Who needs vaccines when you can just meditate in front of a mystical salt crystal for health fortifying energy. I mean, you have to make sure your runes are arranged properly, and ward against any evil psychic waves. But that normally goes without saying.
Who needs vaccines when you can just meditate in front of a mystical salt crystal for health fortifying energy. I mean, you have to make sure your runes are arranged properly, and ward against any evil psychic waves. But that normally goes without saying.
Who needs vaccines when you can just meditate in front of a mystical salt crystal for health fortifying energy. I mean, you have to make sure your runes are arranged properly, and ward against any evil psychic waves. But that normally goes without saying.
Who needs vaccines when you can just meditate in front of a mystical salt crystal for health fortifying energy. I mean, you have to make sure your runes are arranged properly, and ward against any evil psychic waves. But that normally goes without saying.
Only works if you do it in peaceful mosques in India, or so I've been told...
Who needs vaccines when you can just meditate in front of a mystical salt crystal for health fortifying energy. I mean, you have to make sure your runes are arranged properly, and ward against any evil psychic waves. But that normally goes without saying.
This post made me want to bang Melissandre.
Always knew you were gay.
Seeing Melisandre for more than 1 second made me want to bang her.
INL specialists left plutonium in their car. In the morning, it was gone BY PATRICK MALONE AND R. JEFFREY SMITH Center for Public Integrity LINKEDIN GOOGLE+ PINTEREST REDDIT PRINT ORDER REPRINT OF THIS STORY July 16, 2018 06:27 AM Updated July 16, 2018 07:44 PM Two security experts from the Department of Energy’s Idaho National Laboratory drove to San Antonio, Texas, in March 2017 with a sensitive mission: to retrieve dangerous nuclear materials from a nonprofit research lab there.
Their task was to ensure that the radioactive materials did not fall into the wrong hands on the way back to Idaho, where the government maintains a stockpile of nuclear explosive materials for the military and others.
To ensure they got the right items, the specialists from Idaho brought radiation detectors and small samples of dangerous materials to calibrate them: specifically, a plastic-covered disk of plutonium, a material that can be used to fuel nuclear weapons, and another of cesium, a highly radioactive isotope that could potentially be used in a so-called “dirty” radioactive bomb.
But when they stopped at a Marriott hotel just off Highway 410, in a high-crime neighborhood filled with temp agencies and ranch homes, they left those sensors on the back seat of their rented Ford Expedition. When they awoke the next morning, the window had been smashed and the special valises holding these sensors and nuclear materials had vanished.
INL specialists left plutonium in their car. In the morning, it was gone BY PATRICK MALONE AND R. JEFFREY SMITH Center for Public Integrity LINKEDIN GOOGLE+ PINTEREST REDDIT PRINT ORDER REPRINT OF THIS STORY July 16, 2018 06:27 AM Updated July 16, 2018 07:44 PM Two security experts from the Department of Energy’s Idaho National Laboratory drove to San Antonio, Texas, in March 2017 with a sensitive mission: to retrieve dangerous nuclear materials from a nonprofit research lab there.
Their task was to ensure that the radioactive materials did not fall into the wrong hands on the way back to Idaho, where the government maintains a stockpile of nuclear explosive materials for the military and others.
To ensure they got the right items, the specialists from Idaho brought radiation detectors and small samples of dangerous materials to calibrate them: specifically, a plastic-covered disk of plutonium, a material that can be used to fuel nuclear weapons, and another of cesium, a highly radioactive isotope that could potentially be used in a so-called “dirty” radioactive bomb.
But when they stopped at a Marriott hotel just off Highway 410, in a high-crime neighborhood filled with temp agencies and ranch homes, they left those sensors on the back seat of their rented Ford Expedition. When they awoke the next morning, the window had been smashed and the special valises holding these sensors and nuclear materials had vanished.
I call bullshit. A Marriott in a high crime neighborhood. Fuck off.
INL specialists left plutonium in their car. In the morning, it was gone BY PATRICK MALONE AND R. JEFFREY SMITH Center for Public Integrity LINKEDIN GOOGLE+ PINTEREST REDDIT PRINT ORDER REPRINT OF THIS STORY July 16, 2018 06:27 AM Updated July 16, 2018 07:44 PM Two security experts from the Department of Energy’s Idaho National Laboratory drove to San Antonio, Texas, in March 2017 with a sensitive mission: to retrieve dangerous nuclear materials from a nonprofit research lab there.
Their task was to ensure that the radioactive materials did not fall into the wrong hands on the way back to Idaho, where the government maintains a stockpile of nuclear explosive materials for the military and others.
To ensure they got the right items, the specialists from Idaho brought radiation detectors and small samples of dangerous materials to calibrate them: specifically, a plastic-covered disk of plutonium, a material that can be used to fuel nuclear weapons, and another of cesium, a highly radioactive isotope that could potentially be used in a so-called “dirty” radioactive bomb.
