Archive for May, 2010

The Cure – “M”

The Cure M en vivo Yahoo music

The Cure – The Love Cats

Lyrics: We move like cagey tigers We couldn’t get closer than this The way we walk The way we talk The way we stalk The way we kiss We slip through the streets While everyone sleeps Getting bigger and sleeker And wider and brighter We bite and scratch and scream all night Let’s go and throw All the songs we know… Into the sea You and me All these years and no one heard I’ll show you in spring It’s a treacherous thing We missed you hissed the lovecats We’re so wonderfully wonderfully wonderfully Wonderfully pretty! Oh you know that I’d do anything for you… We should have each other to tea huh? We should have each other with cream Then curl up by the fire And sleep for awhile It’s the grooviest thing It’s the perfect dream Into the sea You and me All these years and no one heard I’ll show you in spring It’s a treacherous thing We missed you hissed the lovecats We’re so wonderfully wonderfully wonderfully Wonderfully pretty! You know that I’d do anything for you… We should have each other to dinner We should have each other with cream Then curl up in the fire Get up for awhile It’s the grooviest thing It’s the perfect dream Hand in hand Is the only way to land And always the right way round Not broken in pieces Like hated little meeces… How could we miss Someone as dumb as this? I love you… let’s go… Oh… solid gone… How could we miss Someone as dumb as this?

The Cure – A Forest

See Music Videos www.bvmtv.com that you CAN’T See on You Tube! even some X RATED music videos! +Live Chat and Embed video codes. “A Forest” is a single by the British rock band The Cure, released on April 8, 1980 as the only single from their second album Seventeen Seconds. It was also their first chart single in the UK, reaching #31. The lyrics tell a vague story about a man looking for a girl in a forest. He hears her calling for him, and as he chases her, he suddenly stops and realizes that he is lost and that the girl is not there. The song is fairly upbeat compared to the other material on the album, and Lol Tolhurst’s machine-like steady beat together with Simon Gallup’s minimalistic bassline gives this nervous chase more depth and keeps the song on the edge of a frantic groove until the end. Though not their biggest hit, it is regarded by many fans and critics as one of the best examples of The Cure’s sound, particularly their use of chorusing effects. The song is also notable for securing the band its first slot on BBC’s Top of the Pops. The track has been re-recorded a number of times by The Cure. In 1990 the track was re-recorded and remixed as the “Tree mix” on the band’s “Mixed Up” album.

The Cure – Pictures Of You

The Cure are an English rock band that formed in Crawley, Sussex in 1976. The band have experienced several lineup changes, with frontman, guitarist and main songwriter Robert Smith—known for his iconic wild hair, pale complexion, smudged lipstick and frequently gloomy and introspective lyrics—being the only constant member.

The Cure- Disintegration

The Cure- Disintegration (live in berlin) from the trilogy DVD. One of there best songs played live at one there best gigs,

The Cure – Lullaby live @Music Planet 2Nite

Lullaby live 2001 Music Planet 2Nite

New or Enduring Foundation? – The Natural Choice is that of Natural Rights

By David J. Bobb

In speech after speech, and issue after issue, President Obama’s refrain has been that the nation needs a "new foundation." Whether addressing health care in a recent radio address, the new unemployment figures, or what he sees as the nation’s collapsed international reputation, the president’s pledge is that he will erect "a new foundation." Even the administration’s plan for reforming the financial regulatory system is subtitled, "A New Foundation."

Mr. Obama’s advocacy for health care reform is typical of his "new foundation" talk: "We must lay a new foundation for future growth and prosperity, and a key pillar of a new foundation is health insurance reform."

While at the same time, embracing the idea of a "new foundation," the president also has positioned himself as an anti-ideological pragmatist who will build upon the handiwork of the American Founders.

Take, for example, Mr. Obama’s use of the Declaration of Independence in his first legislative signing ceremony. Enacting a new law on fair pay, he said, ensures that "we’ll do our part, as generations before us, to ensure those words put on paper some 200 years ago really mean something – to breathe new life into them with a more enlightened understanding that is appropriate for our time."

What the president means by "a more enlightened understanding" has over the last six months become clearer: Whether you need a new job, a new car, a new mortgage, or perhaps an easier-to-read credit card statement, a tech-savvy doctor, or an energy-efficient light bulb, the "new foundation" is here to help shore up your life.

And not just to shore it up – to transform it and then, possibly, to perfect it! As the president promised in late October 2008, "[W]e are five days away from fundamentally transforming the United States of America." Even more, as Mr. Obama proclaimed in his election victory speech, "Our Union can be perfected." With political transformation, Mr. Obama says, comes the possibility of political perfection.

