Thursday, 29 December 2011
AWWW Baby's First....WTF???
Finally an easy way to have that awkward conversation with little Timmy on why it's sometimes necessary
to have strange men put their hands in your ass.
Wednesday, 28 December 2011
Uruguay Senate backs bill to allow early abortions
By Felipe Llambias
MONTEVIDEO (Reuters) - Uruguay's Senate passed
a bill to decriminalize abortion on Tuesday, a move that
underscores the nation's liberal stance on ethical issues in the
mainly conservative Roman Catholic region.
The bill, which is expected to pass in the lower house after
lawmakers return from recess in February, would let women have
abortions in the first 12 weeks of pregnancy.
It was approved in the Senate 17-14 after 10 hours of heated
debate.
"We don't have the right to pass moral judgement by saying
that the woman who continues her pregnancy and has her baby is
in the right whereas the one who doesn't, for whatever reason,
is in the wrong," said Senator Monica Xavier, a member of the
ruling leftist coalition of President Jose Mujica.
"We're not moral censors, we're congressmen," she added.
MONTEVIDEO (Reuters) - Uruguay's Senate passed
a bill to decriminalize abortion on Tuesday, a move that
underscores the nation's liberal stance on ethical issues in the
mainly conservative Roman Catholic region.
The bill, which is expected to pass in the lower house after
lawmakers return from recess in February, would let women have
abortions in the first 12 weeks of pregnancy.
It was approved in the Senate 17-14 after 10 hours of heated
debate.
"We don't have the right to pass moral judgement by saying
that the woman who continues her pregnancy and has her baby is
in the right whereas the one who doesn't, for whatever reason,
is in the wrong," said Senator Monica Xavier, a member of the
ruling leftist coalition of President Jose Mujica.
"We're not moral censors, we're congressmen," she added.
Ancient Ruins Found in Antarctica
DURAK, ARGENTINA--Scientists have uncovered the remains of a massive stone structure and other artifacts, estimated to be 4000 years old, in a remote corner of Antarctica. The find, announced at a press conference here today, is the first evidence of ancient civilization on the icy continent and is being hailed as one of the most important archaeological digs of the century.
Working in dwindling light just before Antarctica's first sunset of the year in mid-February, a team led by geologist Scott Amundsen of Wyoming State University came across the rubble of a stone building roughly the size of Rome's ancient amphitheater. "One of my students tripped over a squat pentagonal block while we were hiking up near Doubleday Glacier," Amundsen says. Doubleday has been receding at an estimated 3 meters per year for the last century, and the last geologic expeditions visited the site in the 1920s. "Previous researchers could have easily missed it," Amundsen says.
The team worked deep into March, well after the normal end of the field season. "We survived on show tunes and s'mores," Amundsen says. "And of course the anticipation of what we'd find the next day." So far the researchers have uncovered the foundations of a massive columned structure that may have stood as high as 30 meters, says group member Harvey Sampson, who last year had proved by DNA analysis that Piltdown Man was not an elaborate hoax but in fact the skeleton of the murdered St. Nicholas, the last Russian Tsar.
Antarctica's bone-dry atmosphere has also preserved many artifacts, including coins that feature penguins and an unknown reptile, peanut shells, sticks resembling baseball bats, and seal-hide balls. "I know they couldn't have been playing baseball back then," says Sampson. "But we were so elated that we sung the national anthem anyway." He speculates that the thin air above Doubleday Stadium--the team's nickname for the site--"must have made it a hitters' park. The ball would have sailed."
The find has stunned experts, who had presumed that no person had set foot on Antarctica until the 1800s. "I simply don't believe it," says archaeologist H. P. Lovelock of the University of Dallas, Fort Worth, well known for his work in the Transantarctic Mountains. Other experts laud the discovery. Says Joe Konyu of the Southwest Archaeological Institute, "Forget Noah's Ark and Atlantis: this is as good as it gets."
Working in dwindling light just before Antarctica's first sunset of the year in mid-February, a team led by geologist Scott Amundsen of Wyoming State University came across the rubble of a stone building roughly the size of Rome's ancient amphitheater. "One of my students tripped over a squat pentagonal block while we were hiking up near Doubleday Glacier," Amundsen says. Doubleday has been receding at an estimated 3 meters per year for the last century, and the last geologic expeditions visited the site in the 1920s. "Previous researchers could have easily missed it," Amundsen says.
The team worked deep into March, well after the normal end of the field season. "We survived on show tunes and s'mores," Amundsen says. "And of course the anticipation of what we'd find the next day." So far the researchers have uncovered the foundations of a massive columned structure that may have stood as high as 30 meters, says group member Harvey Sampson, who last year had proved by DNA analysis that Piltdown Man was not an elaborate hoax but in fact the skeleton of the murdered St. Nicholas, the last Russian Tsar.
Antarctica's bone-dry atmosphere has also preserved many artifacts, including coins that feature penguins and an unknown reptile, peanut shells, sticks resembling baseball bats, and seal-hide balls. "I know they couldn't have been playing baseball back then," says Sampson. "But we were so elated that we sung the national anthem anyway." He speculates that the thin air above Doubleday Stadium--the team's nickname for the site--"must have made it a hitters' park. The ball would have sailed."
The find has stunned experts, who had presumed that no person had set foot on Antarctica until the 1800s. "I simply don't believe it," says archaeologist H. P. Lovelock of the University of Dallas, Fort Worth, well known for his work in the Transantarctic Mountains. Other experts laud the discovery. Says Joe Konyu of the Southwest Archaeological Institute, "Forget Noah's Ark and Atlantis: this is as good as it gets."
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