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Lineal Champion - member
3648 posts

Sense we're always talking about funny stories or even bad ones....we can share here =]

Renee u should post that one about that boy today!

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*♥*~LaMorenitaDoble-V~*♥* my eyes are small, but they have seen the beauty of enormous things C=
Lineal Champion - member
3648 posts

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*♥*~LaMorenitaDoble-V~*♥* my eyes are small, but they have seen the beauty of enormous things C=
Lineal Champion - member
3648 posts

If it was my kid I would be upset I admit, but come on kids are erratic sometimes u can never really know what to expect

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*♥*~LaMorenitaDoble-V~*♥* my eyes are small, but they have seen the beauty of enormous things C=
Lineal Champion - member
3648 posts

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*♥*~LaMorenitaDoble-V~*♥* my eyes are small, but they have seen the beauty of enormous things C=
Superstar - founder
4043 posts

I really wouldnt know what side to take on the knife one. The fire one though I dont know if I would have been able to control myself if I was his father....the kids that did it would have been BBQ by now.

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What doesn't kill you makes you stronger...Cotto will come back stronger than ever! Emoticons here: www.addemoticons.com/emoticons.html
Lineal Champion - member
3648 posts

turn out the boy in the helium balloon was a scam and the parents are getting a lawsuit on it now

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*♥*~LaMorenitaDoble-V~*♥* my eyes are small, but they have seen the beauty of enormous things C=
Superstar - founder
4043 posts

turn out the boy in the helium balloon was a scam and the parents are getting a lawsuit on it now

-viv

Yup stupid people

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What doesn't kill you makes you stronger...Cotto will come back stronger than ever! Emoticons here: www.addemoticons.com/emoticons.html
Up Coming - member
2609 posts

it wasnt a knife, they say the camping thing which i think is completely retarded to suspend someone over that, come on, who doesnt have one of those here in boerne middle school and highschool?

setting a kid on fire now thats fucked up and def the kid should be expeled

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February 26th!! <(^_^)>
Lineal Champion - member
3648 posts

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*♥*~LaMorenitaDoble-V~*♥* my eyes are small, but they have seen the beauty of enormous things C=
Lineal Champion - member
3648 posts

Shit, I really hope this is fake- Im so glad Ive never had a flu shot

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*♥*~LaMorenitaDoble-V~*♥* my eyes are small, but they have seen the beauty of enormous things C=
Lineal Champion - member
3648 posts

http://forums.hardwarezone.com.sg/archive/index.php/t-2541652.html


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*♥*~LaMorenitaDoble-V~*♥* my eyes are small, but they have seen the beauty of enormous things C=
Superstar - founder
4043 posts

God IDK it really looks fake but who knows...if its real its very sad.

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What doesn't kill you makes you stronger...Cotto will come back stronger than ever! Emoticons here: www.addemoticons.com/emoticons.html
Lineal Champion - member
3648 posts

well on the forum link it give her facebook link but I dont dare even ask her- poor girl, ive seen videos posted making fun of her like rap music kicks on when she starts having the convulsions =( its terrible, people are seriously effed in the head sometimes

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*♥*~LaMorenitaDoble-V~*♥* my eyes are small, but they have seen the beauty of enormous things C=
Contender - member
2858 posts

yeha i saw this like last week...it does look fake but i dont think she would be a ble to trick all these news people..they hire invesitgators to follow you arond to check on stuff so it has to be real

very sad :(

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For my next trick, im going to need a condom and a volunteer.
Superstar - founder
4043 posts

Yeah its horrible...hopefully she gets cured soon.

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What doesn't kill you makes you stronger...Cotto will come back stronger than ever! Emoticons here: www.addemoticons.com/emoticons.html
Lineal Champion - member
3648 posts

I hope so too man, thats got to be so hard - I dont even want to imagine what that would be like- makes you appreciate life in general for sure

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*♥*~LaMorenitaDoble-V~*♥* my eyes are small, but they have seen the beauty of enormous things C=
Bum - member
491 posts

"Iceland says goodbye to the Big Mac"


The Big Mac, long a symbol of globalization, has become the latest victim of this tiny island nation's overexposure to the world financial crisis.

