Thread: pictures

  1. #2371
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    Re: pictures

    Six inch walker
    Big shit talker
    I never play the victim
    Id rather be a stalker







    Rocking this skirt
    Rocking this club
    Got my middle finger up
    I don't really give a fuck



    - - -

    I told ya
    I told ya
    I told ya
    Baby
    Baby
    Uh, uh
    I told ya, baby
    Uh-oh
    I told ya, baby
    Uh-oh
    I told ya, baby
    Uh-oh
    I told ya, baby
    Uh-oh
    I told ya, baby
    Uh-oh
    I told ya
    Got up in the club
    Posted in the back
    Feeling so good
    Looking so bad
    Rocking this skirt
    Rocking this club
    Got my middle finger up
    I don't really give a fuck
    Rocking these diamonds
    I'm rocking this chain
    Make sure you get a picture
    I'm rocking my fame
    To be what you is
    You gotta be what you are
    The only thing I'm missing
    Is a black guitar
    I'm a rockstar
    Hey baby
    I'm a rockstar
    Hey baby
    Big city
    Bright lights
    Sleep all day
    Up all night
    Hey baby
    I'm a rockstar
    Hey baby
    I'm a rockstar
    Hey baby its,
    Big cities
    And bright lights
    Sleep all day
    Up all nights
    Baby I'm a
    Oh, baby I'm a
    Oh, baby I'm a
    Oh, baby I'm a
    Oh, baby I'm a
    Oh, baby I'm a
    Oh, baby I'm a
    Oh, baby I'm a
    Hey, hey, hey
    Six inch walker
    Big shit talker
    I never play the victim
    Id rather be a stalker
    So baby take me in
    I'll disobey the law
    Make sure you frisk me good
    Check my panties and my bra
    Wild 'n' out
    A crazy house
    With my white jacket on
    Won't you come
    And sign me out
    To be what you is
    You gotta be what you are
    The only thing I'm missing
    Is a black guitar
    I'm a rockstar
    Hey baby
    I'm a rockstar
    Hey baby
    Big city
    Bright lights
    Sleep all day
    Up all night
    Hey baby
    I'm a rockstar
    Hey baby
    I'm a rockstar
    Hey baby its,
    Big cities
    And bright lights
    Sleep all day
    Up all nights
    Baby I'm a
    Oh, baby I'm a
    Oh, baby I'm a
    Oh, baby I'm a
    Oh, baby I'm a
    Oh, baby I'm a
    Oh, baby I'm a
    Oh, baby I'm a
    Hey, hey, hey
    Hey
    I'm rocking out tonight
    Cause I cant wait till tomorrow
    I'm a live my whole life
    In the night
    Cause I ain't got time to borrow
    I'm rocking out tonight
    Why wait till tomorrow
    I'm a live my whole life
    In the night
    I'm a rockstar
    Hey baby
    I'm a rockstar
    Hey baby
    Big city
    Bright lights
    Sleep all day
    Up all night
    Hey baby
    I'm a rockstar
    Hey baby
    I'm a rockstar
    Hey baby its,
    Big cities
    And bright lights
    Sleep all day
    Up all nights
    Baby I'm a
    Oh, baby I'm a
    Oh, baby I'm a
    Oh, baby I'm a
    Oh, baby I'm a
    Oh, baby I'm a
    Oh, baby I'm a
    Oh, baby I'm a
    Hey, hey, hey
    Songwriters: Robyn Fenty / Terius Nash / Christopher Stewart - - -


    Rocking this skirt
    Rocking this club
    Got my middle finger up
    I don't really give a fuck


    218051
    guns kill people,

    like spoons made rush limbaugh,

    fat ....

  2. #2372
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    Re: pictures

    32374056 2163120500381703 7907627939804479488 n


    31666732 2095059160779285 1039432302389624832 n


    218160
    guns kill people,

    like spoons made rush limbaugh,

    fat ....

  3. #2373
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    Re: pictures

    Jenni-fur lowpez

    41333434 795934154084000 1251866099824796602 n

    40797379 1909535042674669 6598164799277885971 n

    218345

    - - - Updated - - -

    Crimen Sollicitationas (1929), which requires that we suppress evidence of child abuse in the church, not tell the police of such abuse, and silence the victims.

    Not in Our Name: A Legal and Moral Declaration and Pledge of Non-Cooperation issued by Concerned Roman Catholic Clergy

    - - - Updated - - -

    US Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein Reportedly Resigns
    guns kill people,

    like spoons made rush limbaugh,

    fat ....

