Obama i SAD (2008-2016)
- veljaca
- Posts: 7753
- Joined: 11/03/2008 14:25
- Location: Za Zelju se ne navija - Zeljo se VOLI ....
#4776 Re: President Barack Hussein Obama!!!
Upravo privodim kraju citanje knjige Baracka Husseina Obame " Snovi moga oca ". Odlicna knjiga 
- KemooSA
- Posts: 459
- Joined: 01/05/2008 16:26
#4777 Re: President Barack Hussein Obama!!!
Kakav je ovo kretenizam
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BMoy8Jpr ... re=related
Sta je cilj ovog i postoji li i jedno logicno objasnjenje za ovu glupost !?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BMoy8Jpr ... re=related
Sta je cilj ovog i postoji li i jedno logicno objasnjenje za ovu glupost !?
- ljubav_aha
- Posts: 15082
- Joined: 03/04/2008 19:25
- Location: TURKISH COFFEEBATH
#4778 Re: President Barack Hussein Obama!!!
ovo je vec 1001 komentar o procitanoj knjizi,otvorite temu kad vam je toliko interesatnaveljaca wrote:Upravo privodim kraju citanje knjige Baracka Husseina Obame " Snovi moga oca ". Odlicna knjiga
nadam se da je jedan dio cijene knjige planiran za donacije
- ahuseino
- Posts: 2183
- Joined: 19/10/2004 05:44
- Location: singularity
#4779 Re: President Barack Hussein Obama!!!
Ima li u knjizi pomena o igrachima iz sjene?..?veljaca wrote:Upravo privodim kraju citanje knjige Baracka Husseina Obame " Snovi moga oca ". Odlicna knjiga
-
walkabout
- Posts: 7869
- Joined: 19/05/2007 00:46
#4780 Re: President Barack Hussein Obama!!!
preletil se kad avijonom preko nevjorka

- corolla02
- Posts: 11253
- Joined: 18/02/2009 22:12
- Location: Light travels faster than sound; that is why some people appear bright, until you hear them speak!
- Horoskop: Gemini
-
PeroKosoric
- Posts: 297
- Joined: 11/12/2008 09:00
#4782 Re: President Barack Hussein Obama!!!
Obama odlican!
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zonbirile
- Posts: 11870
- Joined: 09/10/2008 12:06
#4783 Re: President Barack Hussein Obama!!!
-------------------------------------ahuseino wrote:Ima li u knjizi pomena o igrachima iz sjene?..?veljaca wrote:Upravo privodim kraju citanje knjige Baracka Husseina Obame " Snovi moga oca ". Odlicna knjiga
jok,više piše o Miki Mausu
- jeza u ledja
- Posts: 50266
- Joined: 29/12/2005 01:20
#4784 Re: President Barack Hussein Obama!!!
Mogu se zakleti da sam negdje na ovom topicu davno napisao da ce Biden u prvih 6 mjeseci posjetiti Balkan i Bosnu. I evo danas procitah bas takvu vijest na indexu. 
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PeroKosoric
- Posts: 297
- Joined: 11/12/2008 09:00
#4785 Re: President Barack Hussein Obama!!!
Zakasnio sijeza u ledja wrote:Mogu se zakleti da sam negdje na ovom topicu davno napisao da ce Biden u prvih 6 mjeseci posjetiti Balkan i Bosnu. I evo danas procitah bas takvu vijest na indexu.
- jeza u ledja
- Posts: 50266
- Joined: 29/12/2005 01:20
#4786 Re: President Barack Hussein Obama!!!
PeroKosoric wrote:Zakasnio sijeza u ledja wrote:Mogu se zakleti da sam negdje na ovom topicu davno napisao da ce Biden u prvih 6 mjeseci posjetiti Balkan i Bosnu. I evo danas procitah bas takvu vijest na indexu.Bilo je prekjuce na Sa-X. Go Biden!
Ne kontam u cemu sam zakasnio?
- jeza u ledja
- Posts: 50266
- Joined: 29/12/2005 01:20
#4787 Re: President Barack Hussein Obama!!!
