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Hip Mexican digs invite siestas ... and fiestas - StarPhoenix
MEXICO CITY - If you've never visited Mexico City, you should ... are lushly landscaped parks, dusty open-air markets, beautifully planned plazas and one incredibly efficient Metro subway system. It's exhausting. In a good way. Suffice it to say, in ...
Read moreMagic Mexican Riviera $1,949.00 booked through Cruise Agents - e-Travel Blackboard
* All prices are quoted in Australian dollars, based on per person double occupancy. If you're booking a fly/cruise package, air Taxes & Fuel Surcharge are additional, and will be advised by your consultant. All prices & itineraries are current at ...
Read moreVisit vanilla's ancient home in Papantla, Veracruz - Austin American-Statesman
Vanilla begins life as a thick vine ... actually an orchid, tapped centuries ago in Mexico. The growing and curing processes traditionally followed by Papantla villagers can take years. PAPANTLA, Veracruz Vanilla is boring. Vanilla is plain. Vanilla ...
Read moreAn oasis of ice skating in Mexico City - Edmonton Journal
I am standing in Mexico City's main square, the Zocalo. The temperature is a balmy 25 degrees C and there's not a hint of snow in the air. Nonetheless, next to me is a skating rink, filled with hapless but very happy Mexicans doing their best to stay ...
Read morePre-Boomer Lifestyle on the Mexican Riviera - PRLog (free press release)
First, let's define Pre-Boomer; obviously it's before Boomer! The Baby Boomer Generation is defined as those born after World War II; generally between the years of 1944 and 1964. Consequently, the oldest of the nearly 80 million US born Baby Boomers ...
Read moreIs the U.S. Swine Flu Epidemic Over? - CNS News
Atlanta (AP) - If the U.S. swine flu epidemic isn't over, it certainly looks as if it's on its last legs. While federal health officials are not ready to declare the threat has passed and the outbreak has run its course, they did report Friday that ...
Read moreTouring Mexico by tandem bicycle - Regina Leader-Post
... third cycling trip to Mexico ... between Cancun and Tulum is great for cycling, mostly because the highway has a very wide shoulder and is seldom used by Mexican drivers. On the way to Tulum I tented overnight on the grounds of a scruffy hotel
Read moreJAL chooses to stay with American over Delta - MENAFN
TOKYO (MarketWatch) -- Japan Airlines Corp. said Tuesday that it will keep its partnership with American Airlines in the Oneworld Alliance and it rejected an offer from rival Delta Air Lines Inc. The Tokyo carrier, which filed for bankruptcy ...
Read moreTwo wheels good to go in Mexico - StarPhoenix
The smiling airline clerk at the Puerto Vallarta Airport check-in counter looks at the eight-foot long tandem bicycle and raises her eyebrows. My wife, Charlotte, and I have just finished a short tandem trip in the region, and we are bringing our ...
Read moreBarrel of fun - Norristown Times Herald
FORT WORTH, Texas — As the voice of Jerry Lee Lewis floated above the cattle barns, the rodeo clown sat at a table in his travel trailer parked near the Stock Show midway. Rudy Burns peered into a makeup mirror. “You’re old,” a fellow once ...
Read moreMexican Air Travel Questions asked
Resolved Question: Texas. Why does everyone think it is the worst state in the U.S.?
Here's an example of what America thinks: 1. Texans. Socially retarded acts of bravado. Lack of self awareness. Isolationistic in thought. Kind of like someone who was raised under a rock, but the rock was big, so they boast about how big the rock was. There's more, but, man, it's so sad - and they don't even know it! 2. Texas politics. I am a conservative who votes republican. Texans are rednecks who vote republican. should I buy an "I'm with stupid" T-shirt? 3. Tx is a Mexican border state. Complete with roads traveled by drug cartels feeding the increasing violent crime rate, drug use, and ever expanding prison population in Tx. That isn't nice and I don't have this problem in my state. 4. Is EVERYONE in Tx chewing tobacco?? 5. Leading state for hate groups. There are more known hate groups in tx then any other state. They all hate different groups for different reasons. When you get right down to it, no one is safe in tx - not even texans. Testament to tx long tradition of nice, down to earth, clan members and level-headed cult fanatics. 6. There are Two seasons in Tx, hot and hotter. There is a third if you count the hurricane season. A fourth if you count squirrel season. 7. Texas' branding of Tex-mex. Uh, we all know it's just Mexican. Maybe Kansas should capitalize on Cantonese food and call it Kan-Can. It's catchier, and doesn't sound like a gas station when you say it. 8. Over industrialization of undesirable industries. Yes, when you visit tx, you get the full impact of what a cesspool they've made out of their state with factories, oil refineries, and chemical plants. Don't get me wrong, it is good somebody is manufacturing this stuff out there, but, man, you've got to be six flags short of a theme park to live amongst the stench-filled, chemical run-off, heat-fest that is tx. 9. Texas as a state ranks in the top 5 of all states for all major pollutants. Go figure. The EPA says you can't breathe the air for fear of carcinogens, can't drink the water for fear of toxins, can't eat the seafood for fear of mercury poisoning, and the Taiwanese plants spill high levels of run-off into the neighborhoods. That isn't good either! 10. "Clampet" stereotypes which aren't all together untrue. I've never seen any other collective bunch unwittingly living up to negative stereotypes. Perhaps some t-shirts can be air dropped to them. You know, t-shirts that say something like, "thank god i struck oil, cuz my double-wide needs a fixin" 11. Texan's general confusion between pride and reason. there is a healthy pride, and then there is a texan pride. actually, a texan is proud of his state like a branch davidian is proud of his cool-aid. 12. "DON'T MESS WITH TEXAS". Why would I need to mess with Texas when it's already messed up? What's wrong with the old standby: Yeeeeeeehaw!!!!..and other inane slogans that demonstrate an inability to articulate one's self. 13. Corrupt institutions of business. Enron was a great. But, no one can beat the oil companies for blood money, environmental destruction, greed, and corruption. a texan would tell you that corruption only exists in zip codes outside their magical state. is this true? 14. Cults and fundamentalists. Kind of self explanatory. Apparently, tx is the perfect place for those who like to organize and be merry while preying on kids. Gotta love tx. 15. Backwards thinking. State first? Country second, or is there something between state and country like, i don't know, socks or peanut butter? You gotta love state first mentality. If the country is attacked, would tx try to side with mexico just to save their own state? Kind of like, if the house was burning, you'd only save your favorite bathroom. Lots of reasoning there. wait a minute! i'm going to start a new one. it's called home owners association first! Hey tx, do you shoot people in the back too? Buncha anti-american secessionist quitters! just kidding, only 20% of you are the American Taliban. 16. Worst humidity and dew point. Yes it is true. Houston/bay area is tied with annual averages for the worst humidity and dew point in the united states per NOAA. In a nutshell, it's like a sauna. a constant sauna for 7 months out of the year. so is hell. 17. Hurricanes. you got it. more of my tax dollars go to natural disasters like hurricanes in tx. nothing like every hurricane season fearing the wrath of god upon your family and home. 18. Tornadoes. this must have to do with the fact that tx leads the nation in the amount of trailor homes as a percentage of all homes. the good thing is, tx is flat and has nothing around for 100's of miles. so, not many people should get hurt except those who ask for it. you know, texans. 19. Trailer trash. "T" stands for trailor trash, tornadoes, truck stops, terrible, tacky, terrorist, taliban, travesty, and one more...uh...dang, i forgot. 20. Prison over population. tx just can't kill 'em fast moreResolved Question: Did you know...? XD!?