  4. #2374
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    Re: pictures

    ,

    Temperature: 61.4 ?F
    Humidity: 81 %
    Dewpoint: 55.5 ?F
    Winds From: WSW at 0.0 mph
    Barometer: 29.348 in & Rising Slowly
    Wind Chill: 61.4 ?F
    THW Index: 61.5 ?F
    Heat Index: 61.5 ?F

    Since Midnight

    High Temperature:
    Low Temperature: 84.6?F at 2:01p
    56.1?F at 4:43a
    High Humidity:
    Low Humidity: 92% at 8:03a
    41% at 2:58p
    High Dewpoint:
    Low Dewpoint: 60.0?F at 11:28a
    48.0?F at 12:04a
    High Wind Speed: 10.0mph at 2:47p
    Low Wind Chill: 56.0?F at 4:29a
    High Heat Index: 85.0?F at 1:45p
    Today's Rain: 0.00in
    Rain Rate: 0.00in/hr
    Storm Total: 0.00in

    218,363
    guns kill people,

    like spoons made rush limbaugh,

    fat ....

  5. #2375
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    Re: pictures

    PSA:...today at approximately 4:30 this afternoon...my 18 year old daughter went to Jasper Walmart...she was approached in the frame section by a husky dark black man wearing all black with a gold tooth in front...she said he appeared to be in his 30/40's ... he asked her to show him where the socks were...she tried just telling him...he then asked her to show him...not wanting to judge anyone by their appearance..she walked that direction....once down there...his story changed...he then needed shoes for his daughter...long story short...he blocked her in an isle with his basket...trying to avoid others and nearing the dressing rooms...she managed to run to a woman ... and burst into tears as she was asking for help...he then took off and disappeared...the woman looked at her like she was crazy and left her...she fortunately found her way to others while hysterical and called her Dad...I called the store trying to get someone to her and was hung up on the first time and then told they'd get a manager....once her Dad & brother got there...2 managers were with her and looking for the guy....I also called Jasper police...I was told since he hadn't harmed her and we didn't know his name...there really wasn't much they could do....so please parents...warn your kids...especially your young girls...not to go to the store alone and no matter how silly they may feel...if they feel threatened... go find someone asap! Thank God my baby is okay...just shook up but a younger girl may not have known what to do.

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    Hailee Sanchez
    Hailee Sanchez I actually read this story earlier!! I couldn't believe it. You best believe I would have tow up the Jasper "Walmarks" But it's awful bc the post is right, a younger girl may have seriously not known what to do. Us girls have got to stick together and if I would have seen it happen best believe they would have known exactly what was happening!!
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    Deborah Broadway Russell
    Deborah Broadway Russell Well I worry about you and Jamie Lynn Denham because you always have chilrun with you and sometimes they a distraction. Just be careful in there , I ain't trying to lose one of y'all 😩
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    Hailee Sanchez
    Hailee Sanchez I understand. You know if someone tried that with one of the kids with us it would be all the more motivation to tear that place apart.
    Manage
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    guns kill people,

    like spoons made rush limbaugh,

    fat ....

  6. #2376
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    Re: pictures

    now

    "If Ed Meese is not a good man, there are no good men."

    -ronald reagan

    -----------------------------

    "only God is good "

    -bible

    -----------------------------------

    People like John Mariotta are heroes for the '80s."

    - President Ronald Reagan


    It was campaign '84, and the White House desperately wanted to showcase a successful minority-run business, preferably one from the inner city.

    The search brought them to the South Bronx in the City of New York and to John Mariotta's Welbilt Electronic Die Corp., lately renamed Wedtech.









    Early in his reelection bid, President Ronald Reagan journeyed to the city to pay tribute to Mariotta, a streetwise tool-and-die manufacturer who had finally made it after 20 years of trying.

    "Today, through Wedtech, he not only has built a successful corporation," Reagan told a Waldorf-Astoria audience, "he's helping hundreds of people who would otherwise be condemned to menial jobs or a life on the dole."

    Indeed, over a five-year period, the company would capture $250 million in defense contracts, while winning plaudits for training Hispanic and Russian immigrants for high-tech jobs.

    But Wedtech was a fraud.

