16.5.12

Chinese Man Dies After Woman Squeezes His Testicles In Fight Over Parking Spot


A female scooter rider killed a man by squeezing his testicles for the packing dispute, in Haikou City, Hainan Province. It was learned, the woman, 41 years old, rode on her scooter to an elementary school in Meilan District, Haikou City to pick up her child that day. When she wanted to pack her scooter in front of a shop, she was rejected by the shop owner, a 42-year-old male. The two parties soon fell into a quarrel, and then the physical confrontation. The furious woman called up her husband and brother to come help her, which resulted in a more violent fist fight. During the fight, the middle aged woman manged to grab the man’s testicles, and squeezed them till he finally collapsed on the ground. The man was immediately rushed to hospital, but unfortunately died there despite of efforts.
hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm!!!!

OH MY GOD?! Father Impregnates His Own Daughter?!



Now a days there's not much that can surprise us! But this is something else. 

According to The Irish Sun, a father impregnated his daughter, not by any form of malice or wrong-doing, but because they are truly in love with one another!

28-year old Penny Lawrence, who was raised by her mother and grandparents, never knew her father growing up. But after losing her mother and both grandparents, she became curious to meet her only remaining family member: her father, Gerry Ryan.

And not long after meeting, they fell in love and initiated a sexual relationship, which resulted in Penny becoming pregnant.

To the majority of the world who would believe this to be a disturbing and clearly incestual relationship, the father-daughter couple find nothing wrong with their relationship and blame their attraction to one another on Genetic Sexual Attraction (GSA).

GSA is a condition Barbara Gonyo coined to define the feelings that parents and their children, as well as siblings, have for one another who meet as adults.

Baby aka Birdman ft Rick Ross - Born Stunna


Ever since Birdman came out the womb, he’s been stacking paper and flossing. On the latest single off his sixth studio album, the YMCMB mogul reminds listeners that he’s a Born Stunna, delivering high-rolling, swagger-drenched bars over a street-certified instrumental by Beat Billionaire. Fellow showoff Ricky Rozay contributes guest bars. Bigga Than Life has yet to receive a solid drop date....Click to Download

Mass Marriage In Kano,Nigeria

  Is funny but real,low fall in marriage made government of northern part of Nigeria do this
Well, the Kano government is taking this scheme extremely serious. Not only have they found husbands for 100 women, they also sponsored a joint wedding for the couples yesterday May 15th.

The mass wedding held at the Kano Central Mosque and was supervised by the Emir, Alhaji Ado Bayero, and Secretary to State Government, Dr. Rabiu Suleiman, who represented the Kano State Governor, Rabiu Kwankwaso.,...
what do think about this buddies?

Want To Display Your Ass? There’s A Dress For You!


Why women show their cleavage? To be more attractive, right? What do you think of this ‘plumber’s butt’ dress? Do you find it attractive or offensive?
Obviously not made for plumbers, the ‘Super sexy dress’ is a new addition to the Etsy website from LinaSpyroS.
The seller describes the dress as:
This super sexy dress is made of synthetic fabric. It reveals the most attractive part of the women’s body.
So, if you are a female plumber and don’t have a lots of business…this dress may boost your job…but it may also get you in troubles. I don’t know man…I don’t find this butt-cleavage a proper thing for humans…it feels as if I’m looking at baboon’s ass…maybe sexy for human standards…but still an ass!
In case you want to get one of these dresses....lol
whats your take on this?

Corruption as basis for Nigeria’s underdevelopment


                                                         ''SUFFERING ''N'' SMILING''

