thx u guys as for fluids i breast feed thats good enough right
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Edited by
cutiecami
on
Wed 01/07/09 07:57 PM
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should i do something for her fever i already gave Tylenol any home remedy's
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my 8mo old daughter is sick for the first time ever shes teething and has a fever of 100.2 and has has some diarrhea along with a runny nose i cant get in touch with her doctor and im not sure what to do i gave her some Tylenol and she seems happy and has been playing like normal anybody know what to do
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Topic:
i love this song
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That's no way to live
All tangled up like balls of string. And we woke at dawn And watched the sun glide over the hill. I just said the first Three words that popped into my head. Let me off the bus; i'm tired and soar and should probably change clothes. And the circuits are blown, My woman is cold, Our children are stoned and worthless. All waiting for you to tell them the truth. the truth is a line, that you'll never use. And her dignity Shown so bright like a light on a hill. And she burned for me, And no other man came near the flame. And back country songs the defeaning twang of the rich-white-kid blues You can own the stage, But the lights and glares will not make you real. She whispers to me, i was meant to be free. This life that we've built is deadly. She crawls from my bed, with a comb cross her head. She crawls to the train and drives herself home |
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Topic:
strange phobias
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okay so im afraid of everything but my biggest fear its almost a phobia is escalators i cant get on one without having a panic attack any body else have any strange phobias
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Topic:
Rate Me Please!!!
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ur beautiful
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his parents are putting him to bed kissing him goodnight going look at him hes so sweet ud have never guessed he just strangled a pitbulltomorrow he will punch a shark in the troat
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any animal that was once in a Disney movie
Bambi's mom waaaaaaaaaaaahhhhhhhhhhhh |
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January 5th, Bakersfield, CA - A 9-year-old Bakersfield boy is getting a lot of attention after saving a girl from a vicious pit bull.
Drew Heredia and his female friend were walking the girl's small dog when the pit bull attacked it. The girl tried to intervene but then the pit bull turned the attack on her. Heredia didn't run away but instead he jumped on the pit bull and applied a choke hold that he learned at a local Brazilian jiu-jitsu studio. Heredia held the dog in the chokehold until an animal control officer arrived. The girl was taken to the hospital with numerous puncture wounds. She and her dog are expected to recovER this is awesome any one else have a story about an awesome kid |
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it pisses me off when ppl say this kid deserves it for being in the street first of all he was on a cul da sac so he was not in the street i think it was a hate crime what do u think pleas no attaccks on me i think u r 3 ggradde butt i sad 4 kid what???? |
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Topic:
crazy culture
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yeah well thats life and it aint fair so deal with it. sux but they all grow up and join the parade... then do you still feel sorry for them? NO you don't because now they are the enemies.. think about that one. besides, what do you care at all? what are you gonna do about it? give your sympathy? well that doesn't make a change now does it?? of course not! unless your doing something about it ya'll can shut up. i have no enemies, and no quarrel with people, just their leaders, religious and otherwise, and i do, very much do something about it when i travel abroad. dark alleys are good for that. thats hot |
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Topic:
wich is worse
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how about you slap yourself with a salami for askin these hypothetical questions. how about u go and find something better to do than stalk my treads if u don't like them don't read them that simple |
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Topic:
man catches wife in brothel
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WARSAW (Reuters) - A Polish man got the shock of his life when he visited a brothel and spotted his wife among the establishment's employees.
Polish tabloid Super Express said the woman had been making some extra money on the side while telling her husband she worked at a store in a nearby town. "I was dumfounded. I thought I was dreaming," the husband told the newspaper on Wednesday. The couple, married for 14 years, are now divorcing, the newspaper reported. (Writing by Chris Borowski, Editing by Matthew Jones) so hes getting a divorce but he was in the brothel as well so they are both wrong *****es be crazy |
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Topic:
crazy culture
Edited by
cutiecami
on
Wed 01/07/09 03:03 PM
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yeah well thats life and it aint fair so deal with it. sux but they all grow up and join the parade... then do you still feel sorry for them? NO you don't because now they are the enemies.. think about that one. besides, what do you care at all? what are you gonna do about it? give your sympathy? well that doesn't make a change now does it?? of course not! unless your doing something about it ya'll can shut up. they aren't my enemies and i DO feel sry for them and btw we aren't bothering u u don't like the tread don't post |
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thanks for posting this, it's a hidious practice. i don't understand why they don't want a woman to feel pleasure. i understand the power thing for men,(very wicked) but a woman just waiting there laying down, for you to continue to get off.....what could that possibly gain religiously or practically? it needs to be done do men too, then that race will discontinue(wicked smile) and if those men can burn in their "heaven"(smiles with huge pointed, dripping teeth) i would like to see them suffer the same fate exponentially. in many parts of africa, this practice is becoming most common. what the hell?? it was women who did it you vicious left wingin hillary womans activist!! is that why your on here?? HAAAH actually its started by men who run the govt and the religion that cause the brain whashing for these women to do it so there all in all *****es be crazy |
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Topic:
wich is worse
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okay so would u rather have a cheese grater on the bottoms of Ur feet or have tooth picks put under us toenails and have to kick a wall
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Topic:
crazy culture
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okay so i want to know who starts these retard customs like female circumcision, breast ironing, braces, binding children feet to make them stay small within cultures we should find these ppl and beat them
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Sheelan Anwar Omer, a shy 7-year-old Kurdish girl, bounded into her neighbor's house with an ear-to-ear smile, looking for the party her mother had promised.
