young daughter: "It\'s £200,000!"

That was an astonishing FOURFOLD increase on his opening demand. But Rafiq\'s equally demanding brother Mohiuddin insisted: "The child is special now. This is NOT an ordinary child. This is an Oscar child!"

He sees it as his family\'s escape route from the notorious Bandra slum sprawl of Mumbai.

Rafiq revealed his scheme to undercover News of the World reporters posing as a wealthy family from Dubai.


Riches

We travelled to Mumbai to expose the illegal sale after a tip-off from a concerned close family friend and former neighbour.

Shockingly, this sort of transaction is far from unusual in an impoverished nation where human life comes cheap and children are often treated as a commodity.

Rubina won the hearts of film-lovers around the world playing young Latika in British director Danny Boyle\'s movie that picked up eight Oscars and a pile of other glittering awards. It tells the rags to riches story of a young man from the slums who wins the Indian version of Who Wants To Be A Millionaire?

Filmed in Mumbai\'s seething pauper ghetto it depicts starkly true scenes of poverty and child cruelty, where young orphans are blinded and crippled by Fagin-like thugs and forced to beg on the streets. And with a staggering 11 million children abandoned in India every year, there is no shortage of young prey.

Our informant, now a city tour guide, told us: "Rubina\'s family are furious that despite the film doing so well and their pretty daughter becoming so famous, they are still living in such rough conditions.

"They were approached by one wealthy Middle Eastern family who saw their plight in an item on Al Jazeera TV. The couple expressed an interest in adopting young Rubina and her parents\' eyes lit up.

"Dad Rafiq is streetwise and knows that soon his daughter\'s success will be forgotten and her moment of fame will be over. He has a family to feed and simply can\'t afford it. He is keen to find a rich family to bring up Rubina but only if they are willing to help the whole family to get out of the slums.

"The Middle East family were moved to tears by the plight of the young orphans shown in the film and fell in love with Rubina.

"Just as Western stars like Madonna do, they want to adopt children from poor areas and give them a better life.

"This family wanted to take Rubina abroad. They agreed to come to Mumbai to discuss the adoption in May.

"But the approach has made Rafiq very greedy and he has said that he will consider the highest offer for his child. But they realise that the money will soon stop coming in and Rafiq is open to all offers."

Our investigator made contact with Rafiq and said we had heard he was considering having Rubina adopted. He told Rafiq he was acting for a wealthy Arab sheik who wanted to take the youngster to live with him 2,000 miles away in Dubai.

Rafiq replied: "Yes, we are considering Rubina\'s future.

"Why don\'t you speak to my brother-in-law, Rajan, and he will discuss it with you? I will ask him to call you."

After contacting us, Rubina\'s uncle Rajan More - who speaks good English - confirmed: "Yes, we are interested in securing our girl\'s future.

"Rubina\'s life is miserable and she lives here with her stepmother. Most of the time she stays with me because she is not happy at her parents\' home.

"Obviously if you wanted to adopt we could discuss this, but her parents would also expect some proper compensation in return. We are talking of around £50,000 for this to happen." In another phone call, father Rafiq coolly confirmed: "Whatever you have discussed with Rajan, I agree with. Whatever money is agreed by Rajan, I will accept.

"We can discuss everything about this deal when we meet. There\'s a lot of interest in Rubina, she\'s become very famous."

Without querying the background, intentions, or even the names of Rubina\'s prospective new parents, Rafiq arranged to meet us.


Abuse

And as soon as we said the wealthy family lived in the United Arab Emirates Rafiq suggested: "We would love to come there.

"I have never been there but I have seen it in Indian films. It looks a great place."

Trafficking of poor Indian children to the Middle East, where they are forced to risk their lives as camel jockeys or subjected to sexual abuse, is common in the Mumbai slums. But that did not deter Rafiq.

His first plan was to bring Rubina plus other relatives to visit us in Dubai to discuss the deal. But he had to scrap the idea because he could not get a passport. He is disqualified because he is facing police charges over a knife attack.

That is why he did not accompany Rubina to the Oscars ceremony and her Uncle Mohiuddin went instead.

Rafiq tried to shrug off the problem, claiming: "There is a case against me but it\'s nothing. I\'m trying to get it sorted now. In India you can buy anything if you have money!"

His Plan B was the meeting in Mumbai fixed for Thursday evening. But he arrived late with his little daughter at the luxurious Leela Kempinski hotel at 11.35pm, when most children her age would be in bed.

Also tagging along were trusted sidekick Rajan More, Rafiq\'s brother Mohiuddin, a friend called Dinesh Dubey and two young nephews. "They were all keen to see what the hotel looks like inside," explained Rajan as he entered the £480-a-night suite.

