Sunday, May 28, 2006
Saturday, May 27, 2006
Next...

Wednesday, May 24, 2006
Welcome to Phoenix, Mavs

Now watch out as Steve Nash and Raja Bell, your former stars, are gonna help burn you up!!!
My prediction is the Suns in 5 for the Western Conference finals. (knock on wood)
My prediction in the Eastern Conference finals is the Heat in 5 as well, if last nights game shows all the Pistons have in them...
Thursday, May 11, 2006
Energy Revolution

It is time for a change. Our enemies cannot be the ones who control the worlds energy source. We need to let go of old ways and grab hold of new technologies that will allow us to fuel ourselves and employ Americans to do it! Read this article and then look at this one. When we free ourselves from the chains that bind us to countries full of people who hate Americans, we can only be better off...
Sunday, May 07, 2006
Friday, May 05, 2006
Light out of darkness
Tuesday, May 02, 2006
Rasheed fined $20,000 for his 'opinion'

NBA officials get extremely touchy when a participant claims that officials make calls to steer the outcome of a game.
Houston Rockets coach Jeff Van Gundy caused a major uproar earlier in the playoffs when he alleged during the Mavericks series that an official told him that instructions were in place to single out a player — Houstons Yao Ming. Van Gundy later backed off saying that he’d talked to a league official rather than a game official. However, the league levied a huge fine, and Van Gundy was warned that a similar future transgression could result in a severe suspension or even banishment.
More recently, after a Game 5 loss to Miami in which he managed just two points, Rasheed Wallace said, “Y’all know we’re going to win game six. If y’all don’t know that, y’all crazy.” The clear implication was that the officials were going to find a way to extend the series with their whistles. Wallace was promptly reprimanded and fined $20,000.
"I wanna be like Mike" - Kobe Bryant

You mean this is not the first time???
NBA commissioner David Stern has expressed his disappointment with the NBA officials who staged a visible protest of the suspension of referee Michael Henderson at Friday night's games.
NBA referees turned their jerseys inside-out and wore No. 62 -- the number assigned to a disciplined colleague. "Last night's display was woefully inconsistent with the professionalism with which NBA officials normally conduct themselves," Stern said in a statement on Saturday. "There is nothing more to say at this time."
The league promised more punishment for the referees showing support for Henderson.The NBA released a statement from deputy commissioner Russ Granik on Friday saying any referees taking part in the protest "will be subject to appropriate discipline."The officials were responding to Michael Henderson's being taken off three job assignments and summoned to the league office.
Henderson's bad call at the end of Wednesday night's Lakers-Nuggets game was publicly acknowledged Thursday by the NBA. "An unprecedented job action was taken against one of their colleagues, so an unprecedented response was necessary," said Lamell McMorris, a spokesman and negotiator for the National Basketball Referees Association.
Referees at all 10 NBA games Friday night were expected to take part in the protest, although officials Eddie F. Rush and Nolan Fine worked the Grizzlies-Bucks game in Milwaukee and did not. The third member of their crew, Rodney Mott, wore his shirt inside out with No. 62 magic-markered on the back. McMorris said Rush and Fine were "intimidated" by refereeing supervisor Ronnie Nunn. "From what I understand it was typical bullying tactics by the NBA. Ronnie Nunn came in and threatened them, told them if they wore their shirts inside-out they'd be fired," McMorris said. NBA vice president Stu Jackson did not return a call seeking comment on McMorris' allegation.
Henderson, in his second season as an NBA official, mistakenly whistled a shot clock violation after an attempt by Denver's Andre Miller brushed the rim and was rebounded by a teammate. The officials huddled and ruled it an inadvertent whistle, resulting in a jump ball. The Lakers won the tip and made the game-winning shot with 3.2 seconds left.
"This was an unfortunate call at a highly critical point in the game, and we very much regret the error," NBA vice president Stu Jackson said his statement Thursday. He was not immediately available for comment Friday night. McMorris said Henderson's three-game punishment was unprecedented. "It's inconsistent with the performance evaluation standards that the league introduced to initiate communication between supervisors and referees," McMorris said. "This has never occurred for a bad call." McMorris told SportsTicker he had spoken with Henderson and categorized his mood as "upset, as well as the entire NBRA is upset. He's more hurt than anything."
Friday, April 28, 2006
Luck the Fakers!!!
Wednesday, April 26, 2006
Sunday, April 23, 2006
Saturday, April 22, 2006
Thursday, April 20, 2006
Wednesday, April 12, 2006
Dead End

Cockpit tape played at Moussaoui trial
I am afraid that the Jury will sentence him to death but I think that a much better punishment would be to put him in San Quentin and be a bitch to every big bad lifer in the place. I can see those big boys lining up now outside of his cell waiting to make him cry like the pussy that he is by cranking him up his Islamic ass!!! It should feel like the World Trade Center towers being crammed up inside him... That would be a much more fitting sentence for this radical Islamic piece of shit. Everyone else seems to have a fine time getting along until you get to that religion, they think that Allah is going to line up virgins for them and their worldly acts. (killing non-believers) HA HA FUCKING HA!!! Golly, I cannot believe that there are people in this world that still believe such stupidity. Where the fuck do those fucking stupid desert cavemen think that Allah is going to come up with all those virgins? LMAO! Good Luck Dumb Fuck!!!
I guess they are going to be the next dead end branch of upright walking people since the Neanderthals. (and we don't miss them either)