Gobama!!!

And on the 105th Day . . .
By Dana Milbank
Tuesday, May 5, 2009
Maybe Barack Obama really is The One.
Yesterday's news was good -- almost supernaturally so.
The economy? Recovering.
The markets? Rallying.
Swine flu? Abating.
Drought? Ending.
The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff declared his confidence that Pakistan's nuclear weapons are well secured. The chairman of the Senate Finance Committee declared his confidence that a massive health-care overhaul will be accomplished this year. Warren Buffett declared his confidence that the economy is "out of the quicksand." And the Supreme Court was confident enough about the state of the nation to turn its attention to Janet Jackson's breasts.
Call it good policy, as Democrats do, or beginner's luck, as the last remaining Republicans do, but you can practically hear the nation collectively exhaling.
The rapid improvement in the public's mood is without precedent in modern history. Last week's Washington Post poll found that 50 percent of Americans think things are generally going in the right direction, up from only 8 percent in early October. That's the quickest change in optimism since the question was first asked by The Post in 1980. Views of President Obama, in turn, were impossibly high: Ninety percent called him willing to listen to different views, and better than 70 percent called him a strong leader, honest and trustworthy, and understanding of people's problems.
And that was before happiness started busting out all over yesterday.
First came news from Mexico that swine flu cases were diminishing, and from U.S. authorities that the virus is, for now, less severe than feared. "The feeling from federal officials seems to be one of relief today," NBC's Matt Lauer said on the "Today" show.
"We're seeing encouraging signs," agreed Richard Besser, acting director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Next item: The Commerce Department reported an increase in construction spending after five months of decline. And the National Association of Realtors reported a higher-than-expected increase in sales for the second straight month. That, and Buffett's out-of-the-quicksand remark at his Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting, sent the Dow Jones industrial average up 214 points for the day. For those keeping score, that's a 6 percent increase since the market tanked on Inauguration Day.
The cable news chatterers shared their happy thoughts. "Nice to hear good news out of the housing market," said a CNBC anchor.
"There's some good news on the swine flu front," reported an MSNBC anchor.
Even bad news became good news on CNN, as weatherman Rob Marciano put a favorable spin on the endless rain on the East Coast. "The good news," he said, "is that the ongoing multiyear drought that the Southeast has been dealing with is pretty much over."
Obama may get some credit for the economy, and maybe even the response to swine flu and his orders for Navy snipers to shoot those Somali pirates. But he probably can't claim responsibility for the weather -- unless, that is, he has been sent here by a Higher Authority.
Perhaps he wasn't joking at last year's Al Smith dinner in New York when he said: "Contrary to the rumors you may have heard, I was not born in a manger. I was actually born on Krypton and sent here by my father, Jor-El, to save the planet Earth."
Whatever the cause, the confidence was contagious. Mike Mullen, the Joint Chiefs chairman, gave a news conference and labeled himself "very satisfied" with Pakistan's efforts to keep its nuclear weapons away from terrorists. One of the reporters observed that Mullen seemed "much more optimistic than you've been" about Pakistan.
Also yesterday, Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm was on television talking about her confidence that most of the remaining 54,000 jobs at Chrysler will be saved despite its bankruptcy filing. And Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, in a conference call, said that "all of us agree that the stars are maybe finally aligned this year compared with prior years for the passage of meaningful, comprehensive health-care reform."
The chairman was in such good spirits that he proposed to "give everybody my personal e-mail address," then directed them to an EarthLink address.
It seemed the only ones left out of the celebration were the Republicans, who continued to discuss their wounds. Eric Cantor, the No. 2 House Republican, was on TV talking about the party's setbacks, about how "we've certainly taken our licks" and how the party "needs to be more inclusive."
The newspaper industry was also left out of the good-cheer parade, because of the New York Times Co.'s threats to close the Boston Globe.
