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  • Is Big Brown worth a $50 mil stud syndication?

    Posted by admin on October 26th, 2009 and filed under syndication | 4 Comments »

    I remember everyone saying Secretariat didn’t turn out to be that good a racing producer, that his daughters actually were the better product in the long run.

    Is this horse that great a stallion prospect? I guess I’m just not that impressed here, am I missing something?

    I’m a little leery.

    He’s inbred 3×3 to Northern Dancer. That’s a little too ‘appalachia’ for me.

    There could be som eundesirable genes lurking somewhere – but he is a fine horse.

    Not an all-time great horse – so I’m a little happy he did not complete the TC sweep.

    His feet are very brittle. Derby winners command high stud fees. I’d take the money and just retire him before he has any more issues.

    There is a theory that if a 3 x 3 inbred horse does ovecome losing ‘hybrid vigor’ and becomes a top runner he may also be a valuable breeding commodity.

    I suppose there are two sides to the coin.

    List of ATMs of Syndicate bank in pune?

    Posted by admin on October 26th, 2009 and filed under bank syndicate | 2 Comments »


    Call toll free from BSNL/MTNL lines and place your query
    1800 425 66 55.

    Also visit this link:
    http://syndicatebank.in/asp/0200bran.asp

    Why does Computer Game Crashes, PLS HELP?

    Posted by admin on October 26th, 2009 and filed under street racing syndicate | 1 Comment »

    Before im Playing street racing syndicate fine. But now every heavy turn or chases it crash back to windows. Other games installed works fine. I didnt change options

    check ur video card you may need to update it from the wesite and ur #
    Direct X update that as well if still same problme you maybe need to buy a better video card. also try a uninstall of the game and reinstall

    Do you believe that there is an evil in America?

    Posted by admin on October 26th, 2009 and filed under sound syndicate | 12 Comments »

