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Baby Trend Nambia Collection


from: Baby Trend





Baby Trend Travel System with Flex Loc Car Seat, Nambia


2009-01-01

from: Baby Trend


The Nambia Travel System includes the No 1 rated infant car seat with Flex-Loc stay ...
List Price: $189.99
Our Price: $187.83
You Save: -$2.16 ( 1%)
Prices subject to change.


Baby Trend Double Sit N Stand- Mesa

 out of 5 stars

from: Baby Trend


The Nambia Travel System includes the No 1 rated infant car seat with Flex-Loc stay ...


Baby Trend Triplet Stroller in Silver and Black

 out of 5 stars

from: Baby Trend


The Baby Trend Silver and Black Triplet Stroller for three children features 5-point harnesses, 2-position ...


Baby Trend Expedition LX Jogging Stroller, Skylar

 out of 5 stars
2009-02-01

from: Baby Trend


The Skylar Expedition LX Jogger accepts Baby Trend Skylar infant car seat to form a ...
List Price: $139.99
Our Price: $137.37
You Save: -$2.62 ( 2%)
Prices subject to change.


Baby Trend Expedition LX Jogging Stroller, Vanilla Bean

 out of 5 stars
2008-12-10

from: Baby Trend


The Vanilla Bean Expedition LX Jogger accepts baby trend vanilla bean infant car seat to ...
Our Price: $119.99
Prices subject to change.


Baby Trend Vanilla Bean Collection

 out of 5 stars

from: Baby Trend


The Vanilla Bean Expedition LX Jogger accepts baby trend vanilla bean infant car seat to ...


Baby Trend Sit N Stand Stroller, Vanilla Bean

 out of 5 stars
2008-12-08

from: Baby Trend


The Vanilla Bean Sit N Stand LX is the right stroller for kids. Add our ...
Our Price: $139.99
Prices subject to change.


Baby Trend Expedition Single Jogger Rain Cover

 out of 5 stars

from: Baby Trend


This Rain Cover for the Expedition line of jogging strollers provides both moisture & wind ...


Baby Trend Serengeti High Chair

 out of 5 stars

from: Baby Trend


Baby Trend Serengeti High Chair This high chair comes fully assembled - simply open the ...



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fpatpanel
Fashion Jewelry




Every now and then, I feel thankful that I'm not an idiot. Don't get me wrong, most of the time I yearn for the simple, carefree life of the halfwit. I long to relish the stupid joys of the lowest common denominator, uncomplicated by critical thinking, ulterior motives, ironic distance or simple logic. To drive my daughter straight to Disneyland and delight in the asinine, saccharine femininity represented by their Princess Fantasy Faire. To take in an adorable baby chimp without thinking through the very real possibility that it might grow up and rip someone's face off one day. To say "It's all good" and really mean it.

Being stupid is fun and relaxing. That much is obvious, and it enrages the non-stupid to no end. Just look at the Letters pages here on Salon: Filled with intelligent, tormented human beings, angry at everything under the sun, absolutely furious – livid! -- over the existence of television sets and octuplet moms on disability and fat kids and Sarah Palin and anyone insensitive to the plights of polar bears, severe allergy sufferers, the home-schooled, and, of course, intelligent, tormented, lactose-intolerant human beings like themselves.

But being an imbecile has its drawbacks. Yesterday, for example, I got an email from the IRS. Apparently the IRS needs more information from me -- including my social security number, which they seem to have misplaced. That's understandable, really. The IRS is huge, their office is probably a wreck. Anyway, I have just 12 hours to fill out my tax refund claim form, but my correspondence must remain confidential and "must not be disclosed by anyone other than the intended recipient." I think that means don't tell your accountant about this, because she might not realize that the IRS handles much of its business through email, and sometimes refers to taxpaying citizens as, simply, 'Rabbit.'"

The truth is, I wouldn't have to be that much stupider than I am now to fill out that form and send it back. Instead, I just feel really glad that I'm not a complete moron.

...

via Salon

Last week, I put the 2009 Continuous Integration poll online. However, at one point, I started to notice some major irregularities in the voting patterns - in short, some unscrupulous voters where apparently attempting to skew the results in their...







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