So my friend got ditched by his girl of 3 years via text message, so now he’s on a mission to drive 1000 miles to get an answer.
I can’t really say I blame him for wanting a face to face answer.
Stay tuned for the adventure. SaveTerrick.com
So my friend got ditched by his girl of 3 years via text message, so now he’s on a mission to drive 1000 miles to get an answer.
I can’t really say I blame him for wanting a face to face answer.
Stay tuned for the adventure. SaveTerrick.com
Woo, and everyone is getting involved!
January 23, 2008
The Internet-based group “Anonymous” has released statements on YouTube and via a press release, outlining what they call a “War on Scientology”. Church of Scientology related websites, such as religiousfreedomwatch.org have been removed due to a suspected distributed denial-of-service-attack (DDoS) by a group calling themselves “Anonymous”. On Friday, the same group allegedly brought down Scientology’s main website, scientology.org, which was available sporadically throughout the weekend.
Several websites relating to the Church of Scientology have been slowed down, brought to a complete halt or seemingly removed from the Internet completely in an attack which seems to be continuous. The scientology.org site was back online briefly on Monday, and is currently loading slowly.
On Monday, the group released a video titled: “Message to Scientology” on YouTube concerning their intentions to attack the Church of Scientology. A robotic voice on the video begins with “Hello leaders of Scientology. We are Anonymous,” and continues by explaining their motivations: “Over the years we have been watching you, your campaigns of misinformation, your suppression of dissent and your litigious nature. All of these things have caught our eye. With the leakage of your latest propaganda video into mainstream circulation the extent of your malign influence over those who have come to trust you as leaders has been made clear to us. Anonymous has therefore decided that your organisation should be destroyed.” The message goes on to state that the group intends to “expel Scientology from the Internet”. As of Wednesday, the video had been viewed 370,347 times, favorited 2,473 times, and is currently YouTube’s top third video of the day.
Linkage
http://www.grupthink.com/topic/10253/What_Part_will_you_play_in_the_war_on_Scientology
http://digg.com/world_news/Raid_on_London_Scientology_HQ_planned_for_feb_10
http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/%22Anonymous%22_releases_statements_outlining_%22War_on_Scientology%22
Two cars collided last year on Cinco de Mayo.
Considering the date, you might assume that at least one of the drivers was drunk — and you’d be right. Laura Varker was 17 years old, and she’d been tubing down the Salt River all day with her eight best girlfriends. Their T-shirts all read “Cinco de Drinko.” Even an hour after the accident, Varker’s blood-alcohol level was 0.09, over the legal limit for adults. And, as an underage driver, she was in violation of the law by having any amount of alcohol in her system.
One of Varker’s girlfriends, 15-year-old Felicia Edwards, didn’t drink a drop. But it was Edwards who died when Varker’s Yukon Denali hit another car and flipped over and over like a tumbleweed before coming to a horrifying stop on the Bush Highway north of Mesa. Edwards was thrown from the SUV and pronounced dead at the scene.