Stanislav Struzberg
This is a topic I know nothing about…... However, I thought some posts from this topic might scare up a Leader for a New Body Builders Special Interest Group!!!
Gabriel Latifi - an Eastern USA champion
![](http://tracker.gaytorrent.ru/bitbucket/th_ththhyenas 1.gif) But they are a matched purse and belt so…........
Bill worked in a pickle factory. He had been employed there for a number of years when he came home one day to confess to his boyfriend that he had a terrible compulsion. He had an urge to stick his penis into the pickle slicer. His boyfriend suggested that he should see a sex therapist to talk about it, but Bill indicated that he'd be too embarrassed. He vowed to overcome the compulsion on his own.
One day a few weeks later, Bill came home absolutely ashen. His boyfriend could see at once that something was seriously wrong.
"What's wrong, Bill?" he asked.
"Do you remember that I told you how I had this tremendous urge to put my penis into the pickle slicer?" he asked.
"Oh, Bill, you didn't," he said.
"Yes, I did," he told him.
"My God, Bill, what happened?"
"I got fired."
"No, Bill. I mean, what happened with the pickle slicer?" he asked.
"Oh… he got fired too."
The new hooker just finished his first trick. When he came back down to the street, the seasoned veterans all gathered around to hear the details.
He said "well, he was a big muscular and handsome marine".
"Well, what did he want to do?"they all asked.
He said " I told him that a straight lay was $100, but he said he didn't have that much".
"So I told him that oral sex would be $75, but he didn't have that much either".
"Finally I said, well, how much do you have"?
The marine said that he only had $25.
The new hooker said "well, for $25 all I can do is service you by hand"
He agreed and after getting the finances straight, he said "he pulled it out and I put one hand on it, and then the second hand above the first and then the first hand above the second hand…"
"Oh my god" they all exclaimed, "it must have been huge, then what did you do?"
With a big smile on his face, he said.
"I loaned him $75!"
Are you on your knees yet? To worship you must assume the position…....
Phallic Symbols ~ From around the world….....
Know that at the heart of all things is the burning adoration of man for Phallus.
At the heart of all things is the ideal order within which men live in peace and
give their lives to the adoration and worship of Cock.
(Feb. 4) – The China-based cyberattack against Google has apparently prompted the powerful search engine company to reach out to the National Security Agency for help, The Washington Post reports today.
"Sources with knowledge of the arrangement, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said the alliance is being designed to allow the two organizations to share critical information without violating Google's policies or laws that protect the privacy of Americans' online communications," The Washington Post says.
The public-private alliance is the latest in a series of revelations that highlights the evolution of cyberwarfare.
Last month, Google announced it would no long censor its Chinese search engine, accusing China of orchestrating a broad computer attack on its company. Earlier this week, Director of National Intelligence Dennis Blair called that event a "wake-up call" and warned that future attacks, by terrorists or foreign governments, could "wreak havoc" on the United States.
But the marriage of data-rich Google with the eavesdropping NSA, known as America's "secret sentry," could be privacy advocates' worst nightmare. Google is notoriously reticent to speak about its discussions with government authorities, both in the United States and abroad. The Internet search company originally drew sharp criticism for its decision to cede to China's requests that it censor Web sites.
Even in the United States, Google has agreed to at least one government request. In 2008, the company, at the Pentagon's urging, removed images collected of any Army base in Texas from Google Street View after the military expressed concerns that the panoramic pictures posed a security threat.
The removal sparked questions about other cases when Google might have censored images at the request of the U.S. or foreign governments. At the time, Google confirmed that it had removed the images of the Army base, but declined to say whether there were other instances.
That has led to speculation – though no confirmation – that other cases exist.
Most famously, pictures of the vice presidential residence, rumored to be the site of a secret bunker, were blurred on Google Maps until last year. Google maintains that the imagery, which is supplied by the U.S. Geological Survey, was not blurred by the company.
As for Google's new relationship with the NSA, it's unclear exactly what it will cover. Neither Google nor the NSA responded immediately to requests for comment.
One industry official involved in cybersecurity and familiar with how the NSA works says that a relationship with Google could help the NSA learn how Google spotted the attack and tracked it back to the Chinese government. But the NSA may not necessarily be interested in fixing computer security holes that the agency could exploit to its own advantage against other countries.
"The question is: What's NSA going to do" with information on the Google attack? the source said. "Help them defend against it? I would doubt it."
By Patrik Jonsson Patrik Jonsson – Thu Feb 4, 3:20 pm ET
Of all the protest signs at all the rallies and town-hall meetings where people gathered last year to object to Washington's plans to save the US economy and reform healthcare, this hand-lettered one is memorable: "You can't fix stupid, but you can vote it out."
That's the "tea party" movement in a nutshell.
The left paints the movement as a largely white and middle-class mob – and as including kooks who equate President Obama with Joseph Stalin.
There's some truth to that view. But where some see a bunch of white people standing in the way of progress, others see a growing expression of dissatisfaction with what former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney (R) calls the "neomonarchists."
Ahead of the Tea Party Nation convention in Nashville, Tenn., slated for Feb. 4-6, here's a look at the tea party movement – its birth, its leadership, and its aspirations.
When – and why – was the tea party movement born?
CNBC editor Rick Santelli's on-air "rant" last February about a proposed mortgage bailout is widely considered to be the "big bang" moment for the birth of the movement.
A few days later, a couple of conservative foot soldiers – John O'Hara of the Heartland Institute and J.P. Freire, then of The American Spectator – wondered if there were a way to harness Mr. Santelli's frustration.
"You know what would be funny?" Mr. Freire mused to Mr. O'Hara, leading into a discussion that would become so much more than talk.