That there are this many types of music... v (You don't have to read them... I doubt you would anyway... LMAO!) • 2Step • 4-beat • 2 tone • A cappella - any singing performed without instrumental backing • Aak - Korean court music • Aaroubi - evolved form of al-andalous classical music which comes from Algiers • Abaimajani • Abajeños - folk music of the Perépecha of Mexico • Aboriginal rock - rock and roll mixed with Australian aborigine music, began in 1980s • Abstract hip hop • Abwe • Acoustic Punk • Acoustic Techno Fusion • Acid croft - mixture of traditional Scottish music with house influences • Acid house - house music using simple tone generators with tempo-controlled resonant filters • Acid groove • Acid jazz - jazz mixed with soul, hip hop and funk • Acid punk • Acid rap • Acid rock • Acid techno • Adai-adai • Aduk-aduk • Adult contemporary • Anti-Serious Music • Afoxé • African blues • African jazz • Afrobeat - African rhythms mixed with American funk • Afro-Cuban jazz - jazz mixed with merengue, salsa or other Latin forms • Afro-Cuban rumba • Afro-juju • Afro-Kaiya - originated in San Diego • Afro-Manding blues • Afro-punk • Afro-reggae • Afro-soul • Afro-zouk • Afroma • Aggrotech • Aguinaldo • Ahouach • Ahidus • Air • Akyn - Kazakh folk music made by travelling musicians also called akyn • Alb-pop - Albanian pop music • Aleatoric music - music the composition of which is partially left to chance • Algerias • Alomaco • Alpine New Wave • Alpunk • Alternative country - reaction against the 1990s highly-polished Nashville sound • Alternative hip hop - opposite of gangsta rap, usually includes socially or politically aware lyrics (also known as alternative rap or Bohemian hip hop) • Alternative metal - catch-all term for heavy metal mixed with punk, funk, hip hop or other influences • Alternative punk • Alternative rock- broad movement born in the 1980s generally relegated to the underground music scene and operating outside of the mainstream • Alternative synth - Also known as Subliminal, this features usually a repeatative bass riff and/or a bass riff that is played backwards. It also features a lot of keyboards and is usually instrumental • Amanédhes • Ambient - atmospheric electronic music combined with jazz, New Age and other influences • Ambient acoustic • Ambient breakbeat • Ambient dub • Ambient electronica • Ambient house • Ambient groove • Ambient techno • Ambient trance • American fingerstyle guitar (American primitive guitar) • Americana • Anadolu rock - Turkish rock music • Anarcho-punk - 1970s mixture of punk rock with anarchist lyrics • Andártika • Andean New Age - a mixture of native Peruvian and Western musics which arose in tourist areas in Lima, Cuzco, and Ollantaytambo • Angklung - Osinger and Balinese style of gamelan performed exclusively by young boys • Angolan merengue • Anti-folk • Antiphonal • Apala • Appalachian folk - in the United States, commonly referred to as simply folk music • Arabesk - A versatile collection of music fusing Turkish folk music, Arab classical music and various other genres • Areito • Arena rock - 1970s catchy, bombastic mixture of hard rock, prog and pop music • Argentinean rock • Arpa grande - a style of rural Mexican folk music • Arribeño - lyrical folk music from Sierra Gorda, Mexico • Ars antiqua • Ars nova • Artcore • Art metal • Art punk • Art rock • Ashiq - Azeri bards who sing and accompany themselves on a saz (a kind of lute) • Ashoug • Asian Underground - British-based form of Indian and Western fusion • Australian country music (see also Country music) • Australian pub rock • Australian hip hop • Australian humour • Australian warmetal • Avant-garde jazz • Avant-garde metal • Avant-garde music - any kind of experimental music incorporated bizarre ideas, structures or instrumentation • Axé - pop music from Salvador, Bahia • Bachata • Baião • Bakersfield sound - gritty, hard-edged reaction against 1950s pop country (Nashville sound) • Bakshy - Turkmen folk music made by travelling musicians also called bakshy • Baiáo - Dance music created by a trio of triangle, bass drum and accordion • Baila - Sri Lankan dance music derived from African slaves held by the Portuguese • Baile Funk - Brazilian dance music literally means "ball", as in "dance party", and "funk" • Baisha xiyue - a song and dance suite from the Naxi of Lijiang, China • Bajourou • Bakou - trilling vocals that accompany Wolof wrestling • Bagad • Bal granmoun • Bal-musette • Balakadri • Ballad - generic term for usually slow, romantic, despairing and catastrophic songs • Ballad calypso • Ballata • Ballet (music) • Balss • Bamberas • Bamboo band - originally from the Solomon Islands, music played by hitting bamboo tubes with sandals • BaFnck it got cut off -_- theres +1500 genres XD O_O No way in hell I would type all that... I cheated. :P moreResolved Question: Do I need a Visa (Mexican)/permit to travel to Utah from Arizona?
I need to travel to to Utah and I have a Mexican tourist visa to travel in the United States, the problem is that I don't have a permit to travel to Phoenix, Do I need the Permit to travel by air and what do I need to travel? moreResolved Question: Can i refuse the border patrol to search my car?
I was recently traveling from San Diego to Phoenix along the U.S.-Mexican border with my mother and we came up to one of the many routine border patrol mobile checkpoints. I was driving my subaru sti which is very noticable and the agents had their drug dogs sitting near the lane where cars drive through. As we aproached the checkpoint the dog became interested in my car and began looking in our direction and trying to walk toward it. When i came up to the Agent questioning people before they passed through we asked all the usual questions then asked me to pull over ahead to the search area. i had no problem with this. we got out as ordered and sat on the bench and an agent began questioning us as another agent walking the dog around my car. He then asked if i give consent to have them look through the cabin of my car and have the dog sniff through it. Now i am in the Air Force and do not fit the profile of a drug smuggler or pot head. As they could see when i handed them my military id. But i had nothing to hid so i said go for it. The dog got hair all over my interior scratched my seats and spilled my soda on my seat. They found nothing and told us we were free to go. To say the least i was furious. But what could i do? So we left but my question is when the agent asked if i give consent for them to run the dog through my car, if had said no. What would come of this? Even if i just said your dogs fucked up my interior last time but an agent may search it. Will they detain us or what? Im heading back next week and i will not let them run that fucking mutt through it again. moreResolved Question: Your reaction Pressure Mounts To Resolve ID Law state illegals licenses won't comply with the REAL ID law?
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. -- Having to carry a passport to fly out of the Sunport after the New Year is still weighing heavily on the minds of many New Mexicans. Because New Mexico issues driver's licenses to illegal immigrants, come Jan. 1, state licenses won't comply with the REAL ID law and won't be accepted at airports.Thirty one days remain for Congress to act and travelers aren't happy. Liz De Kinder is supposed to go New York in January, but like many New Mexicans, she doesn't have a passport. De Kinder called her airline, and they told her she would be OK without a passport. "The TSA web site says everybody is currently in compliance and mentions nothing about going out of compliance as of January 1st," said De Kinder. Even though the airlines and the Transportation Security Administration aren't worried, politicians in all branches of government -- from the National Governors Association to new Mexico's Washington delegation -- are very concerned. "I talked to Sen. Bingaman's office this morning," said New Mexico Taxation and Revenue Department Secretary Rick Homans. "They're aware of it. They're working it from behind the scenes and they feel confident also a solution will be forthcoming from the Department of Homeland Security." Late Monday afternoon, U.S. Senators Jeff Bingaman and Tom Udall asked the Department of Homeland Security to provide assurances to New Mexicans that travel plans early in the new year won't be disrupted. In a letter to Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano, the senators said enforcing the Dec. 31 deadline would cause a significant disruption in air travel. They also pointed out that New Mexico has asked for an extension of the deadline. In their letter, the senators urged DHS to quickly clarify its plans regarding the implementation of the REAL ID Act. "The Department of Homeland Security has not indicated whether it will grant an extension, despite the fact that a majority of states are unlikely to be in compliance with the REAL ID Act," said the senators in their letter. "This is causing a great deal of anxiety for our constituents, who are seeing news reports that they will need a passport in order to fly on a commercial airline after the first of the year. Without assurances from your Department that a passport will not be necessary, many people may alter or cancel their travel plans. This uncertainty may also have a significant economic impact if the residents of non-compliant states decide not to fly or are unable to do so."http://www.koat.com/news/21766864/detail.html moreResolved Question: Im traveling from U.S to Mexico, Im 19 years old. Can I Drink alcohol when I cross the international Line?
Or vice versa? does it all apply to the norms of the U.S. while in Mexican Air Territory? From Dallas, TX, to Torreon, Coah, Mex. P.S. In Mexico the legal age for alcohol is 18. moreResolved Question: Why is it that every single race or ethnicity seems to dislike black people?
Why is it that every single race or ethnicity seems to dislike black people. The Jewish, Turks, Indians, Russians, Arabic’s, Italians, Mexicans, Brazilians, Hispanics, and even Asians. I've traveled to many different countries and it seems they all have the same feelings toward black people. That they’re violent, uneducated, can't speak correctly, no family values, they have tons of children they can’t afford, and the worst thing is that they will kill each other over shoes or because someone looked at them in a wrong way. I love watching the TV show, "The First 48". It’s a reality show about murders. The show is based on if the police detectives do not catch the person that committed the murder in the first 48 hours, the likelihood of doing so drops in half. A camera crew follows detectives from the second the murder gets reported to the end where they catch the person. On the show 95% of the people doing the murders are black. I don’t know what’s worse. That there are so many black’s murdering people or they actually made a reality show and they profit from it. I mean think about it. It's so bad they actually made a TV show about it. If the show airs once a week and there are two murders per show and only in two different cities in the country that’s a lot of murders. And what about the rest of the country? WOW! But WHY? The people of the world would like an intelligent answer. So, to the pissed off people reading this, go ahead type your rude answers proving the worlds point. But to the rest of the people please give an honest opinion because the people of the world finally want to know. If all you want is to know too then respond by typing, “I’d like to know too.” moreResolved Question: I found out you don't need your passport to travel by air to Mexico. But will they let me in without a birth c?
I found out you don't need your passport to travel by air to Mexico. But will they let me in without a birth c? I found out you don't need your passport to travel by air to Mexico. But will they let me in without a birth certificate, I heard they will give you problems at the Mexican border or a fine if you dont show proff other than a LPR and CA ID, I don't know if this is true, that you have to show your a citizen of Mexico, I am a citizen of Mexico but i lost my Birth C. moreResolved Question: I found out you don't need your passport to travel by air to Mexico. But will they let me in without a birth c?
I found out you don't need your passport to travel by air to Mexico. But will they let me in without a birth certificate, I heard they will give you problems at the Mexican border or a fine if you dont show proff other than a LPR and CA ID, I don't know if this is true, that you have to show your a citizen of Mexico, I am a citizen of Mexico but i lost my Birth C. moreResolved Question: How dangerous is our southern border and who is coming across?
