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China Kills 500,000 Cats In Death Camps For Beijing Olympics

Thousands of pet cats in Beijing are being abandoned by their owners and sent to die in secretive government pounds as China mounts an aggressive drive to clean up the capital in preparation for the Olympic Games.

Hundreds of cats a day are being rounded and crammed into cages so small they cannot even turn around. Then they are trucked to what animal welfare groups describe as death camps on the edges of the city. Continue reading ›

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US Olympic Team Will Wear Gas Masks To Fight Beijing Smog

As the lead exercise physiologist for the United States Olympic Committee, Randy Wilber has been fielding one bizarre question after another from American athletes training for the Beijing Games.

Should I run behind a bus and breathe in the exhaust? Should I train on the highway during rush hour? Is there any way to acclimate myself to pollution? Continue reading ›

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Ornella’s Cool Winter Olympics


Ornella braves the cold winds in Ice Age

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The Pertinence of Nudity

Every kind of nudity is an abstraction. A man without clothes submits himself to immediate opinion. Nudity emphasizes coarseness devoid of culture, clothes advocate culture without coarseness. Culture and coarseness are subjective omissions.

We wear our personalities, we also wear their failings. When romancing opportunity, man despises possibility. Nudity is the greatest opportunity that yields the nearest possibility to human perfection. Human perfection is an abstraction, too.

The concept of drenching oneself with something that selfishly annuls this, is known as clothing. Topically, it is redeemed as Fashion.

The first human walked naked on earth, says the bible. But the Bible can be wrong. Salvation is extorted by a means of esthetic nakedness supported by an ethical one, say I. I am wrong. Skin is where the soul is most.

The river is nude. Hence, it has a surface. The sky is not nude. Hence, it bears an exaggeration of surface. Anything superficial allows manipulation. Nudity is not superficial, clothing is. It is impossible without surfaces; correction: it is impossible without their employment.

Life is a pornography of awkward silences, purpose must find reason where the source is unfounded. Perfect nudity is a demand on beauty. Beauty is a compromise on that demand. A body is its element.

If every man on the planet were to bear the burden of nakedness, they would also bear the disruption of choices, an overkill of beauty and a greater disruption of vanity.

Nudity commands neither perception nor imagination, neither prejudice nor preference – it is a simple acceptance of the least human soul. A naked man is the reflection of every other. However, it is not the ideal.

A man without clothes is a disarmed man. A man without judgment is so too. Clothes levy illusions of the body and carry them against a looseness of conscience. If every man on the planet were to wear the same set of clothes, the world would consist of only one man or one kind of man. A man is never whole. Even nudity cannot privilege that. It can, however, privilege the sensation.

Partial nudity is similar to partial blindness. Half a perception, half an imagination, half a prejudice, half a preference – they aren’t impossible, they’re unacceptable.

Clothes form wordless introductions. To know a man by what overlaps his skin, is to arrest him by his condition rather than his identity. Conditions are temporary and circumstantial; identity is unique and the unachieved whole. Neither is significant to a wordless introduction. Nudity doesn’t provide one; correction: doesn’t need one.

Man is imperceptible. Clothed, he holds neither disparity nor similarity. Inspite of which there is neither chaos nor dissatisfaction. Nudity cannot make man perceptible. It cannot promote either disparity or similarity. It works against their united cause.

It can, however, discover the chaos and dissatisfaction.

Every erect body is one’s vertical area of the world. We must till, plow, nurture our areas. In a bareness, we must reap. The flesh is where the harvest is.

Cloth is a sight, skin is a definition. Nudity resolves the valid human confusions. A nude body is not a store house, it is a garage sale. We must not fear our shells, and we must fear without them.

Nudity does not need a revolution, it needs an understanding. If every man on the planet were to walk naked, we might still not have a perfect world, but surely a world less precious.

By Tushar Jain. Kindly, ask all and any questions at – mosaics12@rediffmail.com
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Flaming Yoko’s Olympian Vaginal Muscles

Stripper’s blazing performance makes fans shout ‘fire’ in a crowded theater

“From the time I was a little girl, I thought about doing something that would make people notice me, and enable me to tour the country,” says the woman, who is identified throughout only by her professional moniker “Honoo no Yoko” (Flaming Yoko).

As the curtain went up and the bump-and-grind music begins, Yoko would artfully peel her garments and proceed to a series of eight routines. All involved use of the highly developed muscles in her reproductive apparatus.

While not necessarily in the following order, she would make use of her vaginal sphincter to toot notes from a toy trumpet; click a toy clacker; twist the screw-off cap from a bottle of Oronamin C vitamin tonic; snap a wooden pencil in half; bend a metal spoon from a curry restaurant; inhale smoke from a cigarette and blow rings; and make like a blowgun, shooting darts to pop toy balloons.

If there were an Olympic event for this sort of thing, Japan would surely be in the running for a gold medal. A dart propelled from her nether blowgun was once measured at 180km per hour — as fast as one thrown by hand.

