| Posts: 6496
It is a foolish tautalogy with no actual meaning.It is so sad that we condemn perfectly normal, healthy, sane and stable people for no good reason simply because some small minded person somewhere in the past got it in their head that their particular all powerful, mysterious, magical deity is a bigot too. There is nothing wrong with being gay, straight or bi, my friend.I wish people who think like you could see how you're perceptions and beliefs are no different than those outlandish, ridiculous beliefs of racist people in the south 50 years ago.That is a most cogent observation Cogent Observer. You weren't kidding when you chose the moniker "Cogent Observer". Cogent Observer is correct. We should be celebrating homosexuality, not condemning it. I mean, where would this country be if we didn't have homosexuals in it? Who cares if they canât produce offspring on their own? I for one will not tolerate intolerance!!! America wouldn't be America if it didn't have morally sound behaviors, like homosexuality, to nurture.
Ingleside man guilty in 2004 stabbing death of neighbor girl
An Ingleside man entered a guilty plea Monday in the stabbing death of a teenage neighbor who confronted him during a botched burglary of her home in 2004. Adam Christenson, 25, could face up to 60 years in prison for the July 14, 2004, slaying of Elizabeth Willding in the home she shared with her mother and sisters. Christenson, who was to go on trial Monday, agreed to what is known as an Alford plea, in which he conceded that a judge or jury shown the evidence would probably find him guilty but denied that he killed Willding. .
Police bust meth lab in Southeast Portland, arrest resident
An ex-con, he also faces weapons charges. He was booked in the Multnomah County Detention Center. It was the third bust of a meth lab this year, compared with the 40 to 60 labs broken up each year before the current pseudoephedrine legislation was enacted. -- Kimberly A.C. Wilson; kimberlywilson@news.oregonian.com Continue reading "Police bust meth lab in Southeast Portland, arrest resident" » .
Don't Call It Plagiarism
Perhaps not since the air traffic controllers' strike of 1981 has the big press lavished such intense and generally sympathetic coverage on a labor dispute. Both the Washington Post ("it hasn't been easy for movie writers") and the New York Times ("my greed is fair and reasonable") have run op-eds by screenwriters demanding that the entertainment industry compensate Writers Guild of America members for digital use of their work on the Web, iPods, cell phones, etc., the sticking point of this strike. In the opinion pages of the Los Angeles Times, writer-producer Marshall Herskovitz lectures about how corporate domination of Hollywood inconveniences him, and a nonscreenwriter laments the powerlessness of today's scribes ("there is nothing without the writer"). .
Grown-ups have long way to go to rival teens' technology grasp
In type that scrolls up the screen like the preface for Star Wars, a YouTube video reads, "For years, parents could not text message. They could not figure out how to record a voice mail. They could not even connect to the Internet without using AOL." .
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