On-line Job Hunting
Posted by Michelle Moquin on November 9th, 2010
Good morning!
With the unemployment rate so high, and so many people looking for jobs, I thought this was a good one from Scambusters to post:
Posting your resume on an Internet employment search site is an everyday part of online job hunting.
But the information you give about yourself can be used by crooks as well as potential employers.
Securing Your Resume For Online Job Hunting
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These days, when most people change employment every few years, online job hunting is very much part of the search process.
And to give themselves the best chance of success, many job-seekers post their resume on one or more of the scores of Internet job search sites.
This makes sense if you believe that the wider you cast the net, the more likely you are to land a good catch, but promoting yourself online does pose a risk of identity theft, spahamming (misspelled intentionally) and other scams, as we’ve reported in previous issues.
http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=8JUKO&m=1bfMyfUBkWtWfo&b=UAZNwrmWTObihkXrXo7yAg
http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=8JUKO&m=1bfMyfUBkWtWfo&b=JwUhPTY414gwV9qPziZfmg
But you can take steps to reduce that risk, while still keeping your chances high of being “discovered” by a potential new employer.
In this issue, we focus specifically on resume security. A good starting point for guidance is the US Office of Personnel Management
(http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=8JUKO&m=1bfMyfUBkWtWfo&b=n0nyyLha9Mfy1PaNJEjTDg), which looks after recruitment for the Federal Government.
You can post your resume there for free, but even here the site warns users to be “mindful about the type of information you include on your resume,” advising against detailing personal information like your National Identification and driver’s license numbers, financial account information, passwords and birth dates.
But you also get a number of extra security options, which likely you also will see increasingly on other, non-Government job search sites.
Resume privacy options
The most “open” option for online job hunting is the public resume, which allows all potential employers to see all the details you posted including contact information. And it’s the one we don’t recommend.
By contrast, a confidential resume does not disclose your personal details, like contact information, your current employer or available references. Contact with you comes indirectly, via the online job hunting site.
Finally, using a private resume option means it cannot be seen at all by potential employers until you contact them, having spotted a job that interests you, and provide a link.
Ideally, this document should be protected by a password, which you change frequently.
Other job search sites may also allow additional privacy options.
One feature many online job-hunting sites have in common is a claim that your resume cannot be seen by other job-seekers, only by employers.
The validity of that claim, however, rests on how effective a particular search site is at confirming the authenticity of those who say they’re employers, so you shouldn’t let that influence how much information you give away.
The non-profit World Privacy Forum (WPF)
(http://clicks.aweber.com/y/ct/?l=8JUKO&m=1bfMyfUBkWtWfo&b=zkVZfZiGVPjL_CeCZUwLOA), for example, suggests that law firms and private eyes use online job hunting sites to track down people they wish to subpoena.
No matter where you post, your resume will attract a number of online job scams.
These might include bogus jobs, where the scammer wants your details for identity theft or to charge a fee for a supposed security check.
Other search sites will also contact you trying to get you to post with them, or you’ll hear from dubious agents offering to find you a job for a finder’s fee.
At this stage, you should certainly never respond by disclosing any confidential information until you have thoroughly checked out a supposed employer.
Be especially wary of anything that involves a money request. Legitimate employers simply don’t do this.
***************
ZL: I have a very early morning. I really don’t have a response, but thanks for taking the time and giving me your two. I’ll catch up with you tomorrow.
Lastly, greed over a great story is surfacing from my “loyal”(?) readers. With all this back and forth about who owns what, that appears on my blog, let me reiterate that all material posted on my blog becomes the sole property of my blog. If you want to reserve any proprietary rights don’t post it to my blog. I will prominently display this caveat on my blog from now on to remind those who may have forgotten this notice.
Gratefully your blog host,
michelle
Aka BABE: We all know what this means by now :)
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November 9th, 2010 at 11:51 am
Michelle
I’m still wondering how Zen Lill can get in 3 times and no one else once. On up. Is Zen Lill real or a composite of you and Doug?
November 9th, 2010 at 12:31 pm
Michelle
Sir
We have traveled as far as 14 light years away. We visited one galaxy for about 19 earth hours while we explored a form of worm hole that we eventually used to hop to another galaxy 12 light years away.
There we popped out about half a trillion miles away from the center of that galaxy. We basically tossed a coin to decide which way to head. Or I should say Tray did. She was the acting Hum leader for the excursion.
She chose East of a Star we named Chelle. So as per SOP we marked it and set off on what turned out to be a 14 month expedition.
