Friday, May 04, 2007

Jenn's Friday Stew

Just some odds and ends:
"Two illegal aliens, Ralphel Resindez 23 and Enrico Garza 26, probably believed they would easily overpower a home alone 11 year old Patricia Harrington after her father had left their two story home.
It seems the two crooks never learned two things, they were in Montana and Patricia had been a clay shooting champion since she was nine. She quickly ran to her father's room and grabbed his 12 gauge Mossberg 500 shotgun when she heard them break in.
Resindez was the first to get up to the second floor only to be the first to catch a near point blank blast of buck shot from the 11 year olds knee crouch aim. He suffered fatal wounds to his abdomen and genitals. When Garza ran to the foot of the stairs, he took a blast to the left shoulder and staggered out into the street where he bled to death before medical help could arrive.
It was found out later that Resindez was armed with a stolen 45 caliber handgun he took from another home invasion robbery. The victim, 50 year old David Burien, was not so lucky as he died from stab wounds to the chest."

BOOO-YAAAHHHH!!!!


Watch Out Muzzies!!!! See the irony in the resaurants name.
"A 70-year-old slab of blackened pork went on display in a downtown Raleigh restaurant this week in a curious tradition that began in 1937.

The Mecca Restaurant put the rock-hard country ham in its window Tuesday with a sign saying the 25-pound slab of meat would be displayed for only one day, "for security reasons." It was the ham's first appearance in a dozen years."

"A good plan violently executed now is better than a perfect plan executed next week." -George S. Patton

Hey Libtards:"Nobody ever defended anything successfully, there is only attack and attack and attack some more." -George S. Patton

All I can say about this one is WTF????
"Canada is saying no more to its Mr. Nice Guy image.
A new contest is soliciting votes for Canada's worst citizen, Reuters reports. Among the nominees vying for the title are Celine Dion and Shania Twain.
"Our international reputation has us as this very nice, quiet, friendly place," Deborah Morrison, president of Canada's National History Society, told the agency. "We thought it would be fun to show people our seamier side and take a look at some of our more villainous characters and how they've helped to shape our country."

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