I kinda like it.
W (669)
51 SFW Posts |
893 Space Comments
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Registered 2007-06-24 19:38:48 Comment Karma: 395 Featured Comments: 0 Member of : |
Recent Comments from W
- Comment on Steve`n`Seagulls - You Shook Me All Night Long (2015-06-24 09:31:29)
I kinda like it. - Comment on Milker (2015-06-18 13:00:38)
What an asshole! Someone has to clean that up. - Comment on Car Wash (2015-06-09 14:08:31)
It's implied. - Comment on Flexxifinger® Quicker Picker Rock Picker (2015-03-31 10:07:02)
Made in my state! - Comment on Little girl chooses the Dark Side! Horrible! [HD] (2015-03-27 08:07:14)
I've seen this over a hundred times and it still makes me smile. - Comment on Nicole Marie Jean as Gwen Stacy as Spider Girl (2015-02-11 11:27:09)
With a Batgirl phone case! - Comment on High def minecraft (2015-02-11 11:12:56)
Want! http://media.giphy.com/media/FZuRP6WaW5qg/giphy.gif - Comment on Female Coverings (2015-02-09 16:11:45)
Wah Wah - Comment on Glow in the dark Sexy (2015-02-06 22:10:44)
Plutonium. Not even once. - Comment on Mr Peanut Butter (2015-01-28 12:38:42)
Can't wait for the second season! - Comment on Opposite Day (2015-01-27 18:52:33)
I understand that refference. - Comment on playing with grenades (2015-01-19 13:08:57)
Blue handle means it's a training grenade. Explosive core is removed. - Comment on kill whitey (2015-01-19 13:00:51)
And I quote:Polar bears. An iconic photograph of a polar bear clinging to a chunk of melting Arctic ice has driven home the idea that polar bears are going extinct due to global warming. But the science doesn’t necessarily back this up. There are 19 subpopulations of polar bears and eight of them are in decline. Warmer temperatures and shorter-lived ice mean that fewer polar bears can be supported than in the recent past, but there are more than enough to ensure the survival of the species. There are currently about 25,000 polar bears worldwide. In the 1970s the species numbered somewhere between 5,000 and 10,000; their recovery since then is owed in part to a 1975 treaty regulating the hunting of polar bears. The International Union for Conservation of Nature predicts that numbers will decrease by 30 percent or more by the year 2053, mostly due to climate change. That is a dramatic loss, but it will still put polar bear numbers ahead of where they were. DNA studies have shown that polar bears have existed as a species for about 600,000 years. They have lived through many warming and cooling periods in Earth’s history, and they didn’t become extinct during times when ice disappeared. Polar bears also interbred with brown bears during those phases when they had to seek out food on land rather than the seals that they now prefer. Neither hybridization nor global warming are likely to wipe out the polar bear anytime soon. - Comment on Crash (2014-12-30 10:56:48)
lol, Gawkers! - Comment on damcer (2014-12-10 13:41:14)
I was really hoping that this was a gif.