Tag Archives: match up

What’s On: Ramona the Pest

In tonight’s third and concluding part of the Real Housewives of NYC reunion, we have just one question left: How many more ways can Ramona be inarticulately outraged? So far she’s stammered, opened her eyes widely, stared intently at Andy Cohen, stood up steaming, and walked around the set. That’s quite an array — I hope she keeps it up with some head-shaking and eye-closing this time.

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What’s On: Ramona the Pest

Who’s being Fooled by Dairy Front Groups?

Click original link for post with external links to thing and it will make more sense. ____________________ I'd like to thank gmail's targeted ad system for, again, enlightening me to the presence of another pro animal-exploitation front group. (Always click on these ads when you get them. These places often pay per click in order to keep their ad up.) Front groups, for those of you who don't know, are groups designed to protect industries that are failing due to various reasons- exposure for cruelty to animals, health reasons, environmental reasons, worker exploitation, oil spills (BP has one), etc. The Center for Consumer Freedom is one of the most famous of these groups and has attacked everyone from doctors studying obesity to anti-smoking proponents. Today's front group is the Real California Milk campaign, who espouses on their sight that “99% of California dairy farms are family owned”. Well, since 95-99% of these farms are the dreaded “factory farms” then we know now that most factory farms are “family farms”. So if you read into the site, it is telling you the truth about the industry- when people say “family farm” it often still means “factory farm”. My favorite part is the Happy Cows section, trying to convince us that every drop of milk is “made with 100% pure happiness!” A video on the page shows green pastures with cows tagged for milking and slaughter, factory farming pens and milking parlor machines in nice, soft lighting, and baby cows just birthed fromn their mothers shortly before being torn away from them to be made into future dairy cows or veal. This footage is juxtaposed with interviews with the farmers who exploit, beat, confine, forcefully impregnate, kidnap, and kill discussing how much they love their animals. I guess business owners have to do what they have to do when so many undercover videos come out showing horrible abuse on dairy farms. One of the biggest messages of the video is that the cows “need” these farmers to exploit them in order to live (before they are killed of course), and thus, the relationship involves mutual respect and help. Talk about ridiculous. It doesn't take an animal rightsist to realize that when you force an animal to breed and force the babies into these farming conditions, that they are not voluntarilly doing anything. It's also quite true that farm animals survive quite well outside of dairy farms. Take the rescued veal calves living out their lives at Woodstock Farm Animal Sanctuary as an example. Another apparently touching section of a video is a farmer patting himself on the back because, after his cows are dragged to the milking parlor (in which machines are attached to them to extract the milk that should have gone to their calves- who are sent to slaughter for veal and beef), he offers them a soft bed of hay in the pen they are dragged back to, with clean water to boot! What kind of industry is this where hay to lay on top of in a prison and clean water are extreme luxuries? It's funny watching these farmers trying to hide their desire for capital behind “caring” for the cows- of which every measure is based on how much they can get her to produce. There is a constant insistence that if a cow is fed correctly, that's how she produces. That is the main concern here- not the actual well being and desires of the cows, just how much milk they make. What happens when she stops? Oh more rape and kidnapping and if she still doesn't produce enough- slaughter. At the end they claim animal liberationists have something to gain from calling for the abolition of the exploitation of animals. Really? What's that exactly? The same person says he'd invite anyone to see his farm. That's all well and good for the ad online, but in reality he'd call the cops and prosecute people for trespassing or for taking pictures of the animals- something punishable by “terrorism” laws in many areas. Even so, most farm tours never include the slaughter process or veal crates. That way, they can send people away, still able to deny that those things happen. So, bravo, “Real California Milk”! You've actually taught me more about why I oppose the dairy industry- including the “family” farms. Keep up the good work and misinformation. You might be able to combat the fact that a new undercover video comes out every month that most people can not make it through due to the cruelty involved in the dairy industry. added by: animalia_libero

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Who’s being Fooled by Dairy Front Groups?

Real Housewife of New Jersey Danielle Staub’s Sex Tape, Minus the Sex [Sex Tapes]

You’re curious about Real Housewife Danielle Staub ‘s sex tape. But you don’t want to buy it or watch her have sex. So we scrubbed the 90-minute Danielle Staub Raw clean of anything untoward. Now all that’s left is the crazy! More

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Real Housewife of New Jersey Danielle Staub’s Sex Tape, Minus the Sex [Sex Tapes]

Pirates extend contracts for Russell, GM (AP)

The Pittsburgh Pirates say they extended the contracts of manager John Russell and general manager Neal Huntington through the 2011 season without making a public announcement. The Pirates were coming off a 99-loss season in 2009 and, amid slumping ticket sales, apparently felt that announcing the extensions over the winter might further lessen enthusiasm for this season.