But when they stopped at a Marriott hotel just off Highway 410, in a high-crime neighborhood filled with temp agencies and ranch homes, they left those sensors on the back seat of their rented Ford Expedition. When they awoke the next morning, the window had been smashed and the special valises holding these sensors and nuclear materials had vanished.
INL specialists left plutonium in their car. In the morning, it was gone BY PATRICK MALONE AND R. JEFFREY SMITH Center for Public Integrity LINKEDIN GOOGLE+ PINTEREST REDDIT PRINT ORDER REPRINT OF THIS STORY July 16, 2018 06:27 AM Updated July 16, 2018 07:44 PM Two security experts from the Department of Energy’s Idaho National Laboratory drove to San Antonio, Texas, in March 2017 with a sensitive mission: to retrieve dangerous nuclear materials from a nonprofit research lab there.
Their task was to ensure that the radioactive materials did not fall into the wrong hands on the way back to Idaho, where the government maintains a stockpile of nuclear explosive materials for the military and others.
To ensure they got the right items, the specialists from Idaho brought radiation detectors and small samples of dangerous materials to calibrate them: specifically, a plastic-covered disk of plutonium, a material that can be used to fuel nuclear weapons, and another of cesium, a highly radioactive isotope that could potentially be used in a so-called “dirty” radioactive bomb.
But when they stopped at a Marriott hotel just off Highway 410, in a high-crime neighborhood filled with temp agencies and ranch homes, they left those sensors on the back seat of their rented Ford Expedition. When they awoke the next morning, the window had been smashed and the special valises holding these sensors and nuclear materials had vanished.
I call bullshit. A Marriott in a high crime neighborhood. Fuck off.
INL specialists left plutonium in their car. In the morning, it was gone BY PATRICK MALONE AND R. JEFFREY SMITH Center for Public Integrity LINKEDIN GOOGLE+ PINTEREST REDDIT PRINT ORDER REPRINT OF THIS STORY July 16, 2018 06:27 AM Updated July 16, 2018 07:44 PM Two security experts from the Department of Energy’s Idaho National Laboratory drove to San Antonio, Texas, in March 2017 with a sensitive mission: to retrieve dangerous nuclear materials from a nonprofit research lab there.
Their task was to ensure that the radioactive materials did not fall into the wrong hands on the way back to Idaho, where the government maintains a stockpile of nuclear explosive materials for the military and others.
To ensure they got the right items, the specialists from Idaho brought radiation detectors and small samples of dangerous materials to calibrate them: specifically, a plastic-covered disk of plutonium, a material that can be used to fuel nuclear weapons, and another of cesium, a highly radioactive isotope that could potentially be used in a so-called “dirty” radioactive bomb.
But when they stopped at a Marriott hotel just off Highway 410, in a high-crime neighborhood filled with temp agencies and ranch homes, they left those sensors on the back seat of their rented Ford Expedition. When they awoke the next morning, the window had been smashed and the special valises holding these sensors and nuclear materials had vanished.
I call bullshit. A Marriott in a high crime neighborhood. Fuck off.
As a frequenter of Marriotts Nationwide, they have a wide range of quality. I stayed in one in Dallas walking distance to a strip club called XTC where someone was shot and killed in the parking lot the night I was there.
This is up there with your walking peacefully barefoot in Indian temples comment.
Comments
Seeing Melisandre for more than 1 second made me want to bang her.
I do laugh at how no one can support Trump. You and @Sledog just keep pointing at Obama. Nice work!!
BY PATRICK MALONE AND R. JEFFREY SMITH
Center for Public Integrity
LINKEDIN
GOOGLE+
PINTEREST
REDDIT
PRINT
ORDER REPRINT OF THIS STORY
July 16, 2018 06:27 AM
Updated July 16, 2018 07:44 PM
Two security experts from the Department of Energy’s Idaho National Laboratory drove to San Antonio, Texas, in March 2017 with a sensitive mission: to retrieve dangerous nuclear materials from a nonprofit research lab there.
Their task was to ensure that the radioactive materials did not fall into the wrong hands on the way back to Idaho, where the government maintains a stockpile of nuclear explosive materials for the military and others.
To ensure they got the right items, the specialists from Idaho brought radiation detectors and small samples of dangerous materials to calibrate them: specifically, a plastic-covered disk of plutonium, a material that can be used to fuel nuclear weapons, and another of cesium, a highly radioactive isotope that could potentially be used in a so-called “dirty” radioactive bomb.
But when they stopped at a Marriott hotel just off Highway 410, in a high-crime neighborhood filled with temp agencies and ranch homes, they left those sensors on the back seat of their rented Ford Expedition. When they awoke the next morning, the window had been smashed and the special valises holding these sensors and nuclear materials had vanished.
This is up there with your walking peacefully barefoot in Indian temples comment.