wall street fighter 4
Friday, February 27, 2009
Wednesday, February 25, 2009
Tuesday, February 24, 2009
Wednesday, February 18, 2009
Monday, February 16, 2009
kenny glenn cat abuser
actual screenshot, text added to photo
over the weekend some douchebag put on a mask and made a video of himself terrorizing a cat. he put it up on youtube and word got around fast. youtube has since removed the video and suspended the account but the vid is now up on mirror sites. and this kid has been outted.
you can watch the video @ http://www.liveleak.com/item?a=view&token=4c9_1234712092
yeah i'm not gonna put up a live link cuz that shit was disgusting. some kid in a mask identifies himself as "the animal abuser," slams the cat against the shower wall, then proceeds to yell at the family pet while slapping, punching, and shaking it, before finally spraying water on it.
this kid will be owned hard in the days to come. kenny glen, eat ur karma, u fuk.
his personal info has been posted at the right places. he's already been in the news. and someone even put up a website dedicated to this atrocity @ http://www.kenny-glenn.com/
the right people have sided with dusty the cat:
Tuesday, February 10, 2009
job market so bad even illegals feelin it
like this guy who will pack and gtfo
LOS ANGELES, California (CNN) -- Pedro Pablo slowly folds up his American flag blanket and stuffs it in his duffel bag. With it goes his American dream.
Pablo is an illegal immigrant from Guatemala who came to the United States to support his wife and five sons back home. When he arrived, construction jobs were plentiful. Over the last year, he says, he's worked only three days.
He recently boarded a bus with a one-way ticket home, paid for by the Guatemalan consulate in Los Angeles. "I thought I could get ahead here. I regret coming."
Across the United States, millions of immigrants are facing a similar dilemma: Do they continue to search for jobs in a struggling U.S. economy or return home?
"Things are very dire, and I think it's impacting those at the very bottom even more so," said Abel Valenzuela, a professor at the University of California-Los Angeles who has spent years studying day laborers.
"Day laborers are being impacted the most."
Geronimo Salguero is the director of a day labor site in Los Angeles. He says employment for day laborers has dipped 75 percent over the last year. He's now working with the foreign consulates. Once a week, he said, the consulate purchases a bus ticket for the immigrants to go home.
"They are completely desperate," he said. "Each day, I have workers coming into the office and say, 'Geronimo, help me. I want to go back to my country.' "
Pablo was one of those men.
"I can't make it here," he said. "It was nice while it lasted."
Monday, February 2, 2009
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