    Mariotta's firm would become a symbol of one of the nation's worst modern scandals one brimming with shakedowns, pay-offs, thievery, forgery, racketeering, fat-cat lobbying and plain old-fashioned influence-peddling.

    John Mariotta, the South Bronx success story, would go to jail. And so would a who's who of Bronx politicians: 10-term Rep. Mario Biaggi, a highly decorated ex-cop with mayoral aspirations; the once-promising Rep. Robert Garcia, and Stanley Simon, the Bronx borough president.

    The web of corruption spread even wider to three retired generals, a couple of politically connected Maryland legislators and a gaggle of political operatives close to Edwin Meese, a White House lawyer and later Reagan's attorney general.

    In all, 20 government officials, along with Wedtech's officers, would be convicted. Meese himself, despite being a Wedtech investor, would be exonerated of any wrongdoing by a special prosecutor.

    The smell of Bronx money was in the air.

    John Mariotta's rags-to-riches-to-rags career began in 1965, when he opened a tool-and-die shop in a tiny garage in Hunts Point. His company made parts for baby carriages. In 1970, with business flat, Mariotta, son of Puerto Rican parents, took in a partner, Fred Neuberger, an out-of-work engineer who had fled the Nazis a quarter-century earlier.

    Neuberger and Mariotta each put $3,000 into their new venture and went after specially designated no-bid federal contracts for minority-owned firms.


    Their break came in 1980, when Reagan took his first presidential campaign to the South Bronx to denounce the urban policies of Democrat Jimmy Carter.

    After Reagan's election, Mariotta and Neuberger cultivated Washington contacts and made a pitch for a contract to build small engines for the Army. Their first offer was rejected; it was, the brass hats noted, twice Pentagon estimates. At this point, the pair turned to Lyn Nofziger, a White House insider known for his Mickey Mouse ties, wide-brimmed cowboy hats and Reagan connections dating back decades.

    The White House must "get to work" to help the Bronx firm, Nofziger wrote Elizabeth Dole, head of the office of public liaison.

    The Army gave in, awarding the infant Bronx firm a $32 million contract.

    Nofziger, it later would be revealed, got $800,000 in stock and consulting fees from Welbilt as it changed its name to Wedtech and went public with a $30 million stock offering.

    Next up was a pontoon contract for the Navy. The company, now hot, moved into a streamlined building on Gerard Ave., near Yankee Stadium, and the politicians came calling. Overnight, Mariotta and Neuberger were millionaires.

    We want in. One politician wanted a job for his brother-in-law, another for his wife, another for his son. None was more rapacious than Biaggi, dean of the city's congressional delegation.

    Biaggi, according to later trial testimony, "threatened to destroy" Wedtech unless his law firm was given consulting fees and $1.8 billion in stock. The congressman was, Neuberger complained, like "a cop on the beat, putting the arm on the corner bookie."

    In fact, by the time Reagan came to New York in 1984 to sing Mariotta's praises, Wedtech was already in trouble. Expenses were outrunning revenue. The firm began double-billing the government. It forged $6 billion worth of invoices. And Mariotta was losing out in a power struggle that meant Wedtech was no longer a bona fide minority company.

    Ultimately, the Wedtech dream became dust. In December 1986, the company filed for bankruptcy. As federal and city investigators zeroed in, four former company officials cut deals and agreed to cooperate with prosecutors.

    Mariotta, the hero of the '80s, was convicted of tax fraud, bribery and running a racketeering enterprise. Biaggi, Garcia and Simon and other principals were found guilty of racketeering and extortion, among other charges.

    Garcia's conviction for extorting $178,000 was later overturned, but too late to save his job. He had already resigned his South Bronx congressional seat. Nofziger's conviction also was tossed out.

    "If Wedtech was the proverbial American success story," U.S. Attorney Rudolph Giuliani observed, "these charges raise serious questions about the way we practice politics and conduct business in this city, state and nation."

    First published on Nov. 17, 1998 as part of the "Big Town" series on old New York.

    - - - but wait ! theres more - - -

    ahem

    The notorious Wedtech fiasco cost taxpayers and investors about $300 million, which by Reagan-era standards seems like a fine on an overdue library book. Despite its low-rent status, however, the scandal remains a wonderfully sleazy and improbable tale, with a hallucinatory ''only in America'' quality.