Iceland's three McDonald's restaurants -- all in the capital Reykjavik -- will close next weekend, as the franchise owner gives in to falling profits caused by the collapse in the Icelandic krona.

Costs had doubled over the past year because of the fall in the krona currency and high import tariffs on imported goods, Ogmundsson said, making it impossible for the company to raise prices further and remain competitive with competitors that use locally sourced produce.
A Big Mac in Reykjavik already retails for 650 krona ($5.29). But the 20 percent increase needed to make a decent profit would have pushed that to 780 krona ($6.36), he said.
That would have made the Icelandic version of the burger the most expensive in the world, a title currently held jointly by Switzerland and Norway where it costs $5.75, according to The Economist magazine's 2009 Big Mac index.


The decision to shutter the Icelandic franchise was taken in agreement with McDonald's Inc., Ogmundsson said, after a review of several months.
"The unique operational complexity of doing business in Iceland combined with the very challenging economic climate in the country makes it financially prohibitive to continue the business," Theresa Riley, a spokeswoman at McDonald's headquarters in Oak Brook, Illinois, said in a statement. "This complex set of challenges means we have no plans to seek a new partner in Iceland."

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IM NOT A BUM YOUR A BUM!
Lineal Champion - member
3648 posts

It's Official: Water Found on the Moon
By Andrea Thompson
Senior Writer
posted: 23 September 2009
06:17 pm ET

Editor's Note: See also this newer story: 'Significant Amount' of Water Found on Moon, published Nov. 13, 2009.The story below, about scant amounts of water found across the lunar surface, was published in September, 2009:

This story was updated at 10:49 p.m. EDT on the date of initial publication.

Since man first touched the moon and brought pieces of it back to Earth, scientists have thought that the lunar surface was bone dry. But new observations from three different spacecraft have put this notion to rest with what has been called "unambiguous evidence" of water across the surface of the moon.

The new findings, detailed in the Sept. 25 issue of the journal Science, come in the wake of further evidence of lunar polar water ice by NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter and just weeks before the planned lunar impact of NASA's LCROSS satellite, which will hit one of the permanently shadowed craters at the moon's south pole in hope of churning up evidence of water ice deposits in the debris field.

The moon remains drier than any desert on Earth, but the water is said to exist on the moon in very small quantities. One ton of the top layer of the lunar surface would hold about 32 ounces of water, researchers said.  
"If the water molecules are as mobile as we think they are — even a fraction of them — they provide a mechanism for getting water to those permanently shadowed craters," said planetary geologist Carle Pieters of Brown University in Rhode Island, who led one of the three studies in Science on the lunar find, in a statement. "This opens a whole new avenue [of lunar research], but we have to understand the physics of it to utilize it."

Finding water on the moon would be a boon to possible future lunar bases, acting as a potential source of drinking water and fuel.

Apollo turns up dry

When Apollo astronauts returned from the moon 40 years ago, they brought back several samples of lunar rocks.

The moon rocks were analyzed for signs of water bound to minerals present in the rocks; while trace amounts of water were detected, these were assumed to be contamination from Earth, because the containers the rocks came back in had leaked.

"The isotopes of oxygen that exist on the moon are the same as those that exist on Earth, so it was difficult if not impossible to tell the difference between water from the moon and water from Earth," said Larry Taylor of the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, who is a member of one of the NASA-built instrument teams for India's Chandrayaan-1 satellite and has studied the moon since the Apollo missions.

While scientists continued to suspect that water ice deposits could be found in the coldest spots of south pole craters that never saw sunlight, the consensus became that the rest of the moon was bone dry.

But new observations of the lunar surface made with Chandrayaan-1, NASA's Cassini spacecraft, and NASA's Deep Impact probe, are calling that consensus into question, with multiple detections of the spectral signal of either water or the hydroxyl group (an oxygen and hydrogen chemically bonded).