Smiling broadly, Rubina, who was wearing a torn orange and white Indian dress, looked around the room in amazement. She was proudly clutching her new Nokia mobile phone, a gift from a well-wisher.

She said: "My house is as big as the toilet you have here. We live in Gharib Nagar (Poor Man\'s Colony)."

As the young VIP ordered strawberry milk shake and ice-cream, dad Rafiq proudly told how his daughter clinched the part in the international blockbuster film.


Toys

"One of our neighbours where we live took her to the audition," he said. "Around 1,500 kids turned up and my daughter passed. The film took over a year to make and she worked on it for a month."

Slumdog has been a roaring success, raking in a staggering £185 million at box offices around the world.

But Rafiq, 36, again complained: "They haven\'t looked after us. They gave some money at the start but they gave us nothing afterwards. They gave us around 150,000 rupees (£2,040). They\'ve been talking about giving us a house, but all they do is talk." Rubina chipped in: "But I did get toys. When we were filming in Juhu beach I got some crayons."

In fact Danny Boyle and producer Christian Colson have set up a trust to ensure Rubina gets a proper education, is well housed and receives support dealing with media attention.

It was reported that Rafiq had spent some of his daughter\'s film fees on medical treatment to a leg he broke while working as a carpenter. He also used her cash to buy a new mobile phone for himself so agents can contact him to discuss work offers for his daughter. Rafiq has two other children - Sana, aged 13 and six-year-old Abbass - as well as another baby on the way by Rubina\'s stepmum Munni. Street-kid Rubina is one of only a handful of youngsters who attend school in her neighbourhood.

Rafiq added: "What they showed in the film is exactly how life is here. The government doesn\'t help us. We get nothing.

"We live in one room, seven of us sleep on the floor. I earn £2 to £3 a day. I have to consider what\'s best for me, my family and Rubina\'s future."

A fortnight ago Rubina and fellow child actor Azharuddin Ismail were each given a £12,000 luxury apartment by Slumdog sound engineer Rasul Pookutty. The property in Kerala, south India, was awarded to Rasul - who himself escaped poverty - by the local council in honour of his Oscar achievement.

But Rafiq dismissed the gesture, complaining: "We haven\'t got anything yet, it\'s all supposed to come later. It\'s all talk. It\'s being built, it\'ll take a year to be finished."


Stardom

And Rafiq insisted he had no intention of moving to Kerala, even when the apartment is complete.

"I won\'t move," he said. "I can never leave Mumbai. My childhood was here, everything I know is here in Mumbai."

As Rafiq spoke, Rubina excitedly looked around the suite, giggling and pointing out a large plasma TV on the wall to her 13-year-old cousin Mohsin.

Then she spoke about her new-found stardom. "I like being famous," she said. "Everyone where I live knows me and likes me now. Some people who I don\'t even know shout my name wherever I go - \'Rubina, Rubina\'!"

She proudly told us how she had worked with the stars on Slumdog and with "Uncle Danny (Boyle)".

When our female investigator, posing as a princess - the sheik\'s wealthy wife - handed Rubina three boxes of chocolates, she was thrilled. She shrieked with delight as we gave her a silver pendant.

"Can I stay in your bedroom?" asked the innocent youngster. "I\'ve never seen a bed like this in real life. I\'ve seen one like it in films though.

"Where we live there are all poor people. That\'s why the area is called Poor Man\'s Colony. There are all small huts, sewers and gutters, and sometimes the dirty water comes in the house. And there are lots of creepy-crawlies. I\'m scared of spiders and mosquitoes. Our house is very small. We sleep on the floor."

As Rubina jumped on the bed and played with the TV remote, her cousins tucked into a bowl of fruit and ice-cream.

Flicking through the channels, Rubina said: "Our TV is clapped out. It hardly works. The sound keeps going, especially when my favourite songs are on."

Excitedly she added: "I\'m going to be in a TV advert with a famous English actress soon!" In fact, she recently finished filming a soft drink commercial with Australian star Nicole Kidman. It was shot in India and Rafiq pocketed £2,000 for Rubina\'s performance.

Rubina was completely unaware she had been brought to the hotel by the men she trusted, those who should love and protect her, to discuss her SALE. We made certain throughout that Rubina did not know she was being offered for adoption in return for cash.

Rubina believed that she was merely at the hotel to meet a wealthy movie fan who wanted to present her with chocolates.

As midnight passed, our undercover reporter pointed out to Rafiq that it would be a good idea to take his youngster home to bed. Together with his entourage, Rafiq eventually left just before 1am.


