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Post by sadie1263 on Jun 25, 2013 15:51:43 GMT
That is too cool.......if it is foot traffic.....why aren't the other ones moving?
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Post by sadie1263 on Jun 24, 2013 20:05:53 GMT
I so wanted to be zipping around like the Jetsons in my lifetime......ah well........
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Post by sadie1263 on Jun 24, 2013 20:04:57 GMT
I watched the whole thing........every time they went to the camera shooting straight down I almost wet my pants!!!
Wow........it was windy and he still looked pretty calm..........don't know how they do that???!!!
Also....how much was he paid for this???
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Post by sadie1263 on Jun 21, 2013 15:21:21 GMT
Hey.....there are new pics of her out from a hearing Wednesday or Thursday......she was actually in her prison stripes and shackles..........hope she realizes what her life is now going to be.
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Post by sadie1263 on Jun 21, 2013 15:19:54 GMT
Didn't he already shoot someone else earlier in the year?
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Post by sadie1263 on Jun 21, 2013 15:19:02 GMT
Hello Toetapping.........looking forward to knowing you!
Ugh.....Friday........it seemed to take forever to get here!!!! Hope everyone has a great (and safe) one!!!
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Post by sadie1263 on Jun 20, 2013 15:57:40 GMT
And we are all going to believe it when they come back and say nothing illegal was going on.....really.....trust them!!!
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Post by sadie1263 on Jun 20, 2013 14:05:02 GMT
Devin Coldewey NBC News Browser-tracking Internet "cookies" can be useful, unnecessary, or malicious depending on where they come from — but how are users supposed to know which is which? Mozilla plans to integrate a central list into its Firefox Web browser that takes the guesswork away and makes better privacy automatic. "Cookies" are tiny files deposited on your computer by websites that allow them to store small amounts of information, such as where you visited on the site, your username and other data. It's useful to not have to type your login name again to the site you just left 10 minutes ago, but not every site uses this power responsibly. Blocking cookies altogether can make browsing inconvenient, but letting them all in is a privacy risk — and asking about every cookie generated can be tedious and difficult for the user. Some browsers do this automatically, but their simple rules don't leave room for exceptions — cookies that should be allowed, but aren't for technical reasons, and vice versa. The Cookie Clearinghouse, created by Stanford's Center for Internet and Society, aims to centralize the cookie-management process by keeping a list of which cookie creators are and aren't to be trusted. Mozilla, which makes the popular Firefox browser, said Wednesday it plans to integrate the system, although which upcoming version will include it has not been announced. It's not quite a blacklist like an ad-blocker, but rather a way for common exceptions to be taken into account, making sure cookies are useful when they should be, absent when they're not wanted, and otherwise respected when the user makes a specific decision. The system won't come to the main version of Firefox for a few months at least, so don't worry about looking for it in the options menu just yet. www.nbcnews.com/technology/firefox-feature-track-sites-tracking-you-6C10383266
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Post by sadie1263 on Jun 20, 2013 13:47:44 GMT
Wow.....that was great!!!
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Post by sadie1263 on Jun 20, 2013 13:45:51 GMT
And his mother's big concern even after he died was whether she would still get the checks............prison is too humane for these monsters.
