Saturday 6 July 2013

Cute Pictures Of Baby Animals Free Pictures Images Photos Wallpaper Clipart 2013

Cute Pictures Of Baby Animals Definition 

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Whether it's a gangly baby giraffe still trying to make his legs work or a peccary piglet weighing all of 26 ounces, when it comes to new additions at the zoo the fact is one size fits all. And that size is cute. And while these adorable little ones could get by on good looks alone, their first week has been more than full. Otters needed swim lessons, servals needed hunting lessons and the Andean bear cub at the Phoenix Zoo needed a name. Now that he's been dubbed "Luka," the little guy is taking a few steps outside in preparation for his public debut. It's not that he's painfully shy, but as these photos show, it's only safe to let a little bit of cute out at a time.This law is for the birds, according to a Pennsylvania man facing steep penalties for his pet ducks.This law is for the birds, according to a Pennsylvania man facing steep penalties for his pet ducks.Authorities are threatening James Kistler of Delmont, a town east of Pittsburgh, with fines of $500 per day because his four pet birds violate local zoning rules, reports TV station KDKA. He got his first warning in May.Owners cannot keep swine, goats, sheep, insects, reptiles having a venomous or constrictor nature, bovines, quadrupeds and poultry -- such as ducks -- in the living quarters of a residential structure.To Kistler, it's a bird-brained rule that says his blue Swedish ducks -- named Larry, Curly, Moe and Fred -- have to go.And talk about a big duck bill; if Delmont officials impose the penalty it will quickly cut into Kistler's nest egg.Sure you have. We all have – and not in a malicious sense. Squeezing is just something you want to DO. Bunnies. Puppies. Wee baby elephants. Ducks. Baby sloths. All wellsprings of the intense desire to hug so hard it hurts. Well it turns out scientists have given this compulsion a name. It's "Cuteness aggression," and they're trying to make sense of it. With bubble wrap.Tis the season to bring the cuteness. And what's cuter than a baby elephant playing on the beach? Nothing. End of discussion. Read…Tis the season to bring the cuteness. And what's cuter than a baby elephant playing on the beach? Nothing. End of discussion. Read…Carrie Arnold has the lowdown on what science has to say about the universal desire to squeeze baby animals, hard:Whether we are pinching the cheeks of an adorable toddler or enveloping a beloved pet in a bear hug, most of us have experienced the strange drive to give something cute a gigantic squeeze. New research by two Yale University psychologists details how the sight of something cute brings out our aggressive side. Rebecca Dyer and Oriana Aragon investigated “cute aggression” by showing study participants slide shows of either cute, funny or normal animal photographs. As they watched, the participants held bubble wrap. The researchers, attempting to mimic the common desire to squeeze cute things, told subjects to pop as many or as few bubbles as they wished. People watching the cute slide show popped significantly more bubbles than those viewing the funny or control pictures, according to results presented at the Society for Personality and Social Psychology annual meeting in New Orleans. “Some things are so cute that we just can't stand it,” Dyer concludes.The progressive nonprofit organization Common Cause urged then-IRS commissioner Douglas Shulman to investigate activities of conservative donors despite housing the campaign-reform group that employs Shulman’s wife.

In 2012, Common Cause urged Shulman and fellow embattled IRS official Lois Lerner, director of the agency’s tax-exempt organizations division, to investigate the Koch Brothers’ attempted takeover of the libertarian think tank the Cato Institute.

“Common Cause respectfully requests that the Internal Revenue Service initiate an investigation into whether attempts by Charles G. Koch and David H. Koch, shareholders of the Cato Institute, to take control of and manipulate the Cato Institute for partisan political purposes expose a flaw in the Cato Institute’s structure that jeopardizes its tax exempt status under 26 U.S.C. 501(c)(3),” Common Cause president Bob Edgar wrote in a letter to Shulman and fellow IRS official Lois Lerner dated March 9, 2012.

Edgar, who died in April of this year, described “grave questions about whether the Kochs are exploiting Cato’s corporate structure to transform the Cato Institute from its longstanding, storied reputation as a nonpartisan, libertarian think tank into a partisan organization in contravention of its educative and charitable purpose.

“For these reasons, the Internal Revenue Service should open an investigation into the impact of the Kochs’ attempt to control the Cato Institute to advance their own political and economic interests, and whether Cato can maintain its charitable, tax-exempt status without changing its ownership structure,” Edgar wrote.

In May, after news broke that the IRS engaged in widespread targeting of conservative groups for abusive audits and delays of nonprofit applications, Common Cause submitted written testimony to a House Ways and Means hearing expressing disappointment at the actions of IRS officials.

“All organizations, regardless of political affiliation and ideological leaning, deserve to be treated fairly, justly, and equally under the law. The IRS did not use these standards in its review of 501(c)(4) applications, and the employees and those with knowledge of what was happening should be held accountable. In addition, an independent, credible investigation must occur to ensure that these guidelines are strictly adhered to in the future,” Common Cause testified.

The organization described the IRS abuse as merely an unfortunate response to the Supreme Court’s Citizens United ruling.

“We are deeply disappointed that the actions of IRS employees, and the failure of IRS supervisors to uphold fair and sensible standards and priorities, now undermine the credibility of an agency that must crack down on the rising flood of new 501(c)(4)s after the Supreme Court’s misguided decision in Citizens United and Congress’ subsequent failure to enact a common sense disclosure law,” Common Cause testified.

Common Cause provides office space to the progressive campaign-finance reform organization Public Campaign which employs Shulman’s wife Susan L. Andersen as a senior program advisor.

In May, Public Campaign president and CEO Nick Nyhart belittled the concerns of disenfranchised conservatives.

Cute Pictures Of Baby Animals Free Pictures Images Photos Wallpaper Clipart 2013

Cute Pictures Of Baby Animals Free Pictures Images Photos Wallpaper Clipart 2013

Cute Pictures Of Baby Animals Free Pictures Images Photos Wallpaper Clipart 2013

Cute Pictures Of Baby Animals Free Pictures Images Photos Wallpaper Clipart 2013

Cute Pictures Of Baby Animals Free Pictures Images Photos Wallpaper Clipart 2013

Cute Pictures Of Baby Animals Free Pictures Images Photos Wallpaper Clipart 2013

Cute Pictures Of Baby Animals Free Pictures Images Photos Wallpaper Clipart 2013

Cute Pictures Of Baby Animals Free Pictures Images Photos Wallpaper Clipart 2013


Cute Pictures Of Baby Animals Free Pictures Images Photos Wallpaper Clipart 2013

Cute Pictures Of Baby Animals Free Pictures Images Photos Wallpaper Clipart 2013

Cute Pictures Of Baby Animals Free Pictures Images Photos Wallpaper Clipart 2013




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