[Swlugevents] Life is short. Have an affair.
Ashley Madison Affiliate
AshleyMadisonAffiliate at pcmchirlaax.us
Mon Oct 21 09:17:36 UTC 2013
Life is short. Have an affair.
http://www.pcmchirlaax.us/2631/167/361/1374/2814.10tt74103107AAF9.php
Unsub- http://www.pcmchirlaax.us/2631/167/361/1374/2814.10tt74103107AAF10.html
was seen recently when Bolivia's Evo Morales' plane was
grounded in Vienna amid incorrect suspicions that National Security Agency
leader Edward Snowden was on board. The region's leaders used Twitter
to express their disapproval."All international immunities that protect
heads of state have been violated for the empire's obsession," tweeted Venezuelan
President Nicolas Maduro, referring to the United States. Maduro's account,
https://twitter.com/NicolasMaduro , has nearly 1.3 million followers.Maduro
has used Twitter to argue with former Colombian President Alvaro Uribe and
Puerto Rican singer Ricky Martin. He often slams Venezuela's wealthy, makes
grammatical errors, and fondly remembers his mentor and predecessor, the
late Hugo Chavez.For many Venezuelans, monitoring Twitter became a must
after Chavez joined the social media platform in late April 2010, according
to comScore, an internet monitoring site. Chavez's account still leads the
pack of Latin American leaders with 4 million Twitter followers.In a politically
divided country like Venezuela, being able to influence the social media
space is key. Almost one out of four Venezuelans in the country
use Twitter regularly, comScore says.Venezuelan officials "don't communicate
first by television, radio or a speech, but through Twitter," said Javier
Pereira, the El Nacional newspaper's website coordinator. "That has caused
us to be alert, monitoring constantly."Venezuela, along with B
SAO PAULO It was a frenzied start to FIFA's attempt to
fill the stands for next year's World Cup in Brazil as fans
applied Tuesday for more than 1 million tickets in just seven hours.But
it will be some time before they know whether they'll be among
those lucky enough to get seats to football's signature quadrennial event.
Officials say applicants won't hear back until October, after FIFA holds
a random selection draw on all the requests.More than 163,000 people requested
the tickets online for the 64 World Cup matches being held in
Brazil.The website of football's governing body FIFA showed that there were
more ticket applications than the number of seats available in all four
price categories for the opener in Sao Paulo and the final at
Rio de Janeiro's Maracana Stadium.Demand was also high in all price categories
for the semifinals, and 39 of the 64 matches had too many
requests at least for the cheaper category, available only for Brazilians.FIFA
said the highest amount of applications so far has come from Brazil,
Argentina, the U.S., Chile and England."The respective ticket product is
already heavily oversubscribed and therefore, at that point in time, the
success of the application appears very unlikely," FIFA said of the high
demand categories. "There are vastly more ticket applicants seeking tickets
than there are tickets presently available for the general public."Prices
for the final will go from $440-$990, although Brazilian
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