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Pirates extend contracts for Russell, GM (AP)

Sadly, African Teams Still Far Short on Talent to Contend in World Cup

Filed under: FIFA World Cup , International , Nigeria PRETORIA, South Africa — A few nights before this historic World Cup kicked off, the master of ceremonies at a gala in the Johannesburg suburb of Midrand honoring the legends of African soccer reminded attendees of how ignominious was Africa’s arrival in the World Cup in 1974. Mwepu Ilunga, a defender for Zaire, which that year became black Africa’s first World Cup entry, ran out of a defensive wall at the sound of the referee’s whistle and booted away the ball that had been placed for a Brazil free-kick. A video of the incident played on a video screen in the banquet hall and the MC announced Ilunga was in the room and would come to the stage and for the first time explain what all the years since stayed unexplained. “Ilunga?” the MC called several times. “Ilunga?” Ilunga was a no show, or early departee, which was the one thing the room full of African soccer stars from yesteryear, and those who came to see them that night, hoped would not be true of African teams with the first arrival of the World Cup on their continent. It will, unfortunately, be a struggle.

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Sadly, African Teams Still Far Short on Talent to Contend in World Cup

World Cup 2010, Mexico Vs. France: El Tri Send France To Edge Of Elimination, Win 2-0

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World Cup 2010, Mexico Vs. France: El Tri Send France To Edge Of Elimination, Win 2-0

Wallace to start at center for Celtics (AP)

Boston Celtics coach Doc Rivers says Rasheed Wallace will start at center in Game 7 of the NBA finals. Wallace is replacing Kendrick Perkins, who sprained ligaments in his right knee Tuesday night in the first quarter of Boston’s 89-67 loss to the Los Angeles Lakers. Rivers joked that he went with Wallace over Glen “Big Baby” Davis for Thursday’s game because “he’s old.

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Wallace to start at center for Celtics (AP)

World Cup 2010: Algeria’s Madjid Bougherra ready to tackle England

• Defender says playing Wayne Rooney ‘the ultimate test’ • Algerians out to settle score from 1982 travesty Algeria’s Madjid Bougherra has described the match against England tomorrow night as “the game of my life”. Walter Smith, his club manager at Rangers, is just delighted it will be over long before the start of the new Scottish Premier League season. Bougherra has made something of a habit out of late returns from international duty. Lost passports, keys and phones have played a part in the reasoning relayed back to Smith at Ibrox. Last November, after Algeria sealed their qualification for the World Cup, there was no elaborate excuse given for Bougherra’s delay in reaching Glasgow: the players were simply partying in the company of the country’s president. Bougherra’s journey to the grand stage ranks as one of the more circuitous at this year’s World Cup. Dario Gradi plucked him from France’s second tier in 2006 for a loan deal at Crewe Alexandra, during which Bougherra could not prevent relegation to League One. A short spell at Sheffield Wednesday followed, before Charlton Athletic paid £2.5m for the centre-half’s services. The same fee took him to Rangers in August 2008 with Charlton by then a Championship side. Tomorrow, Bougherra will come up against Wayne Rooney. The pair have faced each other before although the England striker may well have erased it from memory. “I only played five games for Charlton in England’s top flight,” Bougherra said last month. “But one was against United and I can tell you that I managed to keep Rooney off the scoresheet. I’d love to do it again when we face England in Cape Town.” Smith was only partly jesting when Bougherra publicly stated he would remain at Rangers for the second half of last season, rather than seek a return to the Premier League. “That’s good of him,” Smith said. “He’s come a long way since Charlton reserves, you know.” Indeed he has. Bougherra was the subject of speculation linking him with Barcelona and Sevilla in recent months despite only featuring 23 times for Rangers in their title-winning campaign. The 28-year-old has played in just three Champions League matches in his career. Occasional lapses in concentration are Bougherra’s main on-field flaw; his clear attacking sense either a benefit or hindrance depending on the circumstance. Defensively, however, Bougherra is robust yet composed. His physicality is suited to Scotland. Those who may scoff at the reported valuation put on his head by Rangers – in excess of £5m – should recall that Carlos Cuéllar earned a £7.8m move to Aston Villa from Ibrox. The Spaniard’s replacement, Bougherra has enjoyed a more fruitful period in the SPL. Alan Hutton’s £9m transfer from Rangers to Tottenham is another for sceptics of Bougherra’s lucrative worth to consider. Internationally, Bougherra and Algeria have a score to settle. In the year he was born, West Germany and Austria played out a famously dubious World Cup group match which prevented the Algerians from progressing in what was their debut in the finals. “Now is the time to bring closure for the stars of 1982,” Bougherra says. Rooney and England have been warned. Algeria England World Cup 2010 Group C World Cup 2010 Ewan Murray guardian.co.uk

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World Cup 2010: Algeria’s Madjid Bougherra ready to tackle England

Cesc Fábregas ‘certain’ to join Barcelona says next president

• Sandro Rosell confident Barcelona will sign Cesc Fábregas • Spanish champions will continue pursuit of Arsenal midfielder Barcelona’s president-elect says he is certain that Cesc Fábregas will sign for the club this summer. Sandro Rosell, who replaces Joan Laporta as president on 1

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Cesc Fábregas ‘certain’ to join Barcelona says next president

World Cup 2010: Switzerland get Spain playing the blame game | Mick McCarthy

The result was not the only aspect of the European champions’ opening game that surprised me. So did their reaction to it The result was not the only aspect of Spain’s opening game that surprised me. I was also struck by the reaction of their players to defeat against Switzerland. It was not the response I’d expect from reigning European champions and one of the few teams at the World Cup who can be confident of recovering from an early shock and

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World Cup 2010: Switzerland get Spain playing the blame game | Mick McCarthy