30 Days To Fire Up Your Creative Genius, Day 13 W

May 17th, 2012

How many mornings do we choose email over meditation, or let deadlines pull rank on stretching, cuddling, or a glass of water swallowed slowly and appreciated? How habitually do we override the call from the interior of our being? The call to pray Windows 7 Key, or listen, or just to be fully awake in noticing what is being said to us — whether it’s our heart, the dog, the trees, or our fellow humans speaking to us?

Have mercy.
Keep them safe.
How lovely.
Courage, please.
I need you.
I love you.
Thank you.
Yes.

Prayer comes in all forms and every one spoken brings grace to the day. Our hearts are the altars. Each day lived is another chance to reap the deep rewards of sacred prioritization. Attend first to the divine and the work at hand becomes art.

Join My ‘30 Days To Fire Up Your Creative Genius’ Challenge NOW!

Missed It? You can still participate in ‘30 Days To Fire Up Your Creative Genius’:

Day 1: Welcome To ‘30 Days To Fire Up Your Creative Genius’
Day 2: Where Are You Forcing Yourself To Be Better?
Day 3: What Are You Intensely Interested In?
Day 4: What’s The Current Proportion Of Your Life?
Day 5: Why Do You Want What You Want? Day 6: How Do You Want To Feel?
Day 7: What’s Underneath Your Definition Of Success?
Day 8: What Have You Pulled Off?
Day 9: What’s Your Favorite Failure?
Day 10: What Will You Approach As New?
Day 11: What’s On Your Stop Doing List?
Day 12: What’s Your Relationship To Time?
Day 13: What Matters Most In Your Beingness?
Day 14: What’s Chronic Buy Windows 7 Product Key, Repetitive Or Inflamed In Your Life?
Day 15: Who Do You Admire?
Day 16: What’s Your Worldview?

For more by Danielle LaPorte Windows Anytime Upgrade, click here.

Working Moms, First Ladies and Recalling Hillary C

May 17th, 2012

A Democratic strategist’s calling into question Ann Romney’s qualification to talk about economic issues since she was a stay-at-home mom has quickly overtaken the political conversation.

“What you have is Mitt Romney running around the country saying, Well, you know, my wife tells me that what women really care about are economic issues. And when I listen to my wife, that’s what I’m hearing. Guess what? His wife has actually never worked a day in her life. She’s never really dealt with the kinds of economic issues that a majority of the women in this country are facing in terms of how do we feed our kids, how do we send them to school and how do we – why we worry about their future,” said CNN contributor and Democratic strategist Hillary Rosen Wednesday night.

Ann Romney quickly fired back on Twitter – “I made a choice to stay home and raise five boys. Believe me, it was hard work,” Ann tweeted.

Official Democrats, the Obama administration and the DNC all quickly distanced themselves from Rosen’s comments.

But Rosen, herself a working mother, did not back down.

“I am raising children too. But most young American women HAVE to BOTH earn a living AND raise children. You know that don’t u?” she tweeted at Ann Romney.

There is no issue more sensitive to working mothers than the difficult choice of going back to work after having a child.

Ann Romney was careful to say on Fox News on Thursday morning that both choices should be respected.

Michelle Obama, who had a career as a lawyer before her husband became president, tweeted support for Ann Romney on Thursday.

“Every mother works hard, and every woman deserves to be respected. -mo,” tweeted @MichelleObama

Here is how Michelle Obama described her own balancing act in 2009.

“I personally… know the challenges of leading a busy life at work and at home cheap replica watches, trying to do a good job at both — and always feeling like you’re not quite living up to either — and trying not to pit one against the other, really trying to balance it so that — if people here are like me — I call myself a 120-percenter,” she said. “If I’m not doing any job at 120 percent, I think I’m failing.  So if you’re trying to do that at home and at work, you find it very difficult and stressful and frustrating.”

For most women, the choice is made for them by economic necessity. Although it is worth pointing out that Elizabeth Warren, the Harvard law professor and consumer watchdog who is running for senate in Massachusetts – one of the most popular Democrats in the country – wrote a book entitled “The Two Income Trap” about how double income families become more susceptible to bankruptcy.

“One income really doesn’t always cut it anymore,” said Michelle Obama in 2009. “And that’s in my lifetime.  In most families, both parents have to work, and even if people want to make the choice to stay home.  And again, there is no subjective analysis or — of what is better.  But people can’t make the choice.  It’s even harder for single parents, and there are millions of them all across this country who are trying to build a life for themselves and their children, and they find in an economy that’s tough that they’re not just holding down one but they need a couple of jobs just to make ends meet.”