    Whenever I see images of George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, Karl Rove, Alberto Gonzales, Condoleezza Rice, Donald Rumsfeld, Paul Wolfowitz, Katherine Harris and other minions of, or apologists for, the corrupt, inept, mendacious and venal Bush dictatorship, I am immediately reminded of this line from John Carpenter’s classic horror movie Halloween: “What is living behind [their] eyes is purely and simply evil.”
    Yet in America there is a great reluctance to use the term “evil” when describing the cabal of thugs, hypocrites and war criminals who stole the White House in 2000 and 2004. Although singer/activist Harry Belafonte courageously proclaimed a few years ago that the Bush dictatorship was “possessed of evil,” it wasn’t until recently that others in positions of prominence began to acknowledge the veracity of Belafonte’s statement. A recent episode of the animated comedy Family Guy, for example, showed cartoon portraits of an inanely grinning Bush shaking hands with Saddam Hussein, Osama bin Laden and, ultimately, the “Super Devil” (a being more evil than Satan).
    Prior to this, most of the statements concerning the inherent evil of the Bush dictatorship came from foreign sources: Russian President Vladimir Putin indirectly suggested that Bush’s foreign policy was analogous to Hitler’s Third Reich; Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez compared Bush to Satan; and the Mayan Indians felt compelled to “spiritually cleanse” a sacred site after Bush visited it earlier this year.
    But even though more Americans feel emboldened to criticize the Bush dictatorship, there is still a reluctance to acknowledge and denounce its evil.
    This reluctance often affects some of the dictatorship’s most outspoken critics: Former American President, and Nobel Laureate, Jimmy Carter recently retreated from his clearly accurate assertion that the Bush dictatorship has been the worst administration in United States history, claiming his words were “careless or misinterpreted.” And syndicated columnist Gwynne Dyer rejected the notion that Bush and/or his minions possessed the evil required to orchestrate the attacks of 9/11, even stressing that Dick Cheney was morally incapable of sanctioning the murders of over three thousand Americans simply to justify the illegal invasion of Iraq.
    I disagree. While the Bush dictatorship is the domicile for many monsters cloaked in human attire, Cheney is arguably the monster most likely to promote mass murder for the sake of war profiteering. His very character endorses this reality. He possesses the attributes of many mass murderers—a sadist who often kills defenseless animals in “caged hunts” (where they have no means of escape), and a coward who, during the Vietnam war, obtained deferment after deferment to avoid facing an adversary capable of shooting back, only to become a vociferous warmonger once the prospect of being drafted into military service no longer confronted him.
    But even if one does not subscribe to the theory that character presages deeds, the Bush dictatorship still cannot be absolved from culpability in the 9/11 attacks. In the legal realm, crimes can be committed through act or omission. It is undisputed that Bush, shortly after his coup of 2000, planned to invade Iraq. It is also undisputed that several warnings about the possibility of airline hijackings, some provided by foreign governments, were forwarded to the Bush dictatorship.
    What most likely occurred was that Bush and his minions were aware of the planned attacks, but underestimated their magnitude, believing any hijacking would be of the “traditional” variety: An American aircraft would be forced to fly to an unplanned destination, followed by a lengthy standoff between the hijackers and the Bush dictatorship. Allowing a hijacking to occur would give Bush the opportunity to blame Iraq, and incite the American media and public into a jingoistic frenzy.
    So the question becomes, “Why are Americans so willing to acknowledge the presence of evil when it comes to foreign governments, but so unwilling to acknowledge the presence of evil within their own government?”
    One explanation may be the “arrogance syndrome.” Americans want to believe they are somehow more “civilized,” and therefore less gullible, than other nations of the world. Unfortunately this belief simply makes them more susceptible to being led into unjust and illegal wars. Also, since many Americans possess short-term memories as selective as the one possessed by Alberto Gonzales (America’s corrupt attorney-general, who recently answered “I cannot recall” over seventy times during his testimony before Congress), they can be duped into supporting such wars time and again.
    Although most corporate-controlled media now refer to the illegal invasion of Iraq as an “unpopular war,” just a few years ago these same media were salivating at the ratings and profit potential this war would bring. Reporters and entertainers who criticized, or even questioned, the motives for war or other policies of George W. Bush were fired from their jobs and oftentimes blacklisted. Pro-war rallies drew record numbers of people, and these rallies frequently treated war criminals like Bush, Cheney and Rumsfeld as deities.
    Another reason why evil is rarely acknowledged in America is simply because too many powerful people profit from it. Sadly, this has been the case throughout history.
    A recent movie, Amazing Grace, recounted how British politician and abolitionist William Wilberforce often invoked the tenets of Christianity during his campaign against the slave trade in the early 1800s. This compelled many so-called Christians to embrace the film as a paradigm of how good can triumph over evil.
    Forgotten in this zeal, however, is the sad reality that many Americans used (and in the case of racism continue to use) the Christian faith to justify bigotry and slavery. American abolitionist Frederick Douglass, in his book The Life of an American Slave, describes how a preacher/slaveholder often justified the whipping of his slaves by stating, “He who honors his master must wear his stripes.”
    Today it is America’s military-industrial complex that profits from economic slavery and the exploitation of the poor and middle-class, who fight and die in wars waged by the rich and powerful. And as long as those in power can reward their cronies with lucrative rebuilding contracts, as long as war can be used to divert attention from government criminality and corruption (as demonstrated by the father of George W. Bush, who invaded Panama to divert attention from the “Savings and Loan” scandal that cost taxpayers billions of dollars), and as long as war can be used to increase the ratings and profit potential of the corrupt corporate-controlled media there will be little incentive to denounce evil in America.
    A third reason for the failure of Americans to acknowledge evil in their own country is the uncanny ability of human beings to rationalize anything. When I was in law practice, I often noticed that there was little difference between “law breakers” and “law makers.” Both demonstrated an enormous capacity to rationalize their actions, no matter how much those actions defied morality or commonsense.

    The incentive to rationalize is particularly prominent in today’s “sound bite” culture. Corporate-controlled media incessantly select the most “controversial” statements for repeated airplay, often taking them out of context. Meanwhile complex topics, if they are covered at all, are covered only superficially; therefore laypeople often do not have the political or historical background necessary to develop well-informed viewpoints, and thus erect their opinions on tenuous foundations that are frequently devoid of facts.
    For example, a recent editorial on the CNN website argued that Americans would be remiss if they failed to honestly debate Texas Congressman Ron Paul’s contention that American foreign policy, particularly its proclivity to dominate or overthrow foreign governments for the sake of corporate profits, played a role in the build-up to the 9/11 attacks.
    But it is unlikely that such a debate will ever transpire, particularly since former New York Mayor turned presidential candidate Rudy Giuliani has already demonstrated that he will continue to exploit the emotions surrounding 9/11 for his own self-aggrandizement, just as he has opportunistically done in the past.
    The final explanation for why the existence of evil in America is often ignored is because the terms “good and evil” often take one into the realm of religion. When science and logic fails, faith often prevails.
    But faith can be a positive force or negative force. Since it cannot be disproved, a person does not require logic or science to acquire faith. But without such logic or science, people can often be deceived into believing concepts that have no factual basis at all. Hating another person because of his/her skin color, for example, is as illogical as hating one flower because it’s red and loving another because it’s yellow, particularly since neither possessed the ability to choose what color it would be. Yet racism is alive and well in America.
    This is why charlatans often exploit the faith of others. If a situation has a positive outcome, they can claim it was because of the “strength of their faith,” and if a situation has a negative outcome, they can claim it was because their followers “didn’t believe deeply enough.”
    It was this type of faith that made many Americans embrace the lies of the Bush dictatorship, naively believing that Iraq possessed “weapons of mass destruction,” that Saddam Hussein was involved in the 9/11 attacks, and that war against Iraq would only be used as “a last resort.”
    This exploitation of faith has been the modus operandi of the Bush dictatorship and its apologists—strategically designed to conceal their ineptitude, arrogance, dishonesty and evil. It has been so effective that many so-called “Christian” colleges and universities have invited members and supporters of the Bush dictatorship, including Bush himself, to be guest or commencement speakers.
    Since I began this essay with a quotation from a movie, I will end it with one as well. In Bryan Singer’s remarkable film The Usual Suspects, a character named Verbal Kint remarks, “The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world he didn’t exist.” Sadly, this trick will continue to be effective as long as Americans refuse to acknowledge that their nation is being controlled by people who are “purely and simply evil.”

