Friday, December 16, 2005
War on Sneazing!
In the past, before secularists and liberals took control of the world, when a person sneezed it was expected to say "God Bless You".
This blessing gave witness to our eternal belief in the Almighty and his power over our respiratory system.
But today, we are lucky to receive a "Bless You"...who's doing the blessing I ask? Some pagan deity or Charles Darwin? I need to know that the only blessing I get is from God Almighty...the one so accurately represented in movies like "The Ten Commandments".
God fearing citizens need to restore God to sneezing! How can we help?
I suggest that we compile lists of God's enemies...doctors, nurses, tissue companies...those who do not greet our sneeze with a blessing but with nosedrops, antibiotics, and throw away paper sheets."
this is a offical call to arms people
This blessing gave witness to our eternal belief in the Almighty and his power over our respiratory system.
But today, we are lucky to receive a "Bless You"...who's doing the blessing I ask? Some pagan deity or Charles Darwin? I need to know that the only blessing I get is from God Almighty...the one so accurately represented in movies like "The Ten Commandments".
God fearing citizens need to restore God to sneezing! How can we help?
I suggest that we compile lists of God's enemies...doctors, nurses, tissue companies...those who do not greet our sneeze with a blessing but with nosedrops, antibiotics, and throw away paper sheets."
this is a offical call to arms people
Thursday, February 10, 2005
Tuesday, February 01, 2005
Q4 profit highest ever for Exxon Mobil
but but i thought oil prices were high cause of restrictions? what waht why would oil companys have a Record High Profit if the prices were raised for lack of oil hmmmmmmm hmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
oh yeah cause there dirty ass fuckers
Thursday, January 20, 2005
Years Ago Secretary of state was the step right before becoming president so Secretary of state shoudl be someone who coudl be a president
Thursday, January 06, 2005
When Congress reconvenes Today to ratify the 2004 Presidential election, Representative John Conyers (D-Michigan) will object to the vote count in Ohio, and if even one Senator joins him, Congress will have to debate the widespread voting problems that have been exposed
im not voteing for my senators if they dont join in on this fuck them in the ear if there going to fuck ohio in the ear
im not voteing for my senators if they dont join in on this fuck them in the ear if there going to fuck ohio in the ear
Tuesday, January 04, 2005
So this was in my News Paper Yesterday and its been nagging me ever since
Emergency measures for a comatose show
Monday, January 3, 2005
Adam Brody as Seth Cohen on "The O.C."
To: Josh Schwartz, creator, "The O.C."
From: Eunnie Park, Staff Writer.
Subject: Season 2.
Dear Josh,
Sit down, honey, we need to talk.
There's no easy way to say this, so I'll just be blunt: The second season of "The O.C" has been a real letdown so far. Everybody thinks so. The numbers speak for themselves: The ratings are down 25 percent overall from last year; the highly anticipated Chrismukkah episode on Dec. 16 raked in a season low of 6.3 million viewers. That's 32 percent down from Chrismukkah 2003.
But don't worry, Josh, there's hope for you yet. The season is only half over, and you can recover -assuming you learn from your mistakes. I've taken copious notes, so let's go over them together:
10. Fix Seth Cohen. How did a lovable dork like Seth (Adam Brody) become such a senseless spaz? I adore him - I really do - but he's been nothing but a big wuss this season, whining about Summer this, Summer that, blah, blah, blah. Pull yourself together, Cohen. You're better than this!
9. Incest = Icky. So Lindsay (Shannon Lucio) is Caleb's illegitimate daughter, which makes her Seth's half-aunt. And yet you set her up on a date with him a few episodes ago. Do you realize how gross that is? I mean, they never did anything, but still! It was a date! Their intentions were ... unwittingly incestuous! Eww!
8. "The O.C." is on Fox, not MTV2. You love indie music. I get it. The Killers, Death Cab, the Walkmen. Great bands. I couldn't agree more. But does every episode have to be built around a show at The Bait Shop? Because I'm starting to think you're using music to get out of having to write actual plot and dialogue.
7. Zach is hot. Bringing in Michael Cassidy as Zach, the new boyfriend for Summer (Rachel Bilson), is the best thing you've done this season. Love him. Keep him. Clone him. He's perfect.
6. Caleb is not. It's bad enough that Caleb (Alan Dale) is the lone old dude on the show. Does he also have to be wrapped up in such boring legal mumbo-jumbo all the time? Nobody knows what's going on. Nobody cares. Send him to jail already!
