“Jimmy bought a handful of shallots which, having first crushed them with the heavy wooden sole of a Dutch clog he’d salvaged from an Amsterdam cathouse, he cut into pulpy lines and snorted through the hollowed-out wren femur he kept on his person for just such an occasion.”
June 8, 2005
Northern California sleeper cell?
Admittedly not as big a deal as a few isolated instances of Qu’ran desecration, but nevertheless a timely reminder that not all of the villains in the War on Terror are U.S. servicemen and their crusading, bloodthirsty overlords in the Bushco power cabal. From FOXNews: A father and a son are among four men who have been detained in a terrorism investigation in Northern California. The son allegedly received terrorist
“The generic ‘stuck in an elevator’ post” (from the protein wisdom conceptual series)
first man: second man: first woman: third man: second woman (with grocery bags): first man: second man: first woman: third man: second woman (with grocery bags): “…somebody tried pushing the button, right…?” **** cross-posted at Kate’s place, where—as a guest poster—I hope to confuse as many Canadians as I can.
Forty-second in a series of real-time empirical observations
In the time it takes you to read this post, at least 6 nationally syndicated rightwing talk show hosts are working on creative new ways to frame the question, “So, those libs sure are a bunch of tin-eared cocksuckers, am I right…?”
The road to HEALING
From the San Francisco Chronicle: Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean, unapologetic in the face of recent criticism that he has been too tough on his political opposition, said in San Francisco this week that Republicans “all behave the same, and they all look the same. … It’s pretty much a white Christian party.” “We’re more welcoming to different folks, because that’s the kind of people we are,’’ Dean said
red pills found behind the sofa cushions, analepsis 8
Beet pulp, the dried fiber residue that remains after most of the sugar has been extracted from sliced sugar beets, can take several forms: plain dried, molasses dried (which contains roughly 25 percent molasses) and pelleted—all of which make for excellent feed (dairy farmers use plain dried pulp as a milk-flow stimulant, for instance; and in recent years, large quantities of pelleted pulp has been exported to both Japan and
