| First, fairy cakes – then welding, kids
Since it came to power, the Labour government has introduced 2,685 pieces of legislation every year. And each has been either ill-conceived, draconian, bonkers, bitter, dangerous, counter-productive, childish, wrong, thoughtless, selfish, or designed primarily to make life a bit more miserable for everyone except six people in the BBC, 14 on The Guardian and Al Gore. Still, with such a torrent of new rules and regulations pouring onto the statute books every day, it was statistically inevitable that one day they’d accidentally do something sensible. And last week that day arrived. They decided that everyone who’s capable of reaching the takeaway shop without being shot in the face is eating far too much Trex and that the way to get them eating fair-trade lettuce and organic tofu instead is to make cooking a part of the school curriculum for children aged 11-14.
Rangers in same position as this time last year with 54 points
And there were overblown rumors of a rift within the dressing room and questions about Renney's ability to pull it all together. Sound familiar? Of course, it took one of the most effective trades in Rangers history - the Feb. 5 acquisition of Sean Avery - to get the 2006-07 team home. And it is unreasonable to believe Glen Sather can pull off another such catalyzer. But then, it also took some pretty impressive stretch runs by several other teams to make it so hard for the Rangers to make the playoffs. And they had to make their run largely without a key player - Brendan Shanahan was lost for 15 games and diminished for the rest in a horrifying collision Feb. 17. .
Ron Paul’s $4.2 Million Haul
I don't know what's more amazing — the sum total. Or this pooh pooh'd article. Truly, had this been any other candidate, me thinks you would have spared a little more ink and common sense before publishing this excuse of an article. Oh, I forgot, this is Rolling Stone. It is a sad state of affairs, when subscribing to the Constitution is considered fringe. But I think we can blame such civic illiteracy of the masses on excellent pieces of journalism, such as this by Tim what's his name? .
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