5. Neither is the Yard Guy. Lose DJ (Nicholas Gonzalez). He's pretty cute in his own way, but as Marissa's (Mischa Barton) blue-collar lover, he's awkward, old-looking and quite creepy. Is he the reason she starts making a move on Alex (Olivia Wilde)? Because that would explain a lot.
4. Keep Alex's hair down. Sometimes it's up, sometimes it's down. When it's up, it looks like that notorious 'do from "There's Something About Mary." And it makes some of us think dirty thoughts.
3. They're in school, aren't they? I understand that the O.C. is this weird place where everybody's beautiful and no one except Lindsay ever studies. But how about mentioning college applications or standardized tests once in a while - just for kicks?
2. About that baby ... The way you handled Theresa's (Navi Rawat) pregnancy is totally shady. She says she lost the baby, but she didn't really. Ryan (Ben McKenzie) all but says, "Hallelujah," and rushes back to Newport, where he immediately makes a move on a peppy young thing. In the real world, we call guys like that Kevin Federline.
1. Desperate times call for ... lesbians? It's not enough that Marissa is a drug-addicted, alcoholic, suicidal kleptomaniac with anger management issues. She also has to embark on a lesbian love affair? Why, why, why? If you're dealing with the subject in some mature, sensitive way, that's great. Go for it. But if you're doing it just to slip in some wild girl-on-girl action to boost the ratings, then ... well, best luck to you, Josh. You're on your own.
E-mail: parke@northjersey.com
Now i think i am being polite but look at that she gets paid to write that i need to know if shes 14, handicap, or lazy
Emergency measures for a comatose show
Monday, January 3, 2005
Adam Brody as Seth Cohen on "The O.C."
To: Josh Schwartz, creator, "The O.C."
From: Eunnie Park, Staff Writer.
Subject: Season 2.
Dear Josh,
Sit down, honey, we need to talk.
There's no easy way to say this, so I'll just be blunt: The second season of "The O.C" has been a real letdown so far. Everybody thinks so. The numbers speak for themselves: The ratings are down 25 percent overall from last year; the highly anticipated Chrismukkah episode on Dec. 16 raked in a season low of 6.3 million viewers. That's 32 percent down from Chrismukkah 2003.
But don't worry, Josh, there's hope for you yet. The season is only half over, and you can recover -assuming you learn from your mistakes. I've taken copious notes, so let's go over them together:
10. Fix Seth Cohen. How did a lovable dork like Seth (Adam Brody) become such a senseless spaz? I adore him - I really do - but he's been nothing but a big wuss this season, whining about Summer this, Summer that, blah, blah, blah. Pull yourself together, Cohen. You're better than this!
9. Incest = Icky. So Lindsay (Shannon Lucio) is Caleb's illegitimate daughter, which makes her Seth's half-aunt. And yet you set her up on a date with him a few episodes ago. Do you realize how gross that is? I mean, they never did anything, but still! It was a date! Their intentions were ... unwittingly incestuous! Eww!
8. "The O.C." is on Fox, not MTV2. You love indie music. I get it. The Killers, Death Cab, the Walkmen. Great bands. I couldn't agree more. But does every episode have to be built around a show at The Bait Shop? Because I'm starting to think you're using music to get out of having to write actual plot and dialogue.
7. Zach is hot. Bringing in Michael Cassidy as Zach, the new boyfriend for Summer (Rachel Bilson), is the best thing you've done this season. Love him. Keep him. Clone him. He's perfect.
6. Caleb is not. It's bad enough that Caleb (Alan Dale) is the lone old dude on the show. Does he also have to be wrapped up in such boring legal mumbo-jumbo all the time? Nobody knows what's going on. Nobody cares. Send him to jail already!
5. Neither is the Yard Guy. Lose DJ (Nicholas Gonzalez). He's pretty cute in his own way, but as Marissa's (Mischa Barton) blue-collar lover, he's awkward, old-looking and quite creepy. Is he the reason she starts making a move on Alex (Olivia Wilde)? Because that would explain a lot.
4. Keep Alex's hair down. Sometimes it's up, sometimes it's down. When it's up, it looks like that notorious 'do from "There's Something About Mary." And it makes some of us think dirty thoughts.
3. They're in school, aren't they? I understand that the O.C. is this weird place where everybody's beautiful and no one except Lindsay ever studies. But how about mentioning college applications or standardized tests once in a while - just for kicks?
2. About that baby ... The way you handled Theresa's (Navi Rawat) pregnancy is totally shady. She says she lost the baby, but she didn't really. Ryan (Ben McKenzie) all but says, "Hallelujah," and rushes back to Newport, where he immediately makes a move on a peppy young thing. In the real world, we call guys like that Kevin Federline.