    Here in the land of opportunity, a small South Bronx machine shop can use influence peddling and bribery to become a large defense contractor. Here an illiterate Hispanic entrepreneur can purchase Democratic Congressmen, a New York City borough president, Republican bureaucrats, a former White House aide and, indirectly, perhaps even an Attorney General - just like anybody else. Given the ethical climate of the last decade, it is strangely appropriate that former President Ronald Reagan in 1984 called John Mariotta, the founder of Wedtech, ''a hero for the eighties.''

    The most nightmarish aspect of the Wedtech affair is that a bunch of losers who could barely run a business - remarkably, Wedtech was always on the verge of bankruptcy even when the fix was in - could be so good at finding the right palms to grease. In ''Too Good to Be True,'' a delightfully written book, James Traub compares the unworldly Wedtech crew to innocents abroad - they certainly never planned to become criminals. They were merely very open to learning how the world actually worked. Was merit irrelevant for a company seeking a minority-business contract from the Small Business Administration or a friendly nod from a Pentagon procurement officer? Hmmm, how interesting. And how convenient.

    Continue reading the main story
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    Continue reading the main story

    So Wedtech's executives began to take a series of outrageous shortcuts. They falsified the company's minority status, freely handed out bribes and gave huge campaign contributions to those politicians who preferred to take their bribes in a legally sanctioned form. Wedtech threw money at the system and, in return, it received large contracts to build Army engines and Navy pontoons. Once corrupted, the Wedtech crew showed little restraint. Top executives began looting the company shamelessly, stealing millions while the accountants and investment bankers casually looked on.

    Wedtech had some good civics teachers, such as former Congressman Mario Biaggi, who told the company how much influence a $20,000 annual retainer to his law firm would buy. The loathsome legislator, whose greed was unseemly even by criminal standards, eventually demanded $5 million in Wedtech stock plus 5 percent of the dollar value of all Government contracts - far above the going Congressional rate. (Mr. Biaggi got the stock, plus eight years in prison.) Wedtech always managed to find such people. ''Destiny sometimes seemed to escort Wedtech through the world with a lantern, looking for yet another dishonest man,'' writes Mr. Traub, a New York City journalist.

    Ronald Reagan was one of those drawn to the light. When he listened to the nearly incoherent babbling of John Mariotta (who described himself as ''a New York Rican . . . an individual that cannot speak English and cannot speak Spanish''), he heard a kind of music. Here was a man who could take drug addicts and ex-cons off welfare without squandering any Federal funds on the poor. (In the Reagan era, of course, Federal funds were supposed to be squandered on the rich.) For Mr. Reagan, Mr. Mariotta embodied capitalism's heroic assault on urban blight; he was a walking, talking enterprise zone.

    One of the tragedies of Wedtech is that Mr. Mariotta and his colleagues really did take society's castoffs and give them decent jobs and self-respect. Mr. Mariotta was a charismatic leader who inspired tremendous loyalty. The workers were never the problem at Wedtech.

    Edwin Meese 3d wasn't the problem, either. Both Mr. Traub and Marilyn W. Thompson, author of ''Feeding the Beast,'' suggest that Mr. Meese's actions in the case probably should have been rewarded with an indictment. The former Attorney General directed one of his deputies to help Wedtech win its $32 million Army contract. (According to Mr. Traub, Mr. Meese later lied to investigators about his actions.) And, by discussing Wedtech's status ad nauseum with his best buddy and Wedtech consultant E. Robert Wallach, he gave the clear impression to everyone involved that he was willing to use his public office for his friend's private benefit.

    Mr. Traub and Ms. Thompson think the special prosecutor was far too gentle with Mr. Meese. (Two of Mr. Meese's top aides did resign because they agreed with Federal prosecutors that their boss was ''a sleaze.'') Intriguingly, what seems to infuriate both authors most about Mr. Meese is his astonishingly casual assumption of virtue for everything he did - no matter how great the stench of impropriety. Mr. Meese emerges as a hypocrite of grotesque proportions - our Mr. Pecksniff or Uriah Heep.

    Happily, the rest of the Wedtech cast is also extraordinarily colorful, if not quite Dickensian. There's Fred Neuberger, Wedtech's sex-obsessed president, later vice chairman, who often had Three Stooges-style fights with Mr. Mariotta during which they screamed, wrestled and threw coffee and furniture at each other. Typically, the two entrepreneurs argued about how much they should steal from their company and which bribed officials offered the biggest bang for the buck. Mr. Neuberger is serving a Federal prison term on fraud and conspiracy charges.

