Re: You is all a bunch of poofs!
Posted: Thu Mar 28, 2019 10:38 am
I have a friend -- a young, very attractive woman surnamed Adcock. I am wicked, and always say to myself, 'gladly'.
Exposing the stupidity, lies, and hypocrisy of Social Justice Warriors since July 2012
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I have a friend -- a young, very attractive woman surnamed Adcock. I am wicked, and always say to myself, 'gladly'.
Where my girlfriend is from there was a high school basketball player named Fonda Dix. She was good enough (at basketball) to get her name in the paper quite often.Matt Cavanaugh wrote: ↑I have a friend -- a young, very attractive woman surnamed Adcock. I am wicked, and always say to myself, 'gladly'.
People I actually know....Driftless wrote: ↑Where my girlfriend is from there was a high school basketball player named Fonda Dix. She was good enough (at basketball) to get her name in the paper quite often.Matt Cavanaugh wrote: ↑I have a friend -- a young, very attractive woman surnamed Adcock. I am wicked, and always say to myself, 'gladly'.
Those are the most ridiculous names I've heard since the last time I watched the Flintstones. But I'm sure you had a gay old time.ConcentratedH2O, OM wrote: ↑I had a teacher called Mrs. Sweatycunt. Same school, the principal was called Mr. Fuckmyhole and the janitor was Gordon Jizzthroat.
Reminds me of my favorite Weird Al song.MarcusAu wrote: ↑Those are the most ridiculous names I've heard since the last time I watched the Flintstones. But I'm sure you had a gay old time.ConcentratedH2O, OM wrote: ↑I had a teacher called Mrs. Sweatycunt. Same school, the principal was called Mr. Fuckmyhole and the janitor was Gordon Jizzthroat.
InfraRedBucket wrote: ↑Wed Mar 27, 2019 12:19 amI posted a link to the New Yorker article way back. Keep up.
:nin:
One simple Google search will tell me if these people exist.ConcentratedH2O, OM wrote: ↑I had a teacher called Mrs. Sweatycunt. Same school, the principal was called Mr. Fuckmyhole and the janitor was Gordon Jizzthroat.
:o :o :oSM1957 wrote: ↑Thu Mar 28, 2019 2:00 pmOne simple Google search will tell me if these people exist.ConcentratedH2O, OM wrote: ↑I had a teacher called Mrs. Sweatycunt. Same school, the principal was called Mr. Fuckmyhole and the janitor was Gordon Jizzthroat.
..........
That , I feel , was a mistake.
How do I delete my browsing history?
Or you can believe he earned a load of dosh on bitcoin and was born a natural assassin. Each to their own I guess.CommanderTuvok wrote: ↑Tue Mar 26, 2019 1:39 pmA "respected" NZ iman has some thought on who was (((actually))) behind the Christchurch shooter.
This will quietly be ignored.
Mike Hock usually made an annual appearance in assembly lists at school, typically reported by the prefects for being late.Matt Cavanaugh wrote: ↑I have a friend -- a young, very attractive woman surnamed Adcock. I am wicked, and always say to myself, 'gladly'.
I'm currently looking into BCAA - probably a good bet.free thoughtpolice wrote: ↑I had a vehicle that was close to being sent to pasture as you traditionalists like to phrase it..Steersman wrote: ↑ <snip>
Guess I'll have to look into a bit further - maybe get a second opinion as I sure don't want to shell out that dough, particularly when it might be better spent on a new or newer vehicle. But not sure how much I'll be able to drive it in the interim - repair shop suggested I might get another year or so out of it.
You live in the city, you can get BCAA?
Or if you are getting to your sunset years, and live in a city? Get rid of your car.
Cheaper to get taxis and buses. Cars are expensive.
Relative to which, I've periodically quoted Canada's own Sir William Stephenson - A Man Called Intrepid - who said, or was paraphrased saying, that there's a difference between being high-minded and being soft-headed. Trudeau certainly aspires to the former - virtue signaling for fun and profit, or Prophet [piss be upon him] as the case may be - but generally only succeeds at the latter:
One seriously wonders whether the Liberal Party knows whether they're on foot or horse-back. And whether there's anyone in the higher echelons of the Party who's able to put Trudeau out to pasture - make him a drama teacher again as the common meme has it. If they don't then the whole Party is likely to be toast before the end of October:screwtape wrote: ↑The latest attempt to discredit Jody Wilson-Raybould (the ex-Attorney General who refused to cave in to political pressure to avoid a prosecution of SNC-Lavalin, a giant Quebec engineering firm that has allegedly spent millions on bribes to win contracts in Africa) involves a semi-official leak, probably straight from the Prime Minister's Office. ....
LoL. As Mark Twain put it, "Politicians and diapers must be changed often, and for the same reason.”screwtape wrote: ↑
<snip>
Fortunately we are used to the inept PR campaigns of this government, and now it is rather clear that our own dear drama teacher is willing to walk all over indigenous people as well as women in order to continue practicing politics in the oh so familiar Liberal way. Time to have a refresher course in Tory corruption, just to clear the palate.
