Sunday, January 31, 2010
Funky Nassau
Saturday, January 30, 2010
Honesty in this government let me count the ways weighs
Stand down those now under the scrutiny of the people
There are so many nukes supposedly well protected by governments
Red White and Blue
Friday, January 29, 2010
The best of times
The element of demise is supposed to be our surprise
Thursday, January 28, 2010
This is sick
Everybody wants you
Anyone you can imagine told me this wouldn't be shit to me
Hey rocky
I can see it now our picture on the cover Gonna buy 5 copies fore my mother Gonna see my smilin face
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
Ok mother fucker's what I'd do tha'd make your mother fucking asses vote fore me as PRESIDENT
You know what's eloquent
Genuine Americans coming back to the flock from the elite
Society is falling apart buy design
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
House Bill H.R. 2977
Yo George I met these fellas who want me to ferry them across the river
One who cries from the bewilderedness
Fuck O'bummer and the elitist whore boat he rowed in
My internet world is being attacked
Monday, January 25, 2010
Had I aligned with the Christian Faith
People are losing their sense of humor
Admit-ably Illinois is corrupt and changing from within
They're killing the fucking messengers fore the hell of it
This is absolute truth
Sunday, January 24, 2010
Maybe I'm amazed
Hey, hey you
All beings that survive and peacefully co exist
I don't want to hurt your branes mem
From an anonymous thought
This note is to protect many GOOD friends
To all species watching the corruption destroying our GOOD and LOVING
Scene of the crime
Town Hall
Saturday, January 23, 2010
Up in droves
Have you heard the one where the atmosphere on the earth was being deliberately
This is a message to all who can read
Help me if you can I'm feeling down
Sum of this is old like the shit is old, world
Friday, January 22, 2010
Mother fuckers these post prove nothings sacred
I promise not to take myself and you anywhere serious
This is the weigh spoken in myth in a song of once there was a weigh
Thursday, January 21, 2010
We have awe been hear be fore
Tommy Lee
If the rental box machines go along with this they'll have
Doc Savage and
Resources have been diverted activating next phase failsaif
Nom de plume'
Out of no whore I mean where comes the Liesman
The time fore all to be GOOD
In memory of the do-able classics
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
Glen Beck the paid 50 million dollar crony of Faux News espouses the shit made up in boiler rooms of the elite
Tuesday, January 19, 2010
Victory Mantra Backups Required
Monday, January 18, 2010
Testing testing calibrated pullit
Epi's everywhere (centers & demics) when pigs fly, when resorts go bad and their insatiable convex towards bloodshed
I'll believe it, when I see it
Only where
Come together
Friday, January 15, 2010
All about Haiti, Catch a wave and you'll be sittin on top of the world
Thursday, January 14, 2010
At what level is there respect for an elitist
Now, here's a conspiracy
Let's call the whole thing made off
Wednesday, January 13, 2010
Just grow there
Woe is fucking me
When y'all finally get up off your denying asses
A message to self
Saturday, January 9, 2010
These are not the reason's we embarked into
Friday, January 8, 2010
Just in case you didn't grow
Wednesday, January 6, 2010
by The Associated Press
2009 started with inaugurating nation's first black president
by The Associated Press
Article Last Updated; Saturday, January 02, 2010 12:00AM
2009 was a year of deaths, firsts and lasts. Here's a look back at some highlights.
January Jan. 1 Sixty-six New Year's revelers die and more than 200 are injured in a fire at a Bangkok nightclub.
Jan. 5 New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson withdraws his nomination to be commerce secretary.
Jan. 9 Rod Blagojevich becomes first Illinois governor to be impeached.
Jan. 12 President George W. Bush asks Congress to release remaining $350 billion in bailout money.
Jan. 15 US Airways jet crash-lands in Hudson River after striking birds. All 155 people aboard survive.
Jan. 20 Barack Obama sworn in as 44th president.
Jan. 23 New York Gov. David Paterson chooses Democratic Rep. Kirsten Gillibrand to fill Senate seat vacated by Hillary Rodham Clinton.
Jan. 29 Blagojevich convicted at impeac-ment trial and barred from office.
Jan. 30 Michael Steele elected first black chairman of Republican National Committee.
February Feb. 3 Eric Holder becomes first black U.S. attorney general.
Feb. 4 Obama imposes $500,000 cap on executive pay for companies receiving federal bailout money.