    Then there's E. Robert Wallach, the foppish lawyer who was Mr. Meese's best friend. He was not content to view his buddy's elevation as the opportunity of a lifetime to buy influence; with Mr. Meese in the Cabinet, Mr. Wallach also thought he could ooze his way into Federal policy making. Mr. Wallach was convicted last year on racketeering and fraud charges.

    And there's Stanley Simon, deemed by Ms. Thompson ''perhaps the stupidest man ever to serve as Bronx borough president.'' Mr. Simon, now serving a five-year sentence in a Federal prison, is depicted as a shnorer, a moocher, the kind of man who would shake down his administrative assistant for lunch money. But Wedtech needed him, too, to handle local issues.

    And it needed the fancy accountants, lawyers and investment bankers who did all they legally could to help Wedtech commit its myriad frauds and felonies. When examining the actions of the Touche Ross accountants and Squadron, Ellenoff, Plesent & Lehrer lawyers, both Mr. Traub and Ms. Thompson conclude that six- and seven-figure retainers can often work just as well as outright bribes.

    Mr. Traub's is by far the best of the Wedtech chronicles. It is elegant, funny and, for the most part, exciting. Ms. Thompson, who helped break the story as a reporter, has more prosecutorial zeal - perhaps not surprising since Wedtech hit her and The New York Daily News with a $1 billion libel suit. Unfortunately, her book is sometimes confusing and filled with cliches (''However, the memos fell on deaf ears''). An earlier book, ''Feeding Frenzy'' by William Sternberg and Matthew C. Harrison Jr., is an amusing and informative account, though less effervescent than Mr. Traub's ''Too Good to Be True.''

    Ultimately, though, the whole story is more depressing than most tales of white-collar crime and political malfeasance. The scandal here is simply too indecent and too predictable. It is not that the system just didn't work - the system failed.

    The reader is left with no illusions that the next procurement scandal will be prevented. In the case of Wedtech, the public did not know sooner because Government employees had so many disincentives to protect the public interest. Those who defied Wedtech's cadre of paid enforcers, and a few were brave enough to do so, all got hurt - just as they feared they would.

    That should not be the end of the story. Whistle blowers need both more protection from institutional persecution and greater economic incentives. Wasn't one of the lessons of the 80's supposed to be that money could make people do almost anything, even the right thing?

    TWO ANGRY MEN

    In June 1970, Fred [Neuberger] joined up with John Mariotta. As a working couple the two men fell somewhere between Felix and Oscar of The Odd Couple and Martha and George of Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? John saw limitless possibilities everywhere; Fred saw dangers. John was impassioned; Fred was steely-eyed. John was generous; Fred was tight. Both men had fought their way through disasters; they were fearless and, at bottom, angry. Neither would ever forgive the world for his suffering. Rather than temper one another's ferocity, each had the effect of corroding the other's already tenuous inhibitions.

    From ''Too Good to Be True.''

    [John] Mariotta, the dreamer, and [Fred] Neuberger, the pragmatist, seemed destined somewhere down the line to come to blows. Their personalities mixed like oil and putrid water. Mariotta, whose staccato voice could climb to the highest octave in the human range, was the type to cajole bureaucrats with crying fits and hysterics. Neuberger negotiated with grunts, cold stares, and fumes from a foot-long cigar. . . . Neuberger was stingy to an extreme. Mariotta, on the other hand, liked to make a grand show of his generosity. He would walk onto the factory floor and pass out hundred dollar bills like penny candy to favored employees.

    From ''Feeding the Beast.'
    guns kill people,

    like spoons made rush limbaugh,

    fat ....

