Wednesday, September 14, 2011

Lisa Vanderpump



Lisa and her Loving husband Ken with jiggy. Truly one of the few with any class on the Housewifes in any city or state.

Brandi Glanville



Get ready to meet a hateful WHORE who is rumored to have More VD then the free clinic

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

haineux, sans instruction pute


My hope for her, is some hunky gay man will marry her. Any gay man who helps this WHORE should be labeled a trader. LET HER HAIR FALL OUT

LOS ANGELES, California (CNN) -- Carrie Prejean has been dethroned as Miss California USA for "contract violations," including missing scheduled pageant events, according to a state pageant official.

Carrie Prejean has been dethroned as Miss California USA.

Prejean, 22, retained her title last month despite a controversy over topless photos, missed appearances and her statements against same-sex marriage.
Miss USA pageant owner Donald Trump made the decision to fire Prejean a month after he gave her a second chance.
"Carrie is a beautiful young woman and I wish her well as she pursues her other interests," Trump said.
Runner-up Tami Farrell, who was Miss Malibu, will immediately assume the Miss California USA title, according to state pageant Executive Director Keith Lewis said.
"This was a decision based solely on contract violations including Ms. Prejean's unwillingness to make appearances on behalf of the Miss California USA organization," Lewis said.
Trump brought Prejean and Lewis together in New York for a meeting last month, after which he announced that communications between the beauty queen and pageant officials had been repaired.
"I told Carrie she needed to get back to work and honor her contract with the Miss California USA Organization and I gave her the opportunity to do so," said Trump. "Unfortunately it just doesn't look like it is going to happen and I offered Keith my full support in making this decision."
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Trump settles Miss California USA imbroglio
Prejean stepped into controversy at the Miss USA pageant in April when she declared her opposition to same-sex marriage in a response to a question asked during the national pageant by Perez Hilton, a pageant judge. Prejean finished as first runner-up, but it was not clear if her answer cost her the crown.
The controversy boiled to a new level in early May when semi-nude photos of Prejean appeared on gossip Web sites.
Miss California USA officials -- some of them outspoken advocates of same-sex marriage -- suggested that the photos breached the contract Prejean signed with the pageant. These officials also complained they couldn't reach Prejean and she had missed important pageant events.
The controversy seemed over when Trump declared the pictures not to be too racy and Prejean promised to do better in communicating with the state pageant.
"After our press conference in New York we had hoped we would be able to forge a better working relationship," Lewis said Wednesday. "However, since that time it has become abundantly clear that Carrie is unwilling to fulfill her obligations under our contract and work together."
Hilton, the judge who asked the same-sex question during the pageant, cheered Prejean's firing.

Thursday, May 7, 2009

OFF WITH HER HEAD, oh, I mean Crown


Based on her lack of MORAL character her crown will be lost riped off her bad WEAVE.



Still no word on whether Miss California USA Carrie Prejean will keep her crown after racy photos surfaced (and more racy Prejean pics to come, according to the website that posted the first picture of the Miss USA runner-up in pink lace underwear and nothing else). Miss USA franchise owner Donald Trump tells E! Newsthat a decision is expected today.
But the Miss California runner-up tells, Tami Farrell of Malibu, tells Billy Bush of "Access Hollywood" that she's ready to step up should Prejean be shed of her tiara. Farrell gives Prejean props for "taking a stance in something she believes in," but says that the Miss USA stage was not the right forum. "Had I got it, I would think let the people of each state decide and let the laws be made on that sense," Farrell says. "I'm just a simple beauty queen and I think it's funny that it's a question scholars and politicians have debated on, and now we're looking to a beauty queen for the answers."
Michael Jackson and Stephanie Seymour are also making news:
-- Raymone Bain, the publicist who shepherded Jackson through his molestation trial, is now suing the rebounding King of Pop for unpaid bills totalling $44 million, the Associated Press reports. Bain also claims that she also oversaw his business affairs for a time.
-- Seymour is embroiled in a nasty divorce with her publisher and polo-playing husband Peter Brant. The former Victoria's Secret model and onetime Guns N' Roses muse has been married to Brant for 16 years and they have three children. Now she tells a pal that she's living in the maid's quarters of their Greenwich, Conn., mansion and that Brant is "playing very dirty with me," the New York Post reports. Brant reportedly plans to challenge Seymour for custody of the kids, saying she's an unfit mother

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Cinco de Mayo

WHY? other then a reason to drink and party what is the celebration about.
Mybe they are just proud how far they have come as a nation since the revolt?