Feb. 5 USA Swimming suspends Olympic gold medalist Michael Phelps for three months after photo showing him inhaling from marijuana pipe becomes public.
Feb. 9 New York Yankee Alex Rodriguez admits he used performance-enhancing drugs from 2001 to 2003.
Feb. 11 Rep. John Dingell of Michigan becomes longest-serving member of U.S. House.
Feb. 12 Commuter plane crashes into a Buffalo, N.Y., home, killing all 49 aboard and a person in the house.
Feb. 17 Obama signs $787 billion economic rescue plan.
Feb. 20 Dow Jones industrial average ends week at 7365, lowest level in more than six years.
Feb. 26 Pentagon says it will allow some media coverage of returning war dead, with family approval.
Feb. 27 Obama announces plan to pull all U.S. combat brigades out of Iraq by August 2010. The Rocky Mountain News ceases publishing; last edition goes on sale.
March March 2 Obama appoints Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius as secretary of health and human services. The Coast Guard, searching for a boat carrying NFL players Marquis Cooper and Corey Smith and two others, finds overturned boat and one survivor off Florida.
March 6 U.S. reports jobless rate reached 8.1 percent in February, highest since 1983.
March 11 German prosecutors charge retired Ohio auto worker John Demjanjuk with more than 29,000 counts of accessory to murder for his time as a Nazi camp guard.
March 12 Insurance broker announces Chicago's Sears Tower will be renamed Willis Tower. Iraqi journalist who threw shoes at President George W. Bush gets three-year sentence.
March 17 Seattle Post-Intelligencer publishes final print edition.
March 18 Chief of bailed-out insurance giant AIG grilled by furious lawmakers over $165 million in bonuses; some executives volunteer to return money.
March 27 Suicide bomber destroys Pakistan mosque, killing at least 48.
March 29 General Motors CEO Rick Wagoner resigns under White House pressure.
April April 3 Iowa Supreme Court unanimously legalizes gay marriage. U.S. reports unemployment reached 8.5 percent in March, highest in quarter-century.
April 7 Vermont becomes fourth state to legalize gay marriage after Legislature overrides governor's veto. Charges dismissed against former U.S. Sen. Ted Stevens of Alaska.
April 8 Somali pirates hijack U.S.-flagged Maersk Alabama and take captain hostage.
April 9 Los Angeles Angels pitcher Nick Adenhart killed in car crash by a suspected drunken driver. Kim Jong Il re-elected as North Korean leader.
April 13 Music producer Phil Spector found guilty of second-degree murder in shooting of actress Lana Clarkson; later sentenced to 19 years to life in prison.
April 15 Army soldier convicted of murder in 2007 deaths of four bound and blindfolded Iraqis and sentenced to life in prison.
April 22 FDA says 17-year-old girls can get “morning after" birth control without prescription.
April 27 Low-flying plane, later determined to be an Air Force One jet, panics New Yorkers. General Motors announces plans to cut 21,000 hourly jobs and scrap Pontiac brand.
April 28 U.S. Sen. Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania defects from Republican Party, joins Democrats.
April 30 Chrysler files for bankruptcy; federal government pledges up to $8 billion in additional aid and to back warranties.
May May 1 Supreme Court Justice David Souter says he's retiring, effective in late June.
May 2 U.S. warplane in Afghanistan kills estimated 78 Taliban fighters and 26 civilians, prompting investigation.
May 5 Texas health officials confirm first death of U.S. resident with H1N1 flu.
May 6 Governor signs bill making Maine fifth state to legalize gay marriage; law is later overturned by public vote.
May 11 Defense Secretary Robert Gates names Lt. Gen. Stanley McChrystal top military commander in Afghanistan, replacing Gen. David McKiernan.
May 21 Sherpa guide breaks his own record, reaching summit of Mount Everest a 19th time.
May 26 Obama nominates Sonia Sotomayor to be first Hispanic Supreme Court justice. California's Supreme Court upholds Proposition 8 gay-marriage ban.
May 31 George Tiller, rare provider of late-term abortions, is shot and killed in a Kansas church.
June June 1 General Motors becomes largest U.S. industrial company to enter bankruptcy.
June 3 New Hampshire becomes sixth state to legalize gay marriage.
June 8 North Korea's highest court sentences American journalists Laura Ling and Euna Lee to 12 years' hard labor for trespassing and “hostile acts."
June 10 Gunman opens fire at U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, killing a guard.