With so many other nations coming across the southern border, how do we know who is exactly coming in? Are these other nations posing a threat to our country? What should be done about these other nations and mexico sneaking them into the U.S.? XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX nation and world Border patrol sees sharp rise in number of Chinese caught in desert At least 261 have been caught trying to cross from Mexico into the U.S., officials say. By Sebastian Rotella Los Angeles Times Posted: 10/06/2009 01:00:00 AM MDT NOGALES, Ariz. — Amid an overall drop in arrests of illegal immigrants crossing the U.S-Mexico border, an intriguing anomaly has cast a new light on human smuggling: Authorities report an almost tenfold spike in the number of Chinese people caught in the Arizona desert, the busiest smuggling corridor on the international line. The Border Patrol in the Tucson sector has arrested at least 261 Chinese border-crossers this year, compared with an annual average of 32 during the last four years, officials said. "They are the main (non-Mexicans) we catch," said field operations supervisor Juventino Pacheco of the patrol's international liaison unit in Nogales. "Lately we have been catching more Chinese than Central Americans." When agents find Chinese migrants — hiding in gulches, perhaps, or huddled in smugglers' vehicles — they often request help from Dean Delap, the sector's only Mandarin-speaking agent. He taught and studied in China, but had not expected that to prove valuable in Nogales. "Some are cooperative," Delap said. "Some are scared. They've just been arrested, they are in a new place. I put them at ease." Chinese remain a small fraction of the overall number processed at the Nogales station — which guards 31 miles abutting Nogales, Mexico. The Tucson sector, where the Nogales station is located, recorded about 226,000 apprehensions this year. That is a 24 percent decline from the last fiscal year — reflecting the impact of the U.S. economic crisis and tougher border enforcement, officials said. The great majority of those arrested were Mexicans. Chinese belong to a category known in the Border Patrol as OTMs: other than Mexicans. And they are big business for smuggling gangs that increasingly have overlapped with Mexico's violent drug mafias. Mexicans typically pay smugglers about $1,500 for help crossing the sun-seared landscape, which is as dangerous as it is majestic. The fees for Central Americans and South Americans often reach $6,000. A group of Haitians, intercepted a few years ago in Tucson after three nights spent hiking in circles in a canyon, had coughed up $10,000; another $10,000 was to have been paid upon arrival in the Chicago area. The Chinese — nearly all of them from Fujian province — pay the most. They often have to work off debts of $30,000 to $70,000 over several years as indentured servants in the sweatshops and kitchens of New York and other cities. Sophisticated Asian mafias organize intricate journeys to the U.S. A typical route leads from Beijing to Rome to Caracas, Venezuela, to Mexico City to the border, according to Matthew Allen, chief agent of the Phoenix office of Immigration and Customs Enforcement. "It's much more elaborate" than smuggling Latin Americans, Allen said. "Waiting in hotel rooms, calls on cellphones, code words. ... The trend (in increased arrests) stands out as apprehensions are going down overall." But the uptick in arrests of Chinese does not necessarily reflect a major influx from that country, officials said. Statistical barometers are imperfect. High-priced smugglers are better at dodging defenses, so it's hard to assess the correlation between arrests, crossing rates and the number who succeed in illegally immigrating. Asian smugglers favor air routes, exploiting visa policies for Chinese travelers in Ecuador, Honduras and Venezuela, which are hubs for their travel to Mexico, officials said. http://www.denverpost.com/headlines/ci_13494389# moreResolved Question: Has anybody else been paying attention to the details........?
Observations of the President's 1st 100 Days: 1. Offended the Queen of England 2. Bowed to the King of Saudi Arabia 3. Praised the Marxist Daniel Ortega 4. Kissed Hugo Chavez on the cheek 5. Endorsed the Socialist Evo Morales of Bolivia 6. Announced we would meet with Iranians with no pre-conditions 7. Gave away billions to AIG, also without pre-conditions 8. Expanded the bailouts 9. Insulted everyone who has ever loved a Special Olympian 10. Doubled our national debt . 11. Announced a termination of the space defense system the day after the North Koreans launched an ICBM. 12. Despite the urgings of his own CIA director and the prior 42 CIA directors, released information on intelligence gathering. Announced major restrictions on interrogation techniques used on enemy combatant prisoners. 13. Accepted without public comment the fact that five of his cabinet members cheated on their taxes and two other appointees withdrew after they couldn't take the heat. 14. Appointed a Homeland Security Chief who quickly identified as "dangers to the nation", groups including veterans of the military, and opponents to abortion on demand, and who ordered that the word terrorism no longer be used but instead referred to such acts as man made disasters. 15. Circled the globe so he could openly apologize for America 's greatness. 16. Told Mexicans the violence in their country was mostly caused by illegal guns from the U.S. 17. Politicized the census by moving it into the White House from its Department of Commerce origins and announced ACORN [the organization under massive scrutiny amid allegations of election fraud] would manage the process. 18. Appointed as Attorney General the man who orchestrated the forced removal and expulsion from America to Cuba of a nine-year old whose mother died trying to bring him to a life of freedom in the United States . 19. Salutes as heroes three Navy SEALS who took down three terrorists who threatened one American life and the next day announces members of the Bush administration will likely stand trial for torturing a terrorist who had played a part in killing 3000 Americans by pouring water over his face. 20. Air Force One flew over New York City for a photo op without notifying local authorities causing widespread panic. 21. Took over the American Automobile industry and handed over 50% off to the unions [because he said he owed them]. 22. Continued his drive for absolute gun control activities, thumbing his nose at the 2nd Amendment. 23. Offered travel and living subsidies in the U.S. to Hamas activists displaced from the Gaza Strip. 24. Got more airtime [TV] than Oprah Winfrey and was seldom in Washington tending to the business of State. 25. Announced the closure of enemy combatants detention center in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba but failed to address the issue of 'what' to do with the 200+ prisoners currently held there. Rumors persist that they'll be housed on U.S. soil... Other than that, how do you rate this administration? moreResolved Question: Based on these observations of Obama's first hundred days do you think he's doing a good job?
Observations of the President's 1st 100 Days: 1. Offended the Queen of England 2. Bowed to the King of Saudi Arabia 3. Praised the Marxist Daniel Ortega 4. Kissed Hugo Chavez on the cheek 5. Endorsed the Socialist Evo Morales of Bolivia 6. Announced we would meet with Iranians with no pre-conditions 7. Gave away billions to AIG, also without pre-conditions 8. Expanded the bailouts 9. Insulted everyone who has ever loved a Special Olympian 10. Doubled our national debt . 11. Announced a termination of the space defense system the day after the North Koreans launched an ICBM. 12. Despite the urgings of his own CIA director and the prior 42 CIA directors, released information on intelligence gathering. Announced major restrictions on interrogation techniques used on enemy combatant prisoners. 13. Accepted without public comment the fact that five of his cabinet members cheated on their taxes and two other appointees withdrew after they couldn't take the heat. 14. Appointed a Homeland Security Chief who quickly identified as "dangers to the nation", groups including veterans of the military, and opponents to abortion on demand, and who ordered that the wordterrorism no longer be used but instead referred to such acts as man made disasters. 15. Circled the globe so he could openly apologize for America 's greatness. 16. Told Mexicans the violence in their country was mostly caused by illegal guns from the U.S. 17. Politicized the census by moving it into the White House from its Department of Commerce origins and announced ACORN [the organization under massive scrutiny amid allegations of election fraud] would manage the process. 18. Appointed as Attorney General the man who orchestrated the forced removal and expulsion from America to Cuba of a nine-year old whose mother died trying to bring him to a life of freedom in the United States . 19. Salutes as heroes three Navy SEALS who took down three terrorists who threatened one American life and the next day announces members of the Bush administration will likely stand trial for torturing a terrorist who had played a part in killing 3000 Americans by pouring water over his face. 20. Air Force One flew over New York City for a photo op without notifying local authorities causing widespread panic. 21. Took over the American Automobile industry and handed over 50% off to the unions [because he said he owed them]. 22. Continued his drive for absolute gun control activities, thumbing his nose at the 2nd Amendment. 23. Offered travel and living subsidies in the U.S. to Hamas activists displaced from the Gaza Strip. 24. Got more airtime [TV] than Oprah Winfrey and was seldom in Washington tending to the business of State. 25. Announced the closure of enemy combatants detention center in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba but failed to address the issue of 'what' to do with the 200+ prisoners currently held there. Rumors persist that they'll be housed on U.S. soil... Other than that, we're doing just fine. Only 1360 more FRIGHTENING days to go... moreResolved Question: Are you prepared for the Mexican flu pandemic?
Let's get real about the swine flu pandemic. In my opinion the H1B Strain should be called the Mexican flu due to the flu origin in Mexico. Are we prepared to close the border with Mexico? Are we prepared to stop all Air Travel? Are we prepared to stay home to survive the Mexican flu for 5 days when the flu is a pandemic? Do you have enough food? Water? Medicine? Cash? Guns and shells? We need to hope for the best, but Mexican flu masks are on sale for 99 cents at the 99 Cent Only Store and I told my store coworkers I am going to wear a mask and rubber gloves, if necessary. As a utility worker I will be forced to work. But, I want to stockpile emergency supplies just in case. Another question, will your local WalMart or Target or Grocery Store have the supplies you need for the emergency?Correction H1N1.the_hedd, Have you done anything to prepare for emergencies like the Mexican flu.I am not panicing. All I ask is are we prepared? I want to wear a flu mask. Maybe gloves because I work with the public for a utility. Is that panic? I want to have emergancy supplies. Still no panic. moreResolved Question: Why shouldnt Obama be proud to leave Mex. Border Open?