Trade

"We can talk other matters tomorrow," said Rafiq, as he arranged to return to our suite to discuss business. He then asked for 1,000 Rupees (£13) to cover his cab fare back to the slums.

As Rubina left she asked our man: "Uncle, can I come here again as well? Please, please!"

On the way out Uncle Rajan, a burly man in his fifties with his hair and moustache dyed jet black, also had a request.

He pulled our reporter to one side and said: "Besides Rubina, if you are interested in having a young boy then I can arrange that. There are several available for adoption. Obviously you won\'t have to pay anything like the money for Rubina. Have a think and let me know then I can arrange for you to meet the children and choose the one you prefer."

Although illegal, India\'s sickening baby trade is widespread. Last year we revealed how a local social worker was exploiting dirt poor families and selling their kids for £1,500 a time. She even lined up a poverty-stricken mother willing to sell her unborn child for just £1,000.

On Friday, yet more of Rubina\'s family, friends and even a neighbour\'s kid joined the outing from the slums to the Leela hotel to meet our reporters.

This time the 13-strong party included Rubina\'s 28-year old stepmum Munni Qureshi, who is three months\' pregnant. Staff at the plush hotel looked on bemused as the kids began staging races along the corridor and lobby.

Meanwhile, Rafiq, Rajan and Mohiuddin headed to our suite to talk business. Rubina, in white blouse and jeans, sat next to her dad and Uncle Rajan on the cream sofa, still unaware her fate was being decided by them.

To save her discovering the truth our man suggested she go next door and play with "the princess" - our female investigator.

Then the men, got straight down to business. "Let\'s talk openly," urged Rajan. Our reporter said his boss the sheik was willing to adopt Rubina and take her to Dubai and asked the men what their demands were.

Rajan explained that no deal could go ahead for a few weeks because the family have been promised a house by the Indian government. If Rubina went abroad they would lose the house.

The governing Indian Congress Party president Sonia Gandhi - currently campaigning for the general elections later this month - has vowed to help them find a home.

Calculating Rajan explained: "Rafiq is about to get a property which will be in his name after Rubina is 18, so it\'ll take a bit of time. The other thing is about the amount. He wants to tell you. Listen to him." Rafiq looked visibly uncomfortable and returned to the theme of the free government house.

"We need time, until after the elections," he insisted. "We need two or three months."

Again Rajan chipped in: "You have to give time. . . you have to wait. Until then we can negotiate the amount. We\'ll come to Dubai, the girl will come and go."


Bitter

Rafiq said he too would be able to get his hands on a passport but only if we paid Rajan 35,000 rupees (£475) to bribe an official. "It\'ll be ready in eight days," said Rajan.

After all the extra demands our man asked about the final price for the adoption. And that\'s when they upped their demand over FOUR-FOLD. "Just tell them," said Rajan. Coyly Rafiq insisted: "You say it." Then Rajan said: "Whisper in my ear!"

Eventually Rajan announced: "It\'s 20 million rupees, £200,000." (In fact 20 million rupees is £270,000, but their calculations were wrong.)

When reminded that this deal was illegal, Rajan promised: "This discussion will not go beyond the three of us." Asked if Rubina\'s birth mother Khursheed might object and interfere, Rafiq insisted he had divorced her seven years ago and that she had no rights on the child.

"It\'s nothing to do with her," he said. And brother Rajan chimed in: "She\'s nothing! It\'s over!"

In fact Rafiq\'s family have been involved in a bitter row with Khursheed, who walked out on Rafiq when Rubina was just four. She showed up in the slums to reclaim her daughter on her return from the Oscar ceremony in February.

Rafiq and Khursheed had to be pulled apart after brawling. Khursheed also had a catfight with new wife Munni. Rubina has had little contact with her real mum.

When our man asked Rafiq if he had any questions about the proposed adoption he said calmly: "No, there\'s nothing more to say."

With the deal seemingly struck the party headed down to the imposing hotel lobby, decorated with a huge chandelier, for a buffet lunch.

Two of Rubina\'s pals were larking about doing headstands in the lobby as Rubina slid along the shiny marble floor to the restaurant. "Come on, everybody follow me!" she shouted. "We\'re having dinner here. I\'ll tell you what to do!"

The party - all in the dark about the deal except the dad and two uncles - were escorted to a long dining table in the lavish restaurant.

Stepmum Munni, wearing a white sari, sat with her feet up on the chair until her husband told her to sit properly. Then they all raced to the buffet, piling their plates high with food - a change from their usual diet of cheap rice and lentils.

