
Homicidalheathen
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Le' ~sigh~
Homicidalheathen replied to Homicidalheathen's topic in Relationships, Pets & Domestic Homelife
I prob should bite my tongue more but the way I am it would be off by now. Just saw gangsta loser kid with his lawn mower...and get this, he in the past...has had the nerve to ask if he could BORROW SOME GAS. Yah. Its free don't ya know? I just give it away! weeeee! So I said something. 'BOUT TIME FAT BOY DID SOME WORK' and he just looked down at the ground and walked away. Heh. edit to fix a typo to appease the spelling nazi's -
WASHINGTON -- Imagine earning $50,000 a year and spending $100,000. That's a lot of money owed to somebody. Now imagine the government spending $3.6 trillion and borrowing nearly half of it. Again, big debt to pay. That's what the Office of Management and Budget is predicting. OMB Director Peter Orszag announced Monday that a $90 billion increase in the estimated deficit for each of the next two years would bring the deficit for fiscal year 2009 to $1.8 trillion and for 2010 to $1.3 trillion. President Obama's proposed budget for 2010 is $3.6 trillion. The 2009 budget was set at $3.1 trillion. Those numbers are up from February's estimates. The budget deficits will be 12.9 percent and 8.5 percent of gross domestic product in those two years, Orszag said. The budget deficit for fiscal year 2009, which ends Sept. 30, is four times the record set last year. Orszag said the increases are "driven in large part by the economic crisis inherited by this administration." The cause for these record deficits? Deep recession, Wall Street bailout, economic stimulus bill and lower than expected tax revenues. The bright side? The actual 2009 deficit could end up to be $250 billion less than predicted because Congress is unlikely to provide another $250 billion in financial bailout money. Annual deficits would never dip below $500 billion and would total $7.1 trillion over 2010-2019. Even those dismal figures rely on economic projections that are significantly more optimistic than those forecast by private sector economists and the Congressional Budget Office. They rely on a 1.2 percent decline in GDP this year and a 3.2 percent growth rate for 2010. Congressional Republicans noted almost immediately that the newest figures foresee the deficit growing by $89 billion more than what was predicted three months ago. They note that's five times the amount the administration proposed saving last week by cutting out $17 billion in 100 programs that Orszag said Monday "don't work or whose costs are excessive." For the most part, Obama's updated budget tracks the 134-page outline he submitted to lawmakers in February. His budget proposes higher taxes for the wealthy, a hotly contested effort to combat global warming and the first steps toward universal health care coverage. Obama's Democratic allies controlling Congress have already made it clear that they will reject key elements of his plan. Apparently dead is a plan to raise $267 billion over the next decade to pay for his health care initiative by curbing the ability of wealthier people to reduce their tax bills through deductions for mortgage interest, charitable contributions and state and local taxes. And the congressional budget plan approved last month would not extend Obama's signature $400 tax credit for most workers -- $800 for couples -- after it expires at the end of next year. Obama's remarkably controversial "cap-and-trade" proposal to curb heat-trapping greenhouse gas emissions is also reeling from opposition from Capitol Hill Democrats from coal-producing regions and states with concentrations of heavy industry. Under cap-and-trade, the government would auction permits to emit heat-trapping gases, with the costs being passed on to consumers via higher gasoline and electric bills. Among the new proposals is a plan -- already on its way through Congress -- that would increase the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation's borrowing authority from $30 billion to $100 billion in order to grant a two-year reprieve from higher deposit insurance premiums while the industry is struggling. Also new are several tax "loophole" closures and increased IRS tax compliance efforts to raise $58 billion over the next decade to help finance Obama's health care measure. The money makes up for revenue losses stemming from lower-than-hoped estimates of his proposal to limit wealthier people's ability to maximize their itemized deductions. The updated budget also would repeal an unintended tax windfall taken by paper companies that use a byproduct in the paper-making process as fuel to power their mills. The tax credits were never intended for paper companies, but now they could be worth more than $3 billion a year, according to a congressional estimate. The budget would make permanent the expanded $2,500 tax credit for college expenses that was provided for two years in the just-passed economic stimulus bill. It also would renew most of the Bush tax cuts enacted in 2001 and 2003, and would permanently update the alternative minimum tax so that it would hit fewer middle- to upper-income taxpayers. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DEIWHI_bwfk
