May 31

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Nos acostumbraremos? No a la modelo… me refiero a la ducha desde abajo, la sensación debe ser bien rara y más cuando la presión está bien fuerte… La duchita se conecta a una manguera, la colocas en tu patio y wala! A joder un rato! Lo malo es que la modelo no está incluí­da.

Lo veré en las próximas pelí­culas porno! LOL

[Via: Gizmodo.com]

May 31

Ya no saben que más inventarse… Si te gusta el bondage, en PermanentBondage.com han creado una especia de jaula donde te sientas (encierras) y el resto es historia… Más imágenes aquí­.

May 31

Solo espero que esa mierda nunca entre aquí­!

[Info: 577 Tyrannosaur]

May 30

[img]http://farm1.static.flickr.com/231/501791705_db4c19d58d_b.jpg[/img]

A veces, los extremos son malos… Va a tardar más destrancando la bicicleta, que llegando a donde vaya a ir…

[Ví­a: Flickr.com]

May 30

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May 30

May 30

Al menos agrada ver que siguen surgiendo alternativas reales a la dependencia que tenemos del petróleo. Los estilos… HORRIBLES… pero hay que darles tiempo a que desarrollen bien el motor para luego meterle al diseño del auto como tal.

[Vía: SpotVerde.com]

May 30

http://www.nytimes.com/cnet/CNET_2100-1083_3-6186567.html?_r=3&partner=MYWAY&pagewanted=print&oref=slogin&oref=slogin&oref=slogin

Email Tax Coming

Brendan Carlin and John Steele
NY Times
Monday May 28, 2007

The era of tax-free e-mail, Internet shopping and broadband connections could end this fall, if recent proposals in the U.S. Congress prove successful. State and local governments this week resumed a push to lobby Congress for far-reaching changes on two different fronts: gaining the ability to impose sales taxes on Net shopping, and being able to levy new monthly taxes on DSL and other Internet-service connections. One senator is even predicting taxes on e-mail.

Pro-tax advocates this week advanced a flurry of proposals pushing in that direction. A bill was introduced that would usher in mandatory sales tax collection for Internet purchases. Then, during a House of Representatives hearing the same day, politicians weighed whether to let a temporary ban on Net access taxes lapse when it expires on November 1. A House backer of another pro-sales tax bill said to expect a final version by July.

The response to the moves in CNET News.com’s TalkBack forum was overwhelmingly negative, mostly along antitax convictions. However, some readers took a bigger-picture approach to the situation.

“Half the reason the Internet has become so successful is because the government has had little involvement.”
– CNET News.com reader

“Half the reason the Internet has become so successful is because the government has had little involvement,” wrote one reader to the forum.

The U.S. Congress is also poised to create a set of massive new government databases that all employers must use to investigate the immigration status of current and future employees or face stiff penalties. The so-called Employment Eligibility Verification System would be established as part of a bill that senators began debating on Monday. The procedure that is likely to continue through June and would represent the most extensive rewrite of immigration and visa laws in a generation.

Because anyone who fails a database check would be out of a job, the proposed database already has drawn comparisons with the “no-fly list” and is being criticized by civil libertarians and business groups.

All employers–at least 7 million, according to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce–would be required to verify identity documents provided by both existing employees and potential hires, the legislation says. The data, including Social Security numbers, would be provided to Homeland Security, on penalty of perjury, and the government databases would provide a work authorization confirmation within three business days.

May 29

May 27

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