But White House press secretary Robert Gibbs, at his daily briefing, wasn't about to let this "sadness" ruin the festivities. He took the opportunity to tweak reporters for mocking Obama's plan to cut a mere $100 million from Cabinet agencies' budgets. "I wondered how you guys didn't think $100 million meant a lot a few weeks ago, but, looking at some of the balance sheets, $100 million seems to mean a lot," Gibbs taunted.
Gibbs should guard against getting too cocky: Even if his boss is The One, there's no guarantee the good news will continue.
Maybe that's why the government has scheduled the release of its "stress tests" of the nation's largest banks for Thursday -- the National Day of Prayer.

And on the 105th Day . . .
By Dana Milbank
Tuesday, May 5, 2009
Maybe Barack Obama really is The One.
Yesterday's news was good -- almost supernaturally so.
The economy? Recovering.
The markets? Rallying.
Swine flu? Abating.
Drought? Ending.
The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff declared his confidence that Pakistan's nuclear weapons are well secured. The chairman of the Senate Finance Committee declared his confidence that a massive health-care overhaul will be accomplished this year. Warren Buffett declared his confidence that the economy is "out of the quicksand." And the Supreme Court was confident enough about the state of the nation to turn its attention to Janet Jackson's breasts.
Call it good policy, as Democrats do, or beginner's luck, as the last remaining Republicans do, but you can practically hear the nation collectively exhaling.
The rapid improvement in the public's mood is without precedent in modern history. Last week's Washington Post poll found that 50 percent of Americans think things are generally going in the right direction, up from only 8 percent in early October. That's the quickest change in optimism since the question was first asked by The Post in 1980. Views of President Obama, in turn, were impossibly high: Ninety percent called him willing to listen to different views, and better than 70 percent called him a strong leader, honest and trustworthy, and understanding of people's problems.
And that was before happiness started busting out all over yesterday.
First came news from Mexico that swine flu cases were diminishing, and from U.S. authorities that the virus is, for now, less severe than feared. "The feeling from federal officials seems to be one of relief today," NBC's Matt Lauer said on the "Today" show.
"We're seeing encouraging signs," agreed Richard Besser, acting director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Next item: The Commerce Department reported an increase in construction spending after five months of decline. And the National Association of Realtors reported a higher-than-expected increase in sales for the second straight month. That, and Buffett's out-of-the-quicksand remark at his Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting, sent the Dow Jones industrial average up 214 points for the day. For those keeping score, that's a 6 percent increase since the market tanked on Inauguration Day.
The cable news chatterers shared their happy thoughts. "Nice to hear good news out of the housing market," said a CNBC anchor.
"There's some good news on the swine flu front," reported an MSNBC anchor.
Even bad news became good news on CNN, as weatherman Rob Marciano put a favorable spin on the endless rain on the East Coast. "The good news," he said, "is that the ongoing multiyear drought that the Southeast has been dealing with is pretty much over."
Obama may get some credit for the economy, and maybe even the response to swine flu and his orders for Navy snipers to shoot those Somali pirates. But he probably can't claim responsibility for the weather -- unless, that is, he has been sent here by a Higher Authority.
Perhaps he wasn't joking at last year's Al Smith dinner in New York when he said: "Contrary to the rumors you may have heard, I was not born in a manger. I was actually born on Krypton and sent here by my father, Jor-El, to save the planet Earth."
Whatever the cause, the confidence was contagious. Mike Mullen, the Joint Chiefs chairman, gave a news conference and labeled himself "very satisfied" with Pakistan's efforts to keep its nuclear weapons away from terrorists. One of the reporters observed that Mullen seemed "much more optimistic than you've been" about Pakistan.
Also yesterday, Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm was on television talking about her confidence that most of the remaining 54,000 jobs at Chrysler will be saved despite its bankruptcy filing. And Senate Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus, in a conference call, said that "all of us agree that the stars are maybe finally aligned this year compared with prior years for the passage of meaningful, comprehensive health-care reform."
The chairman was in such good spirits that he proposed to "give everybody my personal e-mail address," then directed them to an EarthLink address.
