Friday, May 29, 2009

Que? Again...

Governor Steve Beshear of Kentucky has reversed the decision that all written state traffic tests should be in English. Instead, the state will keep it's current offering of the test in 22 different languages. I wasn't sure how I felt about the earlier decision and now I'm not sure about how I feel about this one. It does seem like the liberal thing to do, but it may seriously cause some safety issues out on the road.

Well, I think since the decision's been made, I'll just leave it alone.

Razeworld

Here's something I don't really tell anyone: I write my own comic book. Yeah, it's true, the ultimate in geekdom. I have heroes, villains, allies, enemies, worlds, teams, and all the other fantasmo that one would expect to be in a comic book.

The main hero? Me, of course, well, not me like the way I am, but still me in somewhat appearance and attitude...minus the few pounds...plus the six-pack...oh, and Wolverine's healing factor. No, fuck that, not Wolverine's, I guess it would really resemble more of Deadpool's because it's a lot more powerful. (Why is this guy arguing to himself?)

Here's the kicker: all of my characters are based around people I know, people I've met, and real life people who I believe fit into the comic book world, which I have affectionately called Razeworld. This is the universe all my little comicky happenings occur. Not in the Marvel Universe. Not in WildStorm. Not in the DC Multiverse. Nope. Razeworld.

Liz is a goddess-like entity called Nymph. Bethany is an alien princess named Smera Bethiana. Murrel is a power hungry galactic entity called...well, The Galaxy Entity. Tyrel is Bulldog. I am Raze. Engle is the Spike. Havens is Ricochet. Harry is the Historian. The list goes on and on. They all have their individual power sets and I have their histories, dreams, motivations, personalities...whatever, I have them written. If you know me and I know you, you're probably in this comic book. So if you would ever like to know about your character, I'd be happy to tell you all about him or her.

Excelsior!

Thursday, May 28, 2009

The Blogging Conundrum

I haven't been blogging much lately mostly due to the stresses of work and just having an overall busy summer. But, I have tried to post every now and then, and I want to make posts every single day. I have been so used to being able to post every day that now, when there are days I cannot, I feel a little bit of anxiety. I don't know why though. I think it could be because of the pressure to write for the people that come here and visit, but then again, I'm convinced there's only three or four, no matter what that counter toward the right says. It could also be because I'm not getting to relieve stress from the day, which is what writing actually does for me. Either way, I wish I could post more, and I am making a promise on here that I am going to try.

Here lately though I have been reading a lot, specifically on some negative and depressing subjects. I'm currently reading a book by Christopher Hitchens, and if you know anything about him he'll pretty much tell you there is no God, which is depressing, even though I think I think there's no God, although I'm not sure. Confusing, I know. But this is another reason I haven't been posting: because I've been reading a lot.

Another reason could be because I'm just tired of it. I spent weeks spouting my fury over President Obama and the entire torture thing. I was writing about it on here before a breath of it was majorly in the media. And now it's like the flavor of the month, which really pissed me off. So, you're probably wondering how all this stuff is finally being done about the American torturing and how I really haven't said anything about. Well, after complaining about it for a few weeks, that kind of negativity just gets tiring, and I'm a pretty negative person. So you know when it's too negative for me, it's really bad.

I have also been real busy gearing up for the GRE and applying to Graduate School.

So, to my loyal readers, I just want to say that hopefully this post will get the G-Man back on track, and hopefully nothing like these slow posts will happen again. Thanks for staying with me and I hope you keep reading.

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

This Just Blows My Mind...

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/24/magazine/24prom-t.html?_r=2&ref=magazine

This Is How Fat I Am...

The bulge of my lovely rubber tire that surrounds my lower midsection now forces the top of my pants to bend over my belt because it cannot stand the pressure. It's madness I tell you!

It Could Be Worse, I Guess...

Is Natalie Portman dating Sean Penn?

Que?

Beginning June 1st, the Commonwealth of Kentucky will now only be holding the state's written driving test in English. Naturally, this has made many different people angry. Currently, the test is served in 22 separate languages. The state's decision on this is because they believe it will make the state's roads and traffic safer.

I'm definitely mixed up about this. On one hand, I'm sure that this new test will make the roads safer. All road and traffic signs are in English, and for someone not to know English but being legally allowed to drive, well, that's contradictory. How can they legally be allowed to drive if they can't read and abide by the signs on the road?

