- 04:11 @knarleybass i'm watching Rome season 2. i love me some octavian #
- 14:39 @AthenaFatale I will not be kept away from those poor defenseless crustaceans!! #
- 14:41 @SinnamonLove heh. close. right continent! portuguese! paris is easy ton o fotogs, just gotta get your french skills tuned up. #
- 16:18 @MissConduct13 Curves? that gym place? #
- 17:58 FetishMuse.com set up for affiliate stuff www.altporncash.com/ #
- 18:36 @thursdays_child Cake Farts www.cakefarts.com #
- 19:26 waitin on sushi. then more Rome #
- 23:35 hyundai. why can't any one say it right?!?! #
2009-01-06
it's still quite nice, but i'm realizing now, that when you have to do the writing exercises, people will rewrite the original text with corrections, but then they wont actually EXPLAIN why the things are wrong.
that's irritating.
i've been doing that on all the exercises i correct/comment on.
---
the professional is on. i was thinking how i used to like that movie a lot, but now that i'm watching it again, portman's character annoys me.
stupid kid. i'd slap her silly like her dad did if she was acting like a stupid brat around me too.
need food.hungreeee

The affiliate billing is set up now, so instead of simply linking to the site, you could take advantage of the opportunity to make some cash.
Go to AltPornCash for that.
While you're at it,
visit AltPornNow too. (NSFW)
An air passenger forced to cover his T-shirt because it displayed Arabic script has been awarded a payout of $240,000 (£163,000), his lawyers say.
Two Transportation Security Authority officials and JetBlue Airways will be forced to make the payout.
Raed Jarrar, a US resident, had accused them of illegally discriminating against him based on his ethnicity and the Arabic writing on his T-shirt.
The payout is the largest of its kind since the 9/11 terror attacks.
Lawyers representing Mr Jarrar say the settlement is a victory for free speech and a blow to the practice of racial profiling.
Uncomfortable
Back in 2006, Mr Jarrar was waiting to board a flight at New York's JFK airport wearing a T-shirt that read "We Will Not Be Silent" in English and Arabic.
His lawyers say he was ordered to remove the item of clothing by staff who said other passengers felt uncomfortable with the Arabic slogan.
He eventually agreed to cover the shirt and boarded the plane, but says he was made to sit at the back of the plane.
The Transport Security Authority and JetBlue airlines agreed to settle the case, paying out a total of $240,000 in compensation.
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which represented Mr Jarrar, argues this case is not an isolated one.
Last week, a Muslim family was ordered off a domestic US flight operated by AirTran airlines after passengers claimed they were making suspicious remarks about security.
The family members were later cleared by the FBI, but were not permitted to fly with the airline to continue their journey.