Bump to the top!
LOL!
Sarah Palin in a wet T-shirt after jumping in an ice-covered AK river?
Excuse me - you did mean that Clinton was to be held under ice water for 24-hours didn’t you?
Go George!
He challenges his good friend, Bill Clinton. Says a lot doesn't it.
He is a good sport, always has been.
Wow, the comments at the site are overall disgusting and vile. Amazing the hatred this liberal cockroaches have for Bush, still wishing him death, but at least their not racists like conservatives.
Woody Johnson................hehe,heh,heh............
He was clearly joking. That was well done.
My wife and I got challenged.
Not interested. Not even a little bit.
Don’t read the comments section at YouTube unless you want to see complete utter BDS raging stupidity on display.
Frankly, most of those scum deserve what’s coming.
If Hillary takes the challenge, it will not end well for her: "I'm melting!.... Melting!.....Oh, what a world, what a world!"
After the fad of getting a BUCKET OF COLD WATER dumped on them, these people might want to check out the possible relationship between the Statin drugs and ALS or ALS symptons.
Statins, Lou Gehrig and Big Questions
BY JUDITH REITMAN January 20, 2011 5:00 AM
The cholesterol-lowering drugs known as statins have proved remarkably popular, but might they contribute in a few cases to debilitating neuromuscular disease?
Dr. Greg Burns (not his real name) is a 72-year-old retired radiologist living in Connecticut. Until early last year, he ran with his dog at canine agility meets, skied, ice skated and played 18 holes of golf. He is now unable to walk and is taking a course of medication that will postpone, by a few months, his death.
Burns rapid decline began in December 2007 when he suffered a short-acting stroke from which he fully recovered.
His cholesterol level was elevated and so as a preventative measure his doctor prescribed a 20mg daily dose of Crestor, a cholesterol-lowering drug in the statin class. Statin drugs are designed to inhibit cholesterol synthesis, and about 20 million people are taking statins, most for life.
A few months after beginning Crestor, Burns developed muscle cramps. He was assured by his doctors that these were not serious side effects of taking the drug. But in December 2008 when tests showed that his creatine phosphokinase an enzyme that is released into the blood stream when muscle cells are damaged was elevated, Dr. Burns stopped taking Crestor. When his enzyme levels returned to normal, he began taking Pravachol, another statin drug. He quickly developed weakness in his lower legs and a right foot drop. In January 2010, following an extensive neurological exam, Dr. Kevin Felice at The Hospital for Special Care in New Britain, Conn., diagnosed Burns as having amyotrophic lateral sclerosis or ALS, commonly known as Lou Gehrigs Disease.
Excerpt, for full article go to the link below.
http://www.psmag.com/navigation/health-and-behavior/statins-lou-gehrig-and-big-questions-27449/
Fuuny!
Quite classy.
The time when a cold shower would have helped Bill Clinton passed decades ago.
Haha
Saw Charlie Sheen’s challenge yesterday. He dumped money on himself and said they need money and donated $10k.