stephen hallam's posterousI believe that every individual is naturally entitled to do as he pleases with himself and the fruits of his labor, so far as it in no way interferes with any other men's rights. – Abraham LincolnSomeone's after my lunch...Ice cold Cube.Surprisingly, this is actually quite nice.Occupy LSX - Old Holborn reports from the front line...As much as I hoped people had woken up from the stupor of a decade of Labour benefit addiction, the OccupyLSX protest is nothing more than a cold turkey sweat of the terminal welfare junkies. Says it all, really! The whole piece gives a good report of what is actually going on down there, and I can't say I'm too surprised. These sort of events seem to attract the same sort of crowd of "professional" demonstrators (nearly all of whom I would guess are pretty unemployable, hence their reliance on state handouts). Now this looks a bit tasty!According to cheap car blog 'Not 2 Grand' (an excellent read, by the way) it's now possible to get an E55 AMG Mercedes for less than £2,000. If you ignore insurance, tax, servicing, repairs etc, it's probably a good bargain. But then, who buys a car like this and worries about the cost of a new exhaust for it? Daily Mail reader comment of the day!No, Humans didn't evolve at all, we were created a few hundred thousand years ago by visiting extra terrestrials, who merged their own DNA with that of the neanderthals that were already here. That would explain the missing link, our superior intelligence compared to every other animal, and our yearning to know where we came from. That's also where the legends of Gods (ET's) came from. Think about it. via dailymail.co.uk
From an article claiming that "scientists" can prove that we evolved from a rodent some 160 million years ago. Make what you like of the article itself, but this comment beats it hands down for pure fuckwittery. Things you never thought you'd see in a newspaper ....
Taken with picplz in Corby, United Kingdom.
Big rain!
Taken with picplz in Corby, United Kingdom.
One of my favourite writers, writing about my favourite subjectvia espncricinfo.com
As the 2,000 test match approaches, Gideon Haigh assess where test cricket has come from, where it is now and why it still thrives. Kitteh #2
Taken with picplz in East Northamptonshire.
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