You have the LIPAC (an organization who generally knows what their doing) versus a president whos been in office for 100 days his supporting cabinet urges him to atleast issue public warnings to travelers, and he stands by his message during a time of death WITH AN OPEN BORDER and PANDEMIC we need to make sure were using soap when we wash up... I could have voted for Dr. Jack Kavorkian and gotten a "wash your hands" answer... And hes proudly pops out his chin, with absolutely no excuse to why he leaves it open other then his text book pretty talk that has no base or ground answer... well this isnt just about "change" its definitely not about "the same ol players and same ol politics" this is about a contagion that is preventable, and while the rest of the world battens down the hatches... Obama (the only one who has the right to say it) wont close or urge borders closed... AMERICA HAS NO VOICE... we have an ignorant ILLEGAL ALIEN RUNNING OUR COUNTRY AND SUBJECTING US TO EVERY ENTITY THAT CAN CAUSE US HARM. AND HES F'N PROUD OF IT???!!?!?!?! Americans for Legal Immigration PAC calls on the Obama administration to immediately close the southern border and restrict all inbound air and ground traffic from Mexico to emergencies and product delivery immediately to protect American lives from the Mexican Swine Flu outbreak. "The Obama administration's failure to secure our borders against a possible pandemic is putting American lives at risk at a time when days and hours matter," said William Gheen of ALIPAC. "The weak and inadequate "passive surveillance" described during Sunday's press conference is offensive to the rational mind." Instead of advising American tourists not to travel to Mexico, or closing border crossings and air travel gates to essential travel only, the Obama administration is treating Mexico like a 51st state, instead of separate nation. ALIPAC is also critical of Obama administration's failure to appoint key leadership prior to this crisis. America is entering this crisis without a secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) or appointees in any of the department's 19 key posts. President Barack Obama has not yet chosen a surgeon general or the head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. His choice to run the Food and Drug Administration awaits confirmation. "Obama was playing golf Sunday. Instead, he should have been addressing the nation, securing the borders, and filling the gaps in our government leadership from an emergency command center!" said William Gheen. "He refuses to send troops to the border to stop the violence from spilling over or the Mexican flu from crossing into America. Instead we get second tier bureaucrats telling Americans to wash our hands and cover our mouths when we cough like a bunch of 1st grade students." Obama recently traveled to Mexico to pledge his support for Comprehensive Immigration Reform Amnesty and the unconstitutional implementation of the Security and Prosperity Partnership launched under the Bush administration found at SPP.gov The SPP, which has no approval from the American public or Congressional oversight states borders should remain open during pandemics... "(border restrictions) will not be more restrictive or maintained longer than necessary to achieve the veterinary or public health objective so as to avoid unnecessary interference with the movement of people and goods within North America." The Mexican Swine Flu outbreak impact on the American populace will be more severe due to the lack of action by the Obama administration, their failure to appoint a head of Health and Human Services and a Surgeon General and Obama's adherence to an economic plan which supersedes US Sovereignty, the laws of Congress, and civilian control. "We are asking our supporters to call their Congressional representatives immediately to demand that Congress hold emergency hearings to override the open borders policies of the Obama administration and protect our citizens from this potential pandemic." said William GheenFloyd... The flu itself isnt anything to be worried about - the N1H1 Virus of the flu dies within 48 - 120 hours... the virus that uses N1H1 as a host and vessel of entry and gestation that we have never before seen, we dont know long term effect, we dont know anything other than its strand composure and violent activity has only been seen one other time in the last 20 years... and that was ebola. The 100 plus that have died already in mexico didnt die of a fever, this they died of Hemmoraging.. SO, with that, your idea of this being blown out of proportion, is the same as saying AIDS is being blown out of proportion, only this nasty little carrier virus is now communicable through air. I understand you lack of concern, and that (an already crappy) market is more important to you than possibily devestating out posterity. Its a shame Obama doesnt give us a DEMOCRACY the right to decide and the children the right to decide. but we already know how he feels about little ones dont we?Olan Black... god bless you... not everybody can be as concerned about the poor condition of NAFTA (The worlds most socialist idea yet) WHEN PEOPLE ARE DIEING OF A VIRUS that uses the 3 different H1 strand virus' as a vessel in to the human body. We know that people have been drying from hemmorages vs fever... not a flu like characteristic. we know that its gestation period is 10-48 hours, then it moves directly to the spine (much like all virus') and that this tiny worm like virus has the longest table life (outside of host) in air, water or oily res. for up to 12 hours (longest living virus known) is not effected to UV like AIDS or others. Its killed over a hundred, and the carriers lungs needed drained for autopsy. How bout that? want it in your back yard? alteast the market wont be so bad when WERE ALL SICK! Ahh.. and these med experts are still months away from a vac. and the FDA supply of 12mil tamiflu treatments is gone, oh heres the great part, THEY SAY IT ISNT WORKING!!!!!!!!! moreResolved Question: is it crazy that american authorities do not close the border with Mexico ?
read this: http://www.wftv.com/news/19311020/detail.html Mexican tourist was allowed to US 2(!) days ago, that is when Swine Flu was already all over the news and number of deaths in Mexico was going up. This very moment visitors from Mexico cross US border legally, not mentioning those who do it illegally. I understand that right at the border a person can be just a carrier and not show any visible symptoms of sickness yet, but how dumb and irresponsible are the Federal authorities if they still have not shut down the border and all the air travel to and from Mexico ????? Furthermore, how crazy is it not to deploy troops to Mexican border in places where illegals cross it ???? What is all this insane talk that it is too late for containment ??? How about doing everything fricken possible to reduce the number of sick people coming here ? This guy went to Disney World, where he moved around freely among thousands of people !! What will the fallout be ? I am not against Mexicans, i don't care if all illegals are given amnesty, and so forth... But it is obvious to me that out government, Obama government that i welcomed when he was elected, is mishandling this extremely serious crisis. Close Mexican Border NOW !!! Shut down Air travel !!! Does anyone hear me ? moreResolved Question: Passport?? Mexican vacation?
Hello, I'm traveling with my mom to mexico in late may. I am an American citizen with a valid passport. My mom is a mexican citizen with a permanent resident card for the US. Does she need to get a passport from the US in order to travel ( via air) to mexico? If so where can we process this as soon as possible? Thanks moreResolved Question: TAKING FOOD TO MEXICO?
Can i take a couple frozen pizzas and tater tots to mexico? I am taking my kids to mexico to spend the summer with their grandma and i want to arrive with pizza and tots because thats my mother in laws favorite food when she was in the U.S so do i have to tell customs or will i just open a can of worms (making mexican customs suspicious). Or is this normal. I dont want this to turn out ugly because i want my kids to have a good experiance. Also, i am traveling by air. Tips and advice greatly appriciated moreResolved Question: Would a mexican passport work for air travel in the U.S even though the person is not legalized?
For example flying from LA to Arkansa with only a mexican passport? moreResolved Question: How do I get a Mexican birth-certificate right away?
My father recently applied for his social security benefit's. He is a legal resident and has been for 30 odd years. We had an issue at the Social Security office. My father never obtained his birth-certificate from my grandmother. With prices sky rocketing for bus and air plane rides into Mexico. There is no financial way for us or him to travel that distance into mexico its a 24 hour ride by bus and is expensive. I was told that the only way for us to get a birth certificate was to travel to his mother and pick one up. But this is impossible pls help. There must be another way. moreResolved Question: what do you think of my movies' collection? your favourite?
heartbreak kid you me and dupree georgia rule walk all over me the last kiss you don't mess with the zohan dedication akeelah and the bee big nothing cheaper by the dozen 2 american dreamz the notebook mr.magorium's wonder emporium the terminal click the nanny diaries the mexican enchanted conversations with god the sisterhood of the travelling pants 2 cool ideas eternal sunshine of the spotless mind i now pronounce you chuck and larry lucky you she's the man the accidental husband run fatboy run knocked up no reservations my blueberry nights guess who love actually the ex young people fucking four christmases new york waiting miss conception college road trip dan in real life fool's gold then she found me hairspray the jane austen book club euro trip baby mama lost in translation sleepover picture this the family stone 11:14 the pacifier how to lose friends and alienate people sister act gray matters cold mountain the ten the namesake man from earth burn after reading french kiss wall.e blow once the bourne idetity the bourne supremacy the bourne ultimatum savages stephanie daley the babysitters accepted everything is illuminated something new driving lessons into the wild gone baby gone caramel grosse pointe blank vicky christina barcelona idiocracy wildchild milk 27 dresses priceless friends with money red eye becoming jane another cinderella story drillbit taylor the long weekend do re mi fa sol la si do moulin rouge rendition zodiac brokeback mountain ratatouille mama mia journey to the center of the earth cinderella man high school musical 3 the ultimate gift harold and kumar escape from the guantanamo bay million dollar baby casanova death defying acts crush on you evan almighty the producers fritz the cat fargo the edge of love in bruges my tiny universe my sassy girl the da vinci code oliver twist the sixth sense death at a funeral before the rains trainspotting lars and the real girl scoop wimbledon love song for bobby long the love guru roadside romeo disfigured how to eat fried worms blonde ambition la vie en rose in search of a midnight kiss the dark night the longshots the golden compass shortcut to happiness amelie keith the house bunny across the universe tortoise vs hare schndler's list the duchess things we lost in fire paranoid park fireflies in the garden august rush beauty shop troy the darjeeling limited bobby kit kittredge snatch happy feet the great new wonderful finding nemo the life before her eyes the ex files the clique i am sam breaking and entering alvin and the chipmunks the professional the assasination of jesse james girl with a pearl earing dead man walking wah-wah made of honor twilight cast away nights in rodanthe magnolia zack and miri make a porno saw V employee of the month the women reprise the tracey fragments married life war inc Romulus my father You kill me Christmas at the kranks I’m reed fish Margot at the wedding August Dogville Walk the line Smart people The air I breathe Sparkle Casino royale Hancock Snow angels moreResolved Question: Cancun or the Caribbean for spring break?
