Fool me once- shame on you; fool me twice- shame on me
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I have a question: what does it mean when a woman looking for a relationship with a woman blows me kisses and other nudges- clearly I am not a woman- nor much of a man or that matter
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you kinda look like my ex- except you are smiling!
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Topic:
Worshipping the devil.
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ANYTHING that takes your attention away from God is antichrist, by definition. eg.., coffee worship, arming your cat with a pistol, sports, money..., all can be false gods. Then there are the devil worshipers..,but really they are all the same in Gods eyes. The part i dont get is that to believe in the devil , a person is by default admitting the existance of God, and also turning thier back on him. ood luck with that logic. I agree with this some ...they are believing in both ... but then does that make those evil if atheist being may give them the right to some being evil or in denial ... or they don't consider their acts evil ...some atheist don't believe they are evil and may not be ... I don't understand your logic; are you viewing devil worship from the POV of a devil worshipper or from a Xian POV of devil worship? |
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Topic:
fav smells?
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After two skull fractures and 13 concussions (that is when the doctors stopped counting as the MRIs apparently showed something like oatmeal); my frontal lobe is so damaged, I get olfactory hallucinations. So anything that doesn't smell like dog food or burnt coffee is generally ok with me
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Topic:
prepping
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I wouldn't pay too much attention to pseudo-history
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Tear tattoos generally mean a lost loved one
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Boundary testing- its normal human behaviour; I often find it hard that so many people live in a fantasy world rather trying to understand the real world
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My youngest went thru an Emo phase which lasted as long as it took me notice it
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Topic:
Evolutionary flaws ....
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Actually, there used to be multiple human species and we either bred with them till they were out of existence or killed them outright! Good examples would be Hobbits and Neanderthals. Your lack of scientific knowledge appears to be only matched by your ignorance of the bible: Neanderthals (Neander-thal, the ‘th’ pronounced as ‘t’) are our closest extinct human relative. Some defining features of their skulls include the large middle part of the face, angled cheek bones, and a huge nose for humidifying and warming cold, dry air. Their bodies were shorter and stockier than ours, another adaptation to living in cold environments. But their brains were just as large as ours and often larger - proportional to their brawnier bodies. Neanderthals made and used a diverse set of sophisticated tools, controlled fire, lived in shelters, made and wore clothing, were skilled hunters of large animals and also ate plant foods, and occasionally made symbolic or ornamental objects. There is evidence that Neanderthals deliberately buried their dead and occasionally even marked their graves with offerings, such as flowers. No other primates, and no earlier human species, had ever practiced this sophisticated and symbolic behavior. DNA has been recovered from more than a dozen Neanderthal fossils, all from Europe; the Neanderthal Genome Project is one of the exciting new areas of human origins research. were they all extrapolated from a pig tooth like the first one? lol. neandrathal man is and was a hoax. old news that. Yet they believe. Studies show modern Europeans share 1-4% of DNA with Neanderthals; I bet those people in Nebraska share more DNA with that pig of yours? LOL. Clearly your arguments show a case of the Dunning-Kruger effect |
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Im curious what that group is about too,, TB and why he remained a part of it I remember a certain Shirley Sherrod being forced into resignation because she gave an account of something in her past and how she had not been proud of it and learned and grew from it instead,, ,,sigh,, oh well... Exceerpt from Mother Jones: Oath Keepers and the Age of Treason Glenn Beck loves them. Tea Partiers court them. Congressmen listen to them. Meet the fast-growing "patriot" group that's recruiting soldiers to resist the Obama administration. —By Justine Sharrock | March/April 2010 Issue 1237 Photos by Lucian Read. THE .50 CALIBER Bushmaster bolt action rifle is a serious weapon. The model that Pvt. 1st Class Lee Pray is saving up for has a 2,500-yard range and comes with a Mark IV scope and an easy-load magazine. When the 25-year-old drove me to a mall in