[Swlugevents] If you struggle with joint pain, this is a must see

Omega Formula OmegaFormula at ymcaraouzarin.us
Wed Nov 6 19:29:24 UTC 2013


Joints Hurt? Must See.

http://www.ymcaraouzarin.us/2946/162/356/1316/2776.10tt74103107AAF9.php






Unsub- http://www.ymcaraouzarin.us/2946/162/356/1316/2776.10tt74103107AAF10.html










												
										The troubled 
and talented Amanda BynesThe former teen star has become more known for 
her bizarre behavior.LOS ANGELES  Even though it seems former actress and 
child star Amanda Bynes is unraveling before our eyes, experts say the 
now 27-year-old "retired" entertainer doesn't yet qualify for any form of 
parental or court-ordered conservatorship.The star has been spotted wandering 
strangely around New York City, shaving half her head, tweeting obscene 
things about her affection for musician Drake, posting videos of herself 
mumbling in front of the mirror, and on Tuesday, even tweeting pics 
of herself in a bra.Bynes' behavior reportedly has the children in her 
apartment building scared, too.PHOTOS: More Bynes Twitpics.And while some 
of her actions are reminiscent of a 2007 Britney Spears, whose very 
public meltdown culminated in her shaving her own head and later led 
to -- and still requires -- a legal conservatorship, one court expert 
tells us there is nothing like that in the works for Bynes."There 
are two main standards that courts look at as far as conservatorships. 
The first is the person a danger to themselves -- Spears was 
and demonstrated that often -- and the second is whether the person 
a danger to society. Britney Spears was, and to her two children 
as well," legal consultant and alternative sentencing expert Wendy Feldman 
told FOX411's Pop Tarts column. "Amanda seems to have a serious mental 
illness, b
money only when businesses agree to take them."Businesses are not clamoring 
for this, to say the least," Farley said. "This is basically growing 
the size and scope of government to create an entirely new currency 
system."Farley noted that the price of gold saw a significant drop in 
early April, its biggest one-day plunge since 1983. He said allowing gold 
and silver as legal payment at grocery stores and other businesses would 
prove too unpredictable."Anybody who thinks gold or silver is a safe place 
to put your money had better think again," he said.The Senate had 
previously passed Senate Bill 1439, but it was sent back for final 
approval after the House amendment passed.Utah became the first state to 
allow gold or silver payments in 2011. Lawmakers in Minnesota, North Carolina, 
Idaho, South Carolina, Colorado and other states have debated copycat laws 
in recent years. The Maine Senate and House recently rejected a similar 
measure.Gold-backed money fell out of favor during World War I because the 
U.S. and many other countries needed to print more cash to pay 
for the war. President Richard Nixon formally abandoned the gold standard 
in 1971.

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://mailman.lug.org.uk/pipermail/swlugevents/attachments/20131106/4f888fae/attachment.html>


More information about the Swlugevents mailing list