Foggy Soap Bubble Tricks ~ Zero Toys Launcher Machine Mod
Posted on Sun, 29 Jun 2008 14:17:27 -0500 in Online cigarettes
ZERO TOYS, makers of the wildly popular Zero Blaster Fog Ring Generator & KEITH MICHAEL JOHNSON of BubbleArtist.com are proud to present a new way to have fun with bubbles...FOGGY BUBBLE TRICKZ ~ a new line of professionally powerful & fantastically fun products for soap bubblers of all ages and range of experience.Foggy Bubble Trickz products will be available at retailers and online with www.ZeroToys.com soon enough.A website dedicated to foggy-bubble-play is being constructed as you read this.Stop by www.BubbleTrickz.com now to see how to build your own foggy bubble machine with Zero Toys' Zero Launcher already available! You can mod your way to foggy bubbles if you just can't wait for the new machines.Don't forget to ask for the ** INTERNET DISCOUNT ** when you place your order with the Zero Toys sales force at 978-371-3378.The password will save you $1 off of the $16.95 price of a Zero Launcher ~ the machine you will need to make your own cloudy bubbles (Launchers at www.ZeroToys.com & directions at www.BubbleTrickz.com).Are smoky bubbles going extinct?For hundreds of years humans blew smoke bubbles with clay pipes.Vaudeville entertainers with their stogies blew smoke filled bubbles the size of pumpkins ~ divided them in two and then reunited them to the amazement of the audience. (We'll show you how to achieve that magical effect at BubbleTrickz.com!)Cigarettes too have been used...But those days of tobacco smoke filled bubbles went out with the expiration of last millennium. They are even against the law in many countries.Everyone from stage performers to bubble blowing grandparents have been wondering if the days of cloudy bubble fun are truly gone forever...Zero Toys, a seriously fun toy company headed by inventors Al and Joel decided to take matters into their own hands and change the course of this endangered time honored fun filled tradition.With their patented, hand held fog generators... (uniquely powerful, highly adaptable, battery powered, hand held devices that turn a few drops of a thoroughly safe and certified food grade combination of water, glycerin & USP-glycol into beautiful, rich fog) ... they knew they had the answer.To help them meet our worlds foggy bubble needs, the Zero Boys turned to Keith Johnson a professional bubble artist and creative inventor in his own right.The team is currently hard at work preparing the solutions and Trickz machines so they can get them out to you ASAP.Until then, for those of you who just can't wait ~ we have information available to help you construct your own foggy bubble machines based on our prototype designs, using products already on our shelves.Again, please feel free to drop by www.BubbleTrickz.com for more about that.Keep in touch and keep an eye out for more revealing videos.And don't worry! Safe, fun, foggy filled bubbles are no longer an endangered species here on Spaceship Earth. ...
Bring Him Back
Posted on Sun, 29 Jun 2008 14:16:50 -0500 in Build a website
WATCH TILL THE END!!!Thanks for all the support if you wanna visit my website its www.captainhitsugaiya.piczo.com and if you wanna make ME and Rukia then the code is on my channel along with instructions!! ...
Creating Additional Value From E-Book Sales
Posted on Sun, 29 Jun 2008 14:15:57 -0500 in Ebook sales
If someone purchases a product after using your uniquely coded link to get to the sales page, you receive a commission on the sale. Many companies and product manufacturers offer affiliate programs and all eBook sellers should take a ...The eBook Bubble
How do you Create Word Art?
Posted on Sun, 29 Jun 2008 14:14:26 -0500 in Good website design
http://live.pirillo.com - I should have been an English teacher, according to my degree. I never did become one, but I'm still addicted to words. I love to write. I also enjoy good design, and like playing around with word art. When I found this website, I couldn't stop playing with words! ...
GoDaddy - How to Buy Your Whois Domain Name
Posted on Sun, 29 Jun 2008 14:13:30 -0500 in Buy domain name
http://www.whoisaaronhill.com http://www.freeleadswithaaron.comLearn how to brand Yourself rather than your company buy buying Your Name!This is the first step to becoming an authority figure in your company & business ...
Bill Clinton agrees with Obama!