me and a friend have found packages for both destinations for air travel and hotel stay for reasonable pricing. cancun is only slightly cheaper than the caribbean. do we need a passport if we're flying for either place? and which would be better to visit as far as costs and activities that are available? i don't want to get there and find that everything costs alot more than i thought and planned for. my boyfriend is mexican and speaks fluent spanish so language would not be a problem in cancun and i've heard that people in the caribbean speak mostly english. any suggestions from experience as to which would be better or just facts that may be helpful?? our plan is to go around march 7 or 8th and we'll stay about 5 days or so. moreResolved Question: Traveling to Mexico, need some info.?
I am a US citizen who will be traveling to Mexico, Monterrey, to be exact. I just need to know, other than my passport, what else do I need? I was looking some information and I read that I need a tourist card from a Mexican Consulate. Can I get that from the Mexican Embassy in DC? I live close to DC, so its a non issue for me. And, I was looking at Air Fares, the cheapest I found (I am a college student on a tight budget) was Economy Super Saver from American Airlines. Could some one please explain me the part about Change Fee? What exactly does that mean? And is there something else I need to be aware of? I am planning on visiting it for about 8 days, and its not a business trip, just a go meet some friends trip. Thanks. moreResolved Question: could someone please check my answers... subject verb agreement ?
1.The vase of flowers (is,are) on the table. is 2.The photographs on the table (reminds,remind) me of our recent trip.remind 3. The pole vault, as well as the high jump, (is, are) Abdul's specialty. is 4. Bears (live, lives) in those mountains. 5. Rome, together with Venice, (has, have) many interesting sights.have 6. Lemon (enhances, enhance) the flavor in fish. enhances 7. The tigers at our hometown zoo (roam, roams) freely on an island.roam 8.Spinach, in addition to squash (is, are) very nourishing. is 9. The highest mountains in the world (rises, rise) in the Himalayas. 10. The plays we read in speech class (is, are) based on historical events. are 11. The grass on the lawns (gets, get) parched when we have a hot, dry summer.gets 12. Anaba, along with her brothers, (wants, want) to learn some traditional songs.wants 13. That pair of scissors with the orange handles (is, are) missing. is 14. My aunt from the Netherlands (loves, love) to travel. loves 15. Three students in my math class (is, are) going to the state finals. are 16. Coyotes, rattlesnakes, and lizards (thrive, thrives) in the Mexican desert. thrive 17. Many beautiful fish near the reef in Cozumel (swim, swims) lazily below us. swim 18. The grandparents of my best friend (have, has) always lived in Guadalajara. have 19. Dust mites in the air (is, are) a problem for people with allergies.are 20. The top of those bushes (reaches, reach ) almost to the second story. reach moreResolved Question: Requirements to connect a international flight in Detroit. US? Im Mexican?
I do have my Visa B2 (tourist visa) to get in the States without a problem, but Im not allowed to ask for a permit (CBP Form I-94 Arrival and Departure Records) in the next 2 years, does that mean I can't catch a connection flight in the U.S ? The CBP Declaration used for air and sea are different? Should I expect problems? What if they dont allow me to catch my connection flight? Means I have to get a flight ticket to come back home? Im traveling to London next week. Thanks for the answers. moreResolved Question: do you like my speech?well-written?corrections?speech advice?
Have you ever found yourself alone, pondering what awaits you after death? Have you envisioned the gates of heaven or the fires of hell? Well, I'm here to let you know that this is a worrisome topic that can tend to invade many peoples minds. For the majority of the Mexican population, it is infallible that life after death will depend on your faith in God. That is because the majority of Mexico is overwhelmingly Catholic. Being Catholic signifies that you have firm faith in God, but, more importantly you believe in an afterlife. As death approaches, recital of the maestro cantor is common. The object of the chant is to release the soul from the body and irritate and confuse the demons who invade the exterior of the home waiting to capture the soul. The demons degrade at the sound of the prayers and the soul is set free. Those who wait vigilantly at the bedside are restricted from weeping, for fear that the soul might stay among the living. After certainty of death, the body is dressed in the person's best attire. The relatives pray at the sight of their deceased. As condolence, friends bring gifts such as candles, coffee, and food. Twenty-four hours later the funeral commences. Usually held at a church or cemetery the ceremony is given by a priest. The day after burial,a novena, or nine day prayer, commences, to assure that the soul of the deceased detaches itself from the living. There is limited mourning that takes place after death. One of the ways women show their grief is by wearing black; although, men never do. Mostly everywhere in Mexico the souls of the deceased are said to return to their graves annually on the eve of All Souls’ Day. Food is usually provided by relatives to feed famished souls that traveled on their perilous journey to revisit their graves. Flowers are used to garnish the tombstones so that the souls feel welcomed by their relatives. Relatives provide an altar for the dead for the purpose of mourning them. Items that reminded them of their deceased are placed on the altar, such as favorite foods and personal items. Marigolds are a commonality as well; they adorn the altar and represent the Earth. Candles are also a necessity; their scent helps guide the souls to their graves. Relatives must take special care of the flames provided by the candles, because if blown out, the souls lose their way and never make it to the altar. Imagine you lived in 700 A.D., during the era of the Mayas. You are in the middle of the jungle and suddenly amid the hoots of the spider-monkeys and the sweet song of the birds, you hear a slow yet rhythmic beating. Your curiosity entices you to pursue the sound and you find yourself pushing wildly through vines and branches to find the source of the beating. As you draw nearer, your heart begins to beat faster and faster almost as if in unison with the beat of the drums. Instinctively you know your almost there, and you can feel the anticipation rising, along with the suffocating humid air. You pace yourself for what is to come and slowly peer through the trees. You gawk, open-mouthed, at the sight before you. A lifeless body lay sprawled on the floor covered in strange markings, with a demented man chanting viciously in foreign tongues. Smoke that smells of incense rises all around, and there are people gathered around weeping. Near by there is a small boy tapping at animal-skin drums with rage. Instinct takes over you and you quickly turn the towards the other direction, and sprint wildly away, never to return again. Most of Mexico is strictly Catholic, and they attend Church every Sunday, without fault. Catholic’s believe that after death the soul leaves the body to rejoin God in heaven or to suffer eternally for their sins in hell with Satan. However, ancient civilizations in Mexico like the Mayas had totally contradictory beliefs. The Mayas were extremely religious people who lives revolved around the fear they held for their gods. They practiced many traditions and rituals to worship their gods and to commemorate the deceased. They also believed certain types of death were more worthy then others. Those who died by sacrifice, suicide, or death as a warrior were highly revered and were said to go directly to heaven. The Mayan underworld ,Xilbalba, was were the evil suffered eternally. Death was thought of as a journey, and there were 13 layers of heaven and 9 layers of hell. Each layer had its own god or goddess, and was a varying degree of the afterlife. Sacrifice in Mayan religion was vital to please the Gods. Games such as Pok-a Tok, a Mayan ball game, were played to honor specific Gods, losers of the game would be sacrificed. Although these traditions are long since past, Mexico still pays homage to them by reenacting them in plays and in popular theme parks. We may not know what happens after death, but we all believe in something. Some of us believSome of us believe in heaven and hell, others in several levels of an afterlife. Being human, we all have our doubts and questions, and we can't help but wondering. The truth of the matter is that we will never know the answer until our passing. Once I read an article between an atheist and a priest. The atheist argued that we shouldn't waste our lives with meaningless practices that take up our days and fill our heads with worry. The priest argued that you loose nothing by believing in God, but by not believing in him you loose everything and a you gain an eternity in hell. Our minds are full of invading questions that cause thoughts of worry. Questions such as, Is there a God? What will happen after I die? and Will I go to heaven or hell? The answers await you after death, but hopefully our informative speech gave you some more insight and allowed you to open your perspective on death. moreResolved Question: look at thiss please... do you think this should be ERASED from the internet forever?