There was no celebration. Instead, a local woman quickly locked a rusty red door behind Sheelan, who looked bewildered when her mother ordered the girl to remove her underpants. Sheelan began to whimper, then tremble, while the women pushed apart her legs and a midwife raised a stainless-steel razor blade in the air. "I do this in the name of Allah!" she intoned. As the midwife sliced off part of Sheelan's genitals, the girl let out a high-pitched wail heard throughout the neighborhood. As she carried the sobbing child back home, Sheelan's mother smiled with pride. "This is the practice of the Kurdish people for as long as anyone can remember," said the mother, Aisha Hameed, 30, a housewife in this ethnically mixed town about 100 miles north of Baghdad. "We don't know why we do it, but we will never stop because Islam and our elders require it." Kurdistan is the only known part of Iraq --and one of the few places in the world--where female circumcision is widespread. More than 60 percent of women in Kurdish areas of northern Iraq have been circumcised, according to a study conducted this year. In at least one Kurdish territory, 95 percent of women have undergone the practice, which human rights groups call female genital mutilation. The practice, and the Kurdish parliament's refusal to outlaw it, highlight the plight of women in a region with a reputation for having a more progressive society than the rest of Iraq. Advocates for women point to the increasing frequency of honor killings against women and female self-immolations in Kurdistan this year as further evidence that women in the area still face significant obstacles, despite efforts to raise public awareness of circumcision and violence against women. "When the Kurdish people were fighting for our independence, women participated as full members in the underground resistance," said Pakshan Zangana, who heads the women's committee in the Kurdish parliament. "But now that we have won our freedom, the position of women has been pushed backwards and crimes against us are minimized." Zangana has been lobbying for a law in Kurdistan, a semiautonomous region with its own government, that would impose jail terms of up to 10 years on those who carry out or facilitate female circumcision. But the legislation has been stalled in parliament for nearly a year, because of what women's advocates believe is reluctance by senior Kurdish leaders to draw international public attention to the little-noticed tradition. The Kurdish region's minister of human rights, Yousif Mohammad Aziz, said he didn't think the issue required action by parliament. "Not every small problem in the community has to have a law dealing with it," he said. The practice of female circumcision is extremely rare in the Arab parts of Iraq, according to women's groups. They say it is not clear why the practice -- common in some parts of Africa and the Middle East -- became popular with Iraqi Kurds but not Iraqi Arabs. Supporters of female circumcision said the practice, which has been a ritual in their culture for countless generations, is rooted in sayings they attribute to the prophet Muhammad, though the accuracy of those sayings is disputed by other Muslim scholars. The circumcision is performed by women on women, and men are usually not involved in the procedure. In the case of Sheelan, her mother informed her father that she was going to have the circumcision performed, but otherwise, he played no role. Kurds who support circumcising girls say the practice has two goals: It controls a woman's sexual desires, and it makes her spiritually clean so that others can eat the meals she prepares. "I would not eat food from the hands of someone who did not have the procedure," said Hurmet Kitab, a housewife who said she was 91 years old. Kitab, who lives in the village of Kalar in Kurdistan's eastern Germian area, where female circumcision is prevalent, has had the procedure done on herself and all her daughters. When asked if she would have her 10-month-old granddaughter Saya circumcised, Kitab said "Of course" and explained that the procedure is painless. "They just cut off a little bit," she said, flicking her finger at the top part of a key, which she then dropped on the floor. Women's rights groups in Kurdistan are working eagerly to change the perception that the procedure is harmless and that it is required under Islam. They go to villages in rural areas where the practice is most ingrained and tell women and religious leaders of the physical and psychological damage the circumcision can cause. Health experts say the procedure can result in adverse medical consequences for women, including infections, chronic pain and increased risks