But interesting that many nominally Leftist magazines are becoming increasingly critical of Trudeau. ICYMI, some interesting observations here at MacLean's:New Mulroney Institute is bankrolled by billionaires steeped in scandal
Ex-PM raised part of funds for N.S. university site from businessmen tied to bribery schemes, tax havens ....
Not entirely sure that the Conservatives would be significantly better than the Liberal Party absent Trudeau - particularly as he seems the driver of many of the more demented policies they've been peddling. But it seems rather clear they would be the "lesser of two evils" - and by a long shot - in comparison to a Party with Trudeau as any part of it.On the elimination of inconvenient Liberals
Paul Wells: Welcome to an offensive on Charter rights—This was the week it became necessary to destroy the village of good government in order to save it.
.... I felt something like this was coming when I wrote, near the bottom of a column I wrote last November that was published in December, that an election is “the crudest possible instrument” for fixing serious shortcomings in public administration. It’s simply not true that if you don’t like something a government does you must replace it. But nor should re-electing the Liberals mean endorsing Justin Trudeau’s increasingly obvious flaws. The issues raised by the SNC-Lavalin controversy shouldn’t be settled by an election. Some misdeeds are worth dealing with as themselves, when they come up. And then let the election settle the election. ....
If you are going to get out of Dodge on occasion you pretty much need a car alright. BCAA is a good investment if you are doing any travelling with a beater too.Steersman wrote: ↑I'm currently looking into BCAA - probably a good bet.free thoughtpolice wrote: ↑I had a vehicle that was close to being sent to pasture as you traditionalists like to phrase it..Steersman wrote: ↑ <snip>
Guess I'll have to look into a bit further - maybe get a second opinion as I sure don't want to shell out that dough, particularly when it might be better spent on a new or newer vehicle. But not sure how much I'll be able to drive it in the interim - repair shop suggested I might get another year or so out of it.
You live in the city, you can get BCAA?
Or if you are getting to your sunset years, and live in a city? Get rid of your car.
Cheaper to get taxis and buses. Cars are expensive.
They are indeed expensive. May get rid of mine, even if maybe sooner than I want to.
But while taxis & car rentals are a possible option in some cases, they're not really convenient for periodic visits to friends in the Interior, and family on the Island.
And they're not a lot less expensive than bare insurance.
While Austrians, innocently receiving donations, are bailed up, no one seems to be discussing the NZ police who blithely issued him firearm licences. Complicit, we all be.Among the Australian dignitaries present were Governor-General Peter Cosgrove and NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian, whose state must bear the shame of having exported the alleged gunman.
The Canadian Press joins in on the bash-JWR bandwagon, with articles placed in major outlets:Steersman wrote: ↑screwtape wrote: ↑The latest attempt to discredit Jody Wilson-Raybould (the ex-Attorney General who refused to cave in to political pressure to avoid a prosecution of SNC-Lavalin, a giant Quebec engineering firm that has allegedly spent millions on bribes to win contracts in Africa) involves a semi-official leak, probably straight from the Prime Minister's Office. ....
What did you expect? Having followed Diana Davisons adventures in the Canadian sex crimes playground it is obvious that the Canadian media have been well ahead of the curve. You would think the Jian Ghomeshi case was was a blatant mis-carriage of justice from reading the Canadian press, with notable exceptions.screwtape wrote: ↑Fri Mar 29, 2019 3:06 amThe Canadian Press joins in on the bash-JWR bandwagon, with articles placed in major outlets:Steersman wrote: ↑screwtape wrote: ↑The latest attempt to discredit Jody Wilson-Raybould (the ex-Attorney General who refused to cave in to political pressure to avoid a prosecution of SNC-Lavalin, a giant Quebec engineering firm that has allegedly spent millions on bribes to win contracts in Africa) involves a semi-official leak, probably straight from the Prime Minister's Office. ....
CBC: Wrongfully convicted Halifax man's case sat on Wilson-Raybould's desk for months
NP: Wrongfully convicted man’s case sat on Wilson-Raybould’s desk for months
G&M: Wrongfully convicted Halifax man suffered while waiting for Wilson-Raybould to act in his case, lawyer says
"On the elimination of inconvenient Liberals" indeed.
1. I think Tim Pool was slightly misled by that article, which wasn't-quite-honest about the NAACP award-show host's comments.
Didn't have the balls to make it Dr. Zaius?
So... thanks to the good work SLPC did between 1971 & 1979... they get a pass on all their fraudulent bullshit since-then?
When did I say I give them a pass? Or that anyone else should?Service Dog wrote: ↑So... thanks to the good work SLPC did between 1971 & 1979... they get a pass on all their fraudulent bullshit since-then?
This is a very good way to spare yourself the inner-rot of schadenfreude. But-- a low bar for wrong-doers to clear.