“I’ve always been, and will probably always be in some way shape or form, a working mom replica watches,” she said in 2008.

The White House and the Obama campaign have since made a decision to make Michelle Obama’s public persona more mom than working mom. She focuses her time on the “Let’s Move” campaign to combat childhood obesity.

With that public persona, Michelle Obama has a remarkably solid public approval rating, 65 percent, according to a Marist poll released today, much higher than her husband’s.

Hillary Clinton took a much different path. She was actively involved in policy and the health care reform effort for her husband. And she came under fire in 1992 for stridently defending her own career, saying on 60 Minutes in 1992 that she wouldn’t be “some little woman standing by my husband like Tammy Wynette.”

“I suppose I could have stayed home and baked cookies and had teas, but what I decided to do was fulfill my profession, which I entered before my husband was in public life,” she said at another point.

Hillary Clinton’s 1992 campaign comments made her one of the most divisive women in the country as first lady. But they also paved the way for her to become a senator in her own right and later Secretary of State. As a public official, after Bill Clinton left office, Hillary Clinton has become the most admired American woman, according to Gallup, for years.

It is remarkable that 25 years after Clinton’s “cookie” remarks, the issue of the role of women in the workplace and home is as raw and polarizing as ever. At the end of the day, while the issue of women’s roles in society have evolved, the role of the first lady does remain trapped in stereotypes that are tougher to break.

But there is also the important point that neither Michelle Obama nor Ann Romney are really stay-at-home moms. Not right now, even though both women have, or had replica watches, the luxury of being able to afford to send their children to private schools and have hired help.

“I used to get up in the morning and go to an office. Now I get up and go to a plane, stand in front of thousands of people. My kids still don’t care where I am. They’ve always known two parents to work in the household and as long as we’re back in time for bedtime, they could care less where we are,” said Michelle Obama in 2008.

Get Political Insights and The Note from ABC News

Republican Santorum endorses Romney for president

May 17th, 2012

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Former Republican presidential candidate Rick Santorum endorsed his one-time fierce rival Mitt Romney on Monday, a move that may help the party’s presumptive White House nominee win over religious conservatives.

Santorum said in an unusual late-night statement that the two have differences, but that he came away from a meeting with the ex-Massachusetts governor impressed with Romney’s “deep understanding” of economic and family issues central to the campaign.

“Above all else, we both agree that President (Barack) Obama must be defeated. The task will not be easy. It will require all hands on deck if our nominee is to be victorious,” Santorum said.

“Governor Romney will be that nominee and he has my endorsement and support to win this the most critical election of our lifetime,” he said in the statement Setting Tattoo Machine, which was emailed to supporters.

The socially conservative former Pennsylvania senator Shader Tattoo Machine, who won 11 state contests and was the favorite of Republican voters in a Reuters/Ipsos poll for the No. 2 spot on the ticket, is best known for his strong opposition to abortion and gay rights.

He clashed sharply with Romney in several televised debates, but his support may now help Romney win over religious conservatives before the November 6 election.

Santorum had been reluctant to give an endorsement, but he said that changed after a “clear-the-air” meeting with Romney in Pittsburgh on Friday. The question of endorsement did not come up, but Santorum said the conversation was candid and focused on issues.

“During our meeting I felt a deep responsibility to assess Governor Romney’s commitment to addressing the issues most important to conservatives, as well his commitment to ensuring our appropriate representation in a Romney administration The Best Tattoo Machine,” he said.

“The family and its foundational role in America’s economic success, a central point of our campaign, was discussed at length. I was impressed with the governor’s deep understanding of this connection and his commitment to economic policies that preserve and strengthen families.”

Santorum said he agreed with Romney on “the need for lower taxes, smaller government, and a reduction in out-of-control spending. We certainly agree that abortion is wrong and marriage should be between one man and one woman.”

(Reporting By John Crawley; Editing by Jackie Frank and Christopher Wilson)

Politics Barack Obama Election 2012

Trouble in Paradise Jetsetter’s Founder and CEO

May 17th, 2012

Drew Patterson has stepped down as founder and CEO of Jetsetter, the high-end luxury discount sales travel site owned by Gilt Groupe.

His departure was first reported by Beta Beat, and confirmed by a spokeswoman, who added that he was asked to step down because of staffing issues and low morale — not because of the company’s operations.