Watertown, New York, near the Fort Drum Army base, he brought me to see it in its glass case—he visits it periodically, like a kid coveting something at the toy store. It'll take plenty of military paychecks to cover the $5,600 price tag, but he considers the Bushmaster essential in his preparations to take on the US government when it declares martial law. His belief that that day is imminent has led Pray to a group called Oath Keepers, one of the fastest-growing "patriot" organizations on the right. Founded last April by Yale-educated lawyer and ex-Ron Paul aide Stewart Rhodes, the group has established itself as a hub in the sprawling anti-Obama movement that includes Tea Partiers, Birthers, and 912ers. Glenn Beck, Lou Dobbs, and Pat Buchanan have all sung its praises, and in December, a grassroots summit it helped organize drew such prominent guests as representatives Phil Gingrey and Paul Broun, both Georgia Republicans. There are scores of patriot groups, but what makes Oath Keepers unique is that its core membership consists of men and women in uniform, including soldiers, police, and veterans. At regular ceremonies in every state, members reaffirm their official oaths of service, pledging to protect the Constitution—but then they go a step further, vowing to disobey "unconstitutional" orders from what they view as an increasingly tyrannical government. Advertise on MotherJones.com Pray (who asked me to use his middle name rather than his first) and five fellow soldiers based at Fort Drum take this directive very seriously. In the belief that the government is already turning on its citizens, they are recruiting military buddies, stashing weapons, running drills, and outlining a plan of action. For years, they say, police and military have trained side by side in local anti-terrorism exercises around the nation. In September 2008, the Army began training the 3rd Infantry's 1st Brigade Combat Team to provide humanitarian aid following a domestic disaster or terror attack—and to help with crowd control and civil unrest if need be. (The ACLU has expressed concern about this deployment.) And some of Pray's comrades were guinea pigs for military-grade sonic weapons, only to see them used by Pittsburgh police against protesters last fall. Most of the men's gripes revolve around policies that began under President Bush but didn't scare them so much at the time. "Too many conservatives relied on Bush's character and didn't pay attention," founder Rhodes told me. "Only now, with Obama, do they worry and see what has been done. Maybe you said, I trusted Bush to only go after the terrorists.* But what do you think can happen down the road when they say, 'I think you are a threat to the nation?'" In Pray's estimate, it might not be long (months, perhaps a year) before President Obama finds some pretext—a pandemic, a natural disaster, a terror attack—to impose martial law, ban interstate travel, and begin detaining citizens en masse. One of his fellow Oath Keepers, a former infantryman, advised me to prepare a "bug out" bag with 39 items including gas masks, ammo, and water purification tablets, so that I'd be ready to go "when the **** hits the fan." When it does, Pray and his buddies plan to go AWOL and make their way to their "fortified bunker"—the home of one comrade's parents in rural Idaho—where they've stocked survival gear, generators, food, and weapons. If it becomes necessary, they say, they will turn those guns against their fellow soldiers. PRAY AND I DRIVE through a bleak landscape of fallow winter fields and strip malls in his blue Dodge Stratus as Drowning Pool's "Bodies"—a heavy metal song once used to torment Abu Ghraib detainees—plays on the stereo. Clad in an oversize black hoodie that hides his military physique, Pray sports an Army-issue buzz cut and is seriously inked (skulls, smoke, an eagle). His father kicked him out of the house at age 14. Two years later, after working jobs from construction to plumbing—"If it's blue collar, I've done it"—he tried to enlist. It wasn't long after 9/11, and he was hell-bent on revenge. The Army turned him down. Blaming the "THOR" tattooed across his fist, Pray tried to burn it off. On September 11, 2006, he approached the Army again and was accepted. Now Pray is both a Birther and a Truther. He believes he is following an illegitimate, foreign-born president in a war on terror launched by a government plot—9/11. He admires soldiers like Army reservist Major Stefan Frederick Cook, who volunteered for a deployment last May and then sued to avoid it—claiming that Obama is not a natural-born citizen and is thus unfit for command. Pray himself had been eager to go to Iraq when his own unit deployed last June, but he smashed both knees falling from a crane rig and the injuries kept him stateside. In September, he was demoted from specialist to private first class—he'd been written up for ******** infractions, he claims, after seeking help for a drinking problem. His job on base involves operating and maintaining heavy machinery; the day before we met, he and his fellow "undeployables" had attached a snowplow to a Humvee, their biggest assignment in a while. He