It seemed the only ones left out of the celebration were the Republicans, who continued to discuss their wounds. Eric Cantor, the No. 2 House Republican, was on TV talking about the party's setbacks, about how "we've certainly taken our licks" and how the party "needs to be more inclusive."
The newspaper industry was also left out of the good-cheer parade, because of the New York Times Co.'s threats to close the Boston Globe.
But White House press secretary Robert Gibbs, at his daily briefing, wasn't about to let this "sadness" ruin the festivities. He took the opportunity to tweak reporters for mocking Obama's plan to cut a mere $100 million from Cabinet agencies' budgets. "I wondered how you guys didn't think $100 million meant a lot a few weeks ago, but, looking at some of the balance sheets, $100 million seems to mean a lot," Gibbs taunted.
Gibbs should guard against getting too cocky: Even if his boss is The One, there's no guarantee the good news will continue.
Maybe that's why the government has scheduled the release of its "stress tests" of the nation's largest banks for Thursday -- the National Day of Prayer.
- jeza u ledja
- Posts: 50266
- Joined: 29/12/2005 01:20
#4788 Re: President Barack Hussein Obama!!!
Magazin Forbes objavio:
The Recession Is Over

Brian S. Wesbury and Robert Stein, 05.05.09, 12:00 AM EDT
Indicators point to a fast-approaching end date: May 2009.
If you want a bone to pick--or an economic argument to have--it should be about when the current recession actually began. The National Bureau of Economic Research, the U.S.'s semi-official recession arbiter, says it started in December 2007. But real gross domestic product grew at a 1% annual rate from then through August 2008. That doesn't look like a recession to us.
Nonetheless, when Lehman Brothers ( LEHMQ - news - people ) collapsed and the $700-billion TARP plan was proposed, a very rare "panic" ensued. Monetary velocity collapsed. From September 2008 through March 2009, the economy shrank at a rate of 5.5%. That's why we think the recession started in September 2008, not in December 2007.
Once the "real" recession started--the one that began in September--we consistently forecast it would be over by mid-2009, earlier than many (including the Federal Reserve) predicted. Now it looks like our V-shaped recovery is underway. When the NBER eventually gets around to declaring the recession end date, we think it will be May 2009.
New claims for unemployment insurance are probably the very best single indicator of the end of a recession. The monthly average for claims normally peaks one or two months before the economy bottoms--and it appears to have peaked in March, at 658,000, versus April's 635,000.
Also, given that the September recession was marked by consumer spending falling off a cliff, we look at this measure to signal a rebound. Consumer spending grew at a 2.2% annual rate in the first quarter, and it looks set to rise again in the second quarter. Meanwhile, both major measures of consumer confidence (from The Conference Board and University of Michigan) shot upward in April.
The housing market is also showing nascent signs of life. New home sales bottomed in January at a 331,000 annual rate, but the pace of sales in February/March averaged 357,000. After falling 80% from January 2006 to January 2009, the rate of construction of single-family homes has remained essentially unchanged for the past two months, although (thankfully) it is at a level where builders are still rapidly cutting into excess inventories. In all likelihood, a bottom has been reached for both home sales and housing starts.
On the trade front, companies are increasingly willing to do business across borders. Inbound and outbound container traffic is up, at both the port of Los Angeles and the port of Long Beach. This is also a signal that credit conditions are easing, as international trade tends to be more credit-sensitive than domestic commerce.
Other signs of a rebound in monetary velocity can be found in prices. Consumer prices fell at a 12.4% annual rate in the last three months of 2008, the fastest decline since the Great Depression. In the first three months of 2009, however, prices are up at a 2.2% annual rate
Meanwhile, commodity prices bottomed in February, signaling that the economy has turned a corner. In addition, Treasury bond yields are on the rise despite direct purchases by the Federal Reserve--an indicator that real interest rates have bottomed.
Add to all these signs April's month-to-month jump in the ISM Manufacturing Index--the second largest in the last decade--and recent sharp increases in the Chicago PMI, the Philadelphia Fed Index and the Richmond Fed Index. All show the manufacturing recession is rapidly losing steam.
