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Make your own post!Did "Hobbits" Really Exist? New Evidence Suggests Yes
This sounds like either a) a daily lap in Larry Blamire's brain or b) a headline from The Onion. It is neither. It’s deadpan flat-footed so-says-science bona fide real and scientific. Go forth and ingest. You will be blinking like I am. Let’s blink together.
I didn't know you came with raisons.
The inexplicable cartoons of Larry Blamire
The Lost Skeleton of Cadavra
No, I’m talking about casting the lead role in THE LOST SKELETON OF CADAVRA. In fact, it’s the very titular role (though some would disagree; there are those who don’t find him at all titular). How to Cast Bones.
The Real Republican Road to Recovery
The Republican "Road to Recovery" budget alternative, rolled out today by John Boehner, has been criticized by left and right for its lack of specificity and its promise to eliminate the national debt while significantly cutting taxes. FiveThirtyEight.com, however, has received an advance copy of additional details prepared by the Minority Leader's office. Although some elements of the proposal are still under discussion -- Eric Cantor is said to want to eliminate North Dakota rather than Idaho, while Thaddeus McCotter has suggested using the balance of TARP funds to purchase scratch-off tickets -- the final plan can be expected to contain most or all of these components.
George Bush Abandons Ranch in Favor of Formally "whites-only" Enclave
Abandoning any pretense of being a brush-clearing "rancher" in Crawford [the 1,600 acre "Crawford Ranch" was built and named in 2000 during the presidential primaries], George Bush will be moving into the posh Dallas suburb of Preston Hollow after his term ends in January. In fact, for twelve years the family has planned this relocation to follow immediately George Bush's official political tenure. A racially-restrictive covenant in Preston Hollow prohibited nonwhites from using and occupying specified properties until 2000, when it was invalidated. Racially-restrictive rules have been legally unenforceable since the Supreme Court's decision in Shelley v. Kraemer (1948), but Preston Hollow asserted segregation rights until just eight years ago. In 2000, the following "whites only" language was formally removed from the neighborhood association's covenant: "Said property shall be used and occupied by white persons except these covenants shall not prevent occupancy by domestic servants of different race or nationality in the employ of a tenant." Freestanding "servants quarters" must be placed "to the rear of the lot." In 2006 a federal judge found that Preston Hollow's elementary school district had attempted to undermine the desegregation decision in Brown v. Topeka Board of Education (1954) by using outdated "separate but equal" arguments. Preston Hollow, home to many of most weatlhy and powerful elite in Texas, boasts an average annual household income of $1.5 million.