soiherdyouliekmudkipz
Monday, August 30, 2010
Sunday, August 29, 2010
Why the name?
If your wondering why the url is needdacash, its because I am planning over the course of the next couple of months to put simple tricks and tips on how to save money in this economy, without losing anything
intresting....
|
|
New
So I decided to make a blog, after all my friends talked bout how cool they are.
This isnt going to be about anything in particular, just matters I find intresting, like a personal online diary.
So remember we are legion, and any comments are welcome.
This isnt going to be about anything in particular, just matters I find intresting, like a personal online diary.
So remember we are legion, and any comments are welcome.
Has anyone seen this
GAY BAR BY GROUND ZERO, WORSE THAN MOSQUE IMO
GLENN BECK, HOST: Earlier, I talked about a mosque being built near the World Trade Center. There's another building that has been proposed to be built next to the World Trade Center site. This establishment — like the World Trade Center mosque — also claims to promote integration, tolerance, community cohesion.
Here to explain is Greg Gutfeld, the host of the show "Red Eye" on the Fox News Channel — when your eyes would be red — and the author of "The Bible of Unspeakable Truths," which you have to read. It's laugh-out-loud funny. OK.
So, Greg —
GREG GUTFELD, HOST, "RED EYE": Yes.
BECK: Give me your proposal.
GUTFELD: Well, you know, I was thinking — I went on to their Web site, the Cordoba House website. It's a lovely website, and they talk about preaching tolerance and communication.
And I thought how interesting is it that they are preaching tolerance and communication to Americans? I thought, wouldn't it be great to test their tolerance?
So I figured let's open an Islam-friendly gay bar next door to the mosque. That is my proposal and I'm sticking by it.
I'm not a good businessman and I'm a terrible activist, but this might be the greatest idea I've ever had.
BECK: But you are very, very funny.
GUTFELD: So — am I joking, is what you're asking?
BECK: I mean — what I'm saying is — well, give me some of the names of the -
GUTFELD: Well, I like — I like Ji-Hot.
BECK: Ji-Hot?
GITFELD: Or Ji-Hunk. How about Infidelicious? Or Turban Cowboy?
BECK: Yes.
GUTFELD: You like Turban Cowboy?
BECK: My favorite?
GUTFELD: What?
BECK: Suspicious Packages.
GUTFELD: Yes. That's a nice one.
(LAUGHTER)
GUTFELD: Yes. Rama-Dam. Yes. There are other ones that I don't think I should mention.
BECK: You Mecca-Me-Hot?
(LAUGHTER)
GUTFELD: Yes.
BECK: So now, what would the — what would the — the idea again is you go in to "Suspicious Packages" —
GUTFELD: Yes.
BECK: Which is just — it's a gay bar.
GUTFELD: Yes. Yes, it is, next to a mosque.
BECK: Next to the World Trade Center mosque.
GUTFELD: Exactly. And there will be no alcohol there, Glenn, so you can come.
BECK: OK. Really?
GUTFELD: Because Muslims don't drink alcohol.
BECK: Yes. Neither do I.
GUTFELD: So the bar will have 72 virgin drinks.
BECK: Really?
GUTFELD: Yes.
BECK: Now, this is to teach what exactly? Tolerance —
GUTFELD: Tolerance and communication.
BECK: Right.
GUTFELD: You know, the way that New York is going to accept the mosque, the mosque should accept a gay bar. You see that?
BECK: Yes.
GUTFELD: The correlation —
BECK: Now, as someone who wouldn't want this gay bar built next to my church or, you know, a temple of mine, do you think it might be a little over the top?
GUTFELD: No. I think it has to be done, Glenn. It has to be done. And if I'm not the person to do it, somebody must do it.
BECK: Somebody must do it?
GUTFELD: But I have a lot of people that are interested in backing me for this. And I'm telling you, this is the greatest thing ever, because right now, I contacted the Cordoba House. I wrote them. I e-mailed them. They didn't respond. But I tweeted them and they tweeted me back.
BECK: And what did they say?
GUTFELD: They said, "You are free to open whatever you like. If you won't consider the sensibilities of Muslims, you are not going to build dialogue."
BECK: Oh.
GUTFELD: Yes. And you know I love to build dialogue.
BECK: Sure. Especially — you do that at Grind Zeros.
GUTFELD: Exactly.
BECK: Check out Greg Gutfeld's show, "Red Eye," on the Fox News Channel. You're not serious?
GUTFELD: I'm deadly serious, Glenn.
BECK: At Fox News Channel — airs weekdays at 3:00 a.m. ET for a reason
GLENN BECK, HOST: Earlier, I talked about a mosque being built near the World Trade Center. There's another building that has been proposed to be built next to the World Trade Center site. This establishment — like the World Trade Center mosque — also claims to promote integration, tolerance, community cohesion.