1. Desperate times call for ... lesbians? It's not enough that Marissa is a drug-addicted, alcoholic, suicidal kleptomaniac with anger management issues. She also has to embark on a lesbian love affair? Why, why, why? If you're dealing with the subject in some mature, sensitive way, that's great. Go for it. But if you're doing it just to slip in some wild girl-on-girl action to boost the ratings, then ... well, best luck to you, Josh. You're on your own.
E-mail: parke@northjersey.com
So i Wrote to Mr or Ms Parke
Dear Mr or Ms Eunnie Parke,
Since I Read your I guess it would be called a article about Fixing The Oc that was in the Jan 3rd Issue of the Record I have been Wondering something
Are you Handycapt? , 14?, or just somehow found a way to make money by Doing the least amount of work?. If it is the 3rd then I Highly respect you as a Writer it is also a dream of mine to find a way to make money by Doing basically pulling things out of a Monkeys butt
and if you are handicap I am impressed I have worked with handicap children in my past and I know how it is with the daily struggle
but if you 14 then it explains a lot about the paper as a whole
-me
Dear Mr or Ms Eunnie Parke,
Since I Read your I guess it would be called a article about Fixing The Oc that was in the Jan 3rd Issue of the Record I have been Wondering something
Are you Handycapt? , 14?, or just somehow found a way to make money by Doing the least amount of work?. If it is the 3rd then I Highly respect you as a Writer it is also a dream of mine to find a way to make money by Doing basically pulling things out of a Monkeys butt
and if you are handicap I am impressed I have worked with handicap children in my past and I know how it is with the daily struggle
but if you 14 then it explains a lot about the paper as a whole
-me
Now i think i am being polite but look at that she gets paid to write that i need to know if shes 14, handicap, or lazy
Tuesday, December 28, 2004
Ohio Smells
Monday 27 December 2004 -- This afternoon, an attorney representing the Kerry/Edwards presidential campaign filed two important motions to preserve and augment evidence of alleged election fraud in the November election.
The motions were filed in the matter titled Yost et al. v. Delaware County Board of Elections and J. Kenneth Blackwell (Civil Action No. C2-04-1139) with the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio. The document is titled "Motion Of Intervenor-Defendant Kerry-Edwards 2004, Inc. For A Preservation Order And For A Leave To Take Limited Expedited Discovery."
The purpose of the motions is twofold: A) To preserve all ballots and voting machines pertaining to the Yost matter for investigation and analysis; and B) To make available for sworn deposition testimony a technician for Triad Systems, the company that produced and maintained many of the voting machines used in the Ohio election. The technician has been accused of tampering with the recount process in Hocking County, Ohio, though other counties are believed to have also been involved. Any officers of Triad Systems who have information pertaining to said tampering are likewise subject to subpoena for sworn deposition testimony.
If the judge in this case allows these motions, and these individuals are served with subpoenas for deposition, the information disclosed under oath could have a major effect on the case. Likewise, judicial approval of these motions will open the door to forensic analysis of both the ballots cast and the machines they were counted on. If tampering took place, such an analysis could reveal it.
The document filed in Ohio reads as follows:
Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26, Intervenor-Defendant Kerry-Edwards 2004, Inc. hereby moves this Court for an order preserving materials from the 2004 presidential election and for leave to take a limited number of depositions on an expedited schedule. The depositions and preservation order sought by Intervenor- Defendant Kerry-Edwards 2004, Inc. are the same as those sought in the motion filed on December 23, 2004 by Defendants NVRI, Cobb and Badnarik. Intervenor-Defendant Kerry-Edwads 2004, Inc. hereby adopts the memorandum and proposed order filed by the Defendants in support of its own motion.
As has been previously reported on truthout, this filing for the preservation and augmentation of evidence is centered on Hocking County, Ohio. According to a sworn affidavit by Sherole Eaton, Hocking County deputy director of elections, a technician for Triad Systems entered the county elections office on December 10 and dismantled one of the vote tabulation computers.
Green Party presidential candidate David Cobb, a central figure in the Yost matter, described the incident as related to him by Eaton during a hearing on the matter chaired by Rep. John Conyers. "A representative from Triad Systems came into a county board of elections office un-announced," said Cobb. "He said he was just stopping by to see if they had any questions about the upcoming recount. He then headed into the back room where the Triad supplied Tabulator (a card reader and older PC with custom software) is kept. He told them there was a problem and the system had a bad battery and had 'lost all of its data.' He then took the computer apart and started swapping parts in and out of it and another 'spare' tower type PC also in the room.
