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Confess

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Everything posted by Confess

  1. I would take off that red tshirt very quickly. And then When it calmed down I'd be like, ' Whoa. It's really cool how your little tattoo ripples when you are mad.' You walk into a room and see this: Vut Du?
  2. WoW. Got beat out by a three to one by a dead guy. That town must really dislike their Mayor.
  3. Sometimes you feel like a nut, and sometimes you don't.

    mmm. Almond Joy.

    I'm so distracted.

    Cookies are good.

    sup?

  4. Very irritable. Seems like everything and everyone is pissing me off today. I'm going to sleep early.
  5. Tired of talking about abortion. But unable to not talk about it because of this stupid ethics class. It hurts my heart and makes me sad.
  6. Both projects were fully funded by anonymous donors. If this means you I offer my most sincere thanks. It will make a positive impact for these kids for years to come.
  7. 101 Things You Didn't Know About Freemasonry Just finished Christ the Lord; Out of Egypt by Anne Rice
  8. i THINK i'm the only person in the world that has never had any problems with Vista. lol. I just have hardware issues.
  9. I got this in an email from my girl. She is a special education teacher in an inner city school district that has little to no money for most basic supplies let alone for the things she really needs to be successful. She has been trying to get some projects funded for awhile and it is coming down to the wire for her. There has been some donations coming in, but if she can't make the deadline she forfeits the donations that were made for her students and the funds will be given to other projects by the site that manages the proposals. Any help that can get her closer to enriching the lives of the children she teaches by helping put the proper tools in her hands will be incredibly appreciated. We put alot of our resources into her class, but I'm tapped out for the year and can't make up the slack this time. If any of you know a teacher you'll know they get paid way less than they deserve. Even if you're broke please pass it on to others. Please please please. ```````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````````` To anyone looking for a place to donate to before the end of the year: Please consider donating to one of my projects on donorschoose.org. Both of my projects will allow me to obtain materials to help special needs students. All donations are tax deductible! Meaningful Music and Learning: http://www.donorschoose.org/donors/proposal.html?id=294030 My students love learning through music. Music allows students the opportunity to learn information through auditory and kinesthetic activities. Music makes learning fun, and it gives struggling students the opportunity to master skills through a different learning style. Music could easily be incorporated into more areas of the curriculum as an aid to learning, but we lack the necessary supplies (musical instruments) to allow us this opportunity. Musical instruments would aid us in supplementing the curriculum with music. The instruments I have requested are boomwhackers, hand bells, drums, and instruments from around the world. Only $278.00 more needed to fund this project! Only 9 days left for my project to be fully funded!!! *** Mastering Math With Manipulatives: http://www.donorschoose.org/donors/proposal.html?id=302554 My students love learning with manipulatives. Manipulatives allow students to learn information concretely. Many students, especially special needs students, need concrete learning experiences to master skills. More and more, research suggests that using manipulatives in mathematics is critical to developing good mathematical reasoning. Our classroom lacks many of the manipulatives that students could use in small group or individual work centers to develop their number sense. Number sense is critical to success in math. In early childhood, number sense is a child’s intuitive ability to understand that a number represents a quantity of that many objects. This is when children learn that a print 5 represents a group of 5 objects. Number sense in kindergarten is developed through counting, one to one correspondence (touching objects one at a time and counting them), counting groups of objects (by 2’s, 5’s, and 10’s), and by creating groups of objects for a given number. These manipulatives will give students the materials necessary to practice number skills in learning centers both individually and in small groups. Only $206.00 more needed to fund this project! Only 39 days left for my project to be fully funded!!! *** If you know anyone who might be interested in donating to either (or both of these projects, please pass the information along. If you are willing to redistribute this information to your friends, families, coworkers, neighbors, etc., please do. Anything helps!!!!
  10. The beautiful thing about this was an AP article I read that stated it would be exempt for me to smoke in my work truck. How nice of them to not tell me I can't smoke in a vehicle. I guess that is a government granted privilege now.
  11. As long as it takes for me to get annoyed. Which is kind of fast. I'm an instant gratification kind of guy. Again. What would you do for a Klondike bar?
  12. Couldn't pay my cell phone bill so I haven't had internet or phone. Trying to get into this new job and get some money together to rectify the situation. :)

