Posted by: BathroomCoffee April 1, 2005
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http://www.slshealth.com/residential/behavioral_info/selftest.asp?CatID=52
(Happiness test: 'How often do you feel cheated by what others have done to you?')
http://www.murdermysterygames.co.uk/online/default.htm (Not enough
friends to play our games over a dinner party?: online murder mystery game)
http://prisonplanet.com/articles/march2005/020305thompsonwarned.htm
('Hunter Thompson was working on WTC collapse story before mysterious sudden death, warned he'd be 'suicided': '(He'd) stumbled across what he felt was hard evidence showing the towers had been brought down not by the airplanes that flew into them but by explosive charges set off in their foundations . . .')
President Bush Still Just Says Nothing
Doug Wead, the man who last week published extracts from secretly
recorded tapes on which George Bush discussed his cocaine and marijuana use,
has handed over the recordings to the White House, prompting the
President's spokesman Scott McClellan to declare 'It's a matter we consider
closed'. (Reuters)
David Borden, Executive Director of drug legalisation group DRC.net,
appeared to accept George W's drug raddled past though continued to
challenge him over the still festering charge of hypocrisy.
"As governor (of Texas), Mr. Bush escalated sentences for some drug
offences, putting other people in prison for longer time periods for
things that he himself had done or supported," Mr Borden pointed out.
"So if it is unimportant that George Bush used marijuana, it is kind of
sad that he opposes honesty about it. And it is very sad that he
continues to support cruel and repressive drug policies -- policies which
could have ruined his life if they had been in place back then, but
realistically only in theory," he said.
Pulitzer prize winning US journalist Clarence Page also questioned the
President's 'just say nothing' policy in his heavily syndicated column
this week.
"Take it from me, Mr President, a lot of today's teenagers think you
"smoked and snorted," as one of my son's high school classmates put it,
Anyway," said Mr Page, "Your silence does nothing to defuse their
suspicions." (Chicago Tribune).