  7. #2377
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    Re: pictures

    x=https://n141.network-auth.com/splash/?mac=0C%3A8D%3ADB%3ADC%3AE3%3AF9&real_ip=10.161.78 .60&client_ip=10.161.78.60&client_mac=70:C9:4E3:8E:3F&vap=2&a=c1dfd96eea8cc2b62785275bca38ac2612 56e278&b=1538467&auth_version=5&key=833e964a6cc2f2 b66b5f5a8fdfc8bf41e5b31d7f&acl_ver=P10360527V2&con tinue_url=http%3A%2F%2Flogin-1-dal-mcd.attwifi.com%2Fguest%2Fmcd-guest_3.php%3FvenueConfigId%3Da036000000lYiCy-a1m0z000001gZfo%26cmd%3Dlogin%26mac%3D70%3Ac9%3A4e %3Ad3%3A8e%3A3f%26essid%3DMcDonalds%2520Free%2520W iFi%26ip%3D192.168.4.166%26apname%3Da036000000lYiC y-02i6000000UfQhU%26apmac%3Dc8%3Ab5%3Aad%3Acd%3A9d%3 A98%26vcname%3Da036000000lYiCy-02i6000000UfQhW%26switchip%3Dsecure-login.attwifi.com%26url%3Dhttp%3A%2F%2Frover.ebay. com%2Frover%2F1%2F711-53200-19255-0%2F1%26b%3DeyJ2ZW51ZUNvbmZpZ0lkIjoiYTAzNjAwMDAwMG xZaUN5LWExbTB6MDAwMDAx%250AZ1pmbyIsInZlbnVlIjoiYTA zNjAwMDAwMGxZaUN5IiwibmFtZSI6Ik1jRG9u%250AYWxkJ3Mg MTEzMzEiLCJ1c2VybmFtZSI6ImEwMzYwMDAwMDBsWWlDeV9ndW Vz%250AdEBhdHQtd2lmaS5jb20iLCJwcm9tb2NvZGUiOiIwIiw idmVudWVTdHJlZXQi%250AOiI0Nzg1IExBUyBWSVJHRU5FUyBS RCIsInZlbnVlU3RyZWV0MiI6IiIsInZl%250AbnVlQ2l0eSI6I kNhbGFiYXNhcyIsInZlbnVlU3RhdGUiOiJDQSIsInZlbnVl%25 0AWmlwQ29kZSI6IjkxMzAyIiwicGhvbmUiOiIiLCJzdHlsZSI6 Imh0dHBzOi8v%250AbG9naW4uYXR0d2lmaS5jb20vY3NzL2F0d HNiby5jc3MiLCJyZWRpciI6IiIs%250AInBsYW4iOiJFbnRlcn ByaXNlIFN0YW5kYXJkIiwiY29tcGFueVdlYnNpdGUi%250AOiI iLCJsb2dvIjoiIiwiYmciOiJodHRwczovL2xvZ2luLmF0dHdpZ mkuY29t%250AL2ltYWdlcy9CYWNrR3JvdW5kX0lNR18xMjgwX2 Nyb3AuanBnIiwiY3VzdG9t%250AVG9zIjoiIiwicHJpdmFjeVB vbGljeSI6IiIsIndoaXRlTGFiZWwiOiIwIiwi%250AZmFjZWJv b2siOiIwIiwibGlua2VkSW4iOiIwIiwidHdpdHRlciI6IjAiLC J1%250AdmVyc2UiOiIwIiwiYWRzdXBwb3J0ZWQiOiIwIiwiY29 ubmVjdCI6IjEiLCJt%250AY2QiOiIwIiwicGFuZWxBbGlnbiI6 ImxlZnQiLCJleHRlcm5hbExvY2F0aW9u%250ASWQiOiIxMTMzM SIsImlmcmFtZVVybCI6Imh0dHA6Ly93aWZpLm1jZG9uYWxk%25 0Acy5jb20vd2lyZWxlc3MvY29ubmVjdGlvbi8%252FbG9jYXRp b249MTEzMzEiLCJs%250Ab2dpblRleHQiOiIiLCJwcmVmZXJyZ WRMYW5nIjoiIiwicGFnZWJnY29sb3Ii%250AOiIiLCJhZGRyZX NzIjoiNDc4NSBMQVMgVklSR0VORVMgUkRcbkNhbGFiYXNh%250 AcywgQ0EgOTEzMDIifQ%253D%253D%250A%26hash%3Dcb6121 3f514a4113acb3e734228ffde9fef6f9a3%26_browser%3D1]Guest Portal Agreement[/0]
    guns kill people,

    like spoons made rush limbaugh,

    fat ....

  8. #2378
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    Re: pictures

    31128605 1808075022607831 4480072973344047104 n
    guns kill people,

    like spoons made rush limbaugh,

    fat ....

  9. #2379
    Senior Hostboard Member tomt's Avatar
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    Re: pictures

    circuit diagram
    guns kill people,

    like spoons made rush limbaugh,

    fat ....

  10. #2380
    Senior Hostboard Member tomt's Avatar
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    Re: pictures

    41167769 472148179990118 6687147869151693287 n
    guns kill people,

    like spoons made rush limbaugh,

    fat ....

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