We, as per SOP, set up retreat bases on three different uninhabited planets. Then we used Talmit to locate the nearest inhabited planet and headed for it.
On the way we encountered a metal eating spore colony that was hidden and brought towards us by an asteroid storm. They were disgusting. Small(about the size of the Indian elephant) but extremely efficient at destroying surface areas of our cloaking devices.
So we spent 4 days shooting their snouts off and 9 removing their carcasses from the outer rims and recesses of our vessel. We lost two girlz in the skirmish. One was hit by an asteroid emerging from deck port 7, the other was swept into wrbe channel by the gravitational pull of the asteroid storm.
This happened because our major suits could not be worn because they have some metal in them.
Sir
Leang
November 9th, 2010 at 1:21 pm
Safe-Driving Strategies for Small-Car Owners
William Van Tassel, PhD
American Automobile Association
Small cars can be major money savers, trimming gas bills by 50% or more compared with full-size sedans and SUVs. However, small cars also tend to be riskier than larger vehicles, with fatality rates more than twice as high as those of gas guzzlers. To make small-car driving as safe as possible…
Select the safest small car. When buying a car, look for…
Side-impact air bags. These greatly improve your odds of survival if your small car is hit on the side.
Electronic stability control. This computerized safety system detects when your vehicle is skidding and helps you get the vehicle under control quickly.
High scores in crash tests. Crash-test ratings from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) are available at http://www.safercar.gov.
Ratings from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) can be found at http://www.iihs.org/ratings.
Bright color. Select a brightly colored car — red and yellow are particularly visible. Avoid black, silver and gray.
Turn on your headlights during the day to increase visibility. If your car doesn’t have daytime running lights (low-beam headlights that turn on when the car does), put on the headlights.
Wait a bit before entering intersections when the light turns green. A driver in a larger vehicle could be barreling through the other way trying to beat the red light.
Avoid driving in packs with larger vehicles. When possible, drop back or speed up slightly to create a bubble of open space around you.
If a vehicle is tailgating you, look for an opportunity to pull aside and let it pass.
Think ahead. Consider in advance what you would do if a vehicle fails to notice you and pulls into your path.
Preselect an “emergency escape,” an open area into which you could safely maneuver.
Wide shoulders usually make the best emergency escapes, so it’s usually safest to drive in a lane adjacent to a shoulder.
Learn your car’s capabilities. Your small car probably can stop and swerve more quickly than larger vehicles.
That maneuverability can help you stay out of collisions if you know what your car is capable of before an emergency occurs. Take your small car to an empty parking lot, and practice hard stops and sharp swerves.
Personal interviewed William Van Tassel, PhD, manager of driver training operations at AAA’s national office in Heathrow, Florida. http://www.aaa.com. He is a member of the Transportation Research Board’s Committee on Operative Regulation and Education and a sports car racer with the Sports Car Club of America.
November 9th, 2010 at 1:28 pm
Michelle:
When I read stories of a Girlz. I so wish to be one. I would punish men who do this.
——————
Kabul, Afghanistan (CNN) — Armed men burned down a girls’ primary school in eastern Afghanistan Monday night, an act that also destroyed hundreds of Qurans, a government official said Tuesday.
Ministry of Education spokesman Asif Nang tells CNN that the Sangar girls’ primary school, located in the Alengar district of Laghman province, was destroyed.
About 850 copies of the Quran — the Muslim holy book — which were stored in the school’s library were torched as well.
There were no deaths or injuries, but the groundskeeper was tied up and then freed later by responders.
“This is not the first time,” Nang said. “In the past, armed men have burned schools in Logar and Helmand provinces, burning holy books of Quran in these schools as well.”
Nangyalai Seddiqi, the district governor, told CNN that the school was built by an American provincial reconstruction team.
Taliban militants have attacked girls’ schools in the past, but Seddiqui said that the fire was apparently set by “addicts and thieves” in a failed robbery attempt.
The provincial governor’s spokesman, Gul Rahman Hamdard, confirmed the burning of the school and the Qurans. He told CNN an investigation is ongoing.
Women were oppressed during the Taliban’s rule, from 1996-2001, and many Afghan girls were not allowed to attend school during that time.
Girls’ schools began reopening after the Islamist regime was toppled. The United Nations children’s agency, UNICEF, estimates this year that 2 million Afghan girls are attending school.
However, the hostility hasn’t ended. Earlier this year, there was a rash of poisonings involving schoolgirls.