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Earnhardt Jr. Headlines Acceleration by Sammie Lukaskiewicz BROOKLYN, Mich. -- NASCAR driver Dale Earnhardt Jr. will headline the biggest hospitality event in motorsports at Michigan International Speedway in June. Earnhardt is a featured guest in Acceleration, the new and exciting fan hospitality option open at MIS on June 13 and 14 during the LifeLock 400 NASCAR Sprint Cup weekend. Acceleration is a club that combines the thrill and speed of NASCAR with the comfort, fun and food of a favorite sports bar. “Michigan has come up with a great event for the fans at Acceleration,” Earnhardt Jr. said. “It’s always good to get out there and interact with the fans and I hope we can put on a good race for them.” Earnhardt and other guests will participate in a fan forum, Q&A with Acceleration club guests throughout the weekend. A complete schedule of guests and times will be posted on the speedway’s new Web site, www.MISpeedway.com, as they are confirmed. “I can’t think of a better way to kick off the grand opening of our new hospitality club than with an exceptional lineup of drivers and celebrities and our race fans,” Corporate Partnerships Director for MIS Josh Burgett said. “Acceleration is a true VIP experience and only a few steps away from world-class racing. Whether you’re purchasing individual tickets or bringing a small group, Acceleration is the perfect way to enjoy the excitement and power of NASCAR and MIS.” New, improved and better than ever for 2009, Acceleration is the perfect combination of great racing, great food and great times. The hospitality option replaces the former Tailgate Club and Victory Lane Club at MIS and is an all-inclusive fan package that promises even better food, entertainment and guest amenities. Now located on the New Holland Motorsports Fan Plaza, Acceleration is set up in a 15,000-square-foot pavilion. It is the biggest and best way to enjoy race day, and it’s only a few short steps from the speedway’s grandstand seats. Hospitality packages can be purchased individually or for groups. And guests can take part in Acceleration on Saturday or Sunday — or both days — of the event. Admission to Acceleration includes: · Hospitality access · Pre-race pit access · Breakfast · Lunch · Beverages (six drink tickets per guest good for beer, wine, soda, water) · Entertainment · Souvenir program · Collectible event gift · Scanner rental · Driver and NASCAR personality appearances Admission is $69 for adults and $49 for kids, plus a grandstand admission ticket for Saturday. And $179 for adults and $79 for kids, plus a grandstand admission ticket for Sunday. Acceleration can be purchased for the entire weekend for $248 for adults and $128 kids, plus a grandstand admission ticket. Acceleration isn’t just for individual ticket holders. Businesses can also take advantage of this awesome hospitality option by reserving a table of 10 for $3,650. Corporate hospitality that’s tailored to individual business sizes and budgets is what sets MIS apart from other speedways. “We know that one size doesn’t always fit all,” Burgett said. “So we have created an option for companies who may have smaller client bases or smaller budgets and will create a package that suits their needs, rather than simply ours.” Nestled in the lush Irish Hills of Southeastern Michigan, Michigan International Speedway is the Great Escape, a venerable NASCAR national park where fans can get away and enjoy the very best in racing and camaraderie. It’s the love of racing and the thrill of a great time for race fans and drivers alike. Tickets and camping are on sale now. For additional information, call the MIS Ticket Hotline at 800-354-1010 or visit the new MISpeedway.com. Michigan International Speedway — 2009 Schedule Friday, June 12 ARCA RE/MAX Series Racing for Wildlife 200 Saturday, June 13 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series Sunday, June 14 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series LifeLock 400 Friday, Aug. 14 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Practice and qualifying Saturday, Aug. 15 NASCAR Nationwide Series CARFAX 250 Sunday, Aug. 16 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series
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Star Trek
Homicidalheathen replied to Troy Spiral's topic in Movies, Books, Art, TV, Gaming and Computers
I hate time travel movies where everything works out...I don't think you can be in two places at once and not have things just go haywire.... other than that it was good well the treckies I went with had an hour long discussion of what was wrong with the story line after...THAT was annoying. -
Relieved. Thing 1 has discovered the drama and chaos that comes with gothness and club life and is giving it up. So am/have I. For a group of people who claim to be outcasts...there sure is a lot of hypocrisy and bullying going on. Now if she would just get her butt back in college.