The end of the recession does not mean we won't lose more jobs; employment is always a lagging indicator. And there will be more defaults, foreclosures and financial market problems too. But none of these are leading indicators.
In our view, there are no more shoes to drop.
------------------------
Hvala i prijatno.
The Recession Is Over

Brian S. Wesbury and Robert Stein, 05.05.09, 12:00 AM EDT
Indicators point to a fast-approaching end date: May 2009.
If you want a bone to pick--or an economic argument to have--it should be about when the current recession actually began. The National Bureau of Economic Research, the U.S.'s semi-official recession arbiter, says it started in December 2007. But real gross domestic product grew at a 1% annual rate from then through August 2008. That doesn't look like a recession to us.
Nonetheless, when Lehman Brothers ( LEHMQ - news - people ) collapsed and the $700-billion TARP plan was proposed, a very rare "panic" ensued. Monetary velocity collapsed. From September 2008 through March 2009, the economy shrank at a rate of 5.5%. That's why we think the recession started in September 2008, not in December 2007.
Once the "real" recession started--the one that began in September--we consistently forecast it would be over by mid-2009, earlier than many (including the Federal Reserve) predicted. Now it looks like our V-shaped recovery is underway. When the NBER eventually gets around to declaring the recession end date, we think it will be May 2009.
New claims for unemployment insurance are probably the very best single indicator of the end of a recession. The monthly average for claims normally peaks one or two months before the economy bottoms--and it appears to have peaked in March, at 658,000, versus April's 635,000.
Also, given that the September recession was marked by consumer spending falling off a cliff, we look at this measure to signal a rebound. Consumer spending grew at a 2.2% annual rate in the first quarter, and it looks set to rise again in the second quarter. Meanwhile, both major measures of consumer confidence (from The Conference Board and University of Michigan) shot upward in April.
The housing market is also showing nascent signs of life. New home sales bottomed in January at a 331,000 annual rate, but the pace of sales in February/March averaged 357,000. After falling 80% from January 2006 to January 2009, the rate of construction of single-family homes has remained essentially unchanged for the past two months, although (thankfully) it is at a level where builders are still rapidly cutting into excess inventories. In all likelihood, a bottom has been reached for both home sales and housing starts.
On the trade front, companies are increasingly willing to do business across borders. Inbound and outbound container traffic is up, at both the port of Los Angeles and the port of Long Beach. This is also a signal that credit conditions are easing, as international trade tends to be more credit-sensitive than domestic commerce.
Other signs of a rebound in monetary velocity can be found in prices. Consumer prices fell at a 12.4% annual rate in the last three months of 2008, the fastest decline since the Great Depression. In the first three months of 2009, however, prices are up at a 2.2% annual rate
Meanwhile, commodity prices bottomed in February, signaling that the economy has turned a corner. In addition, Treasury bond yields are on the rise despite direct purchases by the Federal Reserve--an indicator that real interest rates have bottomed.
Add to all these signs April's month-to-month jump in the ISM Manufacturing Index--the second largest in the last decade--and recent sharp increases in the Chicago PMI, the Philadelphia Fed Index and the Richmond Fed Index. All show the manufacturing recession is rapidly losing steam.
The end of the recession does not mean we won't lose more jobs; employment is always a lagging indicator. And there will be more defaults, foreclosures and financial market problems too. But none of these are leading indicators.
In our view, there are no more shoes to drop.
------------------------
Hvala i prijatno.
- ahuseino
- Posts: 2183
- Joined: 19/10/2004 05:44
- Location: singularity
#4789 Re: President Barack Hussein Obama!!!
Nije to sve, ne... mislim da mi je rano vjerovati Him. Nezaposlenost i dalje raste. Ekonomski stimulus se uzda da che ljudi nastaviti troshiti pare koje nemaju (kredit). Po meni je kredit dobra stvar, ali vishe za biznis nego za konzumera. Stvarno svjetlo na kraju tunela josh uvijek ne postoji, a ne moze biti consumer spending. U slijedeche dvije godine che se morati desiti neki paradigm shift in economy, kao shto je bio semiconductor prije 5 decenija ili PC prije 3-4, ili komunikacije zadnjih par...