As the insurgency has strengthened and spread from Taliban strongholds in the southern provinces of Kandahar and Helmand, female educational facilities, students and teachers have come under
vicious attack.
A report compiled last year by the humanitarian agency CARE documented 670 education-related attacks in 2008, including murder and arson.
November 9th, 2010 at 1:30 pm
Hafa adai
It’s official Calvo is the new governor of Guam.
=======================
Posted: Tuesday, November 9th, 2010 5:53 AM HST
Guam Election Commission certifies Calvo victory
By Associated Press
HAGATNA, Guam (AP) — Republican Sen. Eddie Calvo has named his transition team after the Guam Election Commission certified his victory in the U.S. territory’s gubernatorial election.
The Pacific Daily News reports Calvo said Monday that he wasn’t worried about a possible lawsuit his Democratic opponent, former Gov. Carl Gutierrez, might file to challenge the certification.
Gutierrez hasn’t conceded, and his campaign said Saturday that it planned to file a lawsuit to decertify the final results.
Following a recount from last Tuesday’s general election, the commission said Saturday that Calvo garnered 20,066 votes to Gutierrez’s 19,579.
Term limits prevented Republican Gov. Felix Camacho from seeking re-election.
=====================
Peter
November 9th, 2010 at 1:50 pm
Zen Lill
It is interesting that you use the same canard the racists use. That other people are racist against white people.
That may be true, but the reality is so what?
Who cares what another’s opinion is? That is their right to feel as they do. OTW or white. What we are talking about is the ability to impute a racism into harmful action towards the hated group.
Perhaps I should make it simpler for you and give you an example.
If the jews were racists against white germans so what. It would only be an opinion.
They were in no physical or political position to harm white germans.
On the other hand that same attitude if left unchecked by white germans towards jews, — you know the result.
Flash( if I’m not moving too fast for you) towards America. OTWs can hold any racist opinion towards white Americans and it is only an opinion. It poses no threat to white Americans physically or politically on a city, state or national level.
But this same attitude left unchecked can and does result in shit like this happening to OTWS.
===============================
Dear Virdell,
On Friday, Los Angeles judge Robert Perry announced the sentence for Johannes Mehserle, the Bay Area Rapid Transit police officer who killed Oscar Grant on a subway platform in January 2009.
Mehserle will serve the minimum time possible for his involuntary manslaughter conviction — two years, with credit for the time he’s already spent in jail. He’ll be eligible for release in about seven months.
1
It’s a tragic outcome. The judge had the discretion to choose from between 2 and 14 years. He chose the minimum, despite dubious testimony offered in defense of Mehserle even in the final sentencing hearings, specifically the idea that he thought Grant was going for his gun.
This seems unthinkable given the video showing Grant immobilized on the platform, face-down, with another officer’s knee on his back.
Judge Perry also reversed the jury’s decision to attach a gun enhancement (which accounted for 10 of the 14 years possible).
2
Back in July, when the jury delivered the verdict, many of us saw it as a step toward justice given the possibility that Mehserle could have been acquitted.
Others, including several legal experts and scholars, were not satisfied, and believed that Mehserle should have been found guilty of second-degree murder — the maximum charge allowed after the judge took the first-degree murder option off the table.
However you felt about the verdict this summer, this latest development brings us back to our core frustrations with the criminal justice system.
An unarmed Black man was shot in the back, while laying face down and posing a threat to no one. And an officer chose to use force that had potentially lethal consequences, without justification.
Now that officer will likely walk free in under a year, while a young father is unnecessarily dead.
Oscar Grant’s death remains a tragic reminder that Black people across the United States suffer disproportionately from the results of racial profiling and an overzealous use of force on the part of police officers, who rarely face any degree of accountability for officer-involved shootings.
Mehserle’s sentence sends a very dangerous message to other police officers: that they can continue expecting to face very little accountability when they kill unarmed people who pose no threat to them — even when everything is caught on videotape and there is a massive public outcry for justice.
We want to thank you for the action you took to push for justice for Oscar Grant, and we want to point out the difference that the ColorOfChange community made.
You and tens of thousands of others took actions that help put a media spotlight on the activities of the district attorney and the case — making phone calls, writing letters and attending rallies.
ColorOfChange members in the Bay Area confronted the Alameda County District Attorney with stacks of more than 20,000 petitions demanding that he explain why he hadn’t arrested Tony Pirone, another officer on the scene who punched Grant in the face in the moments before Grant was killed.
The action received media coverage that drew attention to the actions of Pirone and other officers on the scene that night, and officer Pirone was ultimately dismissed from the BART police force.
