#4
Hard to get good penetration on a porcelain toilet.
You'd need a 300 Win Mag or better to get her done.
Posted by: no mo uro ||
01/15/2009 19:27 Comments ||
Top||
#5
"Police say they confiscated the 26-year-old man's firearm while they review the incident. The man had a concealed weapons permit. No charges are being filed."
Look...I understand there are certain incidents when the cops are required to do something - even when there is nothing required to do. But why confiscate a legal weapon for accidental property damage?
#6
Idiots like this give the rest of us a bad name. There really is no excuse for this kind of thing.If you are going to use a public toilet, then you must take precautions to ensure that you avoid things like this. I don't even want to imagine how he managed this either.
OAK RIDGE - A 19-year-old man fatally injured one of two masked men who invaded his mother's home late Wednesday night, police said.
Matthew W. Bennett, 42, died early this morning at University of Tennessee Medical Center in Knoxville. . . . Oak Ridge Deputy Police Chief Alan Massengill said the 19-year-old man struck Bennett in the head with an object as he struggled with him in his mother's bedroom. . . . The accomplice, armed with a handgun, fled during the struggle and police are looking for him, Massengill said.
Bennett was wearing gloves and had a bandana over his face, and his accomplice was wearing gloves and a black jacket or hoodie and a full-face ski mask.
"It appears this home was targeted,'' Massengill said. "There's nothing to indicate this was random.'' Police aren't discussing a possible motive for the invasion.
Neither the 45-year-old mother nor her son was injured in the incident but both were traumatized, Massengill said. . . .
Posted by: Mike ||
01/15/2009 15:39 ||
Comments ||
Link ||
[11128 views]
Top|| File under:
Reasonable solution: Cell phone without a camera. Total solution: Get rid of all your kid's friends' cell phones, too. Partial solution: Get on-line and block picture messaging on your kid's phone if your service allows it. And check it periodically to make sure your kid didn't call in as you and unblock it. Many parents seem to get along on the idea that their kid is exempt. It's becoming a social-acceptance ritual. Fifty percent participation rate in some schools. Do you know which side of the line your kid falls on? Or are you just pretty sure? Personally, I'm going to tell my daughter that I have friends who work for the CIA and they can tap into her boyfriend's phone and look at the pictures stored there.
In the Cincinnati area, where legend holds that trends come 10 years late, "sexting" arrived well ahead of time. Teens here are taking nude photos of themselves or others, sending them on their cell phones or posting them online.
Some teens do it as a joke. For others, it's the new bold pickup line to get a date.
A year ago, a 19-year-old Goshen cheerleading coach was charged and prosecuted for a misdemeanor, contributing to the unruliness of a child, for taking a topless photo of herself and a 15-year-old girl. A Glen Este Middle School boy was taken to juvenile court during the last school year for taking explicit photos of his girlfriend.
The National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy and CosmoGirl.com last month revealed results of a study that showed 20 percent of teens say they have sent or posted nude or semi-nude pictures or video of themselves.
The results don't surprise local teens, school officials, police officers and others.
Are Cincy teens ahead on the 'sexting' trend?
"If I were to go through the cell phones in this building right now of 1,500 students, I would venture to say that half to two-thirds have indecent photos, either of themselves or somebody else in school," said Jim Brown, school resource officer at Glen Este High School.
Turpin High School Principal Peggy Johnson thinks that the results would be similar - about 50-50 - in her building.
According to the national study, most teens who send sexually suggestive content send to boyfriends or girlfriends, while others say they send such material to those they want to date or hook up with or to someone they only know online.
Brown, who also is Glen Este Middle School's resource officer, said of the 14-year-old boy's cell phone photos last year: "They were as graphic as you would see in any Penthouse magazine, I've been told."
The study also showed that 44 percent of teens say it's common for sexually explicit images and text messages - sexting - to be shared with people other than the intended recipient.
"Guys who get pictures like this from girls, I don't think girls understand that guys gossip way more than girls," said Taylor McCleod, 17, a Withrow University High School senior who is a teen leader for the Postponing Sexual Involvement program. "And when a guy gets a picture like that, he's not just going to keep it between him and the girl. He's going to take that and show every guy that he knows that knows that girl. And every time somebody looks at her, it's going to be a loss of respect for her."
The stakes of taking and sending sexually explicit photos can be high, compared to the thrill at the time. The consequences can range from humiliation to losing out on jobs to going to court.
When kids are 14 or 15, Brown said, they don't often make the right decisions.
No, reeeeeeeaaally?
"They think, 'I have the right to decide what's best for me.' The next thing you know, it's on YouTube, and you become an international star because you're exposing part of your body. ... Then, they want to retrieve their good reputation, and they can't."
Kids have lost scholarships and jobs because of what's posted on Web sites, Brown said.
Many kids have "wised up," taking photos of body parts, but not faces, to avoid detection. And while some teens intend for the suggestive photos to be seen by only one person, they might not think those photos will be forwarded or that something posted on the Internet lives on.