Then came the climax of her stage performance, the routine from she got the stage name “Flaming Yoko”: She would inject a quantity of alcohol into her vagina, part her thighs and spurt the liquid towards a waiting flame.

The great ball of fire at the climax of her performance was the source of considerable anticipation, and excited male fans often got into the act, counting down “5, 4, 3, 2, 1″ and then, in unison shouting “Fire!” as she let fly, causing an impressively large fireball to burst forth in mid-air.

Read more here,
Mainichi Daily News

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Life Lessons from Olympian Triumphs & Trials

Even if you’re not a sports nut, the drama from the XX Winter Olympic Games yielded many lessons that apply to both business and life. Here are just a few lessons learned over two spellbinding weeks in Turin:

Athlete: Lindsey Kildow, US Women’s Alpine Skiing

What she did: Suffered a horrific crash going 50mph during a training run for the Women’s Downhill and emerged from the hospital, determined to race less than 2 days later. A favorite to medal and ranked 2nd in the world in World Cup downhill standings, the 21-year old pushed through the pain to compete and ended up in eighth place.

Lesson learned: Winston Churchhill said, “Courage is going from failure to failure without losing enthusiasm.” Expect ups and downs along the way to your goal. See any “defeats” merely as setbacks. Learn from them and move forward. Remember, when these athletes suffer a defeat, they have to wait four more years to try again! If you suffer a setback, don’t wait four years. Get up and start over tomorrow.

Athletes: Barbara Fusar Poli and Maurizio Margaglio, Italy, Ice Dancing

What they did: After stumbling near the end of their original dance program, Fusar Poli and Margaglio attempted to stare each other down for nearly 30 seconds at center ice for all the world to see. Although they came into this part of the competition in first place, they literally tumbled to seventh and could only manage to pull themselves back up to sixth.

Lesson learned: Accept wins and losses as a team effort especially when the game is still in play. Instead of pointing fingers in public, move forward by forming a mutual strategy on how to handle damage control, minimize losses, as most importantly, figure out how to get back into the game.

Coach: Bjornar Hakensmoen, Norwegian Cross Country Skiing

What he did: When Canadian skier, Sara Renner was leading in the third lap of a six-lap relay, her ski pole snapped. Falling quickly to fourth place, she struggled on until a complete stranger, Hakensmoen, handed her a pole. Her team went on to win the silver medal. Norway finished in fourth, just out of the medals. Said Hakensmoen, “Nobody in Norway has said anything bad to me. They expect me to do that. Winning is not everything….If you win but don’t help someone when you should have, what win is that? I was just helping a girl in big trouble.”

Lesson learned: Let your values and ethics guide you. Helping others can often earn you greater satisfaction than capitalizing on their misfortunes along the way.

Athletes: Prawat Nagvajara, Thailand and Arturo Kinch, Costa Rica, Men’s 15K Classical Cross Country Skiing

What they did: The sole representatives from their countries in the Winter Olympics, both men paid their own way and finished nearly 30 minutes behind the gold medallist. Far from being disappointed at finishing in last and second to last place, both relished the experience. Said the 48-year old Nagvajara, “Just being here is enough….I can help people believe they can do anything.”

Lessons learned: As fellow Olympian, Robel Teklemariam, the Ethiopian skier who finished 84th out of 97 said, “Dream big, man. Because you just never know.”

Athletes: Lindsey Jacobellis, US & Tanja Freiden, Switzerland, Women’s Snowboard Cross

What they did: Despite having a commanding lead in the finals of the Snowboard Cross, Jacobellis lost the gold medal when she fell going over the second to last jump after performing an unnecessarily risky “method air” freestyle snowboard trick. Freiden capitalized on the American’s mistake and slid into first place. While Jacobellis, the reigning world champion in this event, said she was just trying to “have some fun,” her coach said “I was yelling at the TV the whole time, ‘Keep racing! Keep racing!’” Freiden said, “I knew I had to concentrate because you’re never finished until you’re finished.”

Lesson learned: Don’t hand your competitors success on a silver platter. Never, ever stop racing.

ACT NOW

Citius, Altius, Fortius–Latin motto of the Olympic Games, translated as Faster, Higher, Stronger.

Interested in having your company achieve a personal best in 2006? Answer the following questions and begin writing your game plan for a gold medal season:

1. What does your company do extremely well?

2. How do you measure and track results?

3. How can you improve upon your strengths? (faster service, higher standards, stronger products?)

4. What sort of “training” will keep you on the cutting edge?

5. What can you learn from your competition?

Just a few careful minutes of planning can make all the difference in your bottom line.

Remember, keep racing.

Want more tips like this? Pick-up your free subscription to The Success Hot Sheet and some nifty bonuses at http://www.readytoevolve.com. Kim Nishida is the author of the innovative programs, Stop Wasting Time! and Conception to Completion, helping you realize your company’s full potential.
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