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M
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Feb 13, 2013 07:48PM

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Anyway, my rant's over. Go watch Dear John, cry a little, and then realize the same thing that every girl I know who has watched it says to me after we talk about it.
"Oh my God, that guy is SO sexy/hot/handsome/humperific" (... don't ask, it was a sarcastic guy who said the last one)
You will. I can promise you that much.

Edit: Except for Nicolas Sparks movies, which aren't like other chick flicks, but aren't very different from each other either.



Got a question for y'alls. I am a chick who owns no chick flicks. None, zip, zero.....unless you count "The Princess bride". So in a desperate attempt to ..."
Well, I don't mind well done chick flicks, but my tastes are a bit odd. So, at this time I would recommend Lullaby for Pi with Rupert Friend as a sad musician, 28 Days with Sandra Bullock, Bull Durham with Susan Sarandon and Tim Robbins and Kevin Costner, and Must Love Dogs with Diane Lane and John Cusack. I would also recommend three foreign films: My Life as a Dog, Three Colours Red and Tampopo.




Al, yes, it is. Kind of took away from the movie, which was okay, in a limited way on an off day.

Got a question for y'alls. I am a chick who owns no chick flicks. None, zip, zero.....unless you count "The Princess bride". So in a desperate attempt to ..."
Pride and Prejudice is amazing.... Anything Twilight.

I am a die hard Twilight hater so I don't think I could watch those :D





Coming out this year are the movies Scary Movie 5, an Evil Dead remake, The Hangover Part III, new Superman movie Man of Steel, World War Z (this one might not be so bad), Insidious Chapter 2, another Carrie remake, and Grown Ups 2.

Yeah, nothing original.

Would it be possible for someone to look over this bibliography for me? I now number is still unfinished cause that book is driving me nuts.
1. Chamberlain, Sara. "Techno Foods." Editorial. New Internationalist n.d.: n. pag. New Internationalist. New Internationalist Magazine. Web. 05 Feb. 2013.
In “Techno Foods,” Chamberlain explains how genetically modified goods can cause allergies and superbugs. She questions if the benefits claimed by corporations are worth the risks found by third party scientists. Chamberlain tells her audience “They are being sold in your food shops and grocery stores right now, and their health risks are almost entirely unknown.” Monsanto is pushing their genetically modified seeds into different countries including the US and EU countries. “But who really benefits from these developments, and what risks are involved?” she questions.
2. Key, Suzie, Julie K-C Ma, and Pascal MW Drake. "Genetically Modified Plants and Human Health." Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine (n.d.): n. pag. PubMed Central. 01 June 2008. Web. 06 February 2013.
“Genetically Modified Plants and Human Health” looks at the effects of genetically modified food on human health and other uses scientists are testing. It explains how tightly genetically modified foods are regulated by governments, “In the USA, the Food and Drug Agency, the Environmental Protection Agency and the US Department of Agriculture, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service are all involved in the regulatory process for GM crop approval.” The “Golden Rice Project” is an attempt to add nutrients that are otherwise not found in regular rice to help undernourished countries that rely on this one crop. “...plant tissue in a processed form expressing a pharmaceutical could potentially be consumed as an ‘edible vaccine’,” is an idea that is also being currently studied.
3. Whitman, Deborah B. "Genetically Modified Foods: Harmful or Helpful?" ProQuest. ProQuest, Apr. 2000. Web. 05 Feb. 2013.
Whitman explains the many benefits of genetically modified foods and some of the risks they can have on health and the environment. “GM foods promise to meet this need in a number of ways,” she says as she goes on to describe eight different benefits scientists are working on including pest and cold resistance and better nutrition. Unlike many others who accept and write about genetically modified foods, Whitman accepts that there are problems other than allergencity that we cannot yet fix: “Unfortunately, B.t. toxins kill many species of insect larvae indiscriminately; it is not possible to design a B.t. toxin that would only kill crop-damaging pests and remain harmless to all other insects.”
4. Ronald, Pamela C., and Raoul W. Adamchak. Tomorrow's Table: Organic Farming, Genetics, and the Future of Food. New York, NY: Oxford UP, 2008. Print.
In Tomorrow’s Table, an organic farmer and a plant geneticist try to reconcile organic farming and genetically modified foods. Ronald uses examples of ways genetically modified can help organic farmers fight pests using fewer pesticides. The demand for organic food is increasing
5. Pence, Gregory E. Designer Food: Mutant Harvest or Breadbasket of the World? Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2002. Print.
Pence covers a wide range on the topics of genetically modified foods in Designer Food. He uses examples of contaminated foods that made the news to demonise organic farming. “In these cases, ‘genetically engineered’ food is really ‘genetically purified’ food,” Pence says about genetically modified growth hormones versus naturally derived ones in cows. He is optimistic about ending world starvation. On the environment he has this to say, “Any introduction of change in the environment has the potential for disaster.”

The things I learn when I'm not wasting time at work ...

I'm reading a list of common mistakes. The only one I didn't already know so far is "calendar" versus "calender." I can't wait to play off of that.


hi gang! I just found this little discussion and had to chime in before running off to write. . .

Today I was reading through some of my works, poems and stories and after the first half hour or so I noticed a pattern emerging. Sure enough by the time I quite I realized I have written all of my poems from the first person and all of my stories from third. How did this happen?



Really? There are books in "present tense?" I didn't know people could do that.

....was Divergent written in first person present? I don't remember now. I think it was as well.
Haha, it's not like writing in present tense is banned from the world XD


I had typed something earlier, but was trying to get out of a very cramped minivan an my phone got screwed up and I lost what I said...I hate that stupid app, too...
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