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Another coalition government on it's way I reckon....ready to shaft the working man....
Bunch of
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Discuss ?!?!
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bump...
Why ?
or am I just missing something in the way America reports it's news....
Fox to me are just the Republican party's propaganda machine...what the fuck happened to balanced reporting backed up with 'FACTS'....just saying sorry 'we got it wrong' isn't enough when you continually make dumbass mistakes....
Yeah the right to free speech is one thing,but some free speech has consequences....
The princess - who is fourth in line to the throne - was "safely delivered" at 08:34 BST, the palace statement said.
The Duke of Cambridge, who was present for the birth of the 8lbs 3oz (3.7kg) baby girl, brought his 21-month-old son Prince George to visit his **** at St Mary's Hospital, west London.
Royals...pfft...
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2 pence per person that is..
Most of the Royal family have another title.
And are you really happy at bailing out most of the economies in the Eurozone ?
Is this why guys like gloryholes ?
I got asked this a little bit ago, and I still can't decide. Lol.
They should have a show called 'man finds beer'....
Starting with the monopoly boards of each country,we seek out the weird and wonderful beers across the globe...
We're gonna need bar snacks...
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Such a hard decision though.
I reckon the politicians should just have a boxing match or UFC contest to decide who wins....
Fuck it,why not world leaders too...
Pay per view would be off the scale for Obama versus Putin..
Spare a thought for the many affected.
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The city of Katmandu was built at the intersection of two trade routes linking China and India, and its architectural heritage reflects overlapping influences: miniature Buddhist votive structures from the seventh century, decorated with fine brass and wood carvings; tiered temples made of fired red bricks; monasteries, religious complexes, palaces, courtyards and clusters of tile-roofed homes.
The destruction has been overwhelming. Unesco has said temple complexes in Katmandu, Bhaktapur and Patan are “almost fully destroyed.” At Basantapur Durbar Square on Tuesday, teams of volunteers were shoveling debris off the foundations of two temples that had collapsed on Saturday; ambulances arrived to remove two bodies the volunteers found. A few police officers stood in the square, but made no attempt to supervise the effort.
In the hurry to remove the rubble, carved beams and struts had ended up in piles of scrap wood, though a few particularly beautiful carvings — like one pink-stained piece showing women frolicking acrobatically below two smiling gods — had been set aside.
Over the four days since a magnitude 7.8 earthquake struck Nepal, the de@th toll has mounted so quickly, to more than 5,000, that most concerns other than the health and safety of its people have been put aside. Hope for finding survivors was waning, and tens of thousands of people are living in tents despite heavy rains. Reserves of clean water are running low.
But in the meantime, in many places, the detritus of centuries-old temples and palaces has been left unguarded, diminishing chances to eventually rebuild one of the world’s largest clusters of cultural heritage sites. Sentimental pedestrians are walking away with bricks from the 19th-century Dharahara Tower, which crashed to the earth on Saturday, trapping at least 40 people inside.
On Monday, after a citizen called an official in Nepal’s department of archaeology to report having thwarted an attempt to steal a bronze bell from the roof of a temple here in the capital, the authorities took some first steps to guard against looting. A notice was printed in a local newspaper on Tuesday, warning that anyone taking artifacts will be punished.
But there was also a sense of helplessness at the magnitude of the calamity that has befallen the Katmandu Valley, a place meticulously documented by preservationists and named a World Heritage Site by Unesco in 1979.
Thomas Bell, a journalist and the author of “Kathmandu,” a 2014 book about the city, was watching the volunteers toss down carved beams, which landed atop each other in a cloud of dust. The beams, he said, should be immediately cataloged, stored and protected from any further damage.
In Nepal, “people don’t necessarily place a great deal of value on a piece of wood just because it’s old,” he said. “But if you were to restore the temple, you would want it back.”
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