On the other hand, the rest of the United States are going to look at this and say that the whole thing is just typical of Kentucky, a state traditionally made fun of for its one dimensionality and it's lack of intelligence or perspective. Some may say that it was a feat for Kentucky to offer the test in 22 different languages, and that it helped mitigate all of the stereotypes.

I am a person that really believes the United States of America should be the melting pot for the world. Everyone should come here and bring their traditions, values, and cultures with them. That's one of the reasons that this country is so wonderful. I reported on something earlier when a Texas state representative commented that she wished the Chinese would change their names to make it easier to register them for voting. I was furious and that was ridiculous of her to suggest such a thing. This is kind of on the same line, but then again, it's for safety.

I'm really not sure how I feel about this. Meditate on this I will....

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Funny...

From The Political Animal:

WELL, IF MAGNETO CAN DO IT.... Glenn Greenwald noted yesterday how much success the U.S. has had in locking up terrorists on U.S. soil.

What are all the bad and scary things that have happened as a result? The answer is: "nothing." Take note, Chris Cillizza and friends: while it's true that "not a single prisoner has escaped from Gitmo since it was created," it's also true that no Muslim Terrorists have escaped from American prisons and our SuperMax prison "has had no escapes or serious attempts to escape." Actually, the only person to even make an escape attempt from a SuperMax is Green Arrow, who hasn't succeeded despite the help of Joker and Lex Luthor.

I really want to know: when our nation's stalwart right-wing warriors (along with Harry "Fighting the Good Fight" Reid) become petrified at the thought of keeping Muslim Terrorists in our prisons, what exactly do they fantasize will happen? What bad things specifically do they fear are going to occur?

I know Glenn was kidding with the Green Arrow reference, but it speaks to an underlying truth: the right really seems to believe that suspected terrorists -- many of whom are nuts who've lived in caves -- have some kind of superpowers. They seem to think, "I saw 'X-Men 2,' and if maximum security wasn't good enough to hold Magneto, maybe it won't be enough for KSM, either!"

(Update: Adam Serwer was all over this yesterday: "Greenwald clearly doesn't remember the Magneto incident of 2003, in which the mutant supervillain escaped from his glass prison facility after Mystique increased the iron content in his guard's blood, which Magneto extracted using his ferrokinetic powers and then used to destroy his cell. Obviously, we need to discover if Gitmo inmates do have mutant abilities, which will undoubtedly require more waterboarding, and this has to be done before the administration gets a dime to close Guantanamo. In fact, I'm pretty sure Nancy Pelosi was briefed on the subject in 2002.")
It's why that Fox News
report Glenn cited was actually pretty helpful. Noting information from the Federal Bureau of Prisons, the report offered some details on the supermax facility in Florence, Colorado, which holds, among others, Zacarias Moussaoui. And as Glenn noted, the grand total of escapes from this penitentiary is zero. The grand total of attempted escapes is zero.

Until we start locking up supervillains with superpowers, these facilities and the personnel who work there will do just fine in keeping us safe.

Something to keep in mind as the "debate" continues over the possibility of bringing Gitmo detainees to American soil.

I Hate to Keep Doing This...

...but my friend's explanations of different subjects are always in depth and amazing. I had recently stumbled upon an Ayn Rand book, Atlas Shrugged, and had always remebered hearing her name. I know the show Futurama always makes fun of her, but I was never sure why. So I emailed my friend to explain her to me. She is a philosopher who created modern objectivism. So I wanted to find out. And here's what he said:

Atlas Shrugged is the book. So, Ayn Rand's philosophy is called Objectivism. The *basic* idea of it is that things are what they are, they have a definite, objective nature, and to treat them differently from that is irrational, to treat them in line with their nature is rational. Ethically, "good" is the same thing as "rational", "bad" is the same thing as "irrational". That's not so bad.

Now, I won't go in to it, but there's a big leap to get into the real meat of her philosophy, the stuff everyone talks about. The idea is that human beings have a certain nature, and that nature is that of an individual that is meant to be free and exercise that freedom in a rational way. To keep someone as a slave is bad, because it denies that person human nature (the free part), to submit to collective will is bad because it denies ones human nature (as an individual) and to be an idiot is bad because it also denies human nature (as a rational being).So this leads to concepts that she gets made fun of for: greed becomes a good thing because everyone working *rationally* in their own self-interest means everyone is in line with human nature. It's not as simple as "greed is good" because robbing someone is evil, since it denies the victim of their human nature (freedom, or more specifically, the individual's right to the products of their labor).