The pair organized "A New American Tea Party" rally outside the White House on Feb. 27, according to O'Hara's book about the movement. Six weeks later (around tax day), about 500,000 people took to the streets in small, medium, and large protests from San Francisco to Atlanta. Today, says O'Hara in a phone interview, "there are absolutely hundreds" of local and state tea party organizations.
Is the tea party a real populist movement or a front for big business?
No single person leads the tea party movement. Sympathizers and role players include conservative politicians Sarah Palin and Dick Armey, antitax crusader Grover Norquist, online organizer Eric Odom of the American Liberty Alliance, and media personalities such as talk radio's Mark Williams and Fox News hosts Sean Hannity and Glenn Beck.
But unheralded operatives, such as Brendan Steinhauser, campaign director for FreedomWorks and author of "The Conservative Revolution," created the backbone of the movement, establishing websites and Facebook pages that would become populated with fed-up voters.
Critics say it is being funded or co-opted by entrenched conservative powers like FreedomWorks, which recruits volunteers to lobby for smaller government and lower taxes. The Washington Post has reported that the tea party movement is, through FreedomWorks, tied to corporations like MetLife, Philip Morris, and "foundations controlled by the archconservative Scaife family."
"Nobody is saying that the passion is manufactured," says Chris Harris at MediaMatters, a media watchdog group on the left. "But partisan and pro-business interests … [are] using people's real passion in a way that protesters aren't meaning."
Tea partyers, however, say the amateur-hour feel of their movement proves it's a true grass-roots uprising. "You can't simultaneously call the movement fractured and incompetent and a vast right-wing conspiracy," says O'Hara.
What do tea partyers want?
The movement, in its essence, is about safeguarding individual liberty, cutting taxes, and ending bailouts for business while the American taxpayer gets burdened with more public debt. It is fueled by concern that the United States under Mr. Obama is becoming a European-style social democracy where individual initiative is sapped by the needs of the collective.
"The issue is no longer tea tariffs and imperial rule, but bailouts and handouts, stimulus in the face of deficits, cap and trade [on carbon emissions], universal healthcare … dictated against the will and interest of the people, and at the peril of … the nation as a whole" leading to "an inevitable blow-back in a battle over America's constitutional principles," writes O'Hara in "A New American Tea Party," which hit bookstores this month.
Is the tea party affiliated with the Republican Party?
Certainly more Republicans than Democrats show up at tea party events. But the movement's aim is to fight profligate spending by both parties in Washington. (GOP chairman Michael Steele was notably refused a spot on the speaking roster at a Chicago tea party event last year.)
In some ways, the tea party movement poses less of a challenge to Democrats than to Republicans, who must weigh the potential gains and pitfalls of courting far-right tea partyers against those of courting middle America. To what extent the tea party movement is middle America is the big question – one that coming elections will help answer.
What has the tea party movement achieved so far?
It appears to be winning the image war, for one. Forty-one percent of American adults have a positive view of the tea party, compared with 35 percent for the Democrats and 28 percent for the GOP, according to a recent NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll.
Tea partyers did transform the healthcare reform debate, some analysts say, after activists stormed town-hall meetings last summer.
Moreover, decisions by Democratic Sens. Christopher Dodd and Byron Dorgan not to run for reelection this year is an acknowledgment that they probably would have faced a tea-party-inspired populist backlash at the polls, say tea party watchers.
In Massachusetts, tea party organizers helped to funnel money and manpower to state Sen. Scott Brown's successful bid for the late Ted Kennedy's seat in the US Senate. The upset victory, wrote conservative columnist Mary Katharine Ham, shows that "Democrats fooled themselves into believing the town-hall/tea party caricature and ignored the feelings of real Americans."
What role do tea party activists envision playing in the 2010 elections?
For a template, look to an emerging showdown in Florida between Gov. Charlie Crist and former state House Speaker Marco Rubio over a US Senate seat. Tea partyers are backing Mr. Rubio and making a horse race out of a GOP primary that the popular Mr. Crist should have strolled through.
"The genie has been let out of the bottle," says Robert Watson, a political scientist at Lynn University in Boca Raton, Fla
How will the tea party convention advance or hurt the movement?
Recent convention developments have some tea party activists worried the event could tarnish the movement. The decision by two of the convention's key speakers, Rep. Michelle Bachmann (R) of Minn. and Rep. Marsha Blackburn (R) of Tenn., to pull out is giving Americans a glimpse of the internecine fighting in the tea party movement.
Some are also raising questions about convention expenses and its upscale lobster dinner, saying they contradict the movement's thrifty image and bolster arguments that the convention is a GOP ruse to raise millions.
Those who oppose the convention also question the cult of personality around Sarah Palin, the convention's headline speaker, and say it's the people who should be speaking to politicians, not the other way around.
Still, for many the controversy only proves the tea partyers are a grass roots movement with no central authority, and it's creating a forum for just the kind of healthy debate necessary to shape a stronger and more influential movement.
The Vatican has unveiled a email address for the new Pope.
In related news, the Pope has received a confidential financial offer from the President of Nigeria.
A Gay man was crossing a road one day when a frog called out to him and said, "If you kiss me, I'll turn into a beautiful prince".
He bent over, picked up the frog and put it in his pocket.
The frog spoke up again and said, "If you kiss me and turn me back into a beautiful prince, I will stay with you for one week."
The man took the frog out of his pocket, smiled at it and returned it to the pocket.
The frog then cried out, "If you kiss me and turn me back into a prince, I'll stay with you and do ANYTHING you want."
Again the man took the frog out, smiled at it and put it back into his pocket.
Finally, the frog asked, "What is the matter? I've told you I'm a beautiful prince, that I'll stay with you for a week and do anything you want. Why won't you kiss me?"
The man said, "Look I'm a software engineer. I don't have time for a boyfriend, but a talking frog is cool."