ColorOfChange members were an important part of a larger movement involving many different organizations that organized in many different ways to demand justice for Oscar Grant, and to help Oakland respond to this tragic situation in positive, productive ways.
Clearly, our efforts weren’t enough to force a just outcome out of a broken system.
It’s a reflection of the fact that the criminal justice system is deeply flawed when it comes to holding police accountable — it remains too easy for a police officer to take human life without cause, and with impunity, especially when the victim is Black.
We extend our deepest sympathy to Oscar Grant’s family, and we know that we have our work cut out for us moving forward.
Thanks and Peace,
– James, Gabriel, William, Dani, Matt, Natasha and the rest of the ColorOfChange.org team
November 9th, 2010
==================
You, being white, can afford to be magnanimous or cavalier towards racists attitudes, opinions, and behaviors by fellow white Americans because it poses no actual or potential threat to you or yours.
On the other hand, if you were an OTW faced with a judicial system willing to bend over backwards to excuse the murder of an OTW by a white man, then even the beginnings of racist’s talk by white America is very, very scary.
I say this not because I think you belong to that one third of America that are rabid racists.
But I do believe you belong to that one third that because of ignorance to understanding the difference between a threat made by a man with a loaded real gun and a man with a toy gun can’t see the difference in racism by a group with the power to act upon it and a group without that power.
Yes, I, as a black American who has suffered numerous slights and indignities at the hands of white bigots and racists, could hate the white bastards.
But I can not enact laws that would restrict any of their rights. If I could I would have made it a law to stop every white boy in a pick up truck with a gun rack when Mcvay bombed the Federal building.
On the other hand the white racists have the power to restrict the rights of OTWs and do so at every available provocation.
I.E. the profiling of Arab Americans, the profiling of Latino and Mexican Americans, the incarnation in concentration camps of Japanese Americans, and the condoning of murder of OTWs by law enforcement officials ad nausea.
Robert
November 9th, 2010 at 1:55 pm
Spank me why don’t ya!
I can’t believe that I got that one in. I had given up trying.
So free speech does reign here. Unlike the Huff blog where they screen all comments so as not to offend their precious income pool.
Robert
November 9th, 2010 at 1:57 pm
I’m and old white woman who will this time agree with you Robert. There are far too many whites in america that look the other way at some of our racist and bigoted ways because it doesn’t effect us.
November 9th, 2010 at 2:59 pm
Robert
You are WRONG! Zen Lill doesn’t have a racist bone in her body. She is a woman’s woman and she calls them as she sees them.
And she’s darn smart.
Tina
November 9th, 2010 at 3:40 pm
First thing I want to know is who is James Carlson? If you are reading this, what are your credentials?
And Madaline, why him?
November 9th, 2010 at 3:48 pm
Okay James Carlson you explain this.
======================
Mystery Missile Launch Off Cali Coast
November 9, 2010 – 1:08 PM | by: Justin Fishel
WASHINGTON — The U.S. Military is scrambling to find out what was seen in skies over Los Angeles last night after a local CBS news helicopter captured video that appears to show a major missile or rocket launch from the Pacific Ocean just north of Santa Catalina Island.
The video shows an enormous condensation trail following a brightly lit object, similar to images seen during a space launch.
Read more: http://liveshots.blogs.foxnews.com/2010/11/09/mystery-missile-launch-off-cali-coast/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=Feed:+foxnews/KTvS+(FOXNews.com)#ixzz14pAKAo1W
November 9th, 2010 at 3:51 pm
So what up Madaline.
Mystery Missile Launch Off Cali Coast
November 9, 2010 – 1:08 PM | by: Justin Fishel
WASHINGTON — The U.S. Military is scrambling to find out what was seen in skies over Los Angeles last night after a local CBS news helicopter captured video that appears to show a major missile or rocket launch from the Pacific Ocean just north of Santa Catalina Island.
The video shows an enormous condensation trail following a brightly lit object, similar to images seen during a space launch.
Col. Dave Lapan, a Pentagon spokesman, told reporters the video is so far “unexplained” by anyone in the U.S. Military.
The Missile Defense Agency told Fox News it did not launch any test missile last night that could explain the dramatic images. The Navy and the Air Force were also unable to offer an explanation.
“It does not appear that this was a regularly scheduled missile test”, Lapan said. Before a missile test the military sends notifications to mariners, airmen, and air traffic controllers to stay clear of the area, and according to Lapan it doesn’t appear those warnings were sent.