Atlas Shrugged is kind of important, even if I think it's a pretty unreadable book. One section, the main character gives a speech that basically details Rand's philosophy.

There's an article about it, along with an outline of the speech here: http://www.objectivistcenter.org/cth--1721-OutlineofGalt%27sSpeech.aspxI think there are a few fundamental flaws with Objectivism.

I don't have much of a problem with the idea that things have a definite nature, but it goes astray from there. Can you think of what my problem might be?

Not So Glorious Basterds...

I have been reading a lot of reviews for Quentin Tarantino's new film Inglourious Basterds that I was so excited for. He recently submitted it to the Cannes Film Festival, so many people got a chance to view it before the rest of us will. And from what their reviews say, it doesn't seem as great as I thought it would be. The good reviews aren't really that good, and the bad reviews are REALLY bad.

Damn it. I'll never get excited for a movie again because of The Dark Knight. Once you've tasted heaven, everything else seems...bland.

Megan Fox Thinks Olivia Wilde Is Sexy!

Um...just like the title, Megan Fox thinks Olivia Wilde is sexy!

Monday, May 18, 2009

Book Review: Patient Zero by Jonathan Mayberry

I was lent this book by a co-worker and friend of mine. If you haven't realized on here by now, I am a huge fan of zombies. I don't think there is one situation or scenario out there that would prove to be boring if zombies were thrown into the mix. This book happens to be able the terror scenario, in which a sect of Muslim terrorists (or so we think) decide to create and weaponize a bio-agent that turns regular citizens into flesh-eating monsters of the undead. Not so original and kind of predictable, but damn is it good.

The book reads like a comic book, which I am also a huge fan of, and even carries some comic book references within it. In fact, our protagonist, Joe Ledger, has the same name of Dr. Spectrum, a leading hero in the Squadron Supreme universe in Marvel comics. Joe Ledger here is badass, and it's really easy to get behind him. He's fucked up in the head and in the book you learn what makes him such a great warrior.

Joe is recruited by a black ops government agency (also not original, but never dull) to lead a small team against this terror cell.

The book is good, although I wouldn't say great, but I definitely plan on reading other books by Mayberry featuring the bad Mr. Ledger. It's less scary than you would think, particularly because it has zombies, but focuses more on the action and the military than the actual monsters. There are some awesome zombie fights though, and worth the read. Lot's of blood, and the author is good with creating an environment that we can really picture. How else would you get the image of blood squirting out of a decapitated zombie?

In reading this I have definitely deviated from what I have been doing lately, which is reading non-fiction and more politically centralized books. But it was good to step into a world of fiction and mystery, and for this I am grateful.

Check it out!

FARK Headline of the Day

Teens reluctant to go to summer camp if it means giving up cell phones, iPods and Facebook, refuse to experience life like children did way back in the 1990s

Obama @ Notre Dame

I understand why there were those students who were upset that President Obama was giving the commencement address at their university. He's a strong liberal whose not afraid of expressing liberal values, and Notre Dame is without question a school where students keep faith close to their hearts. So it's no surprise to find out that many students there are not in support of pro-choice, which President Obama is clearly in support of. This controversy has been raging for weeks and on Saturday we finally got to witness President Obama deliver his speech, and it was not without interruption. Protesters in the audience constantly tried to interrupt Obama during the message, and I must say, it was amazing how he dealt with it. Instead of ignoring the protests or choosing not to acknowledge them, President Obama was very eloquent and expressed how he understood what was going on, and how things like this are necessary even if it makes us all feel uncomfortable. It was pretty badass.

I understand the protests. In fact, if you're pro-life and you don't agree with a pro-choice government or its leaders on the issue, you should protest. It's not hard to get. But a commencement where thousands of students are celebrating the biggest victory of their college career...well, that's neither the time nor the place. This commencement became about opposite views, when it should have clearly been about the students and their accomplishments. If I was a student down on that floor, I would be infuriated due to the disrespect of the protesters in the audience. They weren't there for the students, they were there to shove their respective opinions in the face of everyone on national television.

There are times and places to protest. This was not one of them.