    Yes .
    Evil is right under you noses, living next to you ect.
    Freedom can be good.
    Freedom can be evil if it is abused.
    Take a realistic look around, watch the news filled with stupid free people destroying our country.

    Want to get 10 points?? answer my questions correctly..?

    Posted by admin on October 26th, 2009 and filed under lotto syndicate | 7 Comments »

    1. round $18.4427 to the nearest 5 cents..
    2. find 31.48% of $742, expressing the answer to nearest cent.
    3. lotto winnings of one million dollars are divided between two syndicates, bye boss and this time, in the ratio 8:7. how much will the bye boss syndicate receive, to the nearest cent?

    PLZ. help me ASAP. thnx.

    1st Q:
    Answer: $18.45

    2nd Q:
    = 0.3148($742.00)
    = $233.58

    Answer: $233.58

    3rd Q:
    = $1,000,000(8/[8 + 7])
    = $1,000,000(8/15)
    = ($1,000,000/5)(8/[15/5])
    = $200,000(8/3)
    = $1,600,000/3
    = $533,333.33

    Answer: $533,333.33 for the bye boss syndicate

    What is a lottery syndicate?

    Posted by admin on October 26th, 2009 and filed under lottery syndicate | 2 Comments »

    What are the advantages

    It is a large group of people, that treat the lotterys as an investment, they pool large amounts of cash, then buy large amounts of tickets, with excessive number of tickets, they believe they have tipped the odds in thier favor.

    What is the difference between a syndicated and non-syndicated column?

    Posted by admin on October 26th, 2009 and filed under syndicates | 2 Comments »

    I know the word “Syndicated” means a group of business or people but I don’t know what a syndicated column is.

    A non-syndicated column is one that appears in just one publication, so it’s exclusive. An example would be Stephen King’s column in Entertainment Weekly – you won’t find it anywhere else.
    http://www.ew.com/ew/package/0,12938,472578_7_0_,00.html

    A syndicated column appears in multiple publications, whether newspapers or magazines. Usually it’s done through a major syndicate or news corporation – the New York Times Syndicate, Gannett, Newhouse News Service, etc. – though sometimes syndicated columns get sold through smaller services. There are tons of columnists to choose from – Michelle Malkin, Mickey Kaus, Dave Barry and Roger Ebert, just to name a few.

    How many Inspectors General will CRIME SYNDICATE OBAMA illegally fire before any remaining honest DEM objects?

    Posted by admin on October 26th, 2009 and filed under syndicate | 3 Comments »

    The 2008 Law regarding IGs requires 30 day notice and a public full detailed explanation of the reasons for the firing. CRIME SYNDICATE LEADER OBAMA both voted for that bill and was a SPONSOR of it when he was a US Senator.

    The firing was ILLEGAL.

    OBAMA IS A CRIMINAL ATTEMPTING TO PROTECT MEMBERS OF HIS CRIMINAL SYNDICATE.

    You do realize that the ultimate goal of Liberal ideology is a fascist nanny state…no Liberal is going to speak out against more executive power and working around checks and balances in government.

    Dream Syndicate-Tell Me When It’s Over-Still Holding On You

    Posted by admin on October 25th, 2009 and filed under smith syndicate | 19 Comments »

    The original line up of the Dream Syndicate in the early eightties.
    Steve Wynn, Karl Precoda, Kendra Smith and Dennis Duck.
    more of Steve Wynn on http://www.vimeo.com/rockdream

    Duration : 0:10:0

    Read the rest of this entry »

    Coke & Mentos Prank Ad

    Posted by admin on October 25th, 2009 and filed under lotto syndicate | 11 Comments »

    Bad day? David Mulcahy is in for a Coca Cola and Mentos prank! Lottery syndicates are luckier. Play together, win together.

    ‘1 in 4 Lotto jackpots are won by syndicates’ Source:Camelot. Drastically improve your chances of winning the UK National Lotto, Thunderball & EuroMillions Lottery draws. Increase your buying power for a greater chance to win BIG.

    Duration : 0:0:20

    Read the rest of this entry »