The FAA told Fox News it did not issue any license for a commercial launch. NASA also denied any involvement and said it is checking for any meteorite activity, although it’s highly unlikely that is the source of these images.
John Cornelio, a spokesman for Northern Command and NORAD (North American Aerospace Defense Command) told Fox News Tuesday there is no threat to the homeland. “We are very confident this was not fired from a foreign military,” Cornelio said. “That’s not what we are working with.”
Cornelio also cautioned the use of the term missile, saying that word suggests the launch of a weapon, which can’t be confirmed.
“If it was an attack we would have known it and we would have done something about it,” Cornelio said.
At this point the military is working only with video taken from the KCBS news camera.
It appears from the video, Lapan said, the object was launched from the water and not U.S. soil, although he cant be certain.
If a test missile or an accidental missile was launched in the region it would have either come from Naval Air Station Point Mugu or Vandenberg Air Force Base. At sea it could have come from a U.S. submarine or a surface ship. But so far, it all remains a mystery.
November 9th, 2010 at 3:52 pm
Michelle:
Did you open up the topic of UFOs to announce that you are an alien and you are about to become involved in earth politics?
November 9th, 2010 at 3:55 pm
I want to be a Girlz. This is exciting. I hope we show men what we got.
===========================================
Pentagon can’t explain ‘missile’ off California
By Pauline Jelinek Associated Press
Posted: 11/09/2010 09:55:04 AM PST
Updated: 11/09/2010 11:31:30 AM PST
WASHINGTON — The Pentagon said today it was trying to determine if a missile was launched Monday off the coast of Southern California and, if so, who might have fired it.
Spokesmen for the Navy, Air Force, and other military organizations said they were looking into a video posted on the CBS News website that shows an object shooting across the sky and leaving a large contrail, or vapor trail, over the Pacific Ocean.
The video was shot by a KCBS helicopter, the station said today.
“Nobody within the Department of Defense that we’ve reached out to has been able to explain what this contrail is, where it came from,” Pentagon spokesman Col. Dave Lapan said.
Lapan said that “all indications” are that the Department of Defense was not involved within the mystery object, and that the contrail might have been created by something flown by a private company.
Normally any missile test would require notification so that mariners and pilots could be warned or air space closed, but that may not have been done in this case, Lapan said.
“It does seem implausible, and that’s why at this point the operative term is ‘unexplained’,” he said. “Nobody … within the Department of Defense that we’ve reached out to has been able to explain what this contrail is.”
Missile tests are common off Southern California. Launches are conducted from vessels and platforms on an ocean range west of Point Mugu.
The North American Aerospace Defense Command, or NORAD, issued a statement jointly with the U.S. Northern Command, or NORTHCOM, saying that the contrail was not the result of a foreign military launching a missile. It provided no further details.
“We can confirm that there is no threat to our nation, and from all indications this was not a launch by a foreign military,” the statement said. “We will provide more information as it becomes available.”
NORTHCOM is the U.S. defense command and NORAD is a U.S.-Canadian organization charged with protecting the U.S. from the threat of missiles or hostile aircraft.
——
Associated Press writers Jeff Wilson and John Antczak contributed to this report from Los Angeles.
November 9th, 2010 at 3:59 pm
The US launched a missile to test our defenses when we uncloaked for their detection devices.
I’m sure they will come up with an explanation as to why the missile was launched. The aliens in question left from the Guam area during a black of the entire island a few days ago.
We escorted them safely towards their mother ship.
The oil spill below the ocean floor has cause a major incident with aliens that have existed on earth a million years before man arrived.
Madaline
November 9th, 2010 at 2:09 pm
We have set an explosion for the volcano in Indonesia to be an example of our ability to manipulate the natural phenomena on this planet.
The President has been alerted to leave the area.
Lelang
November 9th, 2010 at 4:48 pm
Hi Robert, not sure I get you (perhaps you’re moving too fast for me) – your opening:
‘Zen Lill
It is interesting that you use the same canard the racists use. That other people are racist against white people.’
I don’t recall saying anything of the kind, so no your not moving too fast for me, you did what several others have done, you took something I said out of context and used it to further your agenda, it’s ok, I don’t atke it personally and I stand in the line of fire simply for being here and stating my take on things in this open forum, where you got that idea I’m really unclear, would you mind cutting and pasting my exact quote that led you to believe I used a canard that racists often do, I’ve been misquoted before so whatever…I would hardly regard myself as someone who is cavalier in attitude and/or ‘magnanimous’ towards otw’s bc I’m white.
