Fire Melts Steel and Concrete in Freeway Collapse
Posted by Robbie Cooper on April 30th, 2007 | TrackbackFire Melts Steel and Concrete in Freeway Collapse. Truthers suspect government controlled demolition.
Fire Melts Steel and Concrete in Freeway Collapse. Truthers suspect government controlled demolition.
I propose we start selling Carbon Offsets for Mars™ as soon as possible…before it’s too late:
She shares this very interesting — and spot-on accurate — joke from Mr. Steele on the differences between conservatives and liberals.
Of course if he was much a man, his wife wouldn’t have been running around with little boys.
When you need the caption to fully appreciate what “biased” and “uncredible” news reporting really looks like.
I didn’t watch them. I didn’t even know they were on. Instead I was out drinking beer and watching the NBA playoffs with some of by buddies.
With this kind of technology (and much, much, more), we cannot lose the war in Iraq militarily, as Sen. Harry Reid has suggested we already have. Our enemy simply doesn’t have the technology, the training, the weapons, the firepower, or the manpower to defeat us.
I would no sooner send my cash to buy “carbon credits†than I would send my bank account information to some guy named Howgul Abul Arhu in Nigeria.
In the meantime, could opposing pitchers just get together and agree not to throw Barry a single hittable pitch for the rest of his career?
I’m not so sure that the Dems do want their message to reach as many Americans as possible; they’re much more interested in pandering to the nutroots and their big-money bosses at MoveOn.org
Some people are just no good, and the world is a better place without them. Ryan Dickson is one of those people.
I mean, if you’ve already declared the war lost, why even go through the motions of listening to the men over there who are fighting the war? Especially when you have so many dictators and terror-supporting leaders to capitulate to, and so little time…
I’m actually a bit dissapointed. Hate this vile needs to have as much light shined upon it as possible.
The worst part of a vacation almost always seems to be the final day, which is the travel day. Our’s consisted of a 3 hour drive from Rincon to the airport in San Juan, long airport security lines, a 4.5 hour flight to Houston, a near-missed connection to Austin, and then finally getting in last night around 11:00 p.m.