Ja se nadam da che to biti "zelenilo" i/ili biomedical technology. U svakom sluchaju dok to sve ne krene punom parom (a mislim da polako kreche), nema prosperiteta, previshe je fluff-a ispod nas.
Samo chekam Zonbija da utile sad...
... ili Veleposlanika: nisam ja tako to mislio, konc logori, kovchezi, ovo, ono...
Zezam se ja malo...
Ja se nadam da che to biti "zelenilo" i/ili biomedical technology. U svakom sluchaju dok to sve ne krene punom parom (a mislim da polako kreche), nema prosperiteta, previshe je fluff-a ispod nas.
Samo chekam Zonbija da utile sad...
... ili Veleposlanika: nisam ja tako to mislio, konc logori, kovchezi, ovo, ono...
Zezam se ja malo...
- jeza u ledja
- Posts: 50266
- Joined: 29/12/2005 01:20
#4790 Re: President Barack Hussein Obama!!!
Zelenilo dabome.
Sto se tice nezaposlenosti, ona obicno kasni nekoliko mjeseci za ostalim ekonomskim pokazateljima. Tako da se i dalje predvidja rast iste.
Inace , clanak o poboljsanju ekonomije sam potrazio zato sto sam jutros vidio da je benzin drasticno poskupio na lokalnoj pumpi. (sa $1.85 na $2.15 prakticno preko noci)
Sto se tice nezaposlenosti, ona obicno kasni nekoliko mjeseci za ostalim ekonomskim pokazateljima. Tako da se i dalje predvidja rast iste.
Inace , clanak o poboljsanju ekonomije sam potrazio zato sto sam jutros vidio da je benzin drasticno poskupio na lokalnoj pumpi. (sa $1.85 na $2.15 prakticno preko noci)
-
Sounder
- Posts: 418
- Joined: 30/03/2009 06:56
#4791 Re: President Barack Hussein Obama!!!
da se uslika presjednicev avion u zraku. reklamaKemooSA wrote:Kakav je ovo kretenizam![]()
![]()
![]()
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BMoy8Jpr ... re=related
Sta je cilj ovog i postoji li i jedno logicno objasnjenje za ovu glupost !?
- ahuseino
- Posts: 2183
- Joined: 19/10/2004 05:44
- Location: singularity
#4792 Re: President Barack Hussein Obama!!!
jeza u ledja wrote:Zelenilo dabome.![]()
Sto se tice nezaposlenosti, ona obicno kasni nekoliko mjeseci za ostalim ekonomskim pokazateljima. Tako da se i dalje predvidja rast iste.
Inace , clanak o poboljsanju ekonomije sam potrazio zato sto sam jutros vidio da je benzin drasticno poskupio na lokalnoj pumpi. (sa $1.85 na $2.15 prakticno preko noci)
"Ekonomija" ili GDP kasni 9 - 12 mjeseci za marketom, kako che se nezaposlenost tu "ubrajati" ne znam, ali mislim da je fundamentano vazna u momentalnoj shemi, t.j. principu oporavka ekonomije na osnovu consumer spendinga (sto je glavna nada ove stimulus inekcije).
Ne osporavam ja ove chlanke, samo kazem da nije sve ruzichasto.
Inache ovo sto je Obamica do sad uradio, je ipak drastichna promjena, sta god nevjerne Tome prichale...
- corolla02
- Posts: 11253
- Joined: 18/02/2009 22:12
- Location: Light travels faster than sound; that is why some people appear bright, until you hear them speak!
- Horoskop: Gemini
#4793 Re: President Barack Hussein Obama!!!
Sad sam ga slusao na CNN, imao konferenciju sa predsjednicima Pakistana i Afganistana, i WOW nemam rijeci pohvale, stvarno svaka mu cast, ni jednu, ama bas ni jednu rijec nije rekao kako ne treba da sije mrznju ili zavist. Za 100 dana je vise pomogao Americi, svakom u svijetu valja i na dobrom je putu da unaprijedi ekonomiju, sve brze nego Bush za 8 godina
Long Live Obama!!!!