1001 Ways to Torture a Cat by Ares -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NOTICE: TO ALL CONCERNED Certain text files and messages contained on this site deal with activities and devices which would be in violation of various Federal, State, and local laws if actually carried out or constructed. The webmasters of this site do not advocate the breaking of any law. Our text files and message bases are for informational purposes only. We recommend that you contact your local law enforcement officials before undertaking any project based upon any information obtained from this or any other web site. We do not guarantee that any of the information contained on this system is correct, workable, or factual. We are not responsible for, nor do we assume any liability for, damages resulting from the use of any information on this site. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 11/28/88 Many a time have I wanted to beat the shit out of that furry little bastard that always seems to piss me off. Either by taking a nice warm shit on my brand new carpet, or decided to use me as a clawing device. In this small file, i'd like to suggest ways to hurt or piss of the little shithead that you can't get rid of, usually cuz you're mom thinks it's the nicest fucker alive. 1 -- Kick it Around, you know, when the fucker get's in your way, whether it be when you're taking a shit and it comes in and watches, or when you're sleeping and it sits on your face. Just put a little force into it and BLAM! The fucker goes flying. It's especially nice to watch a cat go flying on a wood floor, with all four spread, doing 360's and crying like a Mexican without his burrito. Kicking him from under (like under the stomach) let's loose a flying cat, spinning and twirling in the air. 2 -- Tail tricks....This is the fun part...Seeing the cat can't really get to it's tail, you can do shit with it and the cat it defenseless. Try tying the cat's tail to his front paw, cuz everyone time it walks, it's tail get's pulled, looks like some diseased person trying to walk. Or even better, get a nice grab of the tail, and start spinning the cat around using it, the cat will have to take the pain, cuz by force of nature, it can't reach it's paws around to scratch you since it's spinning so fast it's paws are spread-eagle like. If you have glue, and the cat's tail is long enough, or maybe just a tad shorter, you can glue it's tail to it's nose, which is cool. The cat moves his head and his ass comes up with it (how'z that for a chain reaction?) Like it'll be walking around town with it's ass all dangling up, all the other furry fucks will ram it up, which in turn, will make the cat freak when it tries to sit down (get it?). But that's kinda mean. 3 -- Wiskers (heh, heh, heh)....Ok, you know who you are people, you kind that clips cat's wiskers and laughs like hell. Cat's use wiskers to navigate in the dark, like when they're entering a tight spot, their wiskers will tell them if they're about to run into something (kind of like those cadillacs with those metal tubes sticking out the side). So what do you do? You cut the fuckers wiskers, down to you start getting fur. Then you gotta through the cat in a closet, and open the door, oh, about 4 inches. The cat will naturally be fucked and stunned that us humans would do such a thing (it probably is equlivant of a cat cutting off your dick) and he'll start bumping around, wondering what the fuck....So you just sit there and laugh your ass off. The cat might eventually make it's way out of the closet, but maybe you could, hmmm...Find something else to do to it after that? (grin> 4 -- Pillow Case....Well, this is kind of funny...All you do is throw the little fuck in a pillow case, and go into an open room (you don't want to beat it to death, well, not yet adleast). And start swinging the fucker around in circles, again and again, the cat will probably crying for it's life (but don't give in to it's whining, cuz when it get's out, it wants blood) keep swinging it around and around, faster and faster, stop when you're too dizzy to figure out where the cat is, then quickly open the pillow case and let the bastard fall out (it WILL fall, believe me). You got to make sure you can see it (cuz you're gonna me almost as dizzy). The fucker will be sitting there, moving it's head in circles, still thinking it spinning. This is the good part, cuz as far as the cat knows, it's totally high on Catnip or something. You can do anything, it's up to you. 4 -- Water ...We all know that cats hate water more than dogs, and would rather travel in a car then deal with it. But cat's are funny as hell in water. Try filling up a tub, or a sink, or something with water in it that the cat will fit in. Throw the fucker in for a minute or two (unless it's definitely going to drown, we'll talk about killing them later) and watch it squeal..They act like water is acid or something and yet they still drink water out of the toilet when none is available (these fuckers gotta get their facts straight). After the cat has had enough torture, grab it by the ear, or tail, or get a good grab around it's head and throw it out (throw it outside you fool). When a cat get's wet (especially a long-haired cat) they look like giant ferrets, really nasty like (which might persuade you to do something else, like nail it to a 2 by 4 and shoot it full of b-b's) but don't hurt it too bad.. 5 -- Misc. shit....Stick the cat in the Microwave (no, really) and don't turn it on (yet) just let it sit there, and look through the little see-through window...It should be scared as hell, since it's in a really tight spot, can't move much at all...If you really want to screw the fucker, nuke it! Just nuke it for 20 seconds at a time...The cat will start squirming at about 10 seconds (depending on the wattage of the Microwave)...After about 30 seconds, the cat will definitely have radiation poisioning, which will probably kill it within a month or less. If you nuke it for a minute, you'll probably kill it, depending on the size of the cat, the microwave cooks inside out, so after a minute, it's intestines and lungs will be a little toasty, maybe killing it, if not, probably sterilizing it or leaving it a slow and terrible death. Of course, you can go "All-Out" if you REALLY express rage for it, and can nuke it for 5 minutes...This is NOT for the Squeamish....I DO know someone who did this, and saw it....It was pretty fucking gross, and being the cat hater I am, I still felt sorry for it. In 30 seconds, it starts kicking and screaming and freaking out (which brings me to the point, you gotta make sure the door can't be opened, and you gotta make sure you don't want the microwave anymore). In 1 minute, it was started to spaz like nothing you've ever seen before, some blood was coming from it's mouth due to internal cuts the Nuking did, all types of seisures and some last moans were following at 2 minutes. At about 2 and a half minutes, the cat was still alive, it's pupils were dialated and it was twitching like someone stuck a Electrolysis gun up it's ass...At 3 minutes, it's almost dead...The smell of the cat would make any mortician throw up, that's why I would suggest alot of open windows and doors and some type of gas mask on. The last two minutes it the cool part...Now that the fucker is dead (for good reason too) it's time to watch the fireworks...I think at around 4 minutes, the cat started popping, it's eyeballs literally popped out of it's sockets, and the blood started to ooze, not a pretty sight..At about, 4 mins 15 seconds, it's fur starts to curl (although it was already crispy) and at about 5 minutes, the whole microwave is one big slaughterhouse.Please, dont be offended by this. I found this when i was reffered to Totse.com from someone on yahooanswers.com... who else here thinks this is wrong? Please i need feedback... if possible i WILL it will be erased from the net for all eternity... this is saddening and terrible and needs to be erased... please i want feedback...i agree that its under free speech, but i also think that this should not be available to the public. This is sickening horrible sad terrible and WRONG!!! thier are things on totse.com that tell you how do things that are ILLEGAL! they tell you how to make a bomb and all kinds of stuff! is THAT under free speech?Honestly, you call this entertaining? moreResolved Question: Must you get a FM-T/ Mexican Tourist Card to visit Mexico if you enter the country by land?
I did my homework. You only need a passport if you are traveling by air. It won't be a requirement until 2009. I know you don't need a tourist card ( which is similar to a visa but given for a shorter amount of time) if you will only be in TJ for less than 72 hours but I want to know if its necessary for me to have it if I will be staying for about a month and a half and I am entering the country of Mexico by land. moreResolved Question: Can a Mexican citizen travle by air from USA to Mexico?
I am a Mexican citizen looking to travel by air into Mexico from the US and not returning to the US. Can I travel by air? moreResolved Question: Is Air Canada the worst airline ever?
I've never had a worse travel experience than a 24 min. jump from YYJ - YVR and my (and 7 others) bag(s) were never loaded on the AC - JAZZ Dash - 8. I had to wear s**t from a Mexican Wal-mart to my cousin's wedding in Cabo San Lucas.The excuse given at the AC baggage counter at YVR was the plane was 100% passengers and "the Dash- 8-300 has weight/imbalance issues." And I didn't fly AC to Mexico either. moreResolved Question: I'm a U.S. Citizen, I'm traveling within Mexico (air) do I still need a Passport?
I've read answers that say you dont need a passport to travel within Mexico, but is that just for Mexican Citizens or anyone? moreResolved Question: Do I need a passport to travel to Mexico City by air? I have my Green Card, but not yet, my passport?
Would I have a problem entering the US from the Mexican airport with just my green card?Please help... moreResolved Question: Can I go to Cuba without getting in trouble?
I am an American citizen who has wanted to visit Cuba for a long time, especially before things change. I am presently studying abroad in Mexico, which means that I have an FM3, a passport looking migratory document. If I leave Mexico, the Mexican authorities stamp that document, not my passport. Also, I know Cuban authorities *usually* don´t stamp American passports (it did, though, happen to one of my friends). My question is, if I fly Air Cubana (which doesn't turn over its passenger lists to the US gov't), if I bring no souvenirs back or go back to the US with my tickets, for instance, and I have no stamps in my passport, what are the chances I'll get caught by the US? Are there ways they ascertain one's trip without stamps in one's passport or flying on a carrier that turns over its passenger list to the US? Are there good/effective ways of covering my tracks, or, as I've heard, has new legislation under Bush made vigilance over travel to Cuba that much tighter? Any hits? moreResolved Question: Can You Believe This Cheap Mexican airlines are taking Mexican right to our border for illegal immigration?