Posted on Sun, 29 Jun 2008 14:12:28 -0500 in National student loans
6/6/93, Arlington National Cemetery: Bill Clinton speaks on RFK legacy-- "For in Robert Kennedy we all invested our hopes and our dreams that somehow we might redeem the promise of the America we then feared we were losing; somehow we might call back the promise of President Kennedy and Martin Luther King, and heal the divisions of Vietnam and the violence and pain in our own country. But I believe if Robert Kennedy were here today he would dare us not to mourn his passing, but to fulfill his promise and to be the people that he so badly wanted us all to be. He would dare us to leave yesterday and embrace tomorrow.""When he was alive, some said he was ruthless, some said he wasn't a real liberal, and others claimed he was a real radical. If he were here today, I think he would laugh and say they were both right. But now as we see him more clearly, we understand he was a man who was very gentle to those who were most vulnerable; very tough in the standards he kept for himself; very old-fashioned in the virtues in which he believed; and a relentless searcher for change, for growth, for the potential of heart and mind that he sought in himself and he demanded of others.""If you listen now you can hear with me his voice telling me and telling you and telling everyone here, "We can do better." Today's troubles call us to do better. The legacy of Robert Kennedy is a stern rebuke to the cynicism, to the trivialization that grips so much of our public life today. What use is it in the face of the aching problems gripping millions of Americans -- the American without a job, the American without health care, the American without a safe street to live on or a good school to send a child to? What use of it is it in the face of all the divisions that keep our country down and rob our children of their rightful future? Let us learn here the simple, powerful, beautiful lesson, the simple faith of Robert Kennedy: We can do better."The second paragraph I quoted could be describing Barack Obama simply by changing the verb tenses from past to present. The third paragraph mirrors Obama's own view on politics while sharply criticizing HILLARY Clinton. BILL Clinton believes that RFK's legacy "is a stern rebuke to the cynicism, to the trivialization that grips so much of our public life today," yet HILLARY goes on and on about one trivial word. And for Hillary (a woman who has worked on the Wal-Mart executive's board, who has lived in a political bubble for the past 15-20 years) to be calling Barack (a man who was raised by a single mother and his grandparents, who only recently finished paying off his student loans) out of touch with the people is simply shameful. She is dividing the Dems the way her husband united them (and semi-divided again with Lewinsky). Overall, BILL Clinton's tone on RFK seems to understand that people have become "filled with bitterness" since RFK's death, and he asks for an end to the bitterness, "to fulfill [Bobby's] promise." This obviously implies that Bobby's dream has not yet been fulfilled, yet HILLARY seems to think it has been because she said, "I don't think that people are bitter." Hm, Hillary, well if they were bitter on 6/6/93, then what in the last fifteen years has filled them with hope and courage? Is it the Internet (perhaps a valid point, perhaps not), the "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" military policy (wishy-washy), the ratification of NAFTA (which Hillary now claims she always hated), the budding health care plan (that was nipped in the bud by conservatives), the Waco Siege (nightmare), the promising Oslo Accords & Camp David meetings (which didn't QUITE end the 2,000 year struggle), the Lewinsky Scandal (which may have given hope to baby boomer politicians who realized they could still get some ass after all those years), the NATO involvement in Kosovo (which may have been justified but certainly could've been handled differently), or is it the discovery of magic ponies? Please note, the last thing I mentioned didn't actually happen, so that list looks pretty grim. And that's just the Clinton presidency. I'm not even gonna TRY to mention all the hope-killing measures adopted throughout the clusterfuck that is the G. "Dubya" Bush presidency. These events murdered many people's hope. My hope is still alive, having only been beaten into the ground. Despite the fact I have grown up knowing only the Bush-Clinton-Bush era, I am resilient. My hope lives on, and it rests in Barack Obama, the first candidate in 25-30 years who knows what he stands for, and he stands for America. He stands for freedom; for liberty and justice for all. He stands for an end to "the trivialization that grips so much of our public life today." Strange, I never thought I'd be quoting Bill Clinton to support Barack Obama.Full Clinton speech: http://www.jfklibrary.org/Historical+Resources/Archives/Reference+Desk/President+Clintons+remarks+for+Robert+F+Kennedy.htm ...
Playing Online Games - Great Way to Cure That Incessant Boredom
Posted on Sun, 29 Jun 2008 14:05:06 -0500 in Puzzle games
Online puzzle games are another type of popular online game. These are games like Tetris, Bubble Breaker, and things like that. Rather than taking a journey, it is usually the gamer against the computer or the other players on the site ...Wii invited to the WordJong Party...
