Home » Archives » December 2008
Zit In My Nose.
December 22, 2008
It’s the Christmas Season and what better way to face it than to have a huge zit inside your nostrills. I just simply hate it. I feel light headed because of the throbbing pain. The slightest touch on my nose sends a thousand volts of electricity down my body. In those moments (yes it ain’t just a single moment of stupidity of hitting or touching my nose.) I feel uncomfortably weak. I simply hate the feeling. Anyone there who knows how to purge it quick?
I googled it up and met with Dan’s minions. Dan has created a site called www.acne.org. The unanimous advice that one guy received when he asked what needs to be done to the zit up there: LEAVE IT ALONE. Alright that’s easy, but WHEN will it leave me!!!???
Barack Obama Supports Philippine Call Centers
December 17, 2008Just when you thought President Barack Obama will pull out outsourced BPO companies in the Philippines and other asian countries, you see these pics…
Van Roxas Half Nekkid
I saw this pic in one locally-run gay website. I was wondering where did they get this uber hot pic of Van Pojas (now known as Van Roxas). Star Studio hailed him as December’s Hunk. Anyways, got this from his Friendster page. He knows that everyone thinks he’s hot. Nice job Van. Make us drool more. Just one teeny tiny question, were his abs re-touched?
Shut Up And Save
I’m worried of the global economic crisis. Who isn’t anyways?
I was supposed to buy me a new laptop this Christmas. However, with news of downsizing and big companies closing I can’t help but imagine myself with all of my gadgets, unemployed and hungry. The last condition tops the my list of the worst. I CAN’T BE THIN ANYMORE!!!
So it’s already a plan. No outward cash flows from my bank account until Barack whips up a cure for this current financial turmoil. I don’t listen to economists who say that we must make the market afloat by purchasing more; keep moneys circulating. Are you nuts? Goodwill stores in the US are reaching record sales in the last 4 months. George Bush dodged a pair of Iraqi shoes. Nearly a thousand people are dying of cholera in Zimbabwe. OFWs are heading home because of unemployment. And you wan’t me to shop? Are you even gonna feed me when all hell breaks lose?
My dear readers. It’s best to save than be sorry. I suggest we all practice prudence and practicality in all of our expenses from this point forward. These are hard times. Let’s pray.
Did I sound jumpy? And did I just say that we must pray. Good Lord!
The Battle Continues
December 16, 2008
To all homophobes out there. WE (LGBT) did not vote for your right to marry. If you can marry so can we. Millions of LGBTs have dreamed of a lawfully recognized marriage for ages and just because you want to keep it’s sanctity, you’re gonna keep that a dream? Who needs sanctity when you favor one group of people over the other. Who care’s about upholding a set of morals that discriminates a group of people because they are considered “queer”.
Gays are here to stay. We are everywhere. Your puny efforts will go in vain because we’ll be stronger than ever. You can talk down on us, you can call us names but you can never take our right to live under the same provisions and protection of the Constitution.
California’s Proposition 8 may have ammended their state’s constitution, isolating marriage only to heterosexual couples, but it has not thwarted the spirit and the resolve of all LGBTs.
www.noonprop8.com has this to say of about this hard defeat:
And while victory is not ours this day, we know that because of the work done here; freedom, fairness and equality will be ours someday. Just look at far we have come in a few decades.Up until 1974 same-sex intimacy was a crime in California. There wasn’t single law recognizing the relationships of same-sex couples until 1984 — passed by the Berkeley School District. San Francisco did not pass domestic-partner protections until 1990, the state of California following in 2005. And in 2000, Proposition 22 passed with a 23% majority.
Today, we fought to retain our right to marry and millions of Californians stood with us. Over the course of this campaign everyday Californians and their friends, neighbors and families built a civil rights campaign unequalled in California history.
You raised more money than anyone believed possible for an LGBT civil rights campaign.
You reached out to family and friends in record numbers—helping hundreds of thousands of Californians understand what the LGBT civil rights struggle is really about.
You built the largest grassroots and volunteer network that has ever been built – a coalition that will continue to fight until all people are equal.
And you made the case to the people of California and to the rest of the world that discrimination — in any form — is unfair and wrong.