"He may have had spare parts in his coat," continued Cobb, "as one of the BOE people moved it and remarked as to how very heavy it was. He finally re-assembled everything and said it was working but to not turn it off. He then asked which precinct would be counted for the 3% recount test, and the one which had been selected as it had the right number of votes, was relayed to him. He then went back and did something else to the tabulator computer. The Triad Systems representative suggested that since the hand count had to match the machine count exactly, and since it would be hard to memorize the several numbers which would be needed to get the count to come out exactly right, that they should post this series of numbers on the wall where they would not be noticed by observers."
Responding to Eaton's allegations, Rep. Conyers dispatched a letter of complaint to Brett Rapp, President of Triad. In it, Conyers wrote, "I am concerned that your company has operated - either intentionally or negligently - in a manner which will thwart the recount law in Ohio by preventing validly cast ballots in the presidential election from being counted. You have done this by preparing 'cheat sheets' providing county election officials with information such that they would more easily be able to ignore valid ballots that were thrown out by the machines during the initial count. The purpose of the Ohio recount law is to randomly check vote counts to see if they match machine counts. By attempting to ascertain the precinct to be recounted in advance, and then informing the election officials of the number of votes they need to count by hand to make sure it matches the machine count, is an invitation to completely ignore the purpose of the recount law."
The filing by the Kerry/Edwards campaign is significant. The Yost matter deals with a recount of the votes cast in Ohio during the election. In order for a judge to consider such a motion, the plaintiff must be able to prove irreparable harm in the matter at hand, and must also be able to prove a significant chance that the case will succeed on the merits. The stumbling point for the Green Party and Libertarian Party in this matter has been the ability to prove that potential for success, because no recount would deliver an Ohio victory to them. A recount could very well deliver Ohio to Kerry, thus fulfilling the success on the merits requirement.
In the end, this filing amounts to a "Me, too" from the Kerry/Edwards campaign. This case would not exist in any form without the dedicated efforts of Green Party candidate David Cobb and Libertarian Party candidate Michael Badnarik. Though the inclusion of Kerry into this matter strengthens the case significantly, Cobb and Badnarik deserve the lion's share of credit for carrying the matter to this point.
Attorney John Bonifaz serves as general counsel for the National Voting Rights Institute, and is co-counsel for Cobb and Badnarik in this matter. Reached for comment on this Kerry filing, Bonifaz said, "We are pleased that the Kerry Edwards campaign has joined our motion to preserve all of the ballots and election machinery in the presidential election in Ohio and to investigate the potential tampering of voting machines by Triad Governmental Systems, Inc, prior to the start of the recount. We welcome the Bush Cheney campaign joining our motion as well. The integrity of this recount is at stake. All candidates ought to join together in ensuring the proper counting of every citizen's vote."
The motions were filed in the matter titled Yost et al. v. Delaware County Board of Elections and J. Kenneth Blackwell (Civil Action No. C2-04-1139) with the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio. The document is titled "Motion Of Intervenor-Defendant Kerry-Edwards 2004, Inc. For A Preservation Order And For A Leave To Take Limited Expedited Discovery."
The purpose of the motions is twofold: A) To preserve all ballots and voting machines pertaining to the Yost matter for investigation and analysis; and B) To make available for sworn deposition testimony a technician for Triad Systems, the company that produced and maintained many of the voting machines used in the Ohio election. The technician has been accused of tampering with the recount process in Hocking County, Ohio, though other counties are believed to have also been involved. Any officers of Triad Systems who have information pertaining to said tampering are likewise subject to subpoena for sworn deposition testimony.
If the judge in this case allows these motions, and these individuals are served with subpoenas for deposition, the information disclosed under oath could have a major effect on the case. Likewise, judicial approval of these motions will open the door to forensic analysis of both the ballots cast and the machines they were counted on. If tampering took place, such an analysis could reveal it.
The document filed in Ohio reads as follows:
Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26, Intervenor-Defendant Kerry-Edwards 2004, Inc. hereby moves this Court for an order preserving materials from the 2004 presidential election and for leave to take a limited number of depositions on an expedited schedule. The depositions and preservation order sought by Intervenor- Defendant Kerry-Edwards 2004, Inc. are the same as those sought in the motion filed on December 23, 2004 by Defendants NVRI, Cobb and Badnarik. Intervenor-Defendant Kerry-Edwads 2004, Inc. hereby adopts the memorandum and proposed order filed by the Defendants in support of its own motion.