  13. the pumpkin pin up is pretty sweet. Awesome thanks for the ideas!
  14. I think I'd have to agree. I really like Skarred too. Matter of fact if I'm home I may actually go. It is all of about 2 miles from my house.
  15. Last Sunday after headin home from hangin with the rev, and some other particularly interesting personalities I saw a bicycle in the middle of the road. About 30 yards from said bicycle I say a guy rolling around on the sidewalk. Ran around the block and asked if he was alright, the response was "Hell naw I ain't alright. I just got hit by a car and that bitch didn't even stop!" Asked if he wanted me to call a cop or a bambulance or something and he said no. Couldn't just leave. Couldn't really do much. Some of his friends came up so I excused myself. Weird. One of them told us we were good people.
  16. One of the few things that ever really had appeal for me about that club was the ability for pretty much anyone to 'fit'. It's sad that even open minded people can be so close minded. As far as inappropriately hittin on goth chicks that goes without saying. There are people everywhere that have lost their ability to engage in conversation with members of the opposite sex in an intelligent and interesting manner. Like Rev said. Blame Liz Vicious.
  17. How about the statement that too many people are drinking Like it's some kind of cult to be a braindead obamabot zombie or something.
  18. That was such a simple statement that so clearly makes complete sense that you totally deserve a shot of Dewar's and a beer for that.
  19. If they were screaming in support of the atrocities that are being perpetrated against all Americans they would be portrayed as patriots by the liberal leaning media. Because they are speaking up in outrage at what is being shoved down our throats they are painted instead as fakes, liars, and plants by the republican party in an attempt to discredit the general feelings of unrest so the current government can continue to herd the sheeple. It's not about the republican party. It's about the AMERICAN PEOPLE.
  20. Paul Joseph Watson Prison Planet.com Tuesday, August 11, 2009 TV star and political commentator Chuck Norris points out in an editorial today that under the Obamacare legislation currently being vociferously opposed in town halls across the country, the government would empower itself to carry out home intrusions and state re-education of children under a Stalinist indoctrination program. “Obamacare is about the government’s coming into homes and usurping parental rights over child care and development,” writes Norris. “It’s outlined in sections 440 and 1904 of the House bill (Page 838), under the heading “home visitation programs for families with young children and families expecting children.” The programs (provided via grants to states) would educate parents on child behavior and parenting skills. The bill says that the government agents, “well-trained and competent staff,” would “provide parents with knowledge of age-appropriate child development in cognitive, language, social, emotional, and motor domains … modeling, consulting, and coaching on parenting practices,” and “skills to interact with their child to enhance age-appropriate development.” “Are you kidding me?! With whose parental principles and values? Their own? Certain experts’? From what field and theory of childhood development? As if there are one-size-fits-all parenting techniques! Do we really believe they would contextualize and personalize every form of parenting in their education, or would they merely universally indoctrinate with their own?,” writes Norris, questioning what the government would teach children about religion, morals and basic values, as well as issues like abortion. “Do you want government agents coming into your home and telling you how to parent your children? When did government health care turn into government child care?,” asks Norris, pointing out that the program has Stalinist overtones in that it gives government the power to shape the very minds of future generations by “seizing parental and educational power, legislating preferred educational methods and materials, and limiting private educational options.” The program outlined in the Obama health care reform bill sounds almost identical to programs already under way in the United Kingdom where the government usurps parental rights and assumes a guardianship role over the child. As we reported earlier this month, the UK Labour government announced its intention to fund an expansion of its Family Intervention Projects, a program which is centered around home visits by state social workers whereby agents enter the private homes of citizens to ensure that children go to bed on time, attend school and eat proper meals. Surveillance cameras are also installed in homes as well as state-run dormitories so government spies can keep an eye on whether parents are mistreating kids and whether the kids are fulfilling their obligations to the government under a pre-signed contract. Another key aspect of the program is that parents deemed “responsible” by the government are handed the power to denounce and report bad parents who allow their children to engage in bad behavior. Such families are then targeted for “interventions”. As Norris highlights in his editorial, under Obamacare, parents won’t be allowed to make a choice on whether they want government assistance in raising their children, they will be “targeted” by the state for home interventions, in exactly the same way the program works in the UK. “One government rebuttal is that this program would be “voluntary.” Is that right?,” asks Norris. “Does that imply that this agency would just sit back passively until some parent needing parenting skills said, “I don’t think I’ll call my parents, priest or friends or read a plethora of books, but I’ll go down to the local government offices”? To the contrary, the bill points to specific targeted groups and problems, on Page 840: The state “shall identify and prioritize serving communities that are in high need of such services, especially communities with a high proportion of low-income families.” Quoting Josef Stalin, “Education is a weapon whose effects depend on who holds it in his hands and at whom it is aimed,” Norris warns that universal health care could mean universal hell care if Obama’s health reform is allowed to proceed. Look in the bill. said sections are there and they do read as such. Who knew Chuck could read? Health Reform Bill
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