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Oblivion May 9th at The Leland!
Homicidalheathen replied to Ice Queen's topic in Nightlife, Events & Concerts
I heard about a after party where some wiiiiild goings on...went on....? -
Like crap...did I stay up to late and have to much fun? I don remembers it...if I did...
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Pictures That Describe How You Feel
Homicidalheathen replied to phee's topic in Pictures, Photography and Art
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excited!!! I might get a monte' carlo with flames...I love fast cars. I need one with better traction...in the snow.
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CNN) -- A court in Saudi Arabia has granted an 8-year-old girl a divorce from her 47-year-old husband, after twice denying the divorce request previously, local media reported Thursday. The marriage sparked condemnations around the world from human rights groups and U.S. and other government officials when it first came to light in December. Local media, which is highly regulated by the Saudi government, reported that the court in the city of Onaiza approved the divorce decree Thursday, and the divorce is final. A source at the court told the Saudi daily newspaper Al-Watan that the divorce "came after a series of pleas made by a number of officials in the region to the husband." Don't Miss Minister moves to regulate child marriages UNICEF 'deeply concerned' at girl's marriage CNN efforts to reach court officials, the husband and the girl's father have been unsuccessful. According to the attorney for the young girl's mother, the father of the girl had arranged the marriage between his daughter and a close friend of his to settle his debts with the man. When the mother went to court to try to get the marriage annulled, Saudi judge Habib al-Habib rejected the request on a legal technicality. The judge ruled that the mother -- who is separated from the girl's father -- was not the child's legal guardian and therefore could not represent her in court, according to the mother's lawyer, Abdullah al-Jutaili. However, the judge required the girl's husband to sign a pledge that he would not have sex with her until she reaches puberty, al-Jutaili said. The lawyer said in the original marriage agreement, the father of the girl stipulated that the marriage would not be consummated until she was 18. The judge also ruled that the girl could file a petition for a divorce when she reached puberty, al-Jutaili said. The young girl lives with her mother, the attorney said, and was never told that she was married. When the initial petition to annul the marriage was rejected, the mother appealed the verdict to an appeals court in the Saudi capital of Riyadh. The appeals court declined to certify the original ruling, in essence rejecting al-Habib's verdict, and sent the case back to him for reconsideration. Under the complicated Saudi legal process, the appeals court ruling meant that the marriage was still in effect but that a challenge to the marriage was ongoing. Earlier this month, the original judge refused for a second time to annul the marriage. Soon after that decision, Saudi Arabia's justice minister told Al-Watan that he planned to enact a law that will protect young girls from such marriages. The law will place restrictions on the practice to preserve the rights of children and prevent abuses, Justice Minister Mohammed Al-Issa was quoted as saying. Additionally, al-Issa said there would be a study of a system that will include regulations for the marriage of minors and everything related to such unions, the newspaper reported. No details on the restrictions or regulations were mentioned. The minister did not say whether child marriage would be abolished. Responding to the justice minister's comments and the possibility of a new child marriage law, al-Jutaili told CNN at the time, "this is what we requested from day one, and we know that Saudi officials are working so hard on resolving this issue." Al-Jutaili believes that such a law would help not only his defendant but many other Saudi minors facing a similar problem. In Washington Monday, Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs William Burns called the marriage a human rights abuse. "Child marriage is, unfortunately, still common in much of Saudi Arabia and we have voiced our concern about this practice at the highest levels," he told a conference on U.S.-Saudi relations. "We were encouraged by reports that the Justice Ministry had begun to review the legal age of marriage." After the divorce was denied for a second time, the head of the United Nations Children's Fund issued a statement expressing concern about the case. UNICEF Executive Director Ann Veneman said, "the right to free and full consent to marriage is recognized in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Consent cannot be free and full when either party to a marriage is too young to make an informed decision." The issue of child marriage has been a hot-button topic in the deeply conservative Saudi kingdom recently. While rights groups have petitioned the government for laws to protect children from such marriages, the kingdom's top cleric has said that it's OK for girls as young as 10 to wed. "It is incorrect to say that it's not permitted to marry off girls who are 15 and younger," Sheikh Abdul Aziz Al-Sheikh, the kingdom's grand mufti, said in January, according to the regional Al-Hayat newspaper. "A girl aged 10 or 12 can be married. Those who think she's too young are wrong, and they are being unfair to her." Al-Sheikh reportedly made the remarks when he was asked during a lecture about parents forcing their underage daughters to marry. "We hear a lot in the media about the marriage of underage girls," he said, according to the newspaper. "We should know that sharia law has not brought injustice to women." Sharia law is Islamic law, and Saudi Arabia follows a strict interpretation of Islam called Wahhabism
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omg this one is hoooorible!
