Not a deformed girl, but rather one who decided to do makeup on half her face, to show what a major difference it makes.
Not a deformed girl, but rather one who decided to do makeup on half her face, to show what a major difference it makes.
Gasoline tax per gallon.
Of course California is the highest.
PROP BET potential?
His YT channel is top notch.
Here's one more gem.
"fuck it, i quit"
this has replaced the insurance meerkats as my favorite British tv commercials during the bootleg UFC feeds
Urban legend debunked:
http://www.snopes.com/food/ingredient/tsp.asp
Claim: Popular cereals (including Lucky Charms and Cheerios) contain paint thinner and pose a danger to children.
FALSE
Origins: Food ingredients are a hot topic on social media sites, and every so often a commonplace ingredient or product comes under fire seemingly out of the ether. Trisodium phosphate, a food additive common in cereals like Lucky Charms and Cheerios, is one ingredient that received such sudden consumer scrutiny.
Concern over trisodium phosphate escalated in October 2014. Chatter about the scary-sounding ingredient had circulated on social media sites and message boards since at least 2010, but a popular picture juxtaposing Lucky Charms with TSP heavy-duty cleaner spiked fear about the additive's safety years later.
It is true that trisodium phosphate is effective as a cleaning agent, due in part to its alkalinity. Sodium bicarbonate is a similarly scary-sounding chemical compound used in heavy-duty cleaning, as an agent to detarnish silver, and to extinguish fires. But you cannot make chocolate chip cookies without the leavening power of baking soda, as it is more commonly known, and leavening is another common use for sodium phosphates. Similarly, water is a very common substance used for such tasks as cleaning, scrubbing silverware, and extinguishing fires, yet it poses no harm to consumers.
Trisodium phosphate is "generally recognized as safe" by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and is approved for use by food safety standards agencies in the European Union. TSP in high concentrations can be used for cleaning walls before painting, but it should not be conflated with "paint thinner," a solvent comprised of mineral spirits, turpentine, or acetone that is chemically unrelated to TSP.
Read more at http://www.snopes.com/food/ingredien...DQJuCROGk4c.99
You're goddamn right
Last edited by 4Dragons; 12-16-2014 at 03:28 AM.
Perhaps the first of the 'Best of the year' photo collections, this one from the Weather Channel has 100 photos:
http://www.weather.com/news/news/wea...00-photos-2014
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