Clearly, there’s signs of trouble in paradise: This time, pretty pictures of luxurious vacations in exotic locations, like Turks & Caicos, can’t cover up what’s really going on at the New York-based start-up. Prior to Patterson’s departure, a handful of executives left, including Jetsetter’s Chief Marketing Officer Barry Herstein; VP of merchandising and operations Heather Leisman; and former head of marketing Stephanie Dolgins, Beta Beat reported.

In Patterson’s absence, Rob Deeming, who has been at Gilt for the past three years, and recently was in charge of opening Jetsetter’s U.K. office, will become acting general manager.

Beta Beat, who interviewed Gilt’s CEO Kevin Ryan about the executive shake-up, also reported that the travel division has faced other problems with getting its international operations up and running and was burning a ton of cash. However Tattoo Grips, the company claims Jetsetter is on track to record $100 million in gross bookings this year and to be profitable next year.

This is not the first internal shake-up at Gilt Groupe, which trimmed roughly 10 percent of its employees Tattoos Kits, including some of its management team, earlier this year. At the time, Ryan downplayed the situation by saying that the cuts are designed to get the company to cash flow positive by the second quarter, and profitable by the fourth quarter. But other reports painted a fairly grim picture of the situation.

Prior to Jetsetter Tattoo Of Tattoo Gun, Patterson was part of the founding team at Kayak, where he was VP of marketing.

 

Grading Barack Obama’s First Term

May 16th, 2012

America’s focus is on the 2012 presidential race. Will Barack Obama be elected to a second term or will a new challenger knock him off his throne? I think it’s safe to say that at least half of the country still supports President Obama, even though they may not agree with all of his policies. When Obama assumed the presidency, he was charged with resolving the nastiest set of problems and issues of any incoming commander-in-chief since Franklin D. Roosevelt took office on March 4, 1933. Obama immediately served up a range of big-ticket solutions that included the unprecedented stimulus package, the auto bailouts, and a health care bill.

Since then, Obama ended the war in Iraq, killed Osama Bin Laden and implemented regulations to improve the environment. In addition, he implemented Race to the Top, began the drawdown of U. S. forces from Afghanistan, appointed two women to the Supreme Court, and ended “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.” I could go on and on, but in the interest of time, I think I’ll stop there. In spite of all of these accomplishments, for many Americans, Obama’s first-term as president has left much to be desired.

Obama’s hecklers come not just from the right, but from other progressives and from well-known African-Americans. A lot of people seem to think that Barack Obama works for them and when they don’t get the reaction they want from pulling his strings, they call him a puppet to somebody else. The president has a whole lot of work to do and a great many needs to tend to, but the impression across the board is that people believe the president should work for them and them alone.

Although the president’s ability to directly influence policy is usually exaggerated, he still wields a considerable amount of power and influence. For instance, executive orders allow him to operate proactively in areas where congress has failed to act. However, they are contentious because they permit the president to make key decisions Buy Christian Audigier Clothes, without the approval of Congress.

As he nears the end of his first term, many laymen and politicos alike are pondering this question; how will the first African-American president’s initial term be remembered? Presidential historians will not have the advantage of hindsight for a decade or two, but when it comes to grading Obama’s Presidency, ask yourself the following questions. Did he make good on his campaign promises? If he didn’t, were there extenuating circumstances that stood in his way? Are the criticisms that he has received, warranted? What grade should his presidency receive?

Since the president’s first term is not quite complete, the best that I can do is offer an interim assessment. Any definitive assessment will have to wait until after the 2012 election. I will assess Obama’s presidency by asking myself the same questions that I posed to you.

Did he make good on his campaign promises?

Politifact.com, the Pulitzer Prize-winning site published by the Tampa Bay Times, contains a special feature called the Obamameter. One of the lists that it publishes is “The Obama Scorecard,” which assesses 508 campaign promises made by Obama with the following ratings: promise kept, promise broken, compromise, in the works and stalled. I used this unbiased tool to determine whether or not Obama kept or is progressing towards fulfilling his campaign promises. According to “The Obama Scorecard,” he performed as follows: promises kept- 35%, promises broken- 12%, compromises- 11%, in the works- 28% and (promises) stalled- 13%. Also, it is important to point out that 0.4% (2) of his campaign promises have not been rated yet.

On 74% of his promises, Obama kept, comprised or is in the process of fulfilling them. Also, 13% of Obama’s attempts to fulfill his campaign promises stalled not because of him, but because of partisanship. Out of 508 campaign promises, Obama has only broken 12% of them, which is mind-boggling when you consider the current political landscape. According to these results, the president did a good job of keeping his campaign promises; however, you can be your own judge.