June 11 With H1N1 flu reported in more than 70 nations, World Health Organization declares first global flu pandemic in 41 years.
June 12 U.S. television stations end analog broadcasts. Congress approves legislation banning “light" or candy-flavored cigarettes and requiring tobacco companies to make bigger warning labels and run fewer ads. U.N. Security Council sanctions North Korea for nuclear test.
June 16 The New York Times reports former baseball star Sammy Sosa tested positive for performance-enhancing drug in 2003.
June 17 U.N. announces economic downturn has led to 1 in 6 people going hungry. Nevada Sen. John Ensign resigns from GOP leadership a day after admitting affair with former campaign staffer. Obama extends some benefits to same-sex partners of federal employees.
June 18 $106 billion in emergency war funding passed by Congress provides no money for closing Guantanamo but creates “cash for clunkers" program.
June 19 Taken hostage seven months earlier, Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times reporter David S. Rohde and Afghan journalist Tahir Ludin escape Pakistani compound.
June 20 Truck bomb kills 72 worshippers leaving Shiite mosque in northern Iraq, wounds nearly 200.
June 29 U.S. completes withdrawal of its combat troops from cities in Iraq. Bernard Madoff gets 150-year sentence for multibillion-dollar fraud. U.S. Supreme Court rules white firefighters in New Haven, Conn., were denied promotion because of their race.
June 30 Former “Saturday Night Live" comedian Al Franken declared winner of Minnesota's eight-month recount; defeats Republican Norm Coleman for U.S. Senate seat.
July July 3 Sarah Palin announces she will resign as Alaska governor, effective July 26.
July 4 Statue of Liberty crown reopens to tourists for first time since Sept. 11, 2001.
July 8 Leaders of world's richest countries pledge to dramatically cut greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. South Korea blames North Korea for cyber attacks targeting Web sites in U.S. and South Korea.
July 13 German prosecutors formally charge retired U.S. auto worker John Demjanjuk with 27,900 counts of accessory to murder.
July 26 Mother drives wrong way on New York highway and crashes into SUV, killing eight people. Toxicology tests show she was drunk and had used marijuana.
July 29 Microsoft and Yahoo announce Internet search partnership.
July 31 Three Americans jailed in Iran after crossing border from Iraq and later accused of espionage.
August Aug. 4 Gunman kills three women and himself in suburban Pittsburgh health club. Diary mentions decades of rejection by women.
Aug. 5 Former President Bill Clinton brings home two U.S. journalists after they were pardoned for entering North Korea illegally.
Aug. 6 Sonia Sotomayor confirmed as first Hispanic Supreme Court justice.
Aug. 8 Small plane, helicopter carrying Italian tourists collide above Hudson River, killing all nine people aboard both.
Aug. 17 Publisher of Reader's Digest announces plans to seek bankruptcy protection.
Aug. 19 Four members of elite Army special operations unit die when helicopter crashes on Colorado mountain during training mission.
Aug. 20 Reality TV ex-contestant Ryan Jenkins charged with murdering former wife in California, is later found dead of an apparent suicide.
Aug. 21 Lutheran leaders OK sexually active gays in committed relationships to serve as clergy.
Aug. 31 Walt Disney Co. announces $4 billion acquisition of comic book giant Marvel Entertainment.
September Sept. 2 Pfizer agrees to record $2.3 billion settlement for illegal drug promotion.
Sept. 9 During Obama's speech to Congress on health care, U.S. Rep. Joe Wilson of South Carolina shouts “You lie!" when the president says illegal immigrants won't be covered.
Sept. 10 Obama accepts apology after Wilson expresses regret for his “lack of civility."
Sept. 13 Body of missing Yale grad student is found in lab wall on what would have been her wedding day. A lab technician is later charged in her death.
Sept. 15 Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke says the worst recession since the 1930s is probably over.
Sept. 23 Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi calls U.N. Security Council a “terror council" and accuses it of treating smaller nations as “second class" during rambling speech in New York.
Sept. 27 Director Roman Polanski is taken into Swiss custody for his 1977 U.S. sex crime conviction.
Sept. 29 Ex-Democratic fundraiser Norman Hsu gets more than 24 years in prison for campaign finance violations. New York City terrorism suspect Najibullah Zazi pleads not guilty to conspiring to use weapons of mass destruction in what authorities say was a planned attack on commuter trains.