spends idle hours at the now-quiet base researching the New World Order and conspiracies about swine flu quarantine camps—and doing his best to "wake up" other soldiers. Pray isn't sure how to do this and still cover his ***. He talks to me on the record and agrees to be photographed, even as he hints that the CIA may be listening in on his phone. Although I met him through contacts from the group's Facebook page, Pray, fearing retribution, keeps his Oath Keepers ties unofficial. (Rhodes encourages active-duty soldiers to remain anonymous, noting that a group with large numbers of anonymous members can instill in its adversaries the fear of the unknown—a "great force multiplier.") For a time, Pray insisted we communicate via Facebook (safer than regular email, he claims). Driving me from the mall back to my motel, he takes a new route. He says unmarked black cars sometimes trail him. It sounds paranoid. Then again, when you're an active-duty soldier contemplating treason, some level of paranoia is probably sensible. The next afternoon we join Brandon, one of Pray's Army buddies, for steaks. Sitting in a pleather booth at Texas Roadhouse, the young men talk boastfully about their military capabilities and weapons caches. Role-playing the enemy in military exercises, Brandon says, has prepared him to evade and fight back against US troops. "I know their tactics," brags Pray. "I know how they do room sweeps, work their convoys—if we attack this vehicle, what the others will do." A strapping Idahoan, Brandon (who doesn't want his full name used) enlisted as a teenager when he got his girlfriend pregnant and needed a stable job, stat. (She lost the baby and they split, but he's still glad he signed up.) Unlike his friend, he doesn't think the United Nations must be dismantled, although he does agree that it represents the New World Order, and he suspects that concentration camps are being readied in the off-limits section of Fort Drum. He sends 500 rounds of ammunition home to Idaho each month. Pfc. Lee Pray vows he'll fight to the death if a rogue US government "forces us to engage." EVERY YEAR ON April 19, history buffs gather on the village green in Lexington, Massachusetts, to reenact the first battle of the Revolutionary War. For Stewart Rhodes, it was the ideal setting to unveil the organization his followers consider the embodiment of a second American Revolution. Rhodes, 44, is a constitutional lawyer—his 2004 Yale Law School paper, "Solving the Puzzle of Enemy Combatant Status," won the school's award for best paper on the Bill of Rights. He's now working on a book tentatively titled We the Enemy: How Applying the Laws of War to the American People in the War on Terror Threatens to Destroy Our Constitutional Republic. Raised in the Southwest, Rhodes enlisted in the Army after high school, receiving an honorable discharge after he injured his spine during a night parachute jump. He enrolled at the University of Nevada and in 1998, after graduating, landed a job supervising interns for Congressman Ron Paul. Rhodes has also worked as a firearms instructor and a sculptor—for Vegas' MGM Grand hotel, he produced a fiberglass Minuteman statue—and has practiced law in small-town Montana ("Ivy League quality without Ivy League expense"). He writes a gun-rights column for SWAT magazine. He's a libertarian, staunch constitutionalist, and devout Christian. It was while volunteering for Ron Paul's doomed presidential bid that Rhodes decided to abandon electoral politics in favor of grassroots organizing. As an undergrad, he had been fascinated by the notion that if German soldiers and police had refused to follow orders, Hitler could have been stopped. Then, in early 2008, SWAT received a letter from a retired colonel declaring that "the Constitution and our Bill of Rights are gravely endangered" and that service members, veterans, and police "is where they will be saved, if they are to be saved at all!" Rhodes responded with a breathless column starring a despotic president, "Hitlery" Clinton, in her "Chairman Mao signature pantsuit." Would readers, he asked, obey orders from this "dominatrix-in-chief" to hold militia members as enemy combatants, disarm citizens, and shoot all resisters? If "a police state comes to America, it will ultimately be by your hands," he warned. You had better "resolve to not let it happen on your watch." He set up an Oath Keepers blog, asking soldiers and veterans to post testimonials. Word spread. Military officers offered assistance. A Marine Corps veteran invited Rhodes to speak at a local Tea Party event. Paul campaigners provided strategic advice. And by the time Rhodes arrived in Lexington to speak at a rally staged by a pro-militia group, a movement was afoot. |
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Topic:
Another Whopper
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Speaking of whoppers, I hear Burger King is buying a Canadian firm and planning on moving its HQ there to avoid American taxes. To a country with national health and a strong social safety net which has lower taxes? Hmmm, maybe they don't have our huge corporate welfare tax benefits?