Three spacecraft

Chandrayaan-1, India's first-ever moon probe, was aimed at mapping the lunar surface and determining its mineral composition (the orbiter's mission ended 14 months prematurely in August after an abrupt malfunction). While the probe was still active, its NASA-built Moon Mineralogy Mapper (M3) detected wavelengths of light reflected off the surface that indicated the chemical bond between hydrogen and oxygen — the telltale sign of either water or hydroxyl.

Because M3 can only penetrate the top few millimeters of lunar regolith, the newly observed water seems to be at or near the lunar surface. M3's observations also showed that the water signal got stronger toward the polar regions. Pieters is the lead investigator for the M3 instrument on Chandrayaan-1.

Cassini, which passed by the moon in 1999 on its way to Saturn, provides confirmation of this signal with its own slightly stronger detection of the water/hydroxyl signal. The water would have to be absorbed or trapped in the glass and minerals at the lunar surface, wrote Roger Clark of the U.S. Geological Survey in the study detailing Cassini's findings.

The Cassini data shows a global distribution of the water signal, though it also appears stronger near the poles (and low in the lunar maria).

Finally, the Deep Impact spacecraft, as part of its extended EPOXI mission and at the request of the M3 team, made infrared detections of water and hydroxyl as part of a calibration exercise during several close approaches of the Earth-Moon system en route to its planned flyby of comet 103P/Hartley 2 in November 2010.

Deep Impact detected the signal at all latitudes above 10 degrees N, though once again, the poles showed the strongest signals. With its multiple passes, Deep Impact was able to observe the same regions at different times of the lunar day. At noon, when the sun's rays were strongest, the water feature was lowest, while in the morning, the feature was stronger.

"The Deep Impact observations of the Moon not only unequivocally confirm the presence of [water/hydroxyl] on the lunar surface, but also reveal that the entire lunar surface is hydrated during at least some portion of the lunar day," the authors wrote in their study.

The findings of all three spacecraft "provide unambiguous evidence for the presence of hydroxyl or water," said Paul Lucey of the University of Hawaii in an opinion essay accompanying the three studies. Lucey was not involved in any of the missions.

The new data "prompt a critical reexamination of the notion that the moon is dry. It is not," Lucey wrote.

Where the water comes from

Combined, the findings show that not only is the moon hydrated, the process that makes it so is a dynamic one that is driven by the daily changes in solar radiation hitting any given spot on the surface.

The sun might also have something to do with how the water got there.

There are potentially two types of water on the moon: that brought from outside sources, such as water-bearing comets striking the surface, or that that originates on the moon.

This second, endogenic, source is thought to possibly come from the interaction of the solar wind with moon rocks and soils.

The rocks and regolith that make up the lunar surface are about 45 percent oxygen (combined with other elements as mostly silicate minerals). The solar wind — the constant stream of charged particles emitted by the sun — are mostly protons, or positively charged hydrogen atoms.

If the charged hydrogens, which are traveling at one-third the speed of light, hit the lunar surface with enough force, they break apart oxygen bonds in soil materials, Taylor, the M3 team member suspects. Where free oxygen and hydrogen exist, there is a high chance that trace amounts of water will form.

The various study researchers also suggest that the daily dehydration and rehydration of the trace water across the surface could lead to the migration of hydroxyl and hydrogen towards the poles where it can accumulate in the cold traps of the permanently shadowed regions.

source: http://www.space.com/scienceastronomy/090923-moon-water-discovery.html

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*♥*~LaMorenitaDoble-V~*♥* my eyes are small, but they have seen the beauty of enormous things C=
Superstar - founder
4043 posts

Water=life=aliens=big change in the way we view things=2012

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What doesn't kill you makes you stronger...Cotto will come back stronger than ever! Emoticons here: www.addemoticons.com/emoticons.html
Lineal Champion - member
3648 posts

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*♥*~LaMorenitaDoble-V~*♥* my eyes are small, but they have seen the beauty of enormous things C=
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