Friday, May 15, 2009

Miss California: All Breasts, No Brains

Carrie Prejean, the sexy little pistol who recently praticipated in the Miss USA pageant, was interviewed the other day by Dr. James Dobson, who represents Focus on the Family, and had some interesting things to say. Before I get into it, I want to remind those reading who Ms. Prejean is, in case you have forgotten. She is the competitor who was asked by Perez Hilton (eek) whether or not she supported homosexual marriage. She came off with an eloquent answer, at least in my opinion, which contained the principle that no...she did not. Now, of course I support it, but I also support anyone willing to give their opinion, and as far as hers, she spoke it without hate, bigotry, or any other thing vile. It was simply her opinion on one issue, and Mr. Hilton, and the gay community for that matter, shouldn't get all upset about it because frankly, they asked her, and she answered.

That's where my support of Ms. Prejean stops though, as in this interview she had this to say:

I felt as though Satan was trying to tempt me in asking me this question. And then God was in my head and in my heart saying: Do not compromise this. You need to stand up for me and you need to share with all these people. You need to witness to them and you need to show that you're not willing to compromise that for this title of Miss USA.

Really? Satan? Hmm..yeah, he probably was trying to get at you. I mean, he's not preoccupied with America created a clusterfuck in the Middle East, the poor state of the economy, the weather disasters/floods lately in the south, all the war, all the bigotry. Yes Ms. Prejean, the devil took some time off to specifically penetrate Perez Hilton (heh) and ask you such an evil question. And then, after that, God came down and tried to help you combat this vile evil.

Don't flatter yourself. That has to be one of the most pretentious things I've ever heard.

The stupidity of people like this could knock a bull over. This doesn't make sense. And here I was all in defense of her, and yet conservative Chrisitans continue to make me realize why I shouldn't.

I wish Satan and God cared enough about me to come down and wrestle over something I said. That would be cool.

But alas...

The Road Trailer

I wrote a review of the book a few weeks earlier. Here is the trailer for the new film. Enjoy!

HAPPY BIRTHDAY BLAIR!!!


Wednesday, May 13, 2009

I Said Unsweetened!

Am I the only person in the entire world who drinks unsweetened tea anymore? I'm a nice guy. When I go to restaurants I make it a point to be as nice as possible to my waiter or waitress, even if they're terrible, because I understand how hard their job probably is and how they need to make their money from gratuity. So I don't complain. I don't yell at them. I don't send food back and I can't really stand people who do. People have this habit of complaining in a restaurant about how long the service or how long the wait is taking, but don't we all go to nice sit-down restaurants to be with one another? Isn't the point to take as much time as possible? To share and enjoy the relationships that we usually have to miss out on during the regular weekday? So yeah, I don't really get angry at restaurants.

The one thing though that I cannot stand is GETTING A SWEET TEA EVERY TIME I ORDER AN UNSWEETENED. This happens nine out of ten times and I'm at the point now where I just don't understand it. I know it's not a big deal, I know the issue probably isn't even blog-worthy. But if I don't write something on here, I'm going to blow up on the next server I get. How hard is it? I just don't understand. Do restaurants just not have many people anymore order unsweet? I think it's because they see this fat bald guy sitting there, and they go back to get the drinks, and they think..."Did he say unsweetened? Nah, couldn't have. He's too fat for that." C'MON! Can a brother get an unsweetened tea?

George is gettin' upset!

Too Much

I'm reading around eight books right now...all at the same time. It's starting to get really frustrating that I can't seem to make headway in any of them because I keep wanting to switch from one to the other. Why do I do these things?

We're Going Streaking! BANG!

A bill has been introduced by Representative Ernest Wooten and is moving forward in Louisiana that would allow students at public and private universities to carry their concealed weapons on campus. Yeah, that should be a great idea. Wooten claims that this will help prevent large massacres on college campuses like that of Virginia Tech. Prevent? I'm definitely not sure. I can think of the number and kinds of students that go to college and I can definitely think of the ones that probably have guns, and I wouldn't want those people to be able to bring those guns to campus. Do any intellectuals out there even have guns? If I were a parent of a college student in Louisiana, I'd be pretty worried right now...

Monday, May 11, 2009

Life is Raping Me

I took the GRE this morning and didn't do as well as I had hoped. To make matters worse, I was finally granted a consolidation loan to help me with my debt and was supposed to received the funds today electronically in my bank account, which I have not. Also, work is extremely busy, and the stress of my personal matters mixed in with that is driving me crazy.