Here to explain is Greg Gutfeld, the host of the show "Red Eye" on the Fox News Channel — when your eyes would be red — and the author of "The Bible of Unspeakable Truths," which you have to read. It's laugh-out-loud funny. OK.
So, Greg —
GREG GUTFELD, HOST, "RED EYE": Yes.
BECK: Give me your proposal.
GUTFELD: Well, you know, I was thinking — I went on to their Web site, the Cordoba House website. It's a lovely website, and they talk about preaching tolerance and communication.
So I figured let's open an Islam-friendly gay bar next door to the mosque. That is my proposal and I'm sticking by it.
I'm not a good businessman and I'm a terrible activist, but this might be the greatest idea I've ever had.
BECK: But you are very, very funny.
GUTFELD: So — am I joking, is what you're asking?
BECK: I mean — what I'm saying is — well, give me some of the names of the -
GUTFELD: Well, I like — I like Ji-Hot.
BECK: Ji-Hot?
GITFELD: Or Ji-Hunk. How about Infidelicious? Or Turban Cowboy?
BECK: Yes.
GUTFELD: You like Turban Cowboy?
BECK: My favorite?
GUTFELD: What?
BECK: Suspicious Packages.
GUTFELD: Yes. That's a nice one.
(LAUGHTER)
GUTFELD: Yes. Rama-Dam. Yes. There are other ones that I don't think I should mention.
BECK: You Mecca-Me-Hot?
(LAUGHTER)
GUTFELD: Yes.
BECK: So now, what would the — what would the — the idea again is you go in to "Suspicious Packages" —
GUTFELD: Yes.
BECK: Which is just — it's a gay bar.
GUTFELD: Yes. Yes, it is, next to a mosque.
BECK: Next to the World Trade Center mosque.
GUTFELD: Exactly. And there will be no alcohol there, Glenn, so you can come.
BECK: OK. Really?
GUTFELD: Because Muslims don't drink alcohol.
BECK: Yes. Neither do I.
GUTFELD: So the bar will have 72 virgin drinks.
BECK: Really?
GUTFELD: Yes.
BECK: Now, this is to teach what exactly? Tolerance —
GUTFELD: Tolerance and communication.
BECK: Right.
GUTFELD: You know, the way that New York is going to accept the mosque, the mosque should accept a gay bar. You see that?
BECK: Yes.
GUTFELD: The correlation —
BECK: Now, as someone who wouldn't want this gay bar built next to my church or, you know, a temple of mine, do you think it might be a little over the top?
GUTFELD: No. I think it has to be done, Glenn. It has to be done. And if I'm not the person to do it, somebody must do it.
BECK: Somebody must do it?
GUTFELD: But I have a lot of people that are interested in backing me for this. And I'm telling you, this is the greatest thing ever, because right now, I contacted the Cordoba House. I wrote them. I e-mailed them. They didn't respond. But I tweeted them and they tweeted me back.
BECK: And what did they say?
GUTFELD: They said, "You are free to open whatever you like. If you won't consider the sensibilities of Muslims, you are not going to build dialogue."
BECK: Oh.
GUTFELD: Yes. And you know I love to build dialogue.
BECK: Sure. Especially — you do that at Grind Zeros.
GUTFELD: Exactly.
BECK: Check out Greg Gutfeld's show, "Red Eye," on the Fox News Channel. You're not serious?
GUTFELD: I'm deadly serious, Glenn.
BECK: At Fox News Channel — airs weekdays at 3:00 a.m. ET for a reason
Oh and BTW
I just got a job at Walmart, they CAN tackle you if you try to steal shit in front of them.
Just got a job at walmart
Wal-Mart suit over sex bias carries high stakes
By STEVEN GREENHOUSE
The New York Times
Updated Aug 28, 2010 04:18PM Passed over
•
The case began nearly a decade ago with one woman, Stephanie Odle, who was upset to discover that the top manager at the Sam’s Club where she worked as an assistant store manager had been administering a promotion test to the three male assistant store managers but not to her. That came after Odle discovered that a male assistant manager at a previous Sam’s Club where she worked had been earning $23,000 more a year than she was. When she complained, she said, the district manager responded, “Stephanie, that assistant manager has a family and two children to support.”
“I told him, ‘I’m a single mother, and I have a 6-month-old child to support,’ ” she recalled in an interview.
Lawyers representing the plaintiffs recruited Odle after obtaining data showing that just a third of Wal-Mart’s managers were women, even though two-thirds of its employees were. The lawyers wanted to enlist a Wal-Mart employee whose complaints about pay and promotions would be a base from which to build a broader sex discrimination case.
Odle’s story, along with those of six other women, became the seed of the 2001 lawsuit that accused Wal-Mart of systematic discrimination against women in pay and promotions. No one expected it to become such a drawn-out battle.
In its appeal, Wal-Mart said the 9th Circuit’s decision had contradicted earlier decisions of the Supreme Court and other appeals courts, and had wrongly relieved the plaintiffs of the burden of proving individual injury
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)