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=68sRAKQ4pX4
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Doctor in US baby murder case stands by autopsy By JAY REEVES | Associated Press | Apr 10, 09 3:54 PM CDT The doctor whose bungled autopsy of a baby led to a murder charge that was dropped this week against an Alabama mother maintains the findings were correct, the medical examiner's lawyer said Friday. Six different experts disagreed with the autopsy report by Dr. Corinne Stern, who ruled that a newborn was suffocated in 2006. The experts' opinion that the baby boy was stillborn led a judge to dismiss the charge Thursday against Bridget Lee, 34, who spent nine months in jail after being charged with capital murder. Jay Lewis, who represented Stern in a lawsuit she filed after leaving Alabama to work in Laredo, Texas, said Stern believes her original autopsy report was correct. "She stands by her findings," Lewis said. Three of the state experts who now maintain the baby was stillborn initially signed off on Stern's ruling that Bridget Lee's child was purposely suffocated after birth, he said. "She is appalled that she is being raked over the coals like this," said Lewis. "It's unprecedented." Dr. Kenneth Snell, who is Alabama's chief medical examiner and who testified during a hearing that Stern made a mistake, declined comment Friday. Snell previously said the Alabama Department of Forensic Science would review as many as 100 homicide autopsies performed by Stern to determine whether more cases were flawed. Stern's autopsy was the primary evidence against Lee, who said she panicked and hid the child's body in a plastic container in her sport utility vehicle after delivering the boy stillborn. The case fell apart when the defense successfully showed the medical report was flawed and prosecutors agreed. Stern is currently the chief medical examiner in Webb County, Texas, where she and a five-person staff handled 430 death cases in 2007, 15 of which were classified as homicides. She took the job after leaving Alabama amid conflict with colleagues. Court records and testimony during Lee's case indicated Stern finished her autopsy on the baby on her last day at work in Alabama _ Dec. 15, 2006. She quit earlier in the month with a letter that complained about conditions at the state forensic agency. "I hope the unprofessional and unfair treatment afforded me and the daily harassment that I face in my own office, with the knowledge of my superiors, will not fall on another unsuspecting physician," Stern wrote. Stern filed a federal lawsuit blaming gender discrimination for a demotion, but a judge threw out the claim in December. Stern left another forensics job in Texas amid turmoil before coming to Alabama. Stern gave sworn testimony that she quit the medical examiner's office in El Paso, Texas, after complaining that her free-speech rights were being violated. Records indicate Stern maintained that law enforcement was getting too involved in her work. A copy of her settlement with El Paso County shows Stern received about $80,000 in pay and agreed to quit by July 31, 2005. She agreed not to perform any autopsies during the last month of her employment. Lewis, Stern's attorney, said the quality of her autopsies has never before been an issue. She helped examine human remains after both Hurricane Katrina in 2005 and the shuttle Columbia accident in 2003, when seven astronauts died. "She has a good reputation for being a pathologist," said Lewis.