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Post by sadie1263 on Jun 20, 2013 13:45:13 GMT
A 32-year-old Pennsylvania man with Down syndrome was so severely neglected by his family that his body was covered in scabies and he weighed just 69 pounds when he died, police said in charging his mother and two sisters with murder. Robert Gensiak had open sores down to the bone at the time of his death March 20. He was taken to the hospital a day earlier because he was only semi-responsive and couldn't stand up. Susan Gensiak, 59, of Taylor in northeastern Pennsylvania, and her daughters, Joan, 35, and Rebekah, 24, were charged Wednesday with third-degree murder, involuntary manslaughter and neglect of care for a dependent person. All three were sent to Lackawanna Prison, with bail set at $350,000 for Susan Gensiak and $250,000 for her daughters. Investigators said the suspects told police they were concerned about losing Gensiak's government assistance if they had placed him in a personal care facility, and his mother asked them if she would still receive her son's Social Security check even after his death. His mother and sisters had little to say at their arraignments or outside court. It wasn't immediately clear whether they had attorneys, and a phone listing was unavailable. Autopsy photos showed Robert Gensiak's skin was yellow and laced with scabies — a contagious skin infection caused by mites — with open sores all over his body that were so extreme in spots that bone was visible. His few remaining teeth were about to fall out, his head was covered in lice, and there was no food or significant fluid in his stomach, according to an autopsy. "Robert's entire body was covered in a thick yellow scab-like rash" that "appeared to have cracked in various places, leaving open sores, which had been bleeding and oozing fluid," said an affidavit of probable cause. The cause of death was sepsis due to the breakdown of his skin, with malnutrition contributing, according to Dr. Gary Ross, who performed the autopsy. Lackawanna County Coroner Tim Rowland ruled the manner of death as homicide due to neglect. According to court documents, the suspects told authorities that Gensiak had psoriasis, but denied he had any other medical problems and said they were treating his skin condition with over-the-counter creams. They said they could not get him to a doctor because they had no means of transportation. They eventually called a doctor, who urged them to call an ambulance, according to court documents. The Associated Press usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/06/20/19055600-cops-neglected-by-family-disabled-man-weighed-69-pounds-at-death?lite
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Post by sadie1263 on Jun 19, 2013 23:01:53 GMT
Just more money and nicer surroundings........if someone wants to pay a whole lot of money for the companionship of someone gorgeous and younger.......and that person is of legal age and doesn't mind.........don't see how anyone is getting hurt.
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Post by sadie1263 on Jun 19, 2013 18:53:58 GMT
Well......I can't agree with walking barefoot in the forest either............
Don't any of these people have friends that can actually say "Hey.....this isn't a good idea"
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Post by sadie1263 on Jun 19, 2013 15:54:46 GMT
Awesome....can't wait!!
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Post by sadie1263 on Jun 19, 2013 15:53:20 GMT
Did the police actually do any digging on the property? Or was it just the media that damaged them?? How about filing against the media for being idiots and going with the story? Something needs to be done to make them more responsible!!
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Post by sadie1263 on Jun 19, 2013 15:51:23 GMT
if she is mentally challenged why was she babysitting a child???
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Post by sadie1263 on Jun 18, 2013 15:54:46 GMT
I hate to spoil the ending for you Hunny.......but she didn't make it!!!
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Post by sadie1263 on Jun 18, 2013 15:54:04 GMT
Some people should just KNOW that they are not cut out to watch a bunch of kids for a living. That's why I only had 3 kids......otherwise they would have ended up taped to the walls or locked in closets!! You have to know your limitations.
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Post by sadie1263 on Jun 18, 2013 0:09:24 GMT
I wish they would just give her life without parole and let her fade to a distant memory..........besides a murderer......she a fame whore.
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Post by sadie1263 on Jun 17, 2013 19:53:05 GMT
A sonar image may point to the wreckage site of Amelia Earhart's plane, the Electra, The International Group for Historic Aircraft Recovery announced. The nonprofit organization has been on the hunt for the Earhart plane for the last 25 years. "What we have is something that looks like what we think the expected wreckage should look like right in the place where we expect it to be," Ric Gillespie, TIGHAR's executive director told Yahoo News. "That’s what's so enticing about this, it looks different from anything else out there." The image was taken from a remotely operated vehicle 600 feet below the water off an uninhabited island in the southwestern Pacific republic of Kiribati. It shows, says the TIGHAR website, an "anomaly." "The most prominent part of the anomaly appears to be less than 32 feet long," states TIGHAR, which also notes the plane was 38 feet and 7 inches long. Earhart, the first female pilot to fly across the Atlantic solo, disappeared while attempting a circumnavigational flight around the globe in 1937. The hunt for Earhart and her Model 10 Lockheed Electra plane has been on ever since. A decade ago, TIGHAR focused on the Pacific island of Nikumaroro as the likely spot where Earhart's plane went down, which is the area in which the possible wreckage has been spotted. The next step is raising money—Gillespie said $3 million is needed—to further investigate the site. The group hopes to return to it in 2014. "It’s not like 'Indiana Jones,'" said Gillespie. "You don’t part the bushes and the silver airplane is sitting there. You do the work and do the analysis. Then you go back and sometimes it’ s nothing and other times, it’s what you hoped it was." news.yahoo.com/blogs/lookout/sonar-image-may-show-amelia-earhart-plane-153437423.html
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