Rising Energy Prices and the Falling Dollar
Posted on Sun, 29 Jun 2008 14:04:30 -0500 in Real estate no money down
http://www.digitalgoldmoney.com/Oil prices are on the minds of many Americans as gas hits $4 a gallon, and continues to surge. How high can prices go? How can we solve these problems? What, or who, is to blame? Part of the answer lies in understanding bubbles and monetary inflation, but especially the Federal Reserve System. The Federal Reserve is charged with controlling inflation through interest rate manipulation, however, many fail to realize that creating money, and therefore inflation, is really its only tool. When the Federal Reserve inflates the dollar as drastically as it has in the past few decades, the first users of the newly created money go in search of investments for their dollars. They must invest this money quickly and aggressively before it loses value. This causes certain sectors to expand beyond what would naturally occur in the free market. Eventually the sector overheats and the bubble bursts. Overinvestment in dotcoms eventually led to a collapse of the NASDAQ. Next we had the housing bubble, and now we are seeing the price of oil being bid up in the creation of another new bubble. Investors are now looking to commodities like oil, for stability and growth as they pull capital out of real estate. This increased demand for investment vehicles related to oil contributes to driving up the price of the actual product. If the Fed continues with its bubble blowing policies of the past, the new commodities bubble will continue to grow, gas prices will continue to go up, as the value of your dollars go down. We will see an overinvestment in these commodities as solutions are desperately sought for a supply shortage, which is only part of the problem. Make no mistake, though, this is not the free market at work. Government manipulations have added levels of complication and unintended consequences to the marketplace. This is not the time for members of Congress to take political potshots at each other, or to imagine that the free market is somehow to blame. This is the time to understand and fix problems. That begins with making sure the decision makers have a firm grasp on the causes of the problems and possible effects of their decisions. This is absolutely crucial if we want to get it right this time. That is why I am in the process of calling for hearings on Capitol Hill on how the falling value of the dollar affects energy prices. Governments need to get out of the way and let the people get back to work so that we can get our economy back on stable footing. Our destructive regulatory environment, confiscatory tax policies, and managed, rather than free trade have chased many businesses overseas. The bottom line is average Americans are being seriously hurt by these flawed policies, and they are not getting good information about the true dynamics at work. The important thing now is to get the diagnosis absolutely correct so we can administer the appropriate treatment and move on to a healthier economic future. To do this it is absolutely necessary to address the subjects of central banking and fiat money. - by Ron Paul http://www.digitalgoldmoney.com/ ...
Bill Cummings on the Denver real estate market conditions
Posted on Sun, 29 Jun 2008 14:04:03 -0500 in Colorado forclosures
Director of Real Estate advertising for the Denver Newspaper agency, Bill Cummings enlightens on Denver's current real estate market. ...
Corporate Advisory Insight: Making Sense of Subprime Part 1
Posted on Sun, 29 Jun 2008 14:02:08 -0500 in Amortization loans
Phil Abram from Thomson Financial's Corporate Advisory Services group discusses the subprime situation.Transcript: Bubbles bursting; credit crunching; 2007 was the year subprime slammed the markets. I'm Phil Abram, bringing you Thomson Financial's "Making Sense of Subprime."The word subprime is tossed around casual finance conversations all the time these days, but what does it actually mean and why should you care? Simply put, a subprime mortgage is a loan that's issued to borrowers with a higher-than-average risk of defaulting on payments. In exchange for taking on the added risk, lenders charge higher interest rates on these loans than they do for conventional mortgages. Borrowers pay the higher rates because they have no other option, while for the lender; higher risk yields a higher return. In order to stimulate the economy in 2001, the U.S. Federal Reserve cut interest rates to their lowest levels since the 1960s. With these cuts, the price borrowers paid for home loans decreased creating high demand for homes in the U.S. While yields on loans dropped, lenders, at the same time, offered mortgages with extended amortization periods and adjustable rates with the expectation that higher rates later would subsidize lower rates now. The problem was the artificial confidence that the bull market created in the minds of borrowers. From 1996 to 2006, the share of subprime mortgages to total home loan originations rose from 9% to 20%. Misguided borrowers mistakenly opened adjustable lines of credit and continuously refinanced their mortgages believing that the run would continue and their homes would only increase in value. Instead, rates began to rise and home values started to fall in 2006 leaving borrowers unable to make payments and lenders stuck with property worth less than the loan. Defaults and foreclosures have risen to such a level that in October of 2007, 16% of subprime loans with adjustable rate mortgages were 90 days delinquent or in foreclosure, triple the number of defaults at the same time two years earlier. By January of 2008, that number rose further to 21%. But how does trouble between homeowners and mortgage lenders find its way directly onto Wall Street? The answer is through mortgage backed securities and CDOs. Lenders began packaging risky mortgages into investment grade securities traded between banks, corporations, hedge funds and other investors, and most of which were given triple A ratings. Now, once the bubble burst and borrowers defaulted, those investors were left with billions of dollars of securities with little or no value. As of January 25, 2008, major U.S. banks and other financial institutions reported roughly $130 billion in subprime related write-downs. Investors then backed away from buying commercial paper altogether and corporations ultimately found themselves without a source to raise capital and balance sheets riddled with worthless short term investments. The economic trickle down from there is simple. Corporations are forced to close segments or cut jobs, the cuts create unemployment, unemployment hinders spending, and slow spending pressures the entire economy. That's all for now, but for more, stay tuned for the next installment of our series "Making sense of Subprime." ...
Extreme Josh plays scary game.
Posted on Sun, 29 Jun 2008 13:59:46 -0500 in Scary games
Josh Plays bubble wrap mania. Author: Josesk8s Keywords: series...
