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Post by sadie1263 on Sept 9, 2012 16:27:11 GMT
No...prisoners are not allowed mobile phones.....but they are regularly smuggled in.....don't want to know how.....(yuck)....also....officers are often paid to get them stuff.......security/jail officers are usually on the low end of the pay scale.....so it is often easy for them to fall into the lure of easy money........
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Post by sadie1263 on Sept 9, 2012 15:40:35 GMT
Happens all the time to both male and female officers......many of these prisoners have nothing to do....(and no one to do)....so they will often cultivate a very wonderful caring loving persona and really spend a lot of time wooing the other person, the other person still feels they are in ultimate control, so it's sometimes easier to let things happen......they have 8 to 10 hours a day to do it every day........has probably happened at every jail in the world.
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Post by sadie1263 on Sept 9, 2012 13:17:59 GMT
No need to shame anyone for having to go to the bathroom......ridiculous. There can be health issues involved. If all the kids are leaving on a regular basis...that there is definitely a teaching issue.......so either way....something needs to be done!
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Post by sadie1263 on Sept 9, 2012 12:39:09 GMT
Even muddy they are all gorgeous!!!
Gosh....I love mud fights.....makes me want to go find a huge mud puddle!!!
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Post by sadie1263 on Sept 9, 2012 12:37:45 GMT
77 year old woman "believed" to be a relative..........the article goes on to say that relatives have come for the children.......wouldn't they know if she was related???
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Post by sadie1263 on Sept 9, 2012 12:36:38 GMT
Eric Maillaud, who is leading the investigation, confirmed Saad al-Hilli, an Iraqi-born engineer, his 47-year-old wife Iqbal, a 77-year-old woman believed to be a relative, and a passing cyclist Sylvian Mollier, 45, all received two gunshot wounds to the head. Initial reports from the French authorities had said they were shot once in the head. A "double tap" where two bullets are shot into the same location is a favoured method of professional killers. "It shows an absolute determination to kill," Mr Maillaud told the Telegraph after a press conference in Annecy. He refused to reveal details of the weapons used, or whether there was more than one assassin. www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/france/9530410/France-shooting-police-confirm-victims-shot-twice-in-head.html
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Post by sadie1263 on Sept 8, 2012 17:56:44 GMT
It clearly states that Leonardo took it with him to France when he moved there and that was in the 1500's....it wasn't stolen.....Italy doesn't own it and never did....... so shut up already........
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Post by sadie1263 on Sept 8, 2012 16:49:55 GMT
Hadn't had it all laid out like that Lin..........wow......that is very very strange. There's something bad going on somewhere.....the fact that they would kill people nearby and attack children........well.....the father or someone had to be into some really serious dangerous stuff!!
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Post by sadie1263 on Sept 8, 2012 16:48:09 GMT
How did she get her own bottle of gin on the plane? I can't get a 4 oz bottle of shampoo on there?
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Post by sadie1263 on Sept 8, 2012 16:15:44 GMT
Get the trial in Florida or California....acquittal for sure!!!
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Post by sadie1263 on Sept 8, 2012 15:38:35 GMT
I knew Deyana looked a little shifty!!! lol......phew...I'm just glad you didn't catch me....oops...I mean guess me!!!
Now to continue digging.........
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Post by sadie1263 on Sept 8, 2012 15:36:58 GMT
What annoys me....is that insurance will pay for ED drugs....but most won't pay for birth control........now explain that one!!!!
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Post by sadie1263 on Sept 8, 2012 14:19:15 GMT
By Stephanie Pappas updated 9/7/2012 3:46:32 PM ET A toxin synthesized from the venom of a spider may offer an alternative to today's erectile dysfunction drugs, a new study suggests. The toxin, unpoetically named PnTx2-6, comes from the bite of the Brazilian wandering spider (Phoneutria nigriventer). In humans, a bite from a wandering spider is very painful. What's more, male victims may find themselves with priapism, or unrelenting and painful erection. It was this symptom, turning up in emergency rooms after spider bites in Brazil, that first alerted researchers to the potential of PnTx2-6 as an erectile dysfunction (ED) drug. The toxin has been shown to improve erections in rats with hypertension and diabetes; now, researchers have tested it in aging mice and found that the toxin is effective in reversing age-related ED as well. "It's working in aging, which is a natural process," study researcher Kenia Nunes, a physiologist at Georgia Health Sciences University, told LiveScience. "It's not just in disease." Viagra, Levitra and other ED drugs on the market work by inhibiting an enzyme called PDE5. To get an erection, a man's body must release nitric oxide, which relaxes the smooth muscle around the arteries of the penis, allowing for his blood vessels to dilate. The nitric oxide is a first step in a series of chemical reactions that allow this muscle relaxation to take place. One step in the series is cGMP, a signaling molecule that acts to keep the muscles relaxed. PDE5 degrades cGMP. That's a good thing for ensuring that erections don't last forever, but too much PDE5 can mean an erection doesn't happen at all. By blocking the enzyme, PDE5 inhibitors solve the problem. The spider toxin works differently. Instead of affecting PDE5, the compound seems to trigger nitric oxide release, acting directly to relax the smooth muscles. Because about 30 percent of patients don't respond to PDE5 inhibitors, the toxin could provide an alternative to ED treatments currently on the market, Nunes said. In the new study, published online Aug. 23 in the Journal of Sexual Medicine, Nunes and her colleagues injected aging and young rats with the toxin extracted from the spider venom. They found that the toxin reversed age-related erectile dysfunction, offering hope that the toxin could eventually move out of animal testing and into human use. The toxin has not yet been tested in humans. The researchers have since developed a synthetic version of the toxin. The next step, Nunes said, is to make sure that the compound doesn't have any nasty effects beyond its intended purpose. "Side effects are the next big hurdle," she said. www.msnbc.msn.com/id/48943935/ns/health-mens_health/#.UEtTbULoCTM
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Post by sadie1263 on Sept 8, 2012 14:02:49 GMT
That is really interesting.......I have decent vision in the dark.......can usually get around after my eyes adjust.....my husband has NONE!......even in our own home...he can't get around......it's really odd.
