Please wait, there are usually a lot of pictures to load...

[Previous entry: "Trading Syria for Iran, My Thoughts on Minimum Wage, Republicans Announce Initiative to Raise Minimum Wage to $112.15/Hour, Is This How the Religious Right Got Control of the Government?, Today's New Adult Links"] [Main Index] [Next entry: "Iran's Nuclear Weapons Program, Arab Nations Pretty Pissed at Syrian President Assad, Today's New Adult Links"]

The adult online journal/diary of someone with opinions on porn and politics, with pictures and links to news and copulation


Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech... But it certainly keeps trying.

See which blogs on the net are the most popular!
See which blogs on
the net are the most
popular! Add your
own blog to the
TopList!

There are users online

To add this blog's rss feed to your newsreader, click the xml button, copy the URL of the page that opens, and paste that URL into the appropriate place in your newsreader software.

Click here for the URL to add my rss feed
Email the Author

Want to receive an email notification whenever I post a new entry in this blog? Just click the link below and submit your email address: Send Me Update Notifications!

Get one password for 1000's
of adult members areas!

VISIT AC WEB SEARCH!

AC WEB SEARCH

AC WEB SEARCH - GO FOR THE GOLD!

AC Web Search

How's This Adult Check Stuff Work?

Dooza is an adult movie download service containing tons of DVD-quality full-length adult movies that you can download. Access requires a Dooza password, which you can get immediately at the site. The Dooza password you get is good for all of the Dooza movie sites in all categories and they add new ones on a daily basis.



The movies are all exclusive, so you won't see them anywhere else. If you're tired of looking at all those little 15-30 second movies you see all over the net and you'd like to download your own collection of exclusive DVD-quality full-length movies, the Dooza password is the way to go. Unlimited movie downloads with one password. Click the banner to get yours now.


Reciprocal Links - Wanna Trade? ErosBlog Sex Blog
Young Suburban Wife
Spunkmouth
The Walrus Blog
NY Hotties
PinkSins
Greg's Porn Blog
Viewing the Local Antiquities
Horny Pervert
Sex Diary
3xL : Lust, Love & Latex!
Rollertrain Small Adult World
The Foreplay Diaries
Free Sex Cams
Diary of a London Based Ebony Escort
Dirty StepSisters Blog
Ignorant Fools
Sick Reporter
Gay Men Blog
Erotic Stories
Sex Positions
SadoMasoKitten
Feed Me Porno Aggregator
Free Sex Ring Portal
Slave Journals Dot Com
Adult Blog Index

See who's advertising in your town!
Millions of
Free photo personals
Who's advertising in
your town?

Places to Spend Your Time:

Blogarama - The Blog Directory



03/12/2005 Archived Entry: "Life in Cullowhee, Middle East Rallies Around Street Rallies, Company Claims it Owns the Patent on Internet Passwords, Need for New Debtor's Prisons in America, Blog Reader Demographics, Thoughts on the new Bankruptcy Bill, Today's New Adult Links"

I got distracted again last night and spent a lot of hours looking for a new place to live. I get so tired of winter. Last year, we only had one month that was really good for riding the Harley. I look for a place with a nice, warmer climate, and a pretty view. Lately, I've been looking a lot at the lower Smokey Mountains. They're all green and heavily wooded, and the average temperature is above freezing all year round. Even though it's warmer there, it doesn't get hot. High temperatures in the summer are in the lower to mid 80's and it's less humid than it is where I live now. They have comfortable temperatures for riding a bike about eight months of the year. All the pictures of the area are beautiful. Last night, I spent my time online looking at properties in Cullowhee, North Carolina. I found one I really liked in my price range and couldn't work after that because I was daydreaming about it. The way I search is to look at a map to get the names of small towns in the mountains down there and then look up all their statistics at City-Data.com. Then I go to Realtor.com and look at the properties for sale that meet my criteria. Cullowhee seems like a strange little town. Most of the residents are 20 years old, attending college there.

I have to stay here at least another year until The Child finishes school. The slave and I are probably going to argue about moving after that. She's Native American and has the sense that she must always live on her traditional tribal lands. But it's fricking cold up here. And one of her criteria for a new house is that it must have enough land to keep horses. But my business requires high-speed cable access to the Internet. Do houses with acreage have cable? Realistically, I can't compromise on that issue.