Of the political truths that make up our nation’s foundation, none was more solidly established by the founding generation than the folly of pursuing political perfection. As George Washington wrote, "We must take human nature as we find it. Perfection falls not to the share of mortals."

To improve our country, we must build upon our foundation of natural rights, not seek another one. As Washington warned of any attack on the American foundation: "[W]hoever would dare to sap the foundation, or overturn the Structure, under whatever specious pretexts he may attempt it, will merit the bitterest execration, and the severest punishment which can be inflicted by his injured Country."

In his aspiration to transformation, then, Mr. Obama resembles not Washington and the Founders but his Democratic predecessor, Franklin Delano Roosevelt.

For Roosevelt, the old American foundation was insufficient. In his 1944 State of the Union speech, Mr. Roosevelt suggested that we must add "security" to our American foundation of the natural rights of "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness."

Security was to be found in eight new rights. All Americans, Roosevelt said, have the right to a job, and the "right to earn enough to provide adequate food and clothing and recreation." Farmers should be guaranteed prices that will ensure them "a decent living," and all should enjoy free trade. Every family has the right to "a decent home," to "adequate medical care," and also to "a good education." Finally, everyone has the right to be free from the fear of economic ruin.

A "Second Bill of Rights" was necessary, Roosevelt argued, because the original Bill of Rights was not sufficient. After listing the rights protected by the first 10 amendments to the Constitution, Roosevelt summed them up by saying, "They were our rights to life and liberty." Were? Roosevelt’s curious verb tense shows the danger of introducing new rights that lack a solid foundation.

The problem with trying to make security a natural right is simple. If you have the right to health care, who has the duty to pay for it? If you have the right to cash for your clunker, who has the duty to pay for it? In inventing new rights for all Americans, the government makes a promise it cannot keep except by violating the natural rights of some Americans.

A natural rights foundation provides the most reliable support of limited government. When it comes to our natural rights, our president and all other policymakers must realize that our surest foundation is not new but enduring.

David J. Bobb is director of the Hillsdale College Kirby Center for Constitutional Studies and Citizenship, in Washington.

Copyright 2009 The Washington Times, LLC

http://washingtontimes.com/news/2009/oct/18/new-or-enduring-foundation/

Coward jamesfentress44

Have you found someone that pays you to be stupid? Is it 0bama?

The Cure – Just Like Heaven (Live 2008)

The classic Kiss Me song from 1987 here in 2008 at MSG.

How far does your dollar go?

1. How much do you spend on gifts (birthdays, christmas, father’s / mother’s day) every year?

2. Did you know?
- For 19c you can feed a hungry child in school for a day. Over 17000 children die every day because she or he is hungry.
- For you can buy a measles vaccine. Over 1100 people die of measles every day.
- For you can buy the most effective malaria treatments for one person. About 3000 peope die of malaria – a mosquito bite – every day.
- For 20c you can buy a full course of deworming drugs. 300mln people suffer severe health problems and often die because of worms.
- For you can put a child through school for a year (including 1 meal / day). 77 mln people have no access to secondary education until 4th grade.

3. Do you donate? At a price of a movie ticket, a haircut, a cheeseburger, a candy bar, you can save and transform lives.

It’s a bargain of a lifetime. What are you waiting for?

For more info see:
www.wfp.org/
www.measlesinitiative.org
malaria.who.int/
For the record: I am not working for any of the above or other charitable organizations, companies or funds.

Let’s make this world a better place.
To hop0409 and others:

The American Red Cross: 91.5% on program expenses, 5% administrative, 3.5% fundraising

Doctors without borders: 85.7% on program expenses, 1.4% administrative, 12.9% fundraising

UN World Food Programme: 97.3% on program expenses.

Source: http://www.charitynavigator.org

I could go on and on. Lots of charities are highly efficient at spending money on their causes and not bureaucracy. The ones I mentioned are 4/4 star charities and I believe make the cut.

Hello ladies,
I’m writing a book on weight loss and transforming your life with it. I’ve read many diet books. Most lack personality, a spirit, and addressing your mindset/soul. I’m curious to hear from you; what subjects do you want to read in a weight loss book? What are issues you’ve been wondering about, that you would like answered? Anything you feel you’d like to be discussed.

I’m not advocating gimmicks, scams, and bariatric surgery. This is about changing your whole health and life for the better, through natural weight loss and changing eating habits. I’ve personally lost over 100 pounds successfully without surgery, I do feel I know what I’m talking about based on experience. I want to provide a book that will help change your life. A great quality book you would benefit from. No scams or fad diets. Your help is kindly appreciated.
Thank you!
-Krystal

  
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