odchudzicsie
Nio dobrze, post powyżej wygaśnie, a o sprawozdanie się dopominają, przeto...
incipam:
Pod Kieleckim Zegarem spotkałam L'Elessara z O. Towarzyszącą , za chwilkę doszła Nienna i Aredh, więc po zakupieniu odpowiedniej flaszki z kwasem ortofosforowym (a czytajcie opakowania, a cio ) wyruszyliśmy w znaną mi już stronę Rezerwatu Kadzielnia. Tam wykonałam kilka zdjęć, przy pomocy których będę przekonywać otoczenie, iz część wakacji spędziłam w Górach Skalistych , tam takze odkryliśmy, że częściowo napełniona butelka z kwasem ortofosforowym (ustawiona odpowiednio w stosunku do kierunku wiatru) może udawać fujarkę Daerona. Jako że Nowoczesna Technologia tym razem nie zawiodła, udało się nam skontaktować z Conducatorem, a nawet go spotkać, po czym przeszlismy do bardziej zalesionej części Kielc, mijając po drodze stadion niebieski od radiowozów. Po czym zasiedliśmy przy weed and bottle (za pierwsze posłużył mocno sfatygowany liść robinii zwanej akacją zatknięty na stoliku, za drugie flaszka wyżej wymienionego kwasu), pogadaliśmy, no i trzeba było wracać...
I tak się skończył zjast KKK
Now Lords and Ladies blithe and bold,
To bless you here now am I bond,
I thank you all a thousandfold
and pray God save you whole and sound.
Whether you go on grass or ground,
may He you guide that nought you grieve,
for friendship that I here have found.
Against my will I take my leave
The Ark - Clamour For Glamour (naprawdę, uwielbiam tego słuchać głośno w samochodzie; jak tylko zrobię prawko, to będę jeździć i się z tym kawałkiem lansować w moim różowym czinkłeczento!)
Backyard Babies - Brand New Hate
The Proclaimers - (I'm gonna be) 500 miles
American Hi-Fi - The Art Of Losing
Jesse Malin - In the modern world
Jesse Malin - Black Haired Girl
Sr-71 - Axl Rose
Kill Hannah - Under The Milky Way (to w nocy fajnie brzmi )
Kill Hannah - NYC Speed
MxPx - Kicking and screaming
New Found Glory - Failure's Not Flattering
New Found Glory - Love and pain
Paul Westerberg - World Class Fad
Paul Westerberg - Right To Arm Bears (to z "Sezonu na misia", jest genialne to auta)
The Summer Obsession - Disappear
The Real McKenzies - Chip
Ryan Adams - Magick (genialne, genialne)
Slade - Radio Wall of sound
Slade - Run runaway
Thin Lizzy - Get out of here
Status Quo - Whatever You Want <3
Status Quo - Burning Bridges
Status Quo - Rocking All Over The World (w ogóle całe Status Quo jest świetne do auta )
Sugarcult - Memory <33
The Donots - We Got The Noise
Fenix TX - Song For Everyone
American Hi-Fi - The Geeks Get The Girls
An Angle - Oh! Oh! Oh! Trouble!
Anberlin - Haight St. <3348328
Backyard Babies - A Song For The Outcast
Deathray - Wild As I Wanna Be (też "Sezon na misia" i też boski kawałek do auta)
Dropkick Murphys - Sunshine Highway (to by się nadawało na jeżdżenie po Arizonie xd)
Plain White T's - Friends Don't Let Friends Dial Drunk
Ramones - The KKK Took My Baby Away
Ramones - Come On Now
Sister Hazel - Change Your Mind
Sister Hazel - Life Got In The Way
Lonestar - What About Now
SR-71 - 1985 (a, wersja Bowling For Soup też wymiata xd)
Talking Heads - Wild Wild Life ("Sezon na misia" po raz trzeci )
Zebrahead - Playmate Of The Year
Roxette - The Big L.
Queen - I Want To Break Free
Taaa, Czaplinek przejrzał kartę SD z auta i oto, co mu wyszło.
Publication:New York Sun; Date:Dec 6, 2007; Section:Editorial & Opinion; Page Number:9
Stop the Black KKK
JOHN MCWHORTER
Jason Whitlock has written this year’s best column on race.
