12Cool-Girl2, is that really the predominant outlook today? Few would (openly) admit harboring those sentiments. Women like Margaret Thatcher, Golda Meir, Indira Gandhi, and others really set the modern precedence for strong women leaders. If Hillary were elected in 2016, it would undoubtedly be a <span style="text-decoration:underline">milestone</span>, just like Obama was in 2008. Nothing more. Define these people in power by their policies, their belief, their integrity.
The distinguished Haruspex spake:[quote]The distinguished OffspringOfMak spake:<blockquote>Legalizing it would leave all the hustlers out on the streets broke, so do some brothers a favor and don't favor for legalization. Thanks. <img src="/chatrooms/smilies/alien1.gif" alt="">
Legalizing it would leave all the hustlers out on the streets broke, so do some brothers a favor and don't favor for legalization. Thanks. <img src="/chatrooms/smilies/alien1.gif" alt="">
WHAT DID U JUST SAY M8
IMA STAB U
The Third District Court of Appeal tossed out an $80,000 discrimination settlement Wednesday between Gulliver Preparatory School and its former headmaster Patrick Snay, ruling the ex-employee and his daughter breached the terms of a confidential agreement when she took to social media to brag about it.
“Mama and Papa Snay won the case against Gulliver,” Dana Snay posted days later to her 1,200 Facebook friends. “Gulliver is now officially paying for my vacation to Europe this summer. SUCK IT.”
The post, seen by current and former Gulliver students, made its way back to the school’s attorneys, who told the Snays they’d violated the deal. Patrick Snay last year won a Circuit Court ruling to enforce the deal, but Judge Linda Ann Wells overturned that decision Wednesday.
“Snay violated the agreement by doing exactly what he had promised not to do,” Wells wrote. “His daughter then did precisely what the confidentiality agreement was designed to prevent.”