October Oct. 1 “Late Show" host David Letterman acknowledges sexual relationships with female employees as “48 Hours Mystery" producer Joe Halderman is charged in an alleged blackmail plot.
Oct. 2 Rio de Janeiro wins bid for 2016 Summer Olympics; Chicago is eliminated in first round.
Oct. 9 Obama wins Nobel Peace Prize.
Oct. 13 Bloomberg agrees to buy BusinessWeek magazine from McGraw-Hill.
Oct. 15 Report of 6-year-old boy flying inside a helium balloon captivates nation before boy is found safe at home; his parents later plead guilty to filing false report.
Oct. 16 Federal deficit reaches all-time high of $1.42 trillion.
Oct. 21 Northwest Airlines jet overshoots Minneapolis airport by 150 miles.
November Nov. 1 Lender CIT Group files one of the biggest Chapter 11 bankruptcy filings in U.S. corporate history.
Nov. 3 Maine residents narrowly vote down same-sex marriage law. Nov. 5 Shooting at Fort Hood Army post leaves 13 people dead and 29 injured. Nov. 6 U.S. unemployment rate hits double-digit percentage — 10.2 — for second time since World War II.
Nov. 7 House narrowly passes landmark health-care changes.
Nov. 10 John Allen Muhammad, mastermind of 2002 sniper attacks that killed 10 in Washington, D.C., region, is executed.
Nov. 12 Maj. Nidal Hasan is charged with 13 counts of premeditated murder in the Fort Hood massacre.
Nov. 13 Analysis of data from spacecraft NASA intentionally crashed into the moon shows ample water near lunar south pole.
Nov. 16 U.S. government health task force suggests most women wait until age 50 to get mammograms and then have one every two years, a major reversal that challenges the American Cancer Society's advice to start getting mammograms at 40.
Nov. 17 Sarah Palin's autobiography Going Rogue is released; 1 million copies sell in less than two weeks.
Nov. 19 Oprah Winfrey's production company announces her daytime talk show will end in 2011 after 25 seasons.
Nov. 21 Gas explosion in northern Chinese mine kills at least 108. Computer hackers break into server at a climate change research center in Britain and post hundreds of private e-mails and documents online, stoking debate over whether scientists have overstated case for man-made climate change.
Nov. 24 Gate-crashers Tareq and Michaele Salahi attend Obama's first White House state dinner uninvited, leading to Secret Service investigation.
Nov. 27 Tiger Woods crashes SUV outside his Florida mansion, sparking widespread attention to reports of marital infidelity.
Nov. 29 Gunman kills four police officers in Washington coffeehouse in what authorities call a targeted ambush, then is shot dead two days later.
Nov. 30 The Large Hadron Collider, the world's largest atom smasher, breaks world record for proton acceleration.
December Dec. 1 Obama orders 30,000 more U.S. troops into the war in Afghanistan but promises to begin withdrawal in 18 months.
Dec. 3 Comcast and GE announce joint venture plans, with Comcast owning a 51 percent controlling stake in NBC Universal.
Dec. 5 American college student Amanda Knox and former boyfriend Raffaele Sollecito convicted in Italy of murdering Meredith Kercher, her British roommate.
Dec. 8 String of bombs in Iraq kills 127 people, injures more than 500, damages ministry buildings and flattens courthouse in Baghdad.
Dec. 10 New estimates reveal H1N1 flu has killed nearly 10,000 Americans and sickened nearly 50 million.
Dec. 12 Houston becomes largest U.S. city to elect openly gay mayor.
Dec. 15 Washington, D.C., council votes to legalize gay marriage.
Dec. 16 Time magazine names Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke its Person of the Year.
Dec. 18 U.N. climate summit in Copenhagen ends with modest accord denounced by smaller countries. Sign bearing Nazi slogan “Work Sets You Free" is stolen from Auschwitz; three days later, Polish authorities recover sign in three pieces and arrest five people.
Dec. 21 Vote by lawmakers makes Mexico City first Latin American capital to legalize gay marriage.
Dec. 24 U.S. Senate passes health-care legislation in chamber's first Christmas Eve vote since 1895. Dec. 25 After a failed attempt to detonate explosives on Northwest Airlines Flight 253 as it landed in Detroit, the 23-year-old son of a prominent Nigerian banker is subdued by fellow passengers. Dec. 28 In Argentina, men turned away in Buenos Aires are wed in Ushuaia, the world's southernmost city, in Latin America's first gay marriage.