As has been previously reported on truthout, this filing for the preservation and augmentation of evidence is centered on Hocking County, Ohio. According to a sworn affidavit by Sherole Eaton, Hocking County deputy director of elections, a technician for Triad Systems entered the county elections office on December 10 and dismantled one of the vote tabulation computers.
Green Party presidential candidate David Cobb, a central figure in the Yost matter, described the incident as related to him by Eaton during a hearing on the matter chaired by Rep. John Conyers. "A representative from Triad Systems came into a county board of elections office un-announced," said Cobb. "He said he was just stopping by to see if they had any questions about the upcoming recount. He then headed into the back room where the Triad supplied Tabulator (a card reader and older PC with custom software) is kept. He told them there was a problem and the system had a bad battery and had 'lost all of its data.' He then took the computer apart and started swapping parts in and out of it and another 'spare' tower type PC also in the room.
"He may have had spare parts in his coat," continued Cobb, "as one of the BOE people moved it and remarked as to how very heavy it was. He finally re-assembled everything and said it was working but to not turn it off. He then asked which precinct would be counted for the 3% recount test, and the one which had been selected as it had the right number of votes, was relayed to him. He then went back and did something else to the tabulator computer. The Triad Systems representative suggested that since the hand count had to match the machine count exactly, and since it would be hard to memorize the several numbers which would be needed to get the count to come out exactly right, that they should post this series of numbers on the wall where they would not be noticed by observers."
Responding to Eaton's allegations, Rep. Conyers dispatched a letter of complaint to Brett Rapp, President of Triad. In it, Conyers wrote, "I am concerned that your company has operated - either intentionally or negligently - in a manner which will thwart the recount law in Ohio by preventing validly cast ballots in the presidential election from being counted. You have done this by preparing 'cheat sheets' providing county election officials with information such that they would more easily be able to ignore valid ballots that were thrown out by the machines during the initial count. The purpose of the Ohio recount law is to randomly check vote counts to see if they match machine counts. By attempting to ascertain the precinct to be recounted in advance, and then informing the election officials of the number of votes they need to count by hand to make sure it matches the machine count, is an invitation to completely ignore the purpose of the recount law."
The filing by the Kerry/Edwards campaign is significant. The Yost matter deals with a recount of the votes cast in Ohio during the election. In order for a judge to consider such a motion, the plaintiff must be able to prove irreparable harm in the matter at hand, and must also be able to prove a significant chance that the case will succeed on the merits. The stumbling point for the Green Party and Libertarian Party in this matter has been the ability to prove that potential for success, because no recount would deliver an Ohio victory to them. A recount could very well deliver Ohio to Kerry, thus fulfilling the success on the merits requirement.
In the end, this filing amounts to a "Me, too" from the Kerry/Edwards campaign. This case would not exist in any form without the dedicated efforts of Green Party candidate David Cobb and Libertarian Party candidate Michael Badnarik. Though the inclusion of Kerry into this matter strengthens the case significantly, Cobb and Badnarik deserve the lion's share of credit for carrying the matter to this point.
Attorney John Bonifaz serves as general counsel for the National Voting Rights Institute, and is co-counsel for Cobb and Badnarik in this matter. Reached for comment on this Kerry filing, Bonifaz said, "We are pleased that the Kerry Edwards campaign has joined our motion to preserve all of the ballots and election machinery in the presidential election in Ohio and to investigate the potential tampering of voting machines by Triad Governmental Systems, Inc, prior to the start of the recount. We welcome the Bush Cheney campaign joining our motion as well. The integrity of this recount is at stake. All candidates ought to join together in ensuring the proper counting of every citizen's vote."
Tuesday, November 09, 2004
I had a dream about a meat factory and how they cut off the heads of mexicans and made meat with there bodies
what the fuck is up with that
what the fuck is up with that
Wednesday, November 03, 2004
Tuesday, November 02, 2004
I'm Voteing Blue
You Can Do It TO, Cause Saveing our Planet is the Thing to DO. Looting and Polluting Is not the Way.
Hear what me has to say - "Don't Vote Red unless they are a modred there almost all good i'll accept your compromise cause Its not a team Event for me and it shouldn't for you"
Monday, November 01, 2004
My Insides are a Twist with Anxiety for Tomarrows Ellection
Sooo do somthing fun for tomarrow could be more fun or DOOM
Sooo do somthing fun for tomarrow could be more fun or DOOM
Friday, October 29, 2004
Arbusto's Ironic Statement
" to jump to Conclusions without knowing the facts is not a person you want as your commander-in-chief" - Bush
Irony is so hot
