quarta-feira, 12 de agosto de 2009

Quem disse que o H5N1 se curava com Tamiflu????!!!!!Redondamente enganados.....Vejam só este vídeo.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_depth/8196807.stm

segunda-feira, 10 de agosto de 2009

Isto ainda não está assim tão mau ó amigo!!!!!

Meus amigos,

Este link foi-me enviado por um amigo que estva muito preocupado com a minha segurança. O pobre coitado, que é Inglês, tinha a ideia que a justiça portuguesa era muito parecida com a justiça Mexicana. Será que ele não tem razão??? Bem, pelo menos as advogadas portuguesas têm mais estilo, não só no que toca a penteados mas tb quanto aos trapitos que usam.
Copiei o email para que percebam a história tão bem cantada por este artista, portador de um enorme talento mas tb do H5n1......
Reparem ainda que o desgraçado achava mesmo que a minha vida esteve em perigo quando eu exercia essa bela actividade, que é a advocacia....


Hi Ana,

It was probably a good idea for you to get out when you could!!

Raph


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jn3Bbn8G0qQ


Mexico Lawyer Who Defended Drug Traffickers Is Shot DeadBy MARC LACEYPublished: August 9, 2009
GUADALAJARA, Mexico — A lawyer who represented drug traffickers and who survived four attempts on her life was killed Sunday in the northern city of Monterrey, law enforcement officials said.
Silvia Raquenel Villanueva, a tough-talking criminal defender whom the authorities accused of getting too close to the notorious figures she represented, was celebrated by Mexico’s underworld. She had at least six different songs written about her, with titles like “The Lady of Steel” and “The Bulletproof Lawyer.”
Knowing she was a marked woman, Ms. Villanueva, 55, a single mother, put bulletproof glass in her office and traveled with a bodyguard. She also sought divine intervention to stay alive, decorating her office with scores of crosses and keeping candles burning.
“I’m a lawyer for people who really need one,” she said in an interview last fall.
The attempts on her life began in 1998, when an explosive went off at the front door of her office. Two years later, she was shot while entering a Mexico City hotel with a police commander charged with working for drug traffickers whom she was representing. Months after that, she was shot eight times by an assailant who entered her office. In 2001, a gunman shot at her on the courthouse steps in Monterrey.
“Some people would have left the country,” she said in the interview. “Not me. God has put me in the eye of the hurricane. The people I defend could be the worst of the worst or they could be innocent.”
The list of suspects could be long. Ms. Villanueva, who was one of six children in a working-class family, represented people with links to a variety of drug trafficking organizations, which angered her clients’ rivals. She also spoke out strongly against the government, accusing politicians and prosecutors of allowing criminals to operate.
News organizations in Monterrey said she had been shopping when three gunmen shot her numerous times just after noon on Sunday.