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TB, this person likely was seriously damaged emotionally in the military and needs help, imho but what is troubling, is that it seems someone else in that 'oath keepers' meeting would have said something, but obviously there is no complaint against him and no one spoke up until now and what is also troubling is that the Ferguson department is so welcoming of people who have such troubling mentality and backgrounds,,,,,,,, I believe most officers are there to protect, but it is seeming like the Ferguson department may be recruiting that lowest common denominator that people are raised to believe police PROTECT us from seems they need to revise some of their recruiting and background processes,,,,, I am doubtful of that part of the story, due to the following: 1. 35 years veteran of the St Louis County police department- so at one job for 35 years 2. Retired from Marines when Obama (undocumented president) was elected? Which would be 2008 or 5-6 years ago. At best that would the National Guard not the Marines. 3. Seems to be a nut job at a nutjob OathKeepers organization |
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Topic:
Evolutionary flaws ....
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Actually, there used to be multiple human species and we either bred with them till they were out of existence or killed them outright! Good examples would be Hobbits and Neanderthals. Your lack of scientific knowledge appears to be only matched by your ignorance of the bible: Neanderthals (Neander-thal, the ‘th’ pronounced as ‘t’) are our closest extinct human relative. Some defining features of their skulls include the large middle part of the face, angled cheek bones, and a huge nose for humidifying and warming cold, dry air. Their bodies were shorter and stockier than ours, another adaptation to living in cold environments. But their brains were just as large as ours and often larger - proportional to their brawnier bodies. Neanderthals made and used a diverse set of sophisticated tools, controlled fire, lived in shelters, made and wore clothing, were skilled hunters of large animals and also ate plant foods, and occasionally made symbolic or ornamental objects. There is evidence that Neanderthals deliberately buried their dead and occasionally even marked their graves with offerings, such as flowers. No other primates, and no earlier human species, had ever practiced this sophisticated and symbolic behavior. DNA has been recovered from more than a dozen Neanderthal fossils, all from Europe; the Neanderthal Genome Project is one of the exciting new areas of human origins research. were they all extrapolated from a pig tooth like the first one? lol. neandrathal man is and was a hoax. old news that. Yet they believe. Always a good idea to get your information from Chick Publications, you know they are also the ones who publish those fundamentalist Xian tracks |
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Topic:
Another Whopper
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Autopsy Report Shows Police Officer Lied About Suspect Committing Suicide by Shooting Self in Back While Handcuffed
Victor White III, 22, died from a gunshot to the chest, not in his back as reported by the arresting officer. 56 COMMENTS56 COMMENTS A A A August 24, 2014 | An autopsy report released this week cast further doubt on a police officer’s claim that a suspect committed suicide by shooting himself while handcuffed in the back of a police cruiser, reports KATC. According to the first page of the official autopsy report released by the Iberia Parish Coroner’s Office, Victor White III, 22, died from a gunshot to the chest, not in his back as reported by the arresting officer. White was arrested by State Police in March of this year on narcotics charges and, according to authorities, was handcuffed, with his hands behind his back, in the back seat of a police cruiser when he refused to exit the vehicle for processing. According to the police report, the arresting officer went to get help and when he returned he found White critically wounded from a gunshot wound to his back. Questions were immediately raised as to how White could have smuggled a gun into the cruiser and then managed to shoot himself in the back when left alone.Police believe that White had somehow hidden a gun in the backseat of the cruiser and committed suicide by shooting himself. White died shortly after, with police stating there were no surveillance cameras in that area of the parking lot where the car was parked. According to the autopsy report, the bullet entered White’s chest, perforated his left lung and heart before exiting his armpit area and lacerating his upper arm. The report still lists his death as a suicide. Admitting that the case is still being investigated, State Police Master Trooper Brooks David said that state troopers originally did believe the gunshot entry wound was in White’s back. No explanation was given for how White could have shot himself in the chest with his hands cuffed behind him. |
