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Clips from "Brainwashing Camp" AKA "Jesus Camp"

Rachel Maddow 4/9/09 - Teabagging Washington

What a Woman Would Do For Chocolate Milk?

Brilliantly simple water sterilizing bag

Lunatic Douchebag Michelle Bachmann at it Again

calvados says...

>> ^kronosposeidon:
God, she just looks crazy. She has one of the glassiest, most vacant stares I've ever seen on a public official. Good thing she's safely isolated from the general public, nestled in the corridors of power of the nation with the most nuclear weapons on the planet.
Sweet dreams, kids.



Wow. I had no idea she's a Congresswoman... I thought she was just some right-wing nutjob half-assed Fox News-type pundit. Scary as hell.

Lunatic Douchebag Michelle Bachmann at it Again

kronosposeidon says...

God, she just looks crazy. She has one of the glassiest, most vacant stares I've ever seen on a public official. Good thing she's safely isolated from the general public, nestled in the corridors of power of the nation with the most nuclear weapons on the planet.

Sweet dreams, kids.

Sesame Street - milk crisis

choggie (Member Profile)

FOX News- George Bush Just Like Abraham Lincoln

my15minutes says...

"so it's a bit of a paradox, that he's now also credited with some of the most eloquent and visionary speeches, ever delivered by an American president."

eeeeyeah. i still remember his best.

"Freedom terror terror, weapons of mass destruction. Freedom, Al Queda, durka durka.
Liberty. And may God bless America."

yes. a paradox.
wrapped in a riddle, nestled within a conundrum, stuffed inside a felafel.

douchebag.

Totalitarianism In America: Vaccinate or Go To Jail

Constitutional_Patriot says...

"because smallpox was eradicated by a vaccine."

If you think smallpox has been completely eradicated, think again...

"In Joe Esposito's lab, at the Centers for Disease Control, there was a test going of a biosensor device for detecting smallpox. It was a machine in a black suitcase. It could detect a bioweapon using; the process called the polymerase chain reaction, or P.C.R. -- the same kind of molecular fingerprinting that police use to identify the DNA of a crime suspect. The suitcase thing was called a Cepheid Briefcase Smart Cycler, and it had been co-invented by M. Allen Northrup, a biomedical engineer who founded a company to make and sell biosensors. He was there, along with a cluster of other scientists.

Esposito, the official guardian of one half of the world's official supply of smallpox, handed a box of tubes to a scientist in the room. Two of the tubes contained the whole DNA of smallpox virus but not live smallpox. The DNA drifted in a drop of water; it was the Rahima strain. Two other tubes contained anthrax. The samples were snapped into slots in the machine.

Northrup turned his attention to a laptop computer that nestled in the machine. Northrup is a chunky man with a mustache and reddish-brown hair. He tapped on the keys.

We waited around, chatting. Meanwhile, the Cepheid was working silently. It showed colored lines on its screen. In fifteen minutes, the anthrax lines started going straight up, and someone said, "The anthrax is screaming." Finally, one of the smallpox lines crept upward, slowly. "That's a positive for smallpox, not so bad," a scientist said. Emergency-response teams could carry a Cepheid suitcase to the scene of a bioterror event and begin testing people immediately for anthrax or smallpox. The machine is priced at sixty thousand dollars.

Afterward, Joe Esposito went around collecting the used tubes. The smallpox-sample holder -- a plastic thing the size of a thumbnail-had been left on a counter. I picked it up.

Esposito wasn't about to let anyone walk off with smallpox. "Leave me that tube," he said. "You are not allowed to have more than twenty per cent of the DNA."

Before I handed it to him, I glanced at a little window in the tube. When I held it up to the light, the liquid looked like clear water. The water contained the whole molecules of life from variola, a parasite that had colonized us thousands of years ago. We had almost freed ourselves of it, but we found we had developed a strong affinity for smallpox. Some of us had made it into a weapon, and now we couldn't get rid of it. I wondered if we ever would, for the story of our entanglement with smallpox is not yet ended."

It might return sooner than you think thanks to bio-weaponized technology... also a few cases have popped up since 1977.

Read this full article at: http://cryptome.org/smallpox-wmd.htm

I found this from a link on the CDC.gov website while searching smallpox.

Source: Hardcopy The New Yorker, July 12, 1999, pp. 44-61. Thanks to Richard Preston

Supercooling

rhettnyedotorg says...

my bad i was having a blonde moment. somehow the mouse must have moved out and clicked without me realizing it as i can't duplicate the error so anything's possible (shadow people?) ALSO: i'm sorry comment system for questioning your sexuality. big huge avatars aside, i don't think you're truly homosexual but was using gay in a way that is the opposite of the old usage 'happy'. kinda like, "Whoa that brand new 83 camaro is BAD!!!" (bad as in good) My 'gay' call was misdirected obviously it was my fault. again, sorry comment system. (nice avatars though FAG)

on topic: low solute ie. distilled water, answers my question. so if i put a bottle of nestle still life water in my freezer it doesn't freeze into a block as long as i don't agitate it?

digg < videosift

Supercooling

Oatmeal says...

It's easy, just freeze any water with relatively low solute concentration. Nestle PureLife works well. Tap water will not work (well, at least not Vancouver tap water. Make sure there are no air bubbles clinging to the bottle inside the water.

Oh, and with respect to the comment system... It's made a pass at me a couple of times, and I agree, it has absolutely no respect for personal boundaries.

You want Cute? You got it. Meet 'Mocha'.....

auntie_macassar says...

What a life, huh? Just lolling around on your back all day, eatin' broccoli, nestled in a gigantic sweaty hand, your image broad-casted to millions of hamster-ogling perverts the world over. I wish I had your life, Broccoli-Face.

The first time I laid eyes on Ali G... and I thought, WTF?

iaui says...

Hehe... even in the face of all the hate for this song I'm compelled to post... For me, being an audiophile, this is one of my naughty favourites. You know, a song that you like that is too popular and done by someone you hate that you don't want anybody anywhere to know you like, but you just can't stop loving...

I just love the synchronic rhythm between the chord hits and the bass drum, nestled against the steady kick of the snare hits. Some nice filtering in the second half adds to the electronic feel of this decidedly funky breakbeat.

I don't ever want to hear this song again. (;

And yeah, Madonna saying she 'discovered' Ali G is total bullshit, but then, so is Ali G, so where is the problem? See... it's a game they play. How many lies can they tell that they won't get caught in. The whole video is a lie, too... But people forget that...

Swearing Celebrities



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