"I don't think it even crosses their mind," Daniel "Woody" Breyer, chief deputy prosecutor in Clermont County, said. "I think that kids are in the moment. What's going to happen today? What are we doing tonight? What are we doing this weekend?"
Going to court might not cross their minds, either.
Prosecutors evaluate the intent of the photo when deciding if charges are warranted. "If this is clearly just a joke and everyone involved thinks it's funny, now somebody's mom sees it and gets mad. Technically, a charge could be filed," said Julie Wilson, chief assistant prosecutor and public information officer for the Hamilton County Prosecutor's Office. "We're asking police to evaluate if it's a criminal charge or a matter that could be handled by the school or parents. For whatever reason, we have not seen a lot of these cases."
With so many implications, why do kids do it?
Besides peer pressure, the practice is provoked by what's considered acceptable in this culture, Breyer said, citing videos, such as "Girls Gone Wild." "What is acceptable behavior in our country has just gone through the floor," Breyer said.
Christopher Kraus, director of the Postponing Sexual Involvement program at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, said that in his 20 years of working in adolescent medicine at the hospital, he's yet to see a teenage trend that does not mirror a larger adult trend. "Adolescent sexuality is part of normal human development," Kraus said. "Teens are trying to figure out how to express their sexuality appropriately. They are learning, and they are learning from adults."
Kraus, who also is project manager for the Ohio Department of Health's new Guidelines for Sexual Health and Adoption Education, Grades 7-12, said teens are learning how to sort out many sexual messages in the media, including text messages. "Some messages are complimentary. Some are offensive. Some are confusing. Each message is different."
Another teen Postponing Sexual Involvement leader, Mariah McCollum, who has received unwanted and unsolicited photos from an acquaintance, talked about the trend. "Every day or every other day, I hear about a new video of one of my peers. There's a new video going around involving sexual activities," said Mariah, a 17-year-old senior at Withrow University High School. "I think it's pretty lame for a male to send you pictures without consent. ... Who says I want to see your private areas?" Mariah said, adding that she lost a lot of respect for the boy who sent it.
Meanwhile, Brown said parents need to pay attention to their kids' use of technology.
Part of the problem is that kids' inhibitions are knocked away by alcohol-fueled parties, where many sexually explicit photo opportunities occur, he said. "It's 'Kids Gone Wild,' with technology being provided by the parents," he said. No, you can't have a beer! That would be irresponsible of me as a parent! But you can have a picture-phone. Use it responsibly, dear.
#7
Spoiled kids acting that way. I had to discuss with 2/3rds of my daughters what they were not permitted to post on their Facebook pages, and why. Then I monitored for a bit, with their knowledge. I like gorb's "friends in the CIA" idea, too -- the daughters think I am about as naively innocent as a human can be and still walk upright, but they believe I have interesting friends in odd places. ;-)
#12
Dude, am I the last person on earth who does not own a cell phone, and has no intention whatsoever of getting one? Even for the nudie pics, which should tell you how little I want one.
#13
Kids do not need cell phones. Young people can have cell phones when they are able to pay for it themselves and are old enough to legally sign a contract.
#14
My 5 year old doesn't want a cell phone yet but has asked for a subscription to Playboy.
Posted by: Jack is Back ||
01/15/2009 12:40 Comments ||
Top||
#15
I must say, a Frenchman using the word Dude has made my day a brighter one.
Posted by: Mike N. ||
01/15/2009 12:41 Comments ||
Top||
#16
Cel phones are not the problem. Kids left unsupervised is the issue here. Kids used to sneak off to spin the bottle, truth or dare, and moms nightmare, 7 minutes in heaven! Now its half monties and text sex. What next! No matter what it is, supervising kids, holding them accountable, and teaching them what is not acceptable is the answer.
My 12 and 14 year olds both have phones. I make them carry them every time they leave the house, they answer when I call or get grounded for a week. We monitor their texting, pictures, facepage, youtube, emails, and computer games. They keep all their passwords in a list for us, or the electronics go away. My kids think I'm over the top and a Nazi about it. I tell them its good parenting and they will understand when they are older. I find myself sounding more and more like my dad.
Posted by: 49 Pan ||
01/15/2009 12:51 Comments ||
Top||
#17
Kids, they're so immature. At 30 I find myself annoyed when I get booby or other such pics. The first 3 were sufficient. I get the point.
Posted by: Mike N. ||
01/15/2009 13:18 Comments ||
Top||
#18
Heh. Now if I could pictures of some steak and taters, I'd immediately drop what I was doing.
That's what this culture needs, a disturbing new trend of females sending pictures of home cooked meals.
Posted by: Mike N. ||
01/15/2009 13:21 Comments ||
Top||
#19
For older folks, getting pics of actual home cooked meals would be torture. For most of these youngsters, their parents feed them out of boxes, so home cooked meals would be alien to them really.