Long Live Obama!!!!
-
PeroKosoric
- Posts: 297
- Joined: 11/12/2008 09:00
#4794 Re: President Barack Hussein Obama!!!
Lakse, lakse. Vijest je bila objavljena svugdje drugo dva dana prije nego sto si je ti otkrio na Sa-X. Eto tu si zakasnio.jeza u ledja wrote:PeroKosoric wrote:Zakasnio sijeza u ledja wrote:Mogu se zakleti da sam negdje na ovom topicu davno napisao da ce Biden u prvih 6 mjeseci posjetiti Balkan i Bosnu. I evo danas procitah bas takvu vijest na indexu.Bilo je prekjuce na Sa-X. Go Biden!
![]()
Ne kontam u cemu sam zakasnio?
Big deal!
- corolla02
- Posts: 11253
- Joined: 18/02/2009 22:12
- Location: Light travels faster than sound; that is why some people appear bright, until you hear them speak!
- Horoskop: Gemini
#4795 Re: President Barack Hussein Obama!!!
Ovo se nedavno dogodilo u NY state, inace, putnicki avion koji je uletio u istu putanju kao onaj iz 09/11 u blizini NYC, zato su mjere predostroznosti bile neophodneSounder wrote:da se uslika presjednicev avion u zraku. reklamaKemooSA wrote:Kakav je ovo kretenizam![]()
![]()
![]()
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BMoy8Jpr ... re=related
Sta je cilj ovog i postoji li i jedno logicno objasnjenje za ovu glupost !?
- ljubav_aha
- Posts: 15082
- Joined: 03/04/2008 19:25
- Location: TURKISH COFFEEBATH
#4796 Re: President Barack Hussein Obama!!!
citas li ponekad komentar postavljaca video spota na gornjoj desnoj straniKemooSA wrote:Kakav je ovo kretenizam![]()
![]()
![]()
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BMoy8Jpr ... re=related
Sta je cilj ovog i postoji li i jedno logicno objasnjenje za ovu glupost !?
fino pise :4/27/09 -- The Defense Department conducted the photo opportunity, which involved two F-16s escorting the plane, a Boeing 747, over Battery Park City and up the Huds...
- jeza u ledja
- Posts: 50266
- Joined: 29/12/2005 01:20
#4797 Re: President Barack Hussein Obama!!!
PeroKosoric wrote:
Lakse, lakse. Vijest je bila objavljena svugdje drugo dva dana prije nego sto si je ti otkrio na Sa-X. Eto tu si zakasnio.
Big deal!
Ja se nisam javio da prenesem tu vijest kao novost, vec da je prokomentarisem.
-
PeroKosoric
- Posts: 297
- Joined: 11/12/2008 09:00
#4798 Re: President Barack Hussein Obama!!!
Haj bas finojeza u ledja wrote:PeroKosoric wrote:
Lakse, lakse. Vijest je bila objavljena svugdje drugo dva dana prije nego sto si je ti otkrio na Sa-X. Eto tu si zakasnio.
Big deal!
Ja se nisam javio da prenesem tu vijest kao novost, vec da je prokomentarisem.
- jeza u ledja
- Posts: 50266
- Joined: 29/12/2005 01:20
#4799 Re: President Barack Hussein Obama!!!
Ubuduce mucni malo glavom bolje prije nego napises nesto.PeroKosoric wrote:Haj bas finojeza u ledja wrote:PeroKosoric wrote:
Lakse, lakse. Vijest je bila objavljena svugdje drugo dva dana prije nego sto si je ti otkrio na Sa-X. Eto tu si zakasnio.
Big deal!
Ja se nisam javio da prenesem tu vijest kao novost, vec da je prokomentarisem.
- kiky
- Posts: 4725
- Joined: 13/02/2008 13:20
#4800 Re: President Barack Hussein Obama!!!
obama je prdno u čabar 