"We can eat anything we like here," said Rubina excitedly.

After several main courses the party descended on the desserts, washing it all down with glasses of mango juice - each one costing more than Rafiq earns in a day.

Delighted Rubina grabbed our man by his arm and told him: "You are the best uncle ever!"

Touchingly she then took photos of everything from the food to the hotel armchairs on her mobile phone, to remind herself of her big day out. "This hotel is like the big ones in America," she said. "One day can I stay in an hotel like this?"


Tout

But after dinner it was back to reality. The group clambered into two people-carriers to be ferried back to the slums.

On Friday evening Rajan met our undercover reporter again - to escort him to another shanty town to tout two MORE children for sale.

In the coastal Mumbai suburb of Madh Island, an hour\'s drive from Rubina\'s home, several thousand people live in a similar sprawling slum. Rajan led our man thorough the dirty narrow streets to another single room shack where decorator Akbar Khan lives with his wife and four children. There was just one straw bed in the cramped room.

"Look at the pretty girl over there and see if you think she is suitable," whispered Rajan as he pointed to a nervous 10-year old called Rukhsar.

"This family want to have their daughter adopted. They have three girls and a son and cannot survive on their income. Take a photo to see if the sheik likes the look of her."

Outside in the rubbish-filled alley soft-spoken dad Akbar begged: "Please consider my daughter for adoption. We are poor people and want her to have a better future."

Later conniving Rajan added: "I can let you have their girl, or you can take their seven-year old boy. These people are desperately hard-up and will take less money."

Last night Rajan phoned us and demanded: "Have you decided which child you want besides Rubina? If you want these kids we have to get moving straight away."

The News of the World yesterday contacted Save The Children, a charity with a strong presence in Mumbai, to seek their help with Rubina\'s case.

Director of Campaigns Adrian Lovett said: "Save the Children pays tribute to the News of the World for highlighting this awful reality. We will do all we can to help Rubina.

"The Indian government must sign up to the International Labour Organisation\'s convention for abolishing the worst forms of child labour and trafficking."
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FrankZappa

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« Reply #472 on: May 19, 2009, 05:26:22 am »
Quote
Bodybuilders flee drug testers; event canceled

      BRUSSELS (AP) - The Belgian bodybuilding championship has been
canceled after doping officials showed up and all the competitors fled.
      A doping official says bodybuilders just grabbed their gear and ran off when he came into the room. "I have never seen anything like it and hope never to see anything like it again," doping official Hans Cooman said Monday.
      Twenty bodybuilders were entered in the weekend competition. Cooman says the sport has a history of doping "and this
incident didn\'t do its reputation any good."
      During testing of bodybuilding events last year, doping authorities of northern Belgium\'s Flanders region found that three-quarters of the competitors tested positive.
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FrankZappa

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« Reply #473 on: May 20, 2009, 08:49:30 am »
Quote from: Yoda;230392
Quote from: derickw;230388
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/us_pfizer_free_drugs


i don\'t know what you guys think, but my personal opinion is if you don\'t have a job and are collecting the last thing you should be doing is having kids..... :no:


Pfizer has more than 150 prescription drug that are not for erectile disfuction...  Some of them include:

Lipitor - for cholesterol
Celebrex - painkiller
Lyrica - for fibromyalgia
Zithromax - antibiotic

Are you telling me that at some point, you haven\'t been prescribed a Z-Pack?  This isn\'t costing taxpayers any money and will do well to repair some of the ill-will that people have towards the pharmaceutical industry...  Unless Pfizer increases the cost of their products to cover the cost of this effort, I don\'t see how this is a bad idea (once you get past the fact that Viagra is only one of many drugs that Pfizer produces)...


I have never been prescribed any of these nor would I take them. Other than bayer asprin on rare occasions or once or twice a year when I get a REALLY bad cold something like nyquill, I pretty much never take medication.

moving on, from the only in texas file;
Quote
--------
AP-TX-XGR--Anti-Abortion Plates,0090
Senate votes for \'Choose Life\' plate
Eds: APNewsNow; Will be led.
      AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - The Texas Senate has voted to add "Choose Life" to the state catalog of specialty license plates. Supporters, including anti-abortion groups and facist Gov. Rick Perry, have said the "Choose Life" plates will help raise money for non-profit groups that support pregnant women considering adoption. Abortion rights groups say Texas should not put a political message on license plates. The Senate\'s preliminary vote was 22-9 but there was no debate. The bill needs a final Senate vote before it goes to the House.
     
      (Copyright 2009 by The Associated Press.  All Rights Reserved.)
     
