Los Angeles is sort of a melting pot of people and ideas. It's sort of a filled with vain people, as evidenced by the pages and pages of plastic surgery ads in any L.A. publication. It is a hard working city in the entertainment industry, while being vain at times, and kind of lax. Considering most parties do not start until 9 or later and set calls can be 5 a.m., it's fascinating to watch.
The Secret Service sent a food taster to a Paris restaurant's kitchen to make sure President Obama's food was not poisoned. They received what they considered a credible threat concerning Obama. Senator Charles Grassley Twittered it.
Day Two has us stopping at the Elephant Seal Rookery and San Simeon, with lunch in Big Sur. We'll be in Carmel for the night at La Playa Hotel. The materials we've been given say"The hotel is recognized as theh Grande Dame of Carmel." Again, I'll let you know.
No. 9 - Michael i loved thisher explanation Phelps smoking pot. What's a superhuman athlete boy-next-door healthy young man doing smoking a bong? Wasn't winning eight medals in one Olympics, and earning millions of dollars in endorsements, enough to keep Michael Phelps too high on happiness to think of ingesting an drug that is illegal? Unless he was smoking pot my company to numb pain from his workouts? You know, that "medical marijuana benefits" thing? After his photograph was leaked his image was tarnished by michael Phelps. And if you think I'm being too critical, remember that Phelps HIMSELF apologized for smoking the bong!
Or it might be completely your fault and you"cheated" by getting pain medications from two individual doctors and got caught. Whichever the reason you still have pain and no one to help right?
The supply side will never be stopped. The so-called"war on drugs" over the years is adequate proof that the effort is pretty much useless.
The mission of LEAP is to lessen the incidence of death, disease, crime, and addiction by ultimately ending drug prohibition and to reduce unintended harmful consequences resulting from fighting the war on drugs' multitude.