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Suspect in baby murder on interstate denied bail TAMPA -- The man charged with murdering a baby by throwing him out of a window on Interstate 275 Tuesday has been denied bail, booking records show. Richard Anthony McTear Jr., 21, faces counts of first-degree murder, aggravated child abuse, battery, burglary and kidnapping, as well as several charges of battery, child abuse and false imprisonment from prior warrants. Deputies say he fought with his former girlfriend, Jasmine Bedwell, 17, early that morning before taking her 3-month-old son, Emanuel Wesley Murray, and throwing him out of car window. The baby was found dead. McTear was arrested after a four-hour search. McTear remains at the Orient Road Jail. video in link: http://blogs.tampabay.com/breakingnews/200...enied-bail.html
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Plea Deal Includes Resurrection Clause Mother to Testify Against Alleged Cult and to Go Free if Son Rises From Dead The Washington Post/March 31, 2009 By Dan Morse Accepting a plea bargain that her attorney described as unprecedented in American jurisprudence, a 22-year-old Maryland woman yesterday agreed to cooperate in the prosecution of other defendants in the death of her son under the condition that charges against her be dropped if the child rises from the dead. "It also is specifically noted," Baltimore Circuit Court Judge Timothy Doory said in court as he described the plea bargain to the boy's mother, "that if the victim in this case, Javon Thompson, is resurrected, as you still hold some hope he will be, you may withdraw the plea, and the charges will be nolle prossed [withdrawn] against you." The boy's mother, Ria Ramkissoon, is shaping up as prosecutors' star witness against a 40-year-old Baltimore woman named Queen Antoinette. Prosecutors allege that Queen Antoinette led a small cult, called One Mind Ministries, based in a West Baltimore rowhouse. In early 2007, prosecutors say, Queen Antoinette instructed Ramkissoon and others to deprive Javon of food and water because he didn't say "amen" before breakfast. Queen Antoinette has been charged with first-degree murder and child abuse resulting in death, as have three of her alleged followers. Any trial is expected to be at least two months away. In yesterday's hearing, prosecutors said they would drop murder charges against Ramkissoon. She pleaded guilty to child abuse resulting in death. If she testifies truthfully against the other defendants, according to yesterday's agreement, prosecutors will recommend that she be released from jail, placed on probation, and provided treatment that could include "a process of deprogramming." A spokeswoman for the Baltimore state's attorney's office said that in recent weeks, as prosecutors and Ramkissoon's attorney discussed the plea bargain, prosecutors made it clear that Ramkissoon could not get out of her obligations if she asserted that Javon came back as anything other than himself. "This would need to be a Jesus-like resurrection," Margaret Burns, the spokeswoman, said after the hearing. "It cannot be a reincarnation in another object or animal." Ramkissoon, listed in court records as five feet tall and 100 pounds, was led into court wearing jeans, a bright yellow shirt, leg chains and handcuffs. She displayed little emotion, walking past friends and relatives without appearing to make any prolonged eye contact. Her mother sobbed in her seat, both before the plea and while prosecutors read aloud the facts as they see them. Prosecutors said Queen Antoinette concluded that Javon had developed a "spirit of rebellion" and should not be given food or water for at least two days. Fearing that his mother, Ramkissoon, might "break down and feed the child," Queen Antoinette ordered that the child be given to another group member, prosecutors alleged yesterday. After Javon died, he was placed on a couch while everyone knelt down and prayed. Ramkissoon also danced around her son, prosecutors said. The boy's body was later moved to a back room. At one point, two members measured Jason's body and bought a suitcase. Members believed that if the body could travel with them, it could be resurrected at a later date, said Steven Silverman, Ramkissoon's attorney. The group members left the suitcase with a man they had befriended. Police eventually discovered it in his shed in Philadelphia. Also during yesterday's hearing, Queen Antoinette and another defendant, Trevia Williams, indicated that they had attorneys but didn't say who they are. Queen Antoinette said little during the hearing. She talked quietly with courtroom security officials during breaks.
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http://www.geekologie.com/2008/03/16-week/
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OLIVET, Mich. (AP) -- A 24-year-old Michigan man linked to a slaying in Italy is an Olivet College student who traveled there to study art with a professor and other students. The college, 30 miles south of Lansing, says Johnathan Hindenach is a junior art major who enrolled in January. Italian authorities say Hindenach confessed to killing a man in Florence early Thursday. Olivet President Don Tuski says seven other students and the professor will depart Italy on Saturday. The 16-day trip was supposed to run until May 18. Olivet describes Hindenach as a top student who recently received an award in visual arts. Before attending Olivet, the Charlotte, Mich., man was a student at Grand Valley State University and Lansing Community College.
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http://www.masksoftheworld.com/ I wonder why the mask making guy never posted...oh well...I was looking forward to talking about it with him.
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my yard looks excellent...i gots new lillys from me step son last night, the kind that look like lil bells, they grew in the house he grew up in. We have this thing going on in my family where we pass down plants...there is a dogwood tree in my front yard at the other house from my grandmas front yard down south, I know that is illegal but we made sure it was disease and bug free before we snuck it up here. I didn't think it would take off but its huge now
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Oh since he only called 7x? Return his call I guess.