MEXICALI, Mexico - Among travelers, it's jokingly known as Aeromigrante - Migrant Air. New discount airlines in Mexico are doing a brisk business shuttling migrants to the U.S. border, turning what was once a days-long trek into an easy hop for legions of workers, both legal and illegal. "It's much more comfortable than the bus and about the same price," said Leopoldo Torres, 37, of Mexico City, as he stretched his legs aboard Volaris Flight 190 to the border city of He and a traveling companion, Julio Menéndez, paid $118 each for the three-hour flight. They planned to cross into the United States illegally through the California desert. Such migrants have become bread-and-butter customers for airlines Volaris, Avolar, Alma, Viva Aerobus, Interjet and Click, all of which have started up in the past two years. Older carriers such as Aero California and Aviacsa have cut their own prices to compete. "The most productive routes we have are cities where you have those passengers who are traveling with the idea of the American Dream," said Luis Ceceña, a spokesman for Avolar. About 70 percent of Avolar's passengers are migrants, he said. For some airlines like Avolar, the emphasis on migrant travel was a conscious decision, with company officials structuring their routes and fares around migrants' needs, he said. For others, it was simply a side effect of low prices, which have opened up air travel to millions of poorer Mexicans. The airlines say they treat migrants like any other passengers. The Mexican government has promised to try to slow emigration by creating jobs in Mexico. But by law, Mexican authorities and companies cannot impede the free travel of their fellow citizens, even if they suspect they are going to cross the U.S. border illegally. Heading for the desert Travelers planning to cross illegally are easy to spot. At the Hermosillo airport, a major crossroads for migrants headed to the Arizona desert, they are the men traveling in groups of three and four, wearing new sneakers or hiking boots and carrying nothing but backpacks. "Altar! Naco! Nogales!" taxi dispatcher Javier Montaño shouted outside the airport as he directed travelers to vans headed to the main staging grounds for illegal border crossers. Because of the increased traffic, Mexican immigration agents now check the IDs of all arriving passengers, even on domestic flights, to try to catch Central American migrants headed to the border. In Hermosillo, federal police conduct spot checks on the vans before they leave the airport. "By law, we can't stop the Mexican (migrants)," police Officer Carlos Zequera Arias said. "But the Central Americans are starting to get on these flights, too." Falling prices Until the flood of discount airlines began in 2005, air travel in Mexico was too expensive for most poor Mexicans. A one-way flight from central Mexico to Tijuana ran $300 or more on the country's two flag carriers, Aeromexico and Mexicana. For most migrants, getting to the border meant days of travel on long-distance buses - or for the very poor, a harrowing and illegal ride on Mexico's railways while clinging to a freight car. The discount airlines cut costs by copying the business model of U.S. carrier Southwest Airlines. They fly out of smaller airports, make several stops on the same trip, bypass travel-agent fees by selling directly to customers, and concentrate on a few high-volume routes instead of a hub-and-spoke system. Typical fares to Tijuana from Toluca, just east of Mexico City, are now around $150 on the discount airlines. That has opened up air travel to millions of new customers, said José Calderoni, marketing director for Volaris. About one-third of the airline's passengers have never flown before, he said. Overall, the number of Mexicans flying has jumped 36 percent since 2004. About 13.4 million people took domestic flights from January to June, according to Mexico's Institute of Statistics, Geography and Information Processing. The discount airlines have been adding planes and routes at a breakneck pace. Avolar has grown from one jetliner and three destinations to nine with 16 destinations. Viva Aerobus has 21 destinations and plans to double its fleet to 10 jets from five. Interjet has nine planes and says it will order 20 more. Alma has 15 regional jets and 25 destinations, Volaris has 12 planes and 17 destinations, while Click has 26 destinations with 18 planes and six on order. Read further details @ http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/1012migrantair1012.html moreResolved Question: why is the US government in its entirety constantly screwing its citizens over?
increasing taxes, evaporating civil rights, direct federal control over some businesses (namely microsoft), making air travel a joke because they cant profile, which is necessary against RELIGIOUS zealots. the borders arent secure and they will never be, seeing that all the illegals will get amnesty eventually, further screwing the citizens out of their jobs. not to mention the huge bills mexicans leave at our hospitals, making us pay, the loss of re venue from taxes when they work under the table, making the yoke of taxes unbearable some day very soon.... when will the people wake up ahnd realize its time to do something, theyve been being sold out for decades?lets not explore the welfare state and the tax breaks for the rich.........if being middle class means shouldering everyone above and below you...then we shall all have 5 children, no jobs and be poor. at least in communism, everyone worked at jobs. maybe they didnt eat every day, but at least most of them worked moreResolved Question: Is Mexico Looking Out for Numero Uno While the country’s poor flee, Mexico’s elite take care of themselves?
Must read more at link.Members of President Vicente Fox’s National Action Party (PAN) have joined the chorus of self-righteous criticism. They applauded an early January 2006 joint declaration by Mexico, Colombia, the Dominican Republic, and six Central American countries pledging their opposition to treating migrants who illegally cross into the United States as law-breakers. This statement neglected to recognize the mounting support of American citizens for curbs on unlawful entries. A Fox News poll conducted in April 2005 found that an overwhelming majority of Americans believe that undocumented immigration is a “very serious” (63 percent) or “somewhat serious” (28 percent) problem for the United States. Sixty percent of respondents to an ABC News/Washington Post survey favored erecting a barrier at the border; only 26 percent disapproved. In addition, Mexico’s nomenklatura never mentions the 1 million legal immigrants whom the United States admits each year. Mexico’s establishment also keeps quiet about the salaries and benefits that its members receive. Private-sector executives are especially secretive. Thanks to Forbes magazine, however, we know that Mexico leads Latin America with ten billionaires, including telecom mogul Carlos Slim Helú, the world’s third richest person with $30 billion. And an increasing amount of data is available on the earnings of public officials. The numbers show that Mexico’s governing class is enriching itself at the country’s expense, with exorbitant salaries and bountiful perks. Remember, these are “official” figures. Most politicians have ingenious ways of fattening their bank accounts. The salaries of top Mexican government officials match or exceed those of comparable figures in Europe and much of the rest of the world. President Vicente Fox ($236,693), for example, makes more than the leaders of the U.K. ($211,434), France ($95,658), Canada ($75,582), and most other industrialized countries (POTUS earns $400,000). The 500 members of Mexico’s notoriously irresponsible Chamber of Deputies, which is in session only a few months a year, each made $148,000 last year in salary and bonuses—roughly on a par with Italian and Canadian legislators and substantially more than their counterparts in Germany ($105,000), France ($78,000), and Spain ($32,311), where living costs are markedly higher. Other legislators in Latin America receive substantially less; for example, those in Bolivia earn $28,000 for a four-month session. Legislators in the Dominican Republic take home $68,500 for six months of service. The salaries are only the beginning. Party leaders in the Chamber of Deputies have a trove of discretionary funds to assist themselves and their colleagues. In 2004, the amount distributed to the three major parties was $15,892,668 to PRI, which had 223 deputies; $10,297,611 to PAN and its 153 deputies; and $7,359,122 to the 97 deputies of the PRD. Mexican deputies enjoy their junkets, frequently taking to the air or the road and asking the country’s taxpayers to foot the bill. During 2005, the Chamber of Deputies spent $1,018,518.50 on domestic and foreign travel. These outlays amounted to $2,095.24 for each of the 500 deputies or $2,927.78 for the 348 deputies who, on average, actually showed up for legislative sessions. This spending on travel is dubious for two reasons: deputies, who cannot run for immediate re-election, do not have to return to their districts every weekend like so many U.S. congressmen; and the Mexican Senate—not the Chamber of Deputies—plays the primary legislative role in international affairs. http://www.amconmag.com/2006/2006_05_22/article.htmlBut Mexico’s lower chamber believes in rewarding itself for its spendthrift ways. At the end of its three-year term (2000-2003), the last Chamber of Deputies voted itself a $28,000 “leaving-office bonus.” Even better work, if you can get it, is to be found in the judicial branch of the Mexican federal government. In 2005, the 11 justices on the National Supreme Court of Justice—equivalent to the U.S. Supreme Court—received $311,759, compared to $194,200 for their American counterparts. (The U.S. Chief Justice earns $202,900.) State-level Mexican officials are amply rewarded as well. Salaries and bonuses place the average compensation of Mexican governors at $125,759, which exceeds by almost $10,000 the mean paychecks of U.S. state executives ($115,778). Narciso Agúndez Montaño runs Baja California Sur. Although his state has only 424,041 residents, he earns $277,777. This is $100,000 more than the salary of Arnold Schwarzenegger, who governs 36,132,147 Californians. moreResolved Question: Have you heard tell of this?
White House prepared to open U.S. air routes to Canada, Mexico http://www.alipac.us/modules.php?name=Forums&file=viewtopic&t=70559&start=0&postdays=0&postorder=asc&highlight= Chad Groening OneNewsNow.com June 25, 2007 An author and investigative journalist says the Bush administration is working on a plan that would essentially erase national borders for air carriers, perhaps paving the way for Mexican and Canadian airlines to compete with U.S. carriers for American domestic and international routes. At an April meeting in Tucson, U.S. Transportation Secretary Mary Peters met with her Canadian and Mexican counterparts to discuss the initial "North American Transportation Trilateral." At the meeting, which went virtually unreported by the American mainstream media, Secretary Peters noted that agreements with the two countries -- a 2005 air services agreement with Mexico, and the Open Skies accord signed with Canada in March -- lift restrictions on continental travel, effectively providing for "free and open trans-border air travel." Dr. Jerome Corsi says the agreements, which are part of President Bush's controversial Security and Prosperity Partnership, will throw open lucrative U.S. air routes. "So Mexicana can fly from Los Angeles to New York, or New York to Paris, or New York to Las Vegas -- anywhere they want to go inside the United States as if they were U.S. airline," he explains. moreResolved Question: If I walk across the border to Tiajuana, do I need a US Passport to return?