#20
anonymous, i also do not own a cell phone. and i'm only 30. I t always seemed too wring when i was about 40 foot in the air on top of a house so now it is Lake Keowee in SC. gOOD RIDDANCE AND IT WAS LIKE DROPPING A DRUG HABIT
Next to come : dudette! Then, I'll stop.
I guess you have to blame 1) Jeff Bridges and 2) even before that, Steve "The Dude" Rude, the best Jack Kirby-like the 90's could give to us comics geeks.
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut ||
01/15/2009 14:34 Comments ||
Top||
#23
Speaking of the Dude, and his bowling friend the sex-offender Jesus...
Since many of these kids are below 18 but some are above the line at some point an over-eager adult will get involved and someone is gonna get branded for life as a sex criminal. Crazy and over the top but i think it's a matter of time. Perhaps that will put an end to this nonsense.
#24
Hmm..rj..if you click on the link in #10, it's already started.
Never ever get a phone with imagery capability, if you're taken down for any reason, it just takes someone else to 'send' one to your device for your life to be significantly altered when they 'accidently' access it during a shakedown interrogation.
HAMMOND, Ind. - In a scene straight out of the movie "A Christmas Story," a 10-year-old Hammond boy got his tongue stuck to a metal light pole. Police say the unidentified 4th grader was able to tell them a friend had dared him ("triple-dog" dared him, that is!)
to lick the pole Wednesday night. Temperatures in Hammond were around 10 degrees at the time. They had to call the fire department!
By the time an ambulance arrived, the boy was able to yank his tongue off the frozen pole. Police say ambulance personnel explained to the boy's mother how to care for his bleeding tongue. Last year's incident reported here.
Posted by: Mike ||
01/15/2009 16:50 ||
Comments ||
Link ||
[11126 views]
Top|| File under:
Two men convicted of adultery in the northeastern city of Mashhad were stoned to death in December, but a third convicted man escaped while the punishment was being carried out, a spokesman for Iran's judiciary said Tuesday.
Ali Reza Jamshidi also said a moratorium on the controversial punishment, announced in 2002 by the head of the judiciary, Ayatollah Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi, was an advisory rather than an edict.
"Judges can't act based simply on advisories by the head of the judiciary, since judges are independent," he said, according to the semiofficial Iranian Students' News Agency.
The European Union, the United Nations and human rights advocates inside and outside Iran have decried stoning, which is enshrined in the country's Islamic legal code as a punishment for homosexuality and adultery. Condemned men are buried in sand up to their waists, and women up to their necks, and are pelted with stones until they die or manage to escape. Under the law, a condemned person's life is spared if he can free himself.
Posted by: Fred ||
01/15/2009 00:00 ||
Comments ||
Link ||
[11128 views]
Top|| File under:
#1
So why do they bury women up to their necks? Something about making sure the women know they are second-class?
#2
maybe the wimmin are burried to the neck to prevent the fleshy bits from getting exposed
Posted by: Abu do you love ||
01/15/2009 8:03 Comments ||
Top||
#3
Well, apparently as demonstrated by the requirement of females to 'cover up' that the males of the cult are unable to control themselves in life, maybe they don't want to entice them into necrophilia too.
HOLLAND TOWNSHIP, N.J. - Police say three New Jersey siblings whose names have Nazi connotations have been placed in the custody of the state. Damn, that will do a number on sales of their upcoming book, "Raising Today's Hitlerjugend on $5 a Day"
Holland Township Police Sgt. John Harris says workers from the state Division of Youth and Family Services on Tuesday 3-year-old Adolf Hitler Campbell and his younger sisters, JoyceLynn Aryan Nation Campbell and Honszlynn Hinler Jeannie Campbell from their home Tuesday.
Harris says family services did not tell police the reason the children were removed. Agency spokeswoman Kate Bernyk says it does not comment on specific cases.
The children and their parents, Heath and Deborah Campbell, received attention last month when a supermarket bakery refused to put Adolf Hitler Campbell's name on a birthday cake. And they loved every minute of it.....until now.
#3
What do you want to bet that the Dad has more than 20 tattoos, a fridge full of beer, a pool table, a Harley, a rap sheet and a GED from the prison school.
Posted by: Jack is Back ||
01/15/2009 12:46 Comments ||
Top||
#4
Since when ca the government tell you wwhat too name your kids whether it is right or wrong.
A multi-volume chronology and reference guide set detailing three years of the Mexican Drug War between 2010 and 2012.
Rantburg.com and borderlandbeat.com correspondent and author Chris Covert presents his first non-fiction work detailing
the drug and gang related violence in Mexico.
Chris gives us Mexican press dispatches of drug and gang war violence
over three years, presented in a multi volume set intended to chronicle the death, violence and mayhem which has
dominated Mexico for six years.
Rantburg was assembled from recycled algorithms in the United States of America. No
trees were destroyed in the production of this weblog. We did hurt some, though. Sorry.