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Maybe or Maybe not


Like a evil Truman Capote
(Geneva) A New York State man is asking a Swiss court to reinstate an assault conviction on a brother of the United Arab Emirates’ ruler who last year was found guilty of beating the man with belt in a Geneva hotel bar when he spurned the sheik’s sexual advances.
Sheik Falah bin Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan denied the charges brought by Silvano Orsi, 40.
At his trial last year, the court heard the attack began when Orsi, originally from Rochester, New York, declined a bottle of champagne the sheik offered him in August 2003.
Orsi claimed that after he refused the champagne, the sheik - whom he never before had met - came up behind him, jostled his glasses, sat in his lap and tried to kiss and fondle him. When Orsi protested, the assault began, he said.
Two former hotel employees and a security officer testified that they had seen the sheik assaulting Orsi.
The sheik said the men got into a heated argument after he overheard someone call him gay and acknowledged that he pulled his belt from his trousers, but insisted he never struck Orsi.
The sheik was convicted of inflicting “bodily harm with the use of a dangerous object” and imposed a suspended fine of 540,000 francs ($530,000), which would be payable in the event of another infraction in Switzerland during the next three years.
The sheik appealed and last month an appeals court in Geneva overturned the verdict, saying in its ruling a belt could not be considered a dangerous object.
Through his attorney, Orsi said he will appeal to the Swiss Supreme Court to have the original sentence reinstated.
Orsi’s injuries and post-traumatic shock from the beating left him incapable of working.
A lawyer for the sheik said that Orsi’s accusations are “false” and purely motivated by his desire to gain money from the sheik.
The sheik is a brother of Sheik Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan, who was appointed president of the United Arab Emirates in 2004 after the death of their father, Sheik Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan.

Friday, April 3, 2009

WE ARE UNDER ATTACH AGAIN


"Once again in a show to harass the wealthy and appease the middle class before a revolution we are hurt " by Zurich HRH



By Paul Carrel and Anna Willard Paul Carrel And Anna Willard – Fri Apr 3, 3:19 pm ET
PRAGUE (Reuters) – Luxembourg on Friday said it should be taken off a "grey list" of countries that do not comply fully with standards for catching tax cheats, as France called for sanctions on uncooperative states.

The Group of 20 leading industrialized and emerging nations pledged on Thursday to crackdown on jurisdictions that fail to cooperate in cross-border tax evasion cases.

Pushed by France and Germany, the G20 agreed that countries should sign up to global rules on sharing tax information, with a commitment to cooperate when cheating is suspected.

Faced with the threat of being added to a blacklist, Luxembourg, Switzerland, Austria, Monaco and others signed up to standards drawn up by the Paris-based Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development just ahead of the G20 summit.

The OECD put Luxembourg, Austria and Belgium -- all European Union member states -- on a "grey list" of countries that have agreed to improve transparency standards but have not yet signed the necessary double taxation accords.

Luxembourg said the list was "fatuous."

"I find the treatment of certain states to be incomprehensible," said its prime minister and finance minister, Jean-Claude Juncker.

"We will negotiate double-taxation agreements. When we do that, we will disappear from this list," he added on arrival for a meeting of euro zone finance ministers in Prague.

Austrian's finance minister, Josef Proell, said the OECD list on tax havens must be discussed further.

"As a member of the OECD, I expect to be listened to and to be able to join in the discussion and to take a joint decision," Proell said.

"We have already given information in individual cases, without legal steps being taken. We do not need, because of that (the G20 declaration), to tackle banking secrecy as it exists in Austria in our banking practice law," Proell said.

Diplomats said the aim of the grey list was to put pressure on countries that have just signed up to the OECD rules to implement them quickly.



French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde said nobody could object to transparency.

"How can you be furious against a principle which consists of saying that you need transparency? That taxes are paid where they should be? The money that finances terrorism, the networks which escape thanks to obscure corners of the world, continue to finance such scandalous and uncertain causes," she told reporters.

"If certain states refuse transparency, we need the arsenal of sanctions that is already planned and on which the finance ministers have worked and which we will submit at the next G20 in September," Lagarde said.

Sanctions could include requiring significant increases in capital requirements for EU-based financial institutions that have relations with non-cooperative tax centers, Lagarde said.