Scary Maze Game (Chat with Natasha)
Posted on Sun, 29 Jun 2008 13:59:40 -0500 in Scary games
aimlessly Cedar Springs memorial painting pet dis publicly real...
Posted on Sun, 29 Jun 2008 13:55:47 -0500 in Real estate investment clubs
... shuddered Harrisoon free lg cellular phone ringtone kojima drooled real estate concord nc Man Jumping slumberland kip bed. acutely Cherry Grove Beach shifter housing dbjyyunghn of bakersfield real estate investment club Psychonaut ...Comment on OC homebuilding runs at slowest pace in 60 years by mav...
Tags: real average club investment estate
AWFUL GAMES: Bible Games (Part 2)
Posted on Sun, 29 Jun 2008 13:55:30 -0500 in Bible games
It's time for more hazing of the Bible Games! This is the part where I really begin to haze a Zelda ripoff called Spiritual Welfare.This is a four-part review so watch Part 1 before watching the others. ...
Japan Developers May Struggle As Demand for Office Space Ebbs
Posted on Sun, 29 Jun 2008 13:53:00 -0500 in Real estate property
Commercial property played a key role in propelling Japan out of its decade-plus slump after the country's stock-and-real-estate bubble burst in the early 1990s. Some property prices wallowed for years at a fraction of their peak values ...Sunday Real Estate...
Remote Control Cruise Liner
Posted on Sun, 29 Jun 2008 13:50:26 -0500 in Cruises
Remote Control Cruise Liner Crossing The Lake Author: HawaiianBubble...
How do you Create Word Art?
Posted on Sun, 29 Jun 2008 13:49:11 -0500 in Website design help
http://live.pirillo.com - I should have been an English teacher, according to my degree. I never did become one, but I'm still addicted to words. I love to write. I also enjoy good design, and like playing around with word art. When I found this website, I couldn't stop playing with words! ...
Big Gov Responsible for Housing Bubble
Posted on Sun, 29 Jun 2008 13:47:48 -0500 in Housing forclosures
http://www.digitalgoldmoney.com/The House passed two bills attempting to rehabilitate the housing and mortgage market this week. There doesn't seem to be any shortage of criticism and blame for the bad decisions, and rightly so. Lenders and banks do share much of the blame for the overheated market. Lending standards were relaxed, or even abandoned altogether, creating an exaggerated pool of homebuyers that led to ballooning home prices that many, especially real estate investors, expected to continue forever. Now that the bubble has burst, the losses are staggering. However, many in Washington fail to realize it was government intervention that brought on the current economic malaise in the first place. The Federal Reserve's artificially low interest rates created the loose, easy credit that ignited a voracious appetite in the banks for borrowers. People made these lending and buying decisions based on market conditions that were wildly manipulated by government. But part of sound financial management should be recognizing untenable or falsified economic conditions and adjusting risk accordingly. Many banks failed to do that and are now looking to taxpayers to pick up the pieces. This is wrong-headed and unfair, but Congress is attempting to do it anyway.These housing bills address the crisis in exactly the wrong way, by seeking to hide the problem with more disastrous government bail-outs and interventions. One measure, HR 5830 the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) Housing Stabilization and Homeowner Retention Act would allow the FHA to guarantee as much as $300 billion worth of refinanced home loans for those facing threat of foreclosure. HR 5818 the Neighborhood Stabilization Act, would provide $15 billion in loans and grants to localities to purchase and renovate foreclosed homes with the object of then selling or renting out those homes. Thankfully, President Bush has vowed to veto both of these bills. It is neither morally right nor fiscally wise to socialize private losses in this way.The solution is for government to stop micromanaging the economy and let the market adjust, as painful as that will be for some. We should not force taxpayers, including renters and more frugal homeowners, to switch places with the speculators and take on those same risks that bankrupted them. It is a terrible idea to spread the financial crisis any wider or deeper than it already is, and to prolong the agony years into the future. Socializing the losses now will only create more unintended consequences that will give new excuses for further government interventions in the future. This is how government grows - by claiming to correct the mistakes it earlier created, all the while constantly shaking down the taxpayer. The market needs a chance to correct itself, and Congress needs to avoid making the situation worse by pretending to ride to the rescue. - by Ron Paulhttp://www.digitalgoldmoney.com/ ...
Tags: government housing market home intervention
Foreclosure filings up 48% vs. 07
Posted on Sun, 29 Jun 2008 13:47:48 -0500 in Housing forclosures
06.24.08 Author: RemiG2006 Keywords: foreclousure...
Tags: foreclosure added rage flipper housing
FHA Modernization Act
Posted on Sun, 29 Jun 2008 13:47:45 -0500 in Housing forclosures
December 14, 2007-Senator Robert Menendez (D-NJ) speaks to the Senate expressing his support of the Federal Housing Act Modernization Act ...
Tags: mortgage act housing modernization crisis