If he didn’t, were there extenuating circumstances that stood in his way?

In some situations, it seems as though Obama can’t catch a break. Regardless of what he does, for some people, it will never be good enough. In some instances, President Obama proposed legislation to Congress that either did not make it to the House or Senate floor or simply failed to garner the necessary votes for passage. Also there were times when in order to avoid giving the president what he wanted, the opposition simply voted down legislation that was good for America.

To be clear, Obama’s obstacles have come not just from the right, but also from Obama’s own party and prominent African-Americans. In response to some of these occurrences, Obama used executive orders to act in areas where congress failed to act. What else can he do? In spite of extenuating circumstances, President Obama continues to keep a smile on his face, and he sticks to his message. So as you can clearly see, in some situations, there were extenuating circumstances that stood in his way.

Are the criticisms that he has received Replica Herve Leger gown, warranted?

A large majority of the criticisms are uncouth, disrespectful and engineered to discredit Obama’s patriotism, religious beliefs and competence. The toxic venom that has been hurled at Obama is unprecedented in modern politics. When in modern times have people openly called for the assassination of a U. S. president? Never.

When I hear scholars such as Cornel West lambasting President Obama for giving oligarchs and corporate America a free pass and for failing to make the “war on poverty” a top priority, I cringe. Not because I believe that Professor West’s criticisms have no merit; I cringe because I know that that Obama’s detractors will try to use it as rhetoric to further discredit him. At the end of the day, he gives his heart and soul to his presidency and he should be afforded the respect that his position demands. At the end of the day, there may be a small percentage of the criticisms that may be warranted, but nobody’s perfect.

What grade should his presidency receive?

As I stated earlier in this piece, when Obama assumed the presidency, he was charged with resolving a nasty set of problems and issues. In response to this, his administration rose to the challenge and fostered positive change and progress in America. Because of this, I think the president deserves an B+, which reflects his solid record as Commander-in-Chief.

At the end of the day, we are all entitled to our own opinion, and I am sure that many on the right and left will disagree with my assessment. So remember, my opinions are just that, my opinions. I am looking forward to reading your comments and I encourage you to use this article as a springboard for discussion.

Third Time’s the Charm

May 15th, 2012

The New York Times, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, and the Wall Street Journal’s world-wide newsbox all lead with the Supreme Court ruling that prisoners being held at Guantanamo Bay have a constitutional right to challenge their detentions before a civilian judge. The LAT, NYT, and WSJ point out that the 5-4 decision marked the third time that the Supreme Court has rejected the Bush administration’s handling of foreign prisoners at the base in Cuba. Writing for the majority, Justice Anthony Kennedy said that “few exercises of judicial power are as legitimate or as necessary” as the basic constitutional right to appear before a judge, and the majority rejected the view that American courts have no jurisdiction over Guantanamo. The WP notes that the majority of justices are “clearly impatient that some prisoners have been held for six years without a hearing.”

USA Todayfronts the Supreme Court ruling but goes across the top of Page One with testimonies from some of the 93 Boy Scouts who had gathered in western Iowa for a week of leadership training when a tornado struck their camp on Wednesday. Four Scouts died, and dozens of people were badly injured by the tornado that seemed to come from nowhere. After the tornado passed, the scouts rushed to assist the injured before help arrived. “There were some real heroes at this Scout camp,” Iowa Gov. Chet Culver said.

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Everyone agrees that yesterday’s Supreme Court ruling was an important victory for detainees, but the decision still leaves several important questions unanswered, “making it likely that the controversy will continue into the next presidential administration,” says the LAT. Notably, the justices didn’t say how much evidence the government has to present in order to justify a continued detention in Guantanamo, how classified evidence should be handled, or even whether enemy combatants can be held for as long as the government thinks is necessary. Ultimately though, the ruling will allow detainees “to challenge their detentions before civilian judges, potentially forcing the government to present evidence against them and giving them the chance to call their own witnesses,” explains the Post.

In a dramatic dissent, Justice Antonin Scalia wrote that the decision will bring about “disastrous consequences” and “will almost certainly cause more Americans to be killed.” He went on to write that “the nation will live to regret what the court has done today.” Chief Justice John Roberts accused the majority of “overreaching” in a decision that left the high court vulnerable to “charges of judicial activism.” For his part, President Bush made it clear he’s not happy with the ruling. “We’ll abide by the court’s decision,” he said. “That doesn’t mean I have to agree with it.” (“Six years of no trials, in the eyes of the dissenters, is more than justifiable in the hopes of dozens more years of no trials,” writes Slate’s Dahlia Lithwick. ”And it’s precisely that sense of time passing without consequence that so infuriates the majority.”)