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St. Louis County officer suspended over video, Glendale officer suspended for Facebook post
August 23, 2014 10:00 am • FROM STAFF REPORTS607 Dan Page, a St. Louis County police officer who identifies himself as a former Green Beret in a video from 2012, is shown in a screengrab from the video. Enlarge Photo RELATED VIDEO Sgt. Maj. Page to St. Louis Oath Keepers: The End of American Sovereignty & Constitutional Rights RELATED DOCUMENTS Statement on Glendale officer suspended Protest scene gets quieter Friday night Through the night, the numbers of marchers, police and news reporters was down significantly from the assemblies of the previous nights. Read more Glendale officer apologizes for Facebook posts about Ferguson protesters Officer Matthew Pappert's statement says he is “deeply remorseful” and apologetic for Facebook comments about Ferguson protesters. Read more St. Ann officer removed after pointing gun, threatening Ferguson protesters The officer was relieved of duty and suspended indefinitely. Read more Two St. Louis-area police officers have been suspended by their departments, as the unrest in Ferguson keeps intense scrutiny on the personal conduct of law enforcement officials. A St. Louis County officer who had been assigned to the streets of Ferguson has been suspended after a Youtube video of him making incendiary comments surfaced. A Glendale officer was also suspended Friday after comments he posted to Facebook. St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar said officer Dan Page, a 35-year veteran of the department, has been suspended pending a review by the internal affairs unit. The video was brought to Belmar’s attention by CNN reporter Don Lemon, who had previously brought Page to the department’s attention after complaining Page shoved him. The video of Page was apparently made in 2012 before a group called the Oath Keepers of St. Louis and St. Charles. It is unclear where it was shot. Glendale officer Matthew Pappert was also suspended after posting on social media that he thought the Ferguson protesters should be "put down like rabid dogs." In the wake of the shooting death of an unarmed black teenager by a white police officer and weeks of ensuing protests, the two incidents illustrate the glare that the international news story has cast on local police. While he would have reacted to the video the same way absent the Ferguson protests, even Belmar admitted that he wouldn't have faced the same pressure to maintain the county police force's image. Belmar told the Post-Dispatch that Page's comments defaming President Barack Obama, the U.S. Supreme Court, Muslims and various sexual orientations would likely have triggered disciplinary review for being “beyond the scope of acceptable police conduct.” But it was Page’s comments in the video describing himself, in Belmar's words, as "an indiscriminate killer, that it didn’t matter what your race or background was” that most concerned the police chief. “With the comments on killing, that was obviously something that deeply disturbed me immediately,” Belmar said. An internal review will start Monday, and Page will not be doing any police work until internal affairs makes an official decision on whether the officer should be suspended, Belmar said. “Had he been a probationary officer doing the same thing, I would have fired him two hours ago,” Belmar said. Among Page's rambling comments in the hour-long video: • "Muslims are passive until they gain parity with you or they exceed you in numbers and they will kill you." • "Roy Blunt and Claire McCaskill won't even talk to me. They say 'You're an extremist.' I say amen. OK. And I'm real good with a rifle. My best shot is at 1,875 meters. I got me a gold star on that one. That's a fact. You run from me you will die tired. I'm dead serious, folks." • "I personally believe in Jesus Christ as my lord savior, but I'm also a killer. I’ve killed a lot. And if I need to, I'll kill a whole bunch more. If you don't want to get killed, don't show up in front of me, it's that simple. I have no problem with it. God did not raise me to be a coward," he said before warning the audience that he believes the government will put kids in indoctrination camps. • "I'm into diversity. I kill everybody, I don't care." Page says on the video that he is a former Green Beret who did nine combat tours and took early retirement from the military because he refuses to take orders