I often overhear people speak in a stereotypical manner re: OTW’s – ex. an acquantance who is experiencing very tough times told me she went to get public assistance i.e. food card, ‘I was the only white woman in there and what a classless bunch of people were there…I was ready to walk out bc of their distgusting behavior, pulling up in blingy MBZ’s and yakking on iphones with a baby on each hip…their sense of entitlement was sickening…blah blah blah…’ another blathering ‘if they’re so catholic and religious, why don’t they either make the money to support all those kids who don’t even speak english or go back where they came from’ another blathering ‘the Chinese are the jews of the Orient…’ or my favorite lately when my comuter guy sent it UPS and it required a signature ‘…well you never know if a chollo is scanning a neighborhood like yours just waiting for some expensive item to show up at your door so they can steal it…’ (I gave him my two cents on that)…
…oh yes I could go on and on about the prejudices that pour forth even from the least suspecting mouths but I won’t, I get tired of justifying what I don’t do and someone like you thinking that I’m excusing obnoxious behavior of white people who do indulge in blowing otw’s out of the water by inciting stereotypes. Am I moving too fast for you? I cannot explain why some white people feel superior though they do and will continue to do so. Robert, if I wanted to I could hate like them, I had my run in when I was young and didn’t have a clue why kids who were bussed into my neighborhood hated me without even speaking to me, they just did, did it feel like reverse prejudice, well yes it did. Why? Bc it wasn’t me or any of my white ancestors who owned slaves and yet, bc I’m white I paid that price by being threatened everyday of grammar school, sound fair to you in any way? No, probably not and Iit wasn’t and no, I won’t get into how I leveled that particular playing field but I did and when some of the girls finally ‘got me’ we were buds, through middle school, high school and now we facebook bc I live here in CA – color didn’t matter anymore. I’ve lived that way since…again, if you could point out where you got your idea of me sounding racist I’d like to see the statement so I can say ‘I stand corrected’ or something apologetic : )
Tina, thank you for the back up, sweet of you : )
Luv, Zen Lill
November 9th, 2010 at 5:01 pm
…and we’ve got a change of plans for President Obama and Mischa, you’re an alien? GF, you never told me that : )!!
Impressive stories coming from the girlZ, I want to zip through a wormhole and maybe check in on myself in a parellel universe while I’m at it.
Oh and Robert, just an FYI, one of my fave fantasies involves an African tribal leader with mega-clout who changes life for all young girls by making female circumcision punishable by death to a male (or older female inflictor) and all bc he gets to spend some quality time with me and my intact parts. And yes, global sisters, I would gladly take one for the team if I thought I could make that a reality for you, how very magnanimous of me…not…in my minds’ eye he is one fine specimen amongst mere mortals ; ) hahaha….hey, it’s my fantasy : )he’ll be whoever I want him to be.
Much pluvness, ZL
November 9th, 2010 at 5:12 pm
Oh and Gloria, yes I am a composite of Mischa and Doug, ah – don’t I wish, they are such good looking people and the best part is, they’ve got soul. But no, I’m just me, sorry to disappoint. And there are plenty of days where it makes no matter whether I comment or not, people get in or they don’t.
Last night in LA I lost power for 2 minutes…
- ZL
November 9th, 2010 at 8:45 pm
oh forgot the most important note to Robert, I’m with you, if there could be a law put in place to pull over red necks with a gun rack, I’d be down with that, absolutely, by the way, with all my ranting notwithstanding I do understand your point – my q for you: how could we get the above law enacted bc pulling over every ‘George’ and giving them a work over based on their beliefs wouldn’t eb an issue for me…might even get the dang racists to have a real experience that they would hate, maybe enough to change their ways…(one could only hope) – ZL
November 9th, 2010 at 10:29 pm
Robert, you are so right I just finished watching “On the Record with Greta Van Susteren.”
The Florida elect Attorney General was on making her case for the repeal of the new Health Care law.
She is the epitome of the saying that most white women are as dumb as a box of rocks. She was on the air exclaiming the will of the “Founding Fathers.”
Will someone please tell white women to quit telling people how important the will of the “Founding Fathers” is to women.
The founding fathers didn’t believe that women should own property, be equal to men or even have the right to vote.
The stupid bitch doesn’t know that by exclaiming the virtues and beliefs of the “Founding Fathers” she is saying that she should have her dumb ass at home.
Some one needs to tell dumb ass white women that the founding fathers didn’t give a damn about women’s rights.
Joyce