The Coming War of Peaceful Assemblies – First, Lebanon's opposition to Syrian occupation held some street rallies. In response, the Hezbollah terrorist organization organized an even bigger rally to support continued Syrian occupation. They are planning at least three more such rallies in different Lebanese cities in upcoming days. Encouraged by this, Bashar Assad approved a rally in his own honor in Damascus. On March 5, they whipped up a “popular” gathering to “spontaneously” greet Assad’s Lebanon speech in parliament. Certain intelligence agencies, including those of the United States and Israel, minutely scrutinized footage of that first street rally outside parliament. At first, they were puzzled by what they did not see, namely women and children. All of the demonstrators were men aged 22 to 26. A quick comparison of some of the faces with mug shots of Syrian troops brought the truth to light: the cheering crowd was made up of an entire Syrian Republic Guard regiment imported to Damascus from its barracks in the northern city of Homs. The soldiers were given civilian clothes and Syrian flags and told to wave enthusiastically. After the rally, they went back to base. Assad's such a kidder.

Syrian Kurds are planning some big anti-Assad demonstrations in Syria to begin as soon as this weekend. The White House hopes these rallies will kick off a wave of mass protests that eventually draw hundreds of thousands into the streets. The Bush administration believes Assad and his generals, fearing an international backlash, will balk at ordering troops and soldiers to fire on the demonstrators. And so an avalanche of protest will sweep the country unchecked. The Americans are counting on these mass displays of popular hostility to the Syrian ruler on his home ground to act as a counterweight to the pro-Assad events planned by the terrorists in Lebanon.

I spoke in an earlier posting about the likelihood that Syria's withdrawal from Lebanon will only result in the replacement of Syrian control of the Lebanese government with Iranian control of that government. Hezbollah takes its orders from Iran and Lebanese Shiite Hizballah is taking the lead and ready to fill in for Syria as Lebanon’s senior power broker. Apparently, America is cognizant of this possibility as well. Washington is planning to draft a UN Security Council Resolution setting up an international peacekeeping force, made up of US, British and French troops, for Lebanon. They've done that before, as you may recall. The Americans and the French were driven out of Lebanon in 1984 by a series of terrorist attacks. We would hope that they would show more resolve when that happens again. It surely will. A US-French-British offensive against Hizballah also holds the potential of clashes with Iranian forces stationed in Lebanon as an integral part of that group’s militia and would reconstitute the transatlantic military alliance for war against terror. Read more on these matters at Debka Net Weekly. (subscription required)

A company called Pat-rights claims it was awarded the patent for "Internet Passwords" in December of 2003, and it's suing Apple for using them. They want 12% of all iPod and iTune sales and they're looking to sell licenses for the right to use passwords to companies like AOL and eBay. I imagine they could as easily go after banks that offer online banking, any online subscription services, and most of the online stores. America's patent office is broken. Fixing it before our courts are filled with lawsuits like this should be a priority.

Debtor's prisons were abolished in America when the United States came into existence. I wonder what the intention of that was. We still put 100,000 or so people in prison every year because they can't pay their debts. We just use regular prisons, though, because "debtor prisons" are abolished. I don't understand the sense of it. They owe somebody money and can't pay it, so we institutionalize them and support them at taxpayer expense. How is that helpful again? Phyllis Schlafly has an interesting article on the matter.

Blogads has conducted a blog-reader survey to discover the demographics of those who read blogs. Over 30,000 responded and took the survey. The results aren't completely broken down yet, but what they have is pretty interesting. You can see them here.

The Bush administration is pushing a new bankruptcy bill through Congress, successfully it seems, and I have a few comments about it. The bill is designed to make it harder for people to use bankruptcy to clear their debts. Admittedly, there are a few people who abuse the system now, but this bill isn't likely to seriously inconvenience them, so that's a moot point. Last year, 1.6 million families filed for bankruptcy. Half of those filings were the result of crushing medical bills. Most of the rest were due to divorce or the loss of a job. Who benefits from this new bill? Basically, there are two sets of creditors here. There is the American taxpayer, who foots the bill for all those defaulted medical costs. And there are the credit card companies. Will the bill make any difference to the American taxpayer? Families often wrack up $millions in medical expenses trying to keep that catastrophically ill family member alive one more year. Will taking their house and car significantly reduce that debt? No, it just puts some poor people out on the street. The taxpayers still end up paying. Undeniably, the credit card companies will benefit from this bill. But they made $30 billion in profits last year even with all the bankruptcies. Is it really necessary to lock a million people/year into lifelong indebtedness to give the credit card companies higher profits? They've been very aggressive in seeking debtors, willing to lend to anyone as long as the interest rate is high enough. This bill will protect them from the consequences of making bad loans. How is that in the public interest?

Washington, D.C.: Wanna Be Mayor?

Today's new adult galleries:

OopsShe didn't know the cam was running and she left as soon as she figured it out.


Today's free sex movies


Powered By Greymatter