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Post by sadie1263 on Sept 8, 2012 14:01:22 GMT
I love my old Kindle....but it is the e-ink.....I don't want one of the Kindle's that show movies and all the other stuff......but I am kinda interested in this new simple version......
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Post by sadie1263 on Sept 8, 2012 14:00:24 GMT
During a media event on Thursday, Amazon revealed its latest Kindle devices. The Kindle Paperwhite, one of those shiny new gadgets, is bound to give Barnes & Noble's Nook Simple Touch with GlowLight a run for its money. The Kindle Paperwhite offers what is described as a clearer screen with a higher resolution than the good ol' Kindle e-ink readers we know and love. "It's really so much sharper," Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos told a crowd of reporters. In a video shown during Thursday's media event, an Amazon customer declared that the device is "exactly what Star Trek promised" him. I don't know if I'd go that far, but after trying the Kindle Paperwhite out for a couple of minutes, I was impressed. Unlike the aforementioned glowing Nook, the Kindle Paperwhite's screen is lit almost perfectly evenly. Either the environment in which I tried the e-reader was ideal or Amazon figured out a secret that Barnes & Noble has yet to grasp. The Kindle Paperwhite is light as a feather — if a feather happens to weigh 7.5 ounces — and it is comfortable to hold. While I didn't spend a lot of time reading through the books Amazon had preloaded on the demo unit, I get the feeling the screen wouldn't cause much discomfort even if I were to hold it for several hours at a time. And speaking of hours, Amazon says that the Paperwhite gets 8 weeks of battery life. Which is over 1,300 hours. The Kindle Paperwhite will be priced at $119 and ship on Oct. 1. A 3G-enabled version will also be available for $179 as well. www.nbcnews.com/technology/gadgetbox/hands-amazons-new-kindle-paperwhite-983102#
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Post by sadie1263 on Sept 8, 2012 13:57:45 GMT
Hee hee hee....I was one of the ones that guessed you, Trubble!! Said you did it with 2 x 4 also!! Thought you would want to be hands on!!!!
Jim with a gun.....oh yeah......I can see that one! lol
Well I have to go with Skylark next!!
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Post by sadie1263 on Sept 8, 2012 13:54:16 GMT
These stories are always so sad. Unfortunately these type of mistakes have been going on for as long as there as been wars.........human error is always going to be a factor.......
Devastating for his family and the soldiers that made the mistake.........
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Post by sadie1263 on Sept 8, 2012 13:51:54 GMT
Now they are saying the brother didn't have anything to do with it.......and that the bicyclist that was killed was probably just in the wrong place at the wrong time....... ************************************ Officers arrived at the mock Tudor detached home in the stockbroker belt village of Claygate, Surrey, on Saturday morning. Wednesday afternoon's bloody attack in a remote forest car park in Annecy left Saad al-Hilli, an Iraqi-born engineer, dead along with his 47-year-old wife and a 77-year-old woman believed to be a relative. The Hillis' seven-year-old daughter, Zainab, who was shot in the shoulder and has a fractured skull after being beaten, remains in a medically-induced coma in hospital. Their younger daughter Zeena, four, survived unhurt by hiding under her dead mother's body and was not found by police under eight hours after the shootings. www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/france/9530011/France-shooting-police-launch-search-of-victims-home.html
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Post by sadie1263 on Sept 7, 2012 21:01:06 GMT
And yes....that sign is over the top! Just tell me what you are going to do to make things better and show you can do it.....I'm sick to death of all of them blaming someone else for things not happening or getting done....or why they couldn't get it done........
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