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Vydox - Stronger erections enough to drive your partner crazy!

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Vydox)
Sun Oct 20 19:05:12 2013

Date: Sun, 20 Oct 2013 16:05:07 -0700
To: linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu
From: "Vydox" <Vydox@tinctoppyfc.us>
Reply-To: <bounce-71675797@tinctoppyfc.us>

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Vydox - Stronger erections enough to drive your partner crazy!

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fired for mistreating his players and mocking them with gay slurs.If two 
women dance together at a club or walk arm-in-arm down the street, 
people are usually less likely to question it    though 
some wonder if that has more to do with a lack of 
awareness than acceptance."Lesbians are so invisible in our society. And 
so I think the hatred is more invisible," says Laura Grimes, a 
licensed clinical social worker in Chicago whose counseling practice caters 
to gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender clients.Grimes says she also frequently 
hears from lesbians who are harassed for "looking like dykes," meaning that 
people are less accepting if they look more masculine.Still, Ian O'Brien, 
a gay man in Washington, D.C., sees more room for women "to 
transcend what femininity looks like, or at least negotiate that space a 
little bit more."O'Brien, who's 23, recently wrote an opinion piece tied 
to the Boy Scout debate and his own experience in the Scouts 
when he was growing up in the San Diego area."To put it 
simply: Being a boy is supposed to look one way, and you 
get punished when it doesn't," O'Brien wrote in the piece, which appeared 
in The Advocate, a national magazine for the gay, lesbian, bisexual and 
transgender communities.Joey Carrillo, a gay student at Elmhurst College 
in suburban Chicago, remembers trying to be as masculine as possible in 
high school. He hid the fact that he was gay, particularly around 
other athletes. As a wrestler, 
 but 
lesbians seem to have an easier time living in it than gay 
men do.High-profile lesbian athletes have come out while still playing their 
sports, but not a single gay male athlete in major U.S. professional 
sports has done the same. While television's most prominent same-sex parents 
are the two fictional dads on "Modern Family," surveys show that society 
is actually more comfortable with the idea of lesbians parenting children.And 
then there is the ongoing debate over the Boy Scouts of America 
proposal to ease their ban on gay leaders and scouts.Reaction to the 
proposal, which the BSA's National Council will take up next month, has 
been swift, and often harsh. Yet amid the discussions, the Girl Scouts 
of USA reiterated their policy prohibiting discrimination based on sexual 
orientation, among other things. That announcement has gone largely unnoticed.Certainly, 
the difference in the public's reaction to the scouting organizations can 
be attributed, in part, to their varied histories, including the Boy Scouts' 
longstanding religious ties and a base that has become less urban over 
the years, compared with the Girl Scouts'.But there's also an undercurrent 
here, one that's often present in debates related to homosexuality, whether 
over the military's now-defunct "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" policy or even same-sex 
marriage. Even as society has become more accepting of homosexuality overall, 
longstanding research has shown more societal tolera



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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">Shown here are Federal Premium hollow point bullets.APRepublican Rep. Jason 
Chaffetz said Thursday that the Department of Homeland Security is using 
roughly 1,000 rounds of ammunition more per person than the U.S. Army, 
as he and other lawmakers sharply questioned DHS officials on their "massive" 
bullet buys."It is entirely ... inexplicable why the Department of Homeland 
Security needs so much ammunition," Chaffetz, R-Utah, said at a hearing.The 
hearing itself was unusual, as questions about the department's ammunition 
purchases until recently had bubbled largely under the radar -- on blogs 
and in the occasional news article. But as the Department of Homeland 
Security found itself publicly defending the purchases, lawmakers gradually 
showed more interest in the issue.Democratic Rep. John Tierney, D-Mass., 
at the opening of the hearing, ridiculed the concerns as "conspiracy theories" 
which have "no place" in the committee room.But Republicans said the purchases 
raise "serious" questions about waste and accountability.Chaffetz, who chairs 
one of the House oversight subcommittees holding the hearing Thursday, revealed 
that the department currently has more than 260 million rounds in stock. 
He said the department bought more than 103 million rounds in 2012 
and used 116 million that same year -- among roughly 70,000 agents.Comparing 
that with the small-arms purchases procured by the U.S. Army, he said 
the DHS is churning through between 1,300 
 The CIA had Tamerlan Tsarnaev's name put into a terror watchlist after 
being contacted by Russian authorities in 2011, sources told Fox News -- 
raising more questions about why the Boston bomber's trip to Russia the 
following year didn't raise more red flags.Sources say the Russians contacted 
the FBI once in March 2011, and several months later they contacted 
the CIA about Tsarnaev.In October 2011, the CIA sent information to many 
federal agencies and to "the watchlisting system" about him, the sources 
say. That step ultimately put him on the vast TIDE database of 
people potentially tied to terrorism cases.The FBI has said previously that 
it was told Tsarnaev was a "follower of radical Islam" and was 
preparing to travel to a foreign country to join unspecified underground 
groups. The FBI said that it responded by interviewing Tsarnaev and family 
members, but found no terrorism activity.In early 2012, Tsarnaev would travel 
to Russia for six months. The nature of that trip is still 
unclear.Two top Republican senators are now calling for a Senate Homeland 
Security Committee hearing on the Boston Marathon bombings, as lawmakers 
question whether enough was done to prevent the attack.Sens. John McCain, 
R-Ariz., and Kelly Ayotte, R-NH, requested the hearing Wednesday, saying 
"it has become increasingly apparent that more questions need to be answered 
regarding the failure to prevent this tragedy."The senators cited the reporting 
by Fox News an
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