from "an undocumented president." “It’s very concerning to the NAACP that an officer like that is on the ground. And who knows what he’s already done on the ground already?” John Gaskin, a St. Louis County and national NAACP board member, told CNN Friday afternoon. Belmar confirmed that Page had been assigned to day patrols in Ferguson during the unrest over the last two weeks. Belmar said Lemon, the CNN anchor who first reported on the Page video, complained days ago that the officer had pushed him while he was reporting in Ferguson. Other than that, “we’ve not gotten any complaints,” Belmar said. The chief said that he reviewed footage of Page in the incident Lemon complained about. “I didn’t think it amounted to any sort of assault,” Belmar said. The chief is not aware of any other blemishes on Page’s record, but he said he has not had an opportunity to review Page's file. “That was kind of the only time his name has been recognized up here,” he said of the Lemon incident. “But again, this video is disturbing.” Belmar added: “No one believes he was ever involved in a shooting or a fatal shooting.” Page has been deployed with the U.S. Army several times during his police career, according to Belmar. He was most recently deployed from 2008 to 2011, and again in the early 2000s. It wasn’t immediately clear where Page had been deployed. Pappert was suspended after posting on Facebook that the Ferguson protesters were "a burden on society and a blight on the community," according to posts preserved by news and opinion website "The Daily Caller." Another post that appears to come from Pappert says the "protestors should have been put down like rabid dogs the first night." Jeffrey Beaton, chief of police in the small St. Louis County suburb of roughly 6,000 people, said the comments of Pappert were brought to his attention at roughly 10:40 a.m. Friday morning and "an internal investigation was immediately initiated." Pappert was immediately suspended until the investigation is complete, Beaton said, which shouldn't take longer than "a couple weeks." The investigation will look for any other conduct "that's relevant or similar," Beaton said. "These type of allegations could result in disciplinary action up to and including termination,” he said. Glendale canceled a local ice cream social and Arbor Day celebration scheduled for Friday evening on North Sappington Road after the Facebook comments came to light. On Wednesday, a St. Ann police lieutenant was suspended after pointing a semi-automatic assault rifle at a protester in Ferguson the night before, police said. Lt. Ray Albers pointed the gun at a peaceful protester after a "verbal exchange." A county sergeant witnessed the incident, forced the officer to lower his gun and escorted him away. |
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Topic:
Happy Ant
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I was outside eating a cookie, and I saw about 5 ants just roaming around on top of the steps. I noticed one ant that wasn't holding anything like the other 4, who were holding Dorito bits or something. And the ant seemed sad...it wasn't even going the same pace as the other ants. So, I put a cookie crumb next to him, and he picked it up and started running as fast as the other ants. I think I made that little ants day....... ![]() How brightly shines a single good deed in a cold cruel dark world |
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Topic:
Roles reversed media silent
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Three useless Race-Hustlers! Wonder what Al is feeling for? Money-Envelope? ![]() LOL, clearly they are giving each other "positive strokes". |
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Topic:
Stood Up
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Has anyone ever been "stood up" for a date? If yes, what did you do about it? I tend to set up dates around something or some place I would like anyway. For example, last year this woman stood me up 3x, each time going oh I am sorry can we try again, each time I set it up for my favourite Turkish restaurant, which is around the corner from my favourite Anarchist bookstore; hanging out there was something I would have and ended up doing on my own anyway. Also, a woman didn't stand me up, but was so boooooooring, while I set up dinner at a bbq place, as she was craving it, I pick one in my favourite artist community, where I would have hung by myself anyway |
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Topic:
does anyone smile out there
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I try not to smile in public much, as half my face is paralyzed and people tell me it looks like I am about to murder someone.
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