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Thursday, March 4, 2010

Open Question: UFC or boxing classes? and more...

 
 



Open Question: UFC or boxing classes? and more...

Open Question: UFC or boxing classes?

UFC or boxing classes? I LIVE IN LOS ANGELES MY ZIPP CODE IS 90033 WHERE IS THE NEARST PLACE WHERE I COULD TAKE CLASSES FOR BOXING OR UFC FIGHTING CLASSES Category

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Open Question: Best Place for Gays ?

So since I am 18, I am about to move out of my parents house and get my own place. The thing is, I really do not know where I could go and not be called " faggot " or " queer " a lot ... I am really thinking about NYC or Los Angeles .... So what are some gay friendly cities that I could move to ?

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Open Question: What are the best music producer company's in Los Angeles? And how do you get them to produce your records?

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Open Question: What do you think here Hispanic Gangs Invade Shenandoah Valley?

That Mount Vernon Statement: Beltway Right Ignores Immigration (Again). But They Still Want Your Money] The Shenandoah Valley is justly celebrated in American history as the place where Stonewall Jackson made his name driving back Northern invaders during the Civil War—in battles like Cross Keys and Port Republic. But now, thanks to federal immigration policy, it has serious Hispanic gang problems, dating from the early 2000s. About a year ago, a student at James Madison University was leaving the 7-Eleven on South Main Street in Harrisonburg, Va., to return to his apartment. It was 2 a.m., hardly an unusual time for a kid in the college town to walk the streets near campus. Yet walking about the city that late is just as unsafe as it common. Three members of the Mexican SUR 13 gang attacked him, the city's daily newspaper reported, and beat him unconscious. They took $1 and a cell phone. After the crime, a friend of the victim texted the cell phone, the newspaper reported, only to receive a scatological, threatening text in return—the printable part said "South Side Sureneos run these 540 streets". [Harrisonburg: gang-member's sentence twice that of sentencing guideline recommendations, January 26, 2010] 540 is the area code for the Shenandoah Valley. Sureneos, (properly spelled Sureños) stands for SUR 13, one of the murderous gangs federal immigration authorities have permitted to spread nationwide because they are too terrified of organized Hispanics to close the borders. Two of the feral culprits were convicted and landed in prison. But their cyberphonic claim isn't far from the truth. Harrisonburg is turning into a scaled-down rural version of Los Angeles. Menacing young Hispanics run the streets and join gangs; racial gang fights with blacks are increasing. The cops can't lock them up fast enough. How fast is that? A judge sentenced the SUR-13 tough guys who battered the JMU student on Jan. 25, the local newspaper reported. The same day, he sentenced a member of the Crips, the African American gang. Last October, a judge sentenced a member of the rival African American Bloods gang unit out of Newport News, Va., in a drug shooting. Harrisonburg had its first gang-related murder back in 2008. A young man connected to another unit of the Bloods was shot to death at a party near JMU's campus. A criminal connected to that crime was involved in a gang attack in the county jail, the newspaper reported. He copped a plea and was released. Across the Valley generally, the murder of Brenda Paz in 2003 was law enforcement's first wake-up call. Paz was the MS-13 member found slashed to death in rural Meem's Bottom near Woodstock, in Shenandoah County. So violent was the attack, The New York Times reported, the killers nearly severed her head. They stabbed her 16 times. She had agreed to testify against her gang friends. As The Times explained it, "The killing shook Shenandoah in ways that can be hard for urbanites to comprehend. For weeks following the discovery of [Brenda Paz], her murder was the talk of the towns along Route 11 in Virginia — from the dairy cooperative in Strasburg, to the C.E. Thompson & Son hardware store in Edinburg, to the old-fashioned lunch counter at the Walton & Smoot pharmacy in Woodstock, across Main Street from the sheriff's office. This sort of thing simply did not happen in a place where many families trace their ancestries in the region to before the Civil War, where people still take the time to stop in on their neighbors, where few people say they feel the need to lock their front doors. This was not Washington, 80 miles and a world away to the east. Folks here tended to worry more about copperheads and rattlesnakes than about knife-wielding murderers." [Hillbangers, By Matthew Brzezinski, August 15, 2004] But "knife-wielding murderers" who belong to gangs are indeed what folks in the Shenandoah Valley have to worry about now. In 2005, law enforcement officials identified 100 gang members in Harrisonburg. Five years later, that number has jumped to 850 members and associates. Among the gangs: SUR 13, the major Hispanic gang in Harrisonburg; MS 13; the Latin Kings. A survey of area news reports shows that Hispanics are committing more than their fair share of the mayhem. Obvious conclusion: if they weren't here, illegal or not, SUR-13 and MS-13 wouldn't be here either. Illegal immigration is such that local law enforcement is treading water to keep up with the workload. Harrisonburg and its surrounding county, Rockingham, have detailed three police officers and a sheriff's deputy to work full time on a gang task force. http://vdare.com/misc/100304_morgan.htm

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