He’s a black sports columnist at FOXSports.com, and he is disgusted with much of the black punditocracy’s response to the murder of Redskins football player Sean Taylor. Some are claiming that 2 was a target because he was an athlete. Others insist that it is wrong and even racist to bring up that Taylor had spent a lot of time on the wrong side of the law.
But the tacit assumption would appear to be that the staggeringly high murder rate among young black men these days is just the way it is. Mr. Whitlock calls these murders the Black KKK.
Oh sure, if it’s brought up people shake their heads. And certainly there are “Stop the Violence” forums and such.
But very few are as truly, lastingly aroused by issues such as these, which involve the black community looking inward, as they are by nooses hung from a tree, someone saying a bad word, or the latest study showing that racism still persists in one way or another in “institutional” guise. No one takes to the streets about the Black KKK, and academics find it much less interesting than, say, a study that some employers reject job applications with black-sounding names.
Friedrich von Hayek once noted, “It seems to be almost a law of human nature that it is easier for people to agree on a negative program — on the hatred of an enemy, on the envy of those better off —than on any positive task.” That’s Black America’s problem right now.
Mr. Whitlock seeks “the outrage and courage it took in the 1950s and 1960s to stop the white KKK from hanging black men from trees.” Instead, “we take great joy in prescribing medicine to cure the hate in other people’s hearts. Meanwhile,
our self-hatred, on full display for the world to see, remains untreated, undiagnosed and unrepentant.”
The question Mr. Whitlock leaves, however, is precisely what we are to do about our internal cultural problems. Everybody knows how to protest. And sometimes a protest is necessary. But obviously, protest alone isn’t working. How do you actually build something?
For one thing, get a copy of Bill Cosby and Alvin Poussaint’s new book, “Come On People” and read it cover to cover, because it is all about precisely what needs to be done and how to do it. If Mr. Whitlock has written the best race column of the year, Messrs. Cosby and Pousssaint have written the best book.
All black people should read it. The audiobook should be played in barbershops. Maybe somebody needs to set it to some “phat” beats so people can dance to it.
Read of how Joyce Riley’s 24th Street Non-Violent Marchers actually got the thugs out of her Kansas City neighborhood. Read about how to get a degree and a job even if you’re not on your way to college — step by step. And to top it all off, “Come On People” is a great read.
No, Tavis Smiley’s book “The Covenant with Black America” from last year was not the same thing. Reading it you’d barely know the Black KKK existed, and the theme is reform of the system, when the solutions that help people almost always involve working within it. Or, instead of waiting for that great day when all inner city kids are taught by awesome teachers in glimmering buildings, focus on something that can happen in the real world. Become active on your local school board, and simply insist that students are taught to read with phonics-based programs. It’s how poor kids learn to read, period. So much starts from there.
Another one: If you’re going to vote for a Democratic presidential candidate, vote for the one most interested in things that will help black people to help themselves.
Upon which, note that this person is not Hillary Clinton. The fact that it is even possible that the black electorate will elevate Mrs. Clinton over Barack Obama because of her mere familiarity, or residual affection for her “black president” husband, is frankly a little embarrassing.
Those who say they don’t “know” Mr. Obama need to get to know him, now. And if Mr. Obama is “not black enough,” I would think that his commitment to reconnecting ex-con dads with their kids, not to mention his days doing community work, would qualify him as, at least, brown.
Mr. Whitlock’s point about self-hatred is also key. Currently, in large swathes of the black community, an able-bodied young man who doesn’t hold down a 40-hour-a-week job is considered normal even when he has kids. We must get to the point that men like that are considered as socially unacceptable as they are in a Scarsdale living room — as they were even in black slums until the 1970s.
I vary from day to day as to how likely I see it that one day black America will be as committed to helping itself as, say, Israel’s first residents were to reviving Hebrew. There is no telling how far we could go if only most of us found reading instruction programs as interesting as nooses.
Mr. McWhorter is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute.
http://daily.nysun.com/Repository/ml.asp?Ref=TllTLzIwMDcvMTIvMDYjQXIwMDkwMg==&Mode=HTML&Locale=english-skin-custom