Posted on 07/18/2008 10:53:27 AM PDT by Born Conservative
That is true of most cities in America.
Since the Government subsidized black brood mares birthing a new bastard every year or so by absent sperm donors — and those brood mares released their feral brood into the streets for their entertainment and education — in every city with a black ghetto populated with fatherless and uneducated, undisciplined and unemployable youth turning to professional gangs financed by robbery and drug dealing, crime becomes a lifestyle and “career path”...
To deny the observable - has become politically correct..
With that pretty smile I imagine his fun is just beginning.
Political correctness- The death of truth!
Yeah. I mean, bludgeon murderers might turn out to be normal people but it probably isn't the way to bet.
Dunno, three hots and a flop, plenty of bro's to kick it with, appeals lasting 20 years. Wish you were right but he will be in hog heaven (for a creature like himself) and we will be footing the bill.
Not to mention cable TV, a prison library with computer/internet access, weightroom, etc.
Behind Bars, Pricey 'Public' Artwork In PrisonsChris Halsne
KIRO 7 Eyewitness News Investigative ReporterHigh-dollar, high-flying birds gracing the ceiling of a state penitentiary -- Is this "public art" or a waste of money?
Despite tough economic times for the state of Washington, you'll see no cutbacks in artwork for prisons.
If you know a felon housed at the Stafford Creek Corrections Center near Aberdeen, you can see a $200,000 flock of acrylic birds. They just went up, paid for with your tax dollars.
You can't exactly take your family to see this public arts project. Amber and blue birds, 17 indigenous species in various stages of flight, soar along inside our state's newest prisoner visiting room.
Prison chief Doug Wadington helped choose the sculptures, entitled "Migration."
Halsne: "What benefit are the birds to this institution?" Wadington: "What benefit are the birds? Uh, it's a public arts project in terms of, we, uh, what's the benefit of public art?" Michelle Zahrly represents the Washington Arts Commission, which oversaw the $200,000 project. "The piece is a directionally accurate compass point. It' s a consideration of life beyond the Stafford Creek Correction Center," Zahrly said.
"That's nice," say most taxpayers we talked with. But the problem is lawmakers were just forced to save prison money by releasing inmates and cutting prison guards. $200,000 for birds that few citizens can view seems at best unnecessary...
More: http://www.kirotv.com/investigations/2325141
“grizzly and grisly?”
One, the animal before the attack, 2 the result of the attack!
Animal/result BFD!
i dk why everyone thinks this is a joke.
2 of the 3 victims were my friends. not cool.
rst in peace leslie + justin <3
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