| Your Comments : I will protect you, Bainimarama assures
No thanks Vore. We the people of Fiji can do without the type of you protection you and your goons offer. You failed to protect Rabaka, Verebasaga and Malasebe. What guarantee do we have that you will hold true to your words? Everything about you is LIES LIES LIES and more LIES. And so far, no evidence of a kill plot has been put forward to the public. Just empty words by your police commissioner and his side-kick Nasir Ali. Treason? Ha! ... and pray tell what did you do on Dec 5, 2006 that has landed us all in this mess? Your government is full of blockheads! Bleakfuture of Fiji (80 days and 19 hours ago) Bainimarama is not safeguarding anyone because the result of all his actions since 5/12 will be a burden to the innocent taxpayers.
Hillary--Anybody But Obama
If home is in Kansas, and fun takes you to California, but work leads to Kentucky, then don't you live in Kanifucky? AT&T says "Kanifky." Weak! ... 12:48 P.M. ___________________________ Will Hill Ditch Iowa? I often rely on NBC's excellent First Read for my fill on the day's campaign . But today First Read and kf are pretty much completely out of synch: FR: For the next 45 days, until the caucuses take place there, the Democratic presidential race will be all about Iowa. ...[snip] ... One of two things will happen in Iowa on January 3: Either Clinton wins, and she steamrolls through the primaries on the way to the nomination. Or she doesn't, and the candidate with a majority of the advantages -- in polls, in endorsements, and with the most famous last name in the Democratic Party -- looks vulnerable and it becomes a two-person fight to the finish with the candidate who wins kf: There is an obvious third thing that could easily happen before the 45 days are up.
On the blog now:
But this turned out to be a brief chapter. Contrary to almost universal expectations, post-World War II America was an era of boisterous economic growth and of a baby boom that began just after the war and lasted for about 20 years. Americans were jostled out of their home states by the war and then continued moving, with huge flows to the West and, particularly after the civil rights movement got rid of racial segregation, to the South. California grew from 6.9 million to 10.6 million in the 1940s and 20 million in 1970; Texas from 6.4 million in 1940 to 11.2 million in 1970, and Florida from 1.9 million to 6.8 million in those years. Demographers in the late 1960s expected the future to be like the recent past. They waited for the children of the baby boom to produce a new baby boom and discounted the likelihood of mass immigration.
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