| Britney and Adnan Shop, Wander, Hopefully Don't Have a Baby
At least she's like of those breeders, she breeds kids (keeps popping out kids) and would have to pay for them $15,000 per piece per month until they're 18 or 21. Those kids at least have enough, although they'll have to rely on step mommies for any source of motherhood relationship. Britney is the prime celebrity(?) example why we need to screen people before they can become parents. Or why we need license to have kids. .
Kosovo sends out a different message
With only five days to go, there are posters everywhere: at the metro stations, in the bus shelters and on banners across the streets. Proudly formal, they have the eagle crest and the simple fact of the 2 March election against the background of the red, white and blue Russian flag. .
Should non-firearms Met officers be allowed to use Tasers?
A schoolgirl who fell on tracks at Worcester Park station as she ran to catch a train is being treated in intensive care. The 15-year-old, a student at Raynes Park High School, suffered massive blood loss in the accident and has had her spleen removed. She also has an injured left foot, is thought to have a fractured pelvis and will undergo more surgery today. The girl was taken away on a stretcher and rushed to St George's Hospital in Tooting as police cordoned off the accident site yesterday. She is believed to be in a stable but serious condition and the next 48 hours are critical. The incident caused chaos for commuters who were told to get off the 7.52am train from Epsom to London Waterloo at Worcester Park yesterday.
From Buses to Blogs, a Pathological Individualism Is Poisoning Public ...
A grey weekday morning at 7.40am in Edmonton bus station in north London, and it's teeming with schoolchildren. As the bus arrives, a crowd surge forward to squeeze their way on. People get knocked over. The children, screaming and pushing, panic. Small ones, horrified by the melee, hold back. The ones with the sharpest elbows make it. The rest have to go through the ordeal again with the next bus and the next - and get bad marks for being late when, battle-scarred, they finally make it into school. When I recounted this incident to my 12-year-old, hardened by 18 months of secondary school travel, she smiled at my naivety. Being pushed, sworn at and squeezed on to overcrowded trains and buses is already routine to her. Trivial personal anecdotes, you might say, with some justification.
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