Sunday, September 19, 2010

A Love Story of Young Boy

                                                             I used to be like this?
                                                            I met a gal?

                                                               She was like this...

 Together, we were like this?

 I gave her gifts like this?

 When she accepted my proposal, I was like this?

 I used to talk to her all night like this


 and at office used to do this...
 When my friends saw my gal friend, they stared like this?

 and I used to react like this?

 BUT on Valentine Day, she gave red roses to someone else like this?


 AND, I was like this?

 Which later led to this...

 I felt like doing this…

But rather did this . . .  

 I started doing this

And this...


And I ended up like this…

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Women Brain!



One night President Obama and his wife Michelle decided to do something out of routine and go for a casual dinner at a restaurant that wasn't too luxurious.


When they were seated, the owner of the restaurant asked the president's secret service if he could please speak to the First Lady in private. They obliged and Michelle had a conversation with the owner.


Following this conversation President Obama asked Michelle, why was he so interested in talking to you. She mentioned that in her teenage years, he had been madly in love with her.


President Obama then said, "so if you had married him, you would now be the owner of this lovely restaurant" , to which Michelle responded, "no, if I had married him, he would now be the President".

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Wikileaks Posts "Classified CIA Memo"

By: WikiLeaks.Org
The report mentions David Headley, who pleaded guilty to helping the Mumbai attackers in 2008.
The whistleblower organisation Wikileaks has released a classified CIA document asking what would happen if foreign countries began to view the US as an "exporter of terrorism".
The document was prepared by the CIA's "red cell", a unit responsible for preparing analysis papers from an adversarial perspective. It notes that a number of Americans have travelled overseas to commit violent acts, like David Headley, the Pakistani-American man who helped the Mumbai attackers in 2008; and Baruch Goldstein, the Jewish extremist who killed dozens of Palestinians in Hebron in 1994.
US citizens also provided "financial and material support" for armed groups in Northern Ireland: much of the funding for the Irish Republican Army, for example, came from Irish-Americans.
"Contrary to common belief, the American export of terrorism or terrorists is not a recent phenomenon," the report said. "Nor has it been associated only with Islamic radicals or people of Middle Eastern, African or South Asian ethnic origin."

'Simply to provoke thought'
The CIA concluded that foreign governments would be less likely to cooperate with the US on detention, intelligence-sharing, and other issues. "If the US were seen as an exporter of terrorism, foreign partners may be less willing to cooperate with the United States on extrajudicial activities," the report noted.
George Little, a CIA spokesman, said in a statement that the document was merely a think piece - one of many prepared by the agency. "These sorts of analytic products, clearly identified as coming from the agency's 'red cell', are designed simply to provoke thought and present different points of view," he said.
Wikileaks has released dozens of leaks over the years, but it gained particular attention last month, when it published more than 75,000 classified US military documents on the war in Afghanistan. It has promised to release another 15,000 in the coming weeks.
Wikileaks was heavily criticised by the US government for endangering the lives of Afghan informants and others who work with the US military. In a separate development, Sweden's chief prosecutor said she will continue investigating an accusation of molestation against Julian Assange, the founder of Wikileaks.

Wikileaks Posts "Classified CIA Memo"

The report mentions David Headley, who pleaded guilty to helping the Mumbai attackers in 2008


The whistleblower organisation Wikileaks has released a classified CIA document asking what would happen if foreign countries began to view the US as an "exporter of terrorism".



The document was prepared by the CIA's "red cell", a unit responsible for preparing analysis papers from an adversarial perspective.



It notes that a number of Americans have travelled overseas to commit violent acts, like David Headley, the Pakistani-American man who

helped the Mumbai attackers in 2008; and Baruch Goldstein, the Jewish extremist who killed dozens of Palestinians in Hebron in 1994.







US citizens also provided "financial and material support" for armed groups in Northern Ireland: much of the funding for the Irish Republican Army, for example, came from Irish-Americans.



"Contrary to common belief, the American export of terrorism or terrorists is not a recent phenomenon," the report said.



"Nor has it been associated only with Islamic radicals or people of Middle Eastern, African or South Asian ethnic origin."



'Simply to provoke thought'



The CIA concluded that foreign governments would be less likely to cooperate with the US on detention, intelligence-sharing, and other issues.



"If the US were seen as an exporter of terrorism, foreign partners may be less willing to cooperate with the United States on extrajudicial activities," the report noted.



George Little, a CIA spokesman, said in a statement that the document was merely a think piece - one of many prepared by the agency.



"These sorts of analytic products, clearly identified as coming from the agency's 'red cell', are designed simply to provoke thought and present different points of view," he said.



Wikileaks has released dozens of leaks over the years, but it gained particular attention last month, when it published more than

75,000 classified US military documents on the war in Afghanistan. It has promised to release another 15,000 in the coming weeks.



Wikileaks was heavily criticised by the US government for endangering the lives of Afghan informants and others who work with the US military.



In a separate development, Sweden's chief prosecutor said she

will continue investigating an accusation of molestation against Julian Assange, the founder of Wikileaks