how could this site be on the web?HELP-I want my grandkinds and YOURS to be SAFE!!!
----------------- There is a site on the web that needs to come down. It is luring children. This is the opening of the web site - "Welcome to Puellula, a place to celebrate little girls in all of their splendor! Nothing can compare to the beauty of a little girl’s smile, to the sound of her laugh, to the smell of her hair or the velvet touch of her hands. This is the place to explore that beauty, to marvel at the exquisite grace of the angels who ceaselessly brighten our days and bring winsome smiles to our lips. Enter into our midst with wonder and expectation. Tarry as long as you please. Depart with joy and elation."
LOS ANGELES -- A
spacecraft designed to
rocket wealthy tourists
into space as early as
2011 was unveiled Monday
in what backers of the
venture hope will signal
a new era in aviation
history.
WASHINGTON -- An internal
investigation of the
community-organizing
group ACORN found no
pattern of intentional,
illegal conduct by ACORN
staffers on undercover
videos shot by
conservative critics of
the group.
WASHINGTON -- The
Environmental Protection
Agency has concluded
greenhouse gases are
endangering people's
health and must be
regulated, signaling that
the Obama administration
is prepared to contain
global warming without
congressional action if
neces...
NEW YORK -- Diane Sawyer
says this week is her
last as co-anchor of
ABC's "Good Morning
America" as she prepares
to replace Charles Gibson
on the network's "World
News."
WASHINGTON -- Al-Qaida
leader Osama bin Laden
may periodically slip
back into Afghanistan
from his remote hideout
in neighboring Pakistan,
a senior White House
official says, adding a
new twist to the mystery
of the elusive
terrorist's whereabouts.
TEHRAN, Iran -- Security
forces and pro-government
militiamen clashed with
protesters shouting
"death to the dictator"
outside Tehran University
on Monday, beating men
and women with batons and
firing tear gas, on a day
of nationwide student
demonstra...
COPENHAGEN -- The largest
and most important U.N.
climate change conference
in history opened Monday,
with diplomats from 192
nations warned that this
could be the best, last
chance for a deal to
protect the world from
calamitous global
warming.