during childbirth. Ghamjeen Shaker, a 13-year-old from the Kurdish capital of Irbil, said she is still traumatized from the day she was circumcised. She sits with her legs clenched together and her hands clasped tightly on her lap, as if protecting herself from another operation. Indeed, Shaker says she sometimes dreams that the midwife who circumcised her is coming back to perform the procedure again. She was 5 when her mother sent her out to buy parsley and then locked her in the front yard of their home with six other girls. "I knew something bad was going to happen, but I didn't know exactly where they were going to cut," she recalled. "My family just kept saying, don't worry, this is a social custom we have been doing forever." "They pinned me to the ground, and I just cried and cried," said Shaker, who spoke barely above a whisper. "I was just so astonished. But now I realize that they want to prevent women from living their lives normally." Her mother, Shukria Ismaeel Jarjees, a 38-year-old housewife, said she was forced by her relatives and elderly women in the community to have her daughter circumcised. "I made a huge mistake, and now my daughter is always complaining of pain in her pelvis," Jarjees said. Her eyes began to fill with tears. "I now advise my daughters to never circumcise their children." Shaker hopes to become a social worker focusing on women's issues, in particular other girls traumatized by female circumcision. "I want to make sure the world understands they cannot silence girls like this," she said. Susan Faqi Rasheed, president of the Irbil branch of the Kurdistan Women's Union, said that even in the cosmopolitan capital, as many as a third of young girls are circumcised. "When the Kurds hold on to something, they hold on to it strongly," she said. "So now they hold to Islam more than the Arabs." One of the religious leaders who have been less vocal in demanding female circumcisions is Hama Ameen Abdul Kader Hussein, preacher at the Grand Mosque of Kalar and head of the clergymen's union in Germian. Previously, he preached that female circumcision was required. Now he says it is optional, which Hussein believes has caused the area's rate of female circumcision to drop from 100 percent to about 50 percent "If there is any harm in this exercise," he said, "we should not do it." Despite the outreach efforts, a study of women in more than 300 Kurdish villages by WADI, a German nongovernmental group that advocates against female circumcision, found that 62 percent underwent the procedure. In Tuz Khurmatu, the most famous practitioner of female circumcision is Maharoub Juwad Nawchas, a 40-year-old midwife with traditional Kurdish tattoos covering her chin. She learned from her mother, who used to perform the procedure for free, though Nawchas now charges 4,000 Iraqi dinars, or just under $3.50, because her husband is disabled and can't work. She has circumcised about 30 girls a year for the past two decades. On the day she circumcised Sheelan, the midwife began the ritual by laying down an empty white potato sack to serve as her working area. AK-47 assault rifles hung from the wall of the dingy concrete house, and watermelons rested below. When Sheelan entered the room, her mother, Nawchas and a local woman placed the girl on a tiny wooden stool the size of a brick. The midwife applied yellow antiseptic to her pelvic area and injected her with lignocaine, an anesthetic. Little children peeked through the window to see what the noise was about. "It's all right, it's all right," Sheelan's mother whispered, as the girl screamed so loudly her face turned red. She tried to bunch up her skirt over her pelvis and shield the area with her hand, but the women jerked her arms back. Then Nawchas uttered the prayer, made a swift cut, and immediately moved the girl over a pile of ashes to control the bleeding. The entire ritual took less then 10 minutes. Back home, Sheelan lay on the floor, unable to move or talk much. She clutched a bag filled with orange soda and candy and barely said anything except that she was in pain. But she became more animated when asked whether it was worth it to have the operation so her friends and neighbors would be comfortable eating food she prepared. "I would do anything not to have this pain, even if meant they would not eat from my hands," she rasped slowly. "I just wish that I could be the way I was before the procedure," she said. |
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PORT ST. LUCIE — A Port St. Lucie man was arrested and charged with neglect of an elderly person after his 90-year-old mother was found emaciated and in urine-soaked clothes, an arrest affidavit released Sunday said.