But this is:
Exactly. Probably or possibly wind up with a vehicle that's a couple of years old - as was the Malibu, and it was fairly low-maintenance up until a year or so ago.free thoughtpolice wrote: ↑If you are going to get out of Dodge on occasion you pretty much need a car alright. BCAA is a good investment if you are doing any travelling with a beater too.Steersman wrote: ↑ <snip>
I'm currently looking into BCAA - probably a good bet.
They are indeed expensive. May get rid of mine, even if maybe sooner than I want to.
But while taxis & car rentals are a possible option in some cases, they're not really convenient for periodic visits to friends in the Interior, and family on the Island.
And they're not a lot less expensive than bare insurance.
Better to get a newer better car in my opinion. Normal maintenance has you replacing brakes and tires, batteries that are expensive and are certain to need replacement so maintaining an older vehicle starts to become a money pit even without a nasty surprise like you have already got with it.
:-) As they say, Spuzzum is beyond hope, although, reading Berton's Last Spike, seems that Yale was a "thriving metropolois", at least for a while, as the railway was being built.free thoughtpolice wrote: ↑ And especially if you plan on taking road trips of the longer variety you get better reliability, comfort, peace of mind. Not much fun to break down anywhere but if you're travelling beyond Hope :P there are lots of country to get stranded in. :lol:
He knows nothing.
I can't even.
:-) "Will no one rid me of this meddlesome [JWR]?" ;-)screwtape wrote: ↑The Canadian Press joins in on the bash-JWR bandwagon, with articles placed in major outlets:Steersman wrote: ↑screwtape wrote: ↑The latest attempt to discredit Jody Wilson-Raybould (the ex-Attorney General who refused to cave in to political pressure to avoid a prosecution of SNC-Lavalin, a giant Quebec engineering firm that has allegedly spent millions on bribes to win contracts in Africa) involves a semi-official leak, probably straight from the Prime Minister's Office. ....
CBC: Wrongfully convicted Halifax man's case sat on Wilson-Raybould's desk for months
NP: Wrongfully convicted man’s case sat on Wilson-Raybould’s desk for months
G&M: Wrongfully convicted Halifax man suffered while waiting for Wilson-Raybould to act in his case, lawyer says
"On the elimination of inconvenient Liberals" indeed.
The gravest threat to the West (possibly the world) is none of those things. It is the gradual slide into Sharia. The issue with these Western politicians is that Nazism and racism are understandable to them in a way that Islam is not. They think of Islam as being a religion in the way Christianity or Buddhism is, not as the supremacist ideology with crafty tools for conquest which it ultimately is.screwtape wrote: ↑Fri Mar 29, 2019 11:35 amAin't giving you the pleasure of a link to this piece of nonsense:
Screen Shot 2019-03-29 at 4.14.56 PM.png
But our Foreign Affairs minister rates neo-nazism and Islamophobia as the gravest threats? Presumably that can be backed up, and that, for example, more people die of Islamophobia than of Islamist terrorism? Or that more die of neo-nazism than either of the above? I shall probably die waiting for the statistics.
When I did I say you said you did or anyone should?MarcusAu wrote: ↑When did I say I give them a pass? Or that anyone else should?Service Dog wrote: ↑So... thanks to the good work SLPC did between 1971 & 1979... they get a pass on all their fraudulent bullshit since-then?
This is a very good way to spare yourself the inner-rot of schadenfreude. But-- a low bar for wrong-doers to clear.
May could solve the problem by having parliament donate to Pettibone's fiancée and getting all of the UK banned from Europe.
I’m not sure what the options are now apart from EU Parliamentary elections and a general UK election.
Fair enough. Let the record of the SPLC speak for itself.Service Dog wrote: ↑When I did I say you said you did or anyone should?MarcusAu wrote: ↑When did I say I give them a pass? Or that anyone else should?Service Dog wrote: ↑So... thanks to the good work SLPC did between 1971 & 1979... they get a pass on all their fraudulent bullshit since-then?
This is a very good way to spare yourself the inner-rot of schadenfreude. But-- a low bar for wrong-doers to clear.
Thank you; I had missed that article.Steersman wrote: ↑
Interesting though that Conrad Black, in a National Post article several weeks ago, gave some justification to think that JWR's credentials - particularly on native rights and aboriginal title - may be a cause for some concern:
Conrad Black: SNC-Lavalin is a sideshow to the real Wilson-Raybould issue
Native groups may provide a welcome bulwark against the depredations of various resource companies - expected costs of cleaning up the Tar Sands being estimated at between $50 & $200 billion, depending on who's counting. But many Liberals - including Trudeau by the look of it - may be a bit too quick in acceding to their every demand. Thorny issue.
Each day brings its own drama, right now no one knows what the fuck they are doing. It's a complete clusterfuck caused entirely by Theresa May and her pathetically weak, no, non existent negotiating skills. The truth is she was and is a remainer, she never wanted us to leave and Michel Barnier and the EU bigwigs have played her like an old fiddle and she has embarrassed the nation in the process. That coupled with Parliaments ineptitude has churned up a hornets nest, the Brexit genie ain't going back in the bottle.