Fuck my life.

(via)

Friday, May 8, 2009

Is Anyone Else Excited About Star Trek?

Me and Hayden are. We talked about it all last night.

We've Gone From Torture to Murder

So it's kind of already been announced that this current administration has no plans to prosecute anyone from the Bush administration for their use of torture techniques against international prisoners. Well, maybe President Obama will do something about this...

From the Raw Story:

United States interrogators killed nearly four dozen detainees during or after their interrogations, according a report published by a human rights researcher based on a Human Rights First report and followup investigations.
In all, 98 detainees have died while in US hands. Thirty-four homicides have been identified, with at least eight detainees — and as many as 12 — having been tortured to death, according to a
2006 Human Rights First report that underwrites the researcher’s posting. The causes of 48 more deaths remain uncertain.
The researcher, John Sifton, worked for five years for Human Rights Watch. In a posting Tuesday, he documents myriad cases of detainees who died at the hands of their US interrogators. Some of the instances he cites are graphic.
Most of those taken captive were killed in Afghanistan and Iraq. They include at least one Afghani soldier, Jamal Naseer, who was mistakenly arrested in 2004. “Those arrested with Naseer later said that during interrogations U.S. personnel punched and kicked them, hung them upside down, and hit them with sticks or cables,” Sifton writes. “Some said they were doused with cold water and forced to lie in the snow. Nasser collapsed about two weeks after the arrest, complaining of stomach pain, probably an internal hemorrhage.”

Another Afghan killing occurred in 2002. Mohammad Sayari was killed by four U.S. servicemembers after being detained for allegedly “following their movements.” A Pentagon document obtained by the American Civil Liberties Union in 2005 said that the Defense Department found a captain and three sergeants had “murdered” Sayari, but the section dealing with the department’s probe was redacted.
Perhaps the most macabre case occurred in Iraq, which was documented in a
Human Rights First report in 2006.

“Nagem Sadoon Hatab… a 52-year-old Iraqi, was killed while in U.S. custody at a holding camp close to Nasiriyah,” the group wrote. “Although a U.S. Army medical examiner found that Hatab had died of strangulation, the evidence that would have been required to secure accountability for his death – Hatab’s body – was rendered unusable in court. Hatab’s internal organs were left exposed on an airport tarmac for hours; in the blistering Baghdad heat, the organs were destroyed; the throat bone that would have supported the Army medical examiner’s findings of strangulation was never found.”

In another graphic instance, a former Iraqi general was beaten by US forces and suffocated to death. The military officer charged in the death was given just 60 days house arrest.
“Abed Hamed Mowhoush [was] a former Iraqi general beaten over days by U.S. Army, CIA and other non-military forces, stuffed into a sleeping bag, wrapped with electrical cord, and suffocated to death,” Human Rights First writes. “In the recently concluded trial of a low-level military officer charged in Mowhoush’s death, the officer received a written reprimand, a fine, and 60 days with his movements limited to his work, home, and church.”


Maybe since George W. Bush didn't get into trouble for torture he might get into trouble for murder.

Hey Barack! Do you think now might be the time to do something about all of this?

Thursday, May 7, 2009

It's Over: Texas Is Full Of Idiots

Politicians in the United States of America are very different. Some are liberals, some are democrats, some are for education, some are for religion. Some are gay and some are straight. And some are even creationists.

Take for example Barbara Cargill of Texas. She is a huge creationist. So much so that she thought it was within her political duties to hold a vote on how old the earth is in Texas. Yes. A vote. To determine the age of the earth. By Barbara Cargill. In Texas. Get it?

I guess it doesn't count that scientists have already determined how old the earth is. I couldn't tell you, but I know it's somewhere in the....fucking MILLIONS! Hell, it could be the BILLIONS but I know it's nowhere close to what she had her fellow politicians voted on: 6,000 years old. That's right. Texas is now officially only 6,000 YEARS OLD.

Why do these politicians not like science? I don't understand. Why are they so obsessed with themselves, so selfish, as to assume that everyone believes the way they do that they can just take a vote on it and pretend that it's official. You know what that vote means to me? Not a motherfucking thing. The earth is not 6,000 years old and anyone who believes that should be shot because their stupidity is clouding up all the good space for the rest of us. Cargill did this to obviously impose her beliefs on everyone, to make it okay to teach that bullshit in school, and to try to diminish the credibility of science. If you would like to see this event in all of its glorified stupidness, check below:


HAPPY BIRTHDAY LIZ!