In front-page analyses, the WP, LAT, and NYT note that yesterday’s Supreme Court decision undercut the main rationale behind holding detainees at Guantanamo Bay, where the Bush administration was once convinced American courts couldn’t reach. There now “appears to be little legal reason to keep it open Tattoo Supplies,” says the LAT. But the NYT notes that the decision didn’t “change some realities that have long made it easier to say that the Guantánamo detention center should be closed than to figure out how.” Practically speaking, attorneys for most of the 270 detainees in Guantanamo are likely to inundate the courts with petitions that will force the government to present evidence justifying their detention. The difficulty of defending so many cases at once is likely to step up efforts to return many of the detainees who are considered less dangerous back to their home countries. The Post notes that even some Republicans agree the White House has only itself to blame for its current predicament after failing to come up with a detention policy that dealt with the concerns of those who have expressed interest in the legal rights of detainees.

Sens. Barack Obama and John McCain have both called for closing the detention center in Guantamo but disagreed on yesterday’s Supreme Court ruling. Obama praised the decision, calling it an “important step toward reestablishing our credibility as a nation committed to the rule of law.” McCain said he’s concerned about granting too many rights to the detainees, saying that “these are unlawful combatants, they are not American citizens,” but he also emphasized that the Supreme Court has spoken and “we need to move forward.”

In other news, the WP fronts a look at how earmarks appear to be making a comeback on Capitol Hill. Of course, earmarks never really went away, but lawmakers did vow to cut down on their use after the funding of pet projects came under fire from critics who see it as another way that members of Congress use their influence to raise campaign contributions. The number of earmarks quickly dropped last year, but now lawmakers are packing the Pentagon authorization budget with a variety of earmarks. In the House’s bill Tattoo Supplies, earmarks soared 29 percent to $9.9 billion, and the Senate has also seen an increase. “Both parties talk a good game on cutting earmarks, but at first opportunity, the House larded up,” said the vice president of Taxpayers for Common Sense, “This is just another broken promise.”

The papers report that authorities in Zimbabwe detained the opposition presidential candidate Morgan Tsvangirai twice yesterday, disrupting a day that was supposed to be filled with campaign events two weeks before the presidential runoff election. In addition, the opposition party’s No. 2 official was arrested and will be charged with treason, which could carry the death penalty.

In a Page One dispatch from Burma, the LAT’s unnamed reporter describes how he had to rely on the help of boatmen who risked arrest in order to get a fuller picture of the aftermath of Cyclone Nargis. The reporter had to hide in the “cramped space beneath the top deck” of the boats in order to avoid detection. In the remote villages hardest hit by the cyclone, government authorities were usually nowhere in sight, but the reporter describes several close calls. “Over the last 16 years, I have reported on famine, massive earthquakes and a tsunami,” writes the reporter. “Cyclone Nargis is the first natural disaster that required working undercover to write about the hungry, sick and homeless.”

All the editorial boards weigh in on yesterday’s Supreme Court decision and mostly praise the ruling. The one exception is the WSJ, which takes up Scalia’s message: “We can say with confident horror that more Americans are likely to die as a result” of the decision. USAT recognizes that Americans may immediately think “the prisoners are getting better treatment than they deserve” and “perhaps they are. But the ruling also sends a powerful message about U.S. justice.” The LAT says it’s time for the Bush administration to “enlist Congress’ cooperation in improving the flawed Military Commissions Act and cooperate in expedited judicial hearings for inmates.” The WP agrees that “sooner or later, lawmakers must fix this mess” and emphasizes that it’s “time that Congress absorb the lesson that the Supreme Court has repeatedly imparted: The war on terrorism cannot invalidate the rule of law.” The NYT points out that the divided decision is “a reminder that the composition of the court could depend on the outcome of this year’s presidential election.”

eBay Find of the DayPorsche-built 1992 Mercedes-Be

May 14th, 2012

1992 Mercedes-Benz 500E – Click above for image gallery
Karen Millen Dresses sale
In 1992 Herve Leger sale, Mercedes-Benz and Porsche briefly entered into a love affair that would produce one very special offspring: the Mercedes-Benz 500E. The car was to become the godfather of all super sedans, packing a 5.0-liter V8 with a staggering (for the time) 322 horsepower and 354 pound-feet of torque. Bolted to a four-speed automatic gearbox, the engine could scoot the big four-door to 60 mph in a mere 6.1 seconds. Something tells us that those power numbers were a little conservative. But where does Porsche come in to this dance?