I'm aware of the new passport restrictions regarding air travel to and from Mexico, Canada and a couple of islands in the Carribean, but I'm not certain about walking across either the Canadian or Mexican border. Maybe someone who works for TSA reads this. I know that someone has the answer. Thanks. moreResolved Question: Can a 2 month old travel from Canada to the US by air without a passport?
I have a 2 month old baby that was born in Canada. Both my husband and I are Mexican with Mexican passport and visas. We need to go to Mexico on family business but the baby doesn't have his passport. We just registered him a month ago. Is there any way that he can travel by air only with his birth certificate? moreResolved Question: Range of high powered air rifle or pellet gun?
How far can the pellet travel and still hurt somebody, break a window, dent a car, etc. I'm talking a powerful rifle, like a Mexican made Mendoza RM-600 that can fire a .22 pellet at 850 fps or even the Chinese made BAM B30 that can fire a .22 pellet aft 900 fps. Both are cheap, about $160 and pretty popular for plinking. The problem I have, are they TOO powerful? I know someone who is under the impression that these guns would pose a danger at 500 yds, which is more than .28 mile. I'm having a hard time buying this. I'm thinking more like 100-150 yds, even for more powerful than "average" ones like this. We are trying to set up a safe place to fire air rifles like this, or perhaps even slightly more powerful, because at firearms ranges they don't like air gunners and most towns around here have banned the firing of them unless at a range. We plan to find property with a flat spot leading into a hill in the country. Maybe form a private club. Thanks! moreResolved Question: do i need a credit card or bank statements to enter mexico?
i'm planning to go to mexico to stay for about 3.5 months to study and travel. so i was doing some research and found on the mexican consulate website that the travellers need something to prove their 'economic solvency' which could be either a credit card or 3 most recent bank stantements. i dont have any credit card yet and i have just enough money in my bank account to survive for 3.5 months. would this be a big problem? anyone who've been to mexico by air, help! moreResolved Question: Sheriff sees pattern in border agents' cases do you see it ?
A Texas sheriff says a 2001 case against another U.S. Border Patrol agent set the pattern that was used by U.S. Attorney Johnny Sutton in his recent cases against Agents Jose Compean and Ignacio Ramos, who now are serving prison terms for shooting at a drug smuggler fleeing back into Mexico, as well as Deputy Sheriff Gilmer Hernandez. Rocksprings, Texas, Sheriff Don Letsinger told WND in a telephone interview that the prosecution of David Sipe was "the smoking gun" showing how the U.S. Attorney's office handles evidence "to get prosecutions like U.S. Attorney Johnny Sutton has gotten in the case of Ramos and Compean." Sipe was convicted in 2001 for a situation near McAllen, Texas, when he was accused of using a metal flashlight to strike illegal alien coyote Jose Guevara on the back of his head after Guevara struggled and resisted arrest. The charge was using "excessive force and causing bodily injury" in the confrontation during the early morning hours of April 5, 2000. The case would ruin Sipe's career and marriage before it was over just a few weeks ago. A federal appeals court reversed his conviction and ordered a new trial because of prosecutorial misconduct, including withholding exculpatory information from the defense in violation of the Brady rule, and during a re-trial in January, Sipe was acquitted after deliberations of less than an hour. Sipe's attorney, Jack Wolfe, told WND there were similarities between Sipe's case and the allegations against the "Texas 3," former U.S. Border Agents Ramos and Compean and Deputy Sheriff Hernandez, who has been convicted in a prosecution also launched by Sutton of shooting at a van loaded with illegal aliens he thought were trying to run him down. "The federal prosecutors in the Sipe case refused to prosecute Guevara when he was apprehended a second time, caught for transporting illegal aliens by automobile," Wolfe told WND, just as documents suggest that prosecutors failed to prosecute a second offense by Osbaldo Aldrete-Davila, the smuggler shot at by Ramos and Compean. Wolve also said the Sipe prosecution was driven by the U.S. Department of Justice in Washington. "DOJ under Clinton sent Fred Menner down to Texas from the Civil Rights Division to make sure this case was prosecuted," he said. Similar concerns have been expressed about the Ramos-Compean case. "At first, the reports from the Border Patrol were that nobody was going to do anything about Sipe's case. The DOJ in Washington was hot," Wolfe said. "They built the fire under the U.S. Attorney's office to get the case going. DOJ Civil Rights got the bit in their mouth and they decided to prosecute Sipe." "The Mexican Consulate footprints were all through the Sipe case," Wolfe added. "The Mexican Consulate wrote letters, they went out and assisted in taking photographs that they turned over to the prosecution. The Mexican Consulate offered to go to Mexico and bring back witnesses. A member of the Mexican Consulate sat through the whole trial." Such requests also were evident in the case against Hernandez, who essentially had been cleared before the demand arrived from Mexico that he be prosecuted. There also have been allegations in the Ramos-Compean case of improper links between those involved in illegal activity, and those connected to the Border Patrol. Likewise in the Sipe case, Wolfe said. "The Texas Department of Public Service pulled over a vehicle transporting illegal immigrants and they found Guevara," Wolfe explained. "DPS called the Border Patrol to respond. The two agents that responded recognized Guevara from the Sipe case. So, they went up the chain of command and the boss of that shift in the McAllen sector made the decision not to send the case over to the U.S. Attorney's office" Wolfe said the Border Patrol boss of that shift and Guevara both ended up being linked to a nefarious character known as the "Goat Man." He was a known alien and dope smuggler who lives in Bonitas, Wolfe said. "The victim worked for the Goat Man. Six months later, when Guevara gets caught again, the Border Patrol official who makes the decision not to prosecute is the nephew of the Goat Man," he said. "The prosecution knew Guevara got caught again," Wolfe said, "and the Border Patrol recommendation was not to prosecute him. The prosecution gave Guevara a pass on the second violation because they didn’t want to weaken the case against Sipe." "The prosecution gave Guevara and the other two illegal immigrant witnesses Social Security cards, border passes, and witness fees," Wolfe also told WND. "The prosecutors became virtually a travel agency for Guevara and the other government witnesses in the case, giving them free air travel to and from Mexico so they could visit family and friends, as well as free phone use to contact their families, whenever they wanted to do so." Letsinger also told WND that he believes information was withheld from the grand jury and trial jury to get a conviction against Hernandez. "I'm reasonably sure that the grand jury was not told there was no physical evidence recovered at the scene to support statements of the government's witnesses and the government's charges," the sheriff said. However, WND was unable to obtain a comment from the U.S. Attorney's office. On February 22, WND reported that Letsinger believed Hernandez did nothing wrong and that the Texas Rangers were not going to recommend prosecution as a result of their investigation. The statements by the prosecution that Gilmer Hernandez had chased the illegals across a pasture, cursing them and shooting at them were completely false," Letsinger told WND. "The Texas Ranger and a federal ATF (Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms) agent and an ATF dog were taken to that location. That dog searched that location thoroughly and could find no shell casings. When the dog failed to find the shell casings, the officers used a metal detector to search the field thoroughly and failed to find any shell casings." "At trial, the prosecutor insinuated to the jury information that he knew was not true," Letsinger told WND. "He implied to the jury that evidence was tampered with, when there is no evidence of tampering. The physical evidence collected is consistent with Gil Hernandez's version of events." "These immigrants, by their own statements to Texas Rangers, had entered into a criminal conspiracy with an organized crime smuggling organization to enter the United States in violation of the U.S. immigration laws," Letisinger continued. "The difference is that when you enter into a conspiracy, even though you do not know all the conspirators, you are responsible for the [actions] of all the conspirators. So, when the driver attempted to run over Deputy Hernandez, all the parties in the car were now culpable for felony assault charges. "The U.S. attorneys knew everything that was in the Texas Rangers report," Letsinger said. "In that report were the statements of the illegal immigrants that they had entered into a criminal conspiracy. So, prior to trial, Sutton had decided to give all the occupants of the van and all the members of the conspiracy immunity from those felony assault charges." Letsinger told WND that he strongly suspects Sutton would have had no case if the jury had known that the story about Hernandez running through a field, firing his weapon and trying to kill the runaway immigrants was unsubstantiated by evidence. Letsinger also told WND that had the story been true, the Texas Rangers would have recommended prosecution and he would have concurred. WND has reported that the federal prosecution of Hernandez began only after the Mexican Consulate in Eagle Pass, Texas, wrote a series of letters demanding that the Bush administration prosecute Hernandez for injuring a Mexican national, Marciela Rodriguez Garcia. The federal government has recommended a seven-year term for Hernandez at his sentencing later this month. How long have we been begging and petitioning Bush for a pardon? moreResolved Question: I´m Mexican, I´ll be traveling to USA by air next week, do I need a Mexican passport?
I already have my laser visa, Thanks!!! moreResolved Question: Is the mexican consulate id accepted as a valid from of id for air travel?
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