Robert M. Rozenti, 68, of the 2000 block of Southeast Franciscan Street, was the sole provider for his mother and told police that he was appointed his mother’s power of attorney in 2006, the report said. Early Saturday, the victim, Anna Chuboff was transported to Columbia Hospital after falling at the residence. Police were called to the hospital after the paramedics found her “unwashed, wearing clothing soaked in urine, severely underweight and emaciated,” the report said. Police also noted that the shoes the victim had been wearing had not been removed for a long period of time and had “grown into her feet,” the report said. Her toenails had taken the shape of her shoes, police said in the report. Chuboff told investigators that her son was “abusive to her verbally” but never hit her, the report said. She told police that she had not received medical attention for some time despite being diagnosed with diabetes and high blood pressure, the report states. At the time of questioning, she could not remember if she ate that day. Chuboff told police that she could not remember the last time she bathed and she routinely soils her clothing, the report said. Investigators said that Chuboff was extremely frail and her shoes were soiled with what appeared to be fecal matter. Part of her slippers were embedded in her skin and her rib bones appeared to be protruding, the report said. When questioned by police, Rozenti said that he did not have a good relationship with his mother as he was her “illegitimate son,” the affidavit said. He stated that he is aware that his mother needs 24-hour care, but does not provide that for her. Rozenti then took police to his home that he shared with his mother. Investigators said the home had an odor of urine and feces. “There was what appeared to be fecal stains on the carpet throughout the home, on the walls and light switches,” the report said. According to the report, Chuboff’s room had limited clothing and no bedding on the mattress. Police found tomatoes, one package of sandwich meat, oatmeal and a few cans of soup in the kitchen, the report said. After the investigation, Rozenti was arrested for neglect of an elderly person and transported to the St. Lucie Jail. After treatment at the hospital, Chuboff is to be released to social services, the affidavit states. your own mother wtf |
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"We don't know what happened to Adam Herrman past '99, when he was last seen," Butler County Sheriff Craig Murphy said at a news conference in El Dorado.
"Is he alive, is he dead? That one I can't answer because we don't know," he added. Adam was 11 or 12 when he was last seen, Murphy said. At the time, he was living in a mobile home park in Towanda, a small town in southern Kansas, with his adoptive parents, Doug and Valerie Herrman. The couple did not report him missing, Murphy said. A few weeks ago, a person notified Sedgwick County Exploited and Missing Children's Unit of a "concern" regarding Adam, Murphy said. The agency did not immediately return CNN's phone call seeking additional information. Wichita attorney Warner Eisenbise, who is representing Adam's adoptive parents, said the couple "really rue the fact that they didn't" report the boy missing. "They feel very guilty" about not doing that, he said in a telephone interview. The couple told him the boy had run away frequently, he said, and they believed him to be either with his biological parents or homeless. Although the Herrmans did not report him missing, "they were very worried about him," he said. Authorities have searched the Pine Ridge Mobile Home Park, where the family had lived, and discovered an "answer" to one of their questions, Murphy said, without explaining. "We did find one of the answers we were looking for, but I am holding that one very tightly," he said. Eisenbise said authorities also executed a search warrant on December 15 at the Herrmans' home in Derby, a town just outside of Wichita. They took the couple's computer, he said. Murphy said the couple is cooperating and had not been charged with anything. Citing a relative, the Wichita Eagle reported the Herrmans had taken Adam into foster care and later adopted him. Michelle Ponce of the Kansas Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services, which oversees adoption and foster care, said she could not release any details regard Adam's case, and could confirm only that he had been in foster care at some point, but was no longer in foster care in 1999. Adam had been placed in the Herrmans' care when he was about 2, Murphy said in a phone interview. He had been named Irvin Groeninger III when he was born on June 8, 1987, Murphy said, and it was not clear when his name was changed. His biological parents relinquished their rights as parents about two decades ago, and Adam and his siblings were put in different foster homes, CNN affiliate KWCH reported. "I thought what I was doing for them was in the best interest of the children and evidently it wasn't," Irvin Groeninger told KWCH. "If he was still in my custody this would have never happened." Adam's sister, Tiffany Broadfoot, 22, said she last saw her brother about 14 years ago at a birthday party. A year or two later, he sent her a Christmas card, she said. "And that was the end of my contact with him," she told KWCH. "He had the cutest little round face, little bitty freckles right up here on the tip of his cheek," she remembered. "I'm just awestruck as how something like that could actually happen, and how he could be missing as long as he's been and nobody say anything," she said. Murphy said Adam's name appears on a legal document later than 1999. "We know that he was listed in a legal action as if he was still living at home, and I'm not certain of the date, but it was beyond 1999," he told *****es be crazy |
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