Germany’s sportscar manufacturer was responsible for working the sheetmetal of the 500E into the shape you see above. Those healthy fender arches were all massaged into place by the gurus at Porsche before the body was shipped off to Mercedes-Benz for paint and final assembly. Once done Discount Chloe Dresses, the whole kit and caboodle was shipped back to Porsche for final inspection. Needless to say Discount Herve Leger gown, this was an incredibly limited production vehicle Replica Emilio Pucci Dresses, with the two companies only creating around 500 examples per year.

This particular car has a grand total of 587 miles on the clock Buy White Herve leger, having spent the fair majority of its years tucked away in a museum. Bidding is at $35,200 with the reserve not met and less than 8 hours to go as of writing. Follow the jump for jazz-tastic video walk around and check out pics in the gallery below.

Related Gallery1992 Mercedes-Benz 500E
[Source: eBay Motors]

Bar-Echo Chamber

May 14th, 2012

Today’s Obamaism: Replica Herve Leger gown

Bar-echo chamber (bah-REK-oh cheym-ber) n. The comments sections on blogs and newspaper Web sites where readers reinforce one another’s love for Obama and distaste for Hillary Clinton.

Example: While the editors had hoped that user-generated content would foster a healthy debate on their Web site, they found that the forums quickly devolved into a Bar-echo chamber.

Since Slate first launched its Encyclopedia Baracktannica in February Discount DKNY Clothes, more than 800 readers have written in with their own Obamaisms, from “Barack Ness Monster” to “Post-Baracalyptic.” The best of these entries, along with Slate’s original Obama neologisms Replica BCBG Dresses, are collected in a new book: Obamamania! The English Language, Barackafied Buy Herve leger strapless, available now.

In conjunction with the publication of the book Replica DKNY Dresses, we will be publishing a new Obamaism every morning and adding it to the Obamamania widget above Cheap Hale Bob Dresses, which you can add to your Facebook or MySpace profile or Web site.

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ReportFord feels Japan quake effect with shortage

May 14th, 2012

Due to a pigment shortage stemming from the March 11 earthquake in Japan Cheap Missoni Dresses, Ford has had to stop taking new orders for cars in Tuxedo Black, and is limiting orders of three shades of red. Officials from Ford say they’re working on another source for the pigment as you read this, and have enough cars in each color to satisfy demand until production resumes.

The paint shortage affects the F-150 and Super Duty lines of pickups Chanel Dresses sale, as well as the Explorer Replica Christian Audigier Clothing, the Expedition, Focus, Taurus and the Lincoln MKS and Navigator. Ford’s slowdown follows General Motors Replica Chanel Dresses, who slowed production of pickups in Shreveport, Louisiana Replica DKNY Dresses, as well as compact cars in Europe following parts shortages.

Honda, Toyota and Nissan have all experienced slowdowns as a result of the quake Buy Christian Audigier Clothing, though none have had to limit color choices.

Related GalleryReview: 2010 Ford Taurus SHO
Photos copyright ©2011 John Neff / AOL

[Source: Bloomberg]

Make it stopLamborghini Alar official brochure

May 13th, 2012

Some of you are still registering some retinal activity after viewing the Alar. For you, the horn of plenty continues to spill forth its fruit: the official brochure for the Alar has been released. It’s difficult to tell from Argentina Auto Blog if the brochure is more than two pages — but what more do you really need to know?

Joan Fercí’s creation, with a Klingon’s visage and the backside of a Starship Trooper bug replica watches, goes on sale in March Tattoo Supplies, 2008. As if the car weren’t eye-watering enough, the price — $750,000 large — is enough to make anyone reach for the Kleenex. However Beats by Dre, for that, you get a top speed of 410 kph (254.2 mph), which either puts it right at the Bugatti Veyron’s top speed or a hair above it. Either way replica watches, it’s nice to know that you’ll be able to go fast enough that no one else can see you and hurt themselves.

If it makes you feel any better, know that the Alar didn’t spring whole from Ferci’s pen like Athena from Zeus’ head. Rather, as you can see from the other models (Coatl and Eros GT-1), he has been working up to it, honing his craft replica watches, like Michelangelo releasing Moses from the granite slab. Or something like that.

[Source: Argent]

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