Since independence in 1960, Nigerians have not ceased to complain about corruption in high places. The incidence of corruption rose to alarming proportions between the late 1980s and the 1990s, especially during the tenure of the Ibrahim Babangida military regime.
During that period, corruption was introduced to the country by the leadership, nurtured and institutionalised.
The relationship between individual social and economic development of an average Nigerian political office holder and the widespread underdevelopment and acute poverty in the land is dialectical; with one invariably deriving from the other.
The gap between the material wellbeing of individuals in government and social, economic and political conditions of the country and her populace thus creates the basis for development or underdevelopment.
Shortly after taking over in 1999, former President Olusegun Obasanjo sent an anti-corruption bill to the legislature and the result was the creation of two anti-corruption agencies, the EFCC and the ICPC. But curiously, efforts by both commissions have not succeeded in curbing the menace. Politicians, rather than desist from corruption simply create ways to frustrate the anti-corruption bodies.
The result is a deterioration of the ‘terms of engagement’ between the government and the governed. The latter find themselves at the mercy of government policies, while government officials invest enormous effort to circumvent the law, amass so much wealth, and inspire acquisitive values on our youths.
Successive leaders, since 1999, have initiated policies purportedly aimed at curbing corruption. Unfortunately such policies are soon enough consumed by the same corruption. The privatisation policy, for instance, was initiated to divest government investment from certain sectors and hand them over to private investors for increased productivity.
On January 1, 2012, the Nigerian government, impetuously, withdrew the subsidy on fuel and raised the price of PMS astronomically, from N65 per litre to N145, which attracted nationwide condemnation and protests.
The issue of subsidy has always been contentious, with most Nigerians opining that there is no subsidy in the first place. But, in spite of resistance by a majority of Nigerian under the aegis of labour and civil society, government remained resolute and intimidated the labour leaders into capitulation, after unilaterally pegging the price at N97 per litre.
Recently, the House of Representatives ad hoc committee set up to investigate the issue of subsidy came out with mind-boggling revelations of monumental fraud, amounting to trillions of naira in the so-called subsidy regime, conflating with the submission that what the government describes as subsidy is stolen funds. No country develops like this.
Development is an increasing capacity to produce and build upon what was inherited, while advancing steadily. But, what we see in Nigeria is lack of continuity and policy reversals by every new government. As a result, the productive sector is comatose.
Most worrisome is the fact that the concept of checks and balances, which regulates separation of power in a democratic contraption, appears to be absent. In fact, there appears to be a conglomeration of forces by the three arms of government to fleece Nigeria. That is why the legislature has consistently failed to check the excesses of the executive, in spite of the glaring abuse of power by that arm of government, and the judiciary seems prepared to stand logic on its head in judicial pronouncements, just to please the executive.
Corruption leads to a breakdown of legal and social rules. It is contagious and if not nipped in the bud, will permeate the whole society, weaken treasured institutions and strengthen shady individuals. It is, in the words of South African business executive, Suresh Kana, a burdensome tax on the poor, which should be fought with all means available.
Certain events occurred in the not too distant past, to emphasise the magnitude of damage corruption has done to Nigeria and its effect on the role of the Judiciary in protecting corrupt government officials.
A former governor of Edo State, Lucky Igbinedion, was investigated, prosecuted and found guilty of monumental fraud throughout his eight years reign. But, curiously, a plea bargain arrangement was invented, which saw the man literally escape punishment.
Now it is clear that Igbinedion’s counterpart in Delta State, James Ibori, was not fit to hold public office initially, having being convicted a couple of times, both in Nigeria and in the United Kingdom. Although certain individuals took the challenges to stop him from holding public office by going to court, the man was cleared by the Nigerian judiciary and he went on to rule Delta State for eight years.
Dramatic events precipitated by the death of the then President Shehu Yar’ Adua forced Ibori to flee to Dubai in the UAE. He was apprehended and subsequently extradited to the UK, where he pleaded guilty to the same charges for which he was acquitted by a Nigerian judge. He was aptly described by the UK judge as ‘a thief in government house’.
Decades of corrupt leadership has turned Nigeria, paradoxically to an oil rich country which, some years back, had to pay tens of billions of dollars to exit the London and Paris clubs of creditors, but which is gradually crawling back to indebtedness.
The country’s leaders leave office with enduring legacies of a battered economy, electoral crises and the nation at the brink of destruction, which are indices of underdevelopment. If allowed to endure, the current situation in the country may result in a failed an Hobbesian state of nature where life is nasty, brutish and short

Obama Isn’t Our 1st Gay President!


Tina Brown would like you to think that our 44th commander in chief is the “First Gay President.” Jim Loewen would like you to know that title actually belongs to our country’s 15th leader, James Buchanan.
taking a moment to smack Newsweek for the “cheap sensationalism” of its buzzy cover, Loewen imparts a history lesson. “Buchanan was gay, before, during and after his four years in the White House,” he writes for Salon. And the country was well aware of it. (Not convinced? Consider this line from an 1844 letter Buchanan wrote: “I have gone a wooing to several gentlemen, but have not succeeded with any one of them.”)
But Loewen’s intention isn’t just to give you a new trivia tidbit: It’s to explain why Buchanan isn’t lauded as such, and what that means. Quite simply, our “touching belief in progress” is the problem. “We must be more tolerant now than we were way back in the middle of the 19th century!
Buchanan could not have been gay then, else we would not seem more tolerant now.” Loewen urges us to embrace a more complex national history, one in which “we all moved backward” for about 50 years beginning in 1890, particularly in terms of race relations. “If we can rid ourselves of the fantasy that we are always getting better, then maybe we can create a nation that actually becomes more tolerant,” he writes. “Then we might—again—elect areal gay president.” Click for his entire column.