AP-NY-04-30-09 1420EDT
"i heard that after he crossed the finish line he proceeded to wrestle down and pin a full sized grizzly bear"- ds673488

"if i listened to the distance on repeat, i\'d be wearing yellow jerseys like a motherfucker" - zuke

tyzack

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« Reply #474 on: May 26, 2009, 06:47:52 pm »
Quote

TEHRAN (Reuters) - Iranian security forces have arrested 104 "devil worshippers" and seized drugs and alcohol during a party in a southern city, a semi-official news agency reported Monday.
"Cutting (their own) skin and sucking up the blood was among the indecent behavior of the group," Mehr News Agency quoted Colonel Abbas Hamedi of Iran\'s Revolutionary Guards in the city of Shiraz as saying.
He said a Guards intelligence unit launched an investigation into the all-male group about one year ago, leading to their arrest Sunday evening.
"The group\'s aim was to promote irreligious behavior," Hamedi, adding they had posted footage of their parties on the Internet.
The Islamic Republic, which bans alcohol and narcotics, last year said it would launch a crackdown on "indecent Western-inspired movements" such as rappers and satanists.
That move signaled a widening of a clampdown on "immoral" conduct launched in 2007 against women flouting rules dictating that they cover their heads and disguise the shape of their bodies in public, in line with Iran\'s Islamic system.
The crackdown against what clerics see as corrupt Western influence coincided with rising pressure on Iran by the West over its nuclear program. The United States and its allies say Iran wants to build an atomic bomb, which Tehran denies.
(Reporting by Hossein Jaseb and Hashem Kalantari; writing by Fredrik Dahl; editing by Mark Trevelyan)
Apartheid: A policy of segregation and political and economic discrimination.

FrankZappa

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« Reply #475 on: June 15, 2009, 08:47:35 pm »
umpire ejects entire crowd

Quote
WEST BURLINGTON, Iowa - An umpire emptied the stands at a high school baseball game, ejecting the entire crowd of more than 100 fans for being unruly.

Umpire Don Briggs said he had no problem with any of the student athletes during Thursday\'s game between Winfield-Mount Union and West Burlington.

He said he had to take action because fans were being unruly, yelling and arguing.

However, West Burlington Superintendent James Sleister said he didn\'t see any unusual behavior and said he thought the umpire overreacted.

The game resumed after a 40-minute delay. West Burlington won 12-11.

The umpire called police as a precaution. West Burlington police officer Al Waterman says there were no arrests.

http://highschool.rivals.com/content.asp?CID=955927
"i heard that after he crossed the finish line he proceeded to wrestle down and pin a full sized grizzly bear"- ds673488

"if i listened to the distance on repeat, i\'d be wearing yellow jerseys like a motherfucker" - zuke

Spacey

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« Reply #476 on: June 16, 2009, 09:01:57 am »
That must be a first.
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tyzack

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New Prime number found
« Reply #477 on: June 16, 2009, 06:55:33 pm »
Okay, so I heard this tag line on NPR this morning, but haven\'t been able to find out anything esle about it.

Does anyone here know what the number is and what the significance of finding it is?

I thought the big task was to find the pattern to primes, not all of them (since there are, of course) and infinite number.
Apartheid: A policy of segregation and political and economic discrimination.

FrankZappa

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« Reply #478 on: June 16, 2009, 09:20:19 pm »
what do you mean "the number"?

my favorite thing is finding perfect formulas, they are the palindromes of the math world. my favorite is fibonacci sequece. a+a=b, a+b=c, b+c=d, c+d=e...

or 0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34...

tool used it in writing the rhythm and lyrics to lataralus:
    (1) Black,
    (1) then,
    (2) white are,
    (3) all I see,
    (5) in my infancy,
    (8) red and yellow then came to be,
    (5) reaching out to me,
    (3) lets me see.
    (2) There is,
    (1) so,
    (1) much,
    (2) more and
    (3) beckons me,
    (5) to look through to these,
    (8) infinite possibilities.
    (13) As below so above and beyond I imagine,
    (8) drawn outside the lines of reason.
    (5) Push the envelope.
    (3) Watch it bend.

and yet I\'m still single. :lol:
"i heard that after he crossed the finish line he proceeded to wrestle down and pin a full sized grizzly bear"- ds673488

"if i listened to the distance on repeat, i\'d be wearing yellow jerseys like a motherfucker" - zuke

tyzack

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« Reply #479 on: June 17, 2009, 09:44:22 am »
I meant what is the new prime number that they found, the digits.
Apartheid: A policy of segregation and political and economic discrimination.