why that was nice

Should i start using crystal meth?

  • Sure...its not that bad...

    Votes: 93 62.0%
  • Just say no!

    Votes: 57 38.0%

  • Total voters
    150
I just hate the people who get this stuff, and don't deserve it... I have an Uncle that gets it because hes a lazy retard, sat around for 10 years, and now has kidney failure. Hes only like 30 years old too. Hasn't had a job since he was 16.
Here's the question you have to ask yourself: do you want to set up the system so a minority of people who don't deserve the benefits get them, or so a minority of people who need the help don't get it? It's similar to asking if you'd rather execute an innocent man or release a guilty one.

Yeah it sucks that you've got "welfare queens" and lazy bums who exploit the system, but I'd rather have that happen than more people who legitimately need the assistance being unable to get it.

 
You could pin most of the current economic crisis on 1999's Gramm-Leech-Bliley Act, which repealed all of the 1930's regulations that were passed in order to yank us out of the Great Depression, but it's arguable how much of a hand Clinton himself actually had in that (or more specifically, if he had the power to stop it).
You can tell who's got a political axe to grind by who they turn a blind eye to. Obama's doing a pretty poor job currently, but it's a poor job at a mess that was created by Bush and even conservatives like Bruce Bartlett have figured it out. It's the drooling Limbaugh dittoheads that won't listen to reason.
Don't forget about the Glass Steagall act //content.invisioncic.com/y282845/emoticons/wink.gif.608e3ea05f1a9f98611af0861652f8fb.gif Thanks Mr. Clinton.

 
Here's the question you have to ask yourself: do you want to set up the system so a minority of people who don't deserve the benefits get them, or so a minority of people who need the help don't get it? It's similar to asking if you'd rather execute an innocent man or release a guilty one.
Yeah it sucks that you've got "welfare queens" and lazy bums who exploit the system, but I'd rather have that happen than more people who legitimately need the assistance being unable to get it.
I also used to work at a check cashing place, and it was UNREAL how many people who looked fine to me were getting these SSI checks. Regular joe looking people. Obviously I don't know what mental issues they may have, but I feel there is an enormous amount of people playing the system.

 
BREAKING NEWSmsnbc.com news services

updated 16 minutes ago

HOUSTON - The Los Angeles County coroner ruled Michael Jackson's death a homicide, a law enforcement official told the Associated Press on Monday. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the findings have not been publicly released.

A spokesperson for the coroner's office told Access Hollywood that the office had no comment on the AP report.

Meanwhile, a search warrant affidavit revealed that Jackson had lethal levels of the powerful anesthetic propofol in his system when he died in his rented Los Angeles mansion on June 25.

The document unsealed Monday allowed officials to raid the Houston offices and storage facility of Dr. Conrad Murray last month.

According to the warrant, Murray, Jackson's personal physician, had been treating the singer for insomnia with the sedative for six weeks. According to the document, Murray said he had been trying to wean Jackson off the powerful sedative by using smaller doses in combination with the sedatives lorazepam and midazolam.

On the morning Jackson died, Murray said he tried to induce sleep without using propofol, starting first with valium at 1:30 a.m. When Jackson was still awake at 2 a.m., Murray injected Jackson with lorazepam, then injected him with midazolam at 3 a.m. Murray told police he administered several other drugs over the next few hours.

By 10:40 a.m., Jackson, still unable to sleep, urged Murray to give him propofol. Murray said in court documents that he administered 25 milligrams of the drug at that time, then left Jackson alone under the influence of the drug to make phone calls to his Houston office. When he returned, Jackson was not breathing. He performed CPR while a member of Jackson's staff called 911. The singer was rushed to UCLA Medical Center where he was declared dead sometime later.

The affidavit says, while Murray acknowledged to police that he administered propofol, authorities find no evidence that he had purchased, ordered or obtained the medication under his medical license or Drug Enforcement Administration tracking number. Police detectives found about eight bottles of the anesthetic in Jackson's house along with other vials and pills that had been prescribed to Jackson by Dr. Murray, Dr. Arnold Klein and Dr. Allan Metzger.

Valium, lorazepam, clonazepam, tamsulosin and other drugs also were confiscated in the search, and propofol was found in Murray's medical bag. According to the warrant, Murray told police he was not the first doctor to administer propofol to the singer.

Authorities subpoenaed medical records from Klein, Metzger and Dr. David Adams, in addition to Murray, the affidavit states. They also asked for medical records from Dr. David Slavitt, who conducted the independent medical examination of Jackson for Anschuntz Entertainment Group, Dr. Randy Rosen and nurse practitioner Cherilyn Lee.

The affidavit also states that Jackson told Murray that two doctors in Germany had given him propofol. Murray said he repeatedly asked Jackson what other physicians were treating him and what drugs they were prescribing. Murray said Jackson refused to give the information.
oh my.

 
August 24, 2009The Battle of the Wilderness has given way to a battle over a Wal-Mart.

The discount giant wants to build a super store in Orange County, Va., near where a portion of the key 1864 Civil War battle was fought — on top of a hill that overlooks grassy fields and dense woods.

Wal-Mart says it's not building on actual battlefield land. Its store would be on the edge, outside the national park.

Preservationists disagree. They say the proposed site might not be where actual fighting occurred, but it's where a lot of war activity took place, such as where armies ran medical teams and reinforcements up and down.

Civil War Ancestors

The importance of the Battle of the Wilderness — where Grant first met Lee head on — might have been obscured by time. But for many of the folks fighting over the Wal-Mart, the Civil War is in their blood.

The Battle of the Wilderness is a turning point in Civil War history. It's the beginning of the end for the Confederacy. Grant decided to keep moving ... and he was going to keep fighting until this war was over."

- Russ Smith

Craig Rains, a local Civil War preservationist fighting against the Wal-Mart, had great-grandfathers on both sides of the conflict.

Zack Burkett, a county supervisor, is fighting for the Wal-Mart.

"My great-great uncle survived at Vicksburg by eating rats," Burkett says.

And then there's Russ Smith, a national park ranger who takes care of the battlefield. He's also against the Wal-Mart.

"His name was James Leatherbury. He was a great-great-uncle," Smith says. "He was here with Second Delaware, the crazy Delawares."

A lot of people in Orange County live and breathe the Civil War. Rains says he can't remember a time when the war wasn't a part of his life.

"In my high school yearbook, my hobbies were playing the guitar and studying Civil War history," he says.

The Battle Of The Wilderness

The Battle of the Wilderness was the first official face-off for the Confederacy's grey eminence, Gen. Robert E. Lee, and the Union's cigar-chomping bulldog, Gen. Ulysses S. Grant. It was May 1864. The forest was so dense, troops couldn't see their enemy until they were almost face to face. The intense fighting set the trees on fire, and soldiers who were shot too badly to move ended up burning alive in the forest.

"The Battle of the Wilderness is a turning point in Civil War history," Smith says. "It's the beginning of the end for the Confederacy."

Walmart might as well be paying people to go piss on graves in Arlington National Cemetery.

What an insult to the fine men who gave their lives fighting for this great nation.

 
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