No Justice From the Justice Department

From the AP:

Bush administration lawyers who approved harsh interrogation techniques of terror suspects should not face criminal charges, Justice Department investigators say in a draft report that recommends two of the three attorneys face possible professional sanctions.

The recommendations come after an Obama administration decision last month to make public legal memos authorizing the use of harsh interrogation methods but not to prosecute CIA interrogators who followed advice outlined in the memos.

So I guess they are leaning toward not doing anything. I guess politicians can get away with anything they want in this country. You know, as a person who loves politics, who loves to keep up with everything that's going on, this whole thing is very disheartening. This is a major fuck up of Republicans. This is a major fuck up of Democrats. Of the Bush and Obama administrations. Overall, this is horrible for the country. The radical right will have a good time with this decision, and it basically promotes bad behavior for politicians.

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Condi Rice recently visited a local Jewish elementary school in Washington, D.C. where the cute little kids had the opportunity to ask her ALL KINDS OF QUESTIONS. They could have asked her how helping running the country was, how it was being an African-American woman in such a position of power, what it was like to work with the president, all kinds of good stuff! But the thing that apparently sticks in kids minds?

From MSNBC:

Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice told Jewish elementary school students that the Bush administration did not use illegal interrogation tactics. Her remarks were in response to a question from Misha Lerner, a fourth-grader at the Jewish Primary Day School of the Nation’s Capital, The Washington Post reported Monday.

Rice spoke at the school Sunday before giving a lecture at the Sixth & I Historic Synagogue.
Lerner asked Rice what she thought about the Obama administration’s remarks on interrogation methods authorized by its predecessors.

But didn't it just come out that this administration DID use torture? Condi, you can't be lying to kids now. Torture is one thing, but the kids babe...the kids!

Ah Texas. You are fail.

Remember when all the noise was going when the current governor of Texas, Rick Perry, came out and said that if things continue to get worse in America then he believes the state should secede? No? Well, I do, because I consider part of my job to keep up with dumb things conservatives say.
Well guess what little interesting bit of news I found out today?

Apparently, the state of Texas receives more assistant funds with natural disasters, clean-up, etc. than any other state in the nation. What that really means is without the United States, Texas would morph into a landfill, because without the nation's support, there's no way they could create a successful disaster relief system on their own.

Texas is biting the hand that feeds them. Well, I shouldn't say that, because I don't believe all Texans are stupid, just all Texas politicians. Rick Perry, George W. Bush, George H.W. Bush, Betty Brown, Chet Edwards (whose a democrat, FYI), Tom DeLay...look, I could go on and on, but for the sake of my sanity, I'll stop.

IGN...You. Are. Amazing.

Go here. The folks over at IGN have put together an awesome list that breaks down the top 100 villains in comic books. Yeah. Cool.

Sweet Taliban Article

There is a wonderful article written by Nic Robertson regarding his interview with a Taliban spokesman. I suggest you go over and read it by going here.

Monday, May 4, 2009

Come On, Jedwards!

I'm not going to lie. Before Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama were slated to duel for the 2008 democratic nomination, I was in support of John Edwards. I liked his platform, I thought he was eloquent, and from his voting record and his overall experience, I thought he would be the best candidate.

And now he shames me.

He was involved with an affair that would have probably destroyed the democratic party if he was the democratic nominee. It would have become even worse if he was elected president and then it came out. The conservatives would have raped him verbally, in the press, and every other way.

Now he's being investigated for using his campaign funds to pay the company that his mistress worked for.

And I supported this guy?

Maybe I'm not as great as I think I am.

New Apartment

Over the weekend my roommate and I moved into a new apartment. The place is amazing and not just because it's bigger and has more amenities. There are little things that make it incredibly better than our old place. For instance, one in particular is the fact that I no longer need to use a U-turn in the mornings to get to work and I avoid all the traffic of New Circle Road. Another big plus is that this place does not tow for parking. Lexington is notorious for towing everyone everywhere and I no longer have to worry about it. People are always coming over and it used to stress me out to the max. Well, to that I say no longer.

First Official Iron Man 2 Pic

Enjoy it in its awesomeness.

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