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grinreaper

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Everything posted by grinreaper

  1. If you watch that more than 87 times there's probably something a little strange about you.
  2. https://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=the+seas+will+stop+rising+obama&&view=detail&mid=F8E8DBD4C6563931AD7EF8E8DBD4C6563931AD7E&rvsmid=6132CFD3CAA4A68959B96132CFD3CAA4A68959B9&FORM=VDQVAP This makes me want to defriend Russia.
  3. Read the whole thread. This issue started out with aggreanacsa being used instead of agreeance. It was claimed that autocorrect was the culprit which is a pretty lame excuse for not proofing ones post. Then it was stated that agreance was the proper spelling. Then it was stated that it wasn't a word. Some pretty smart people are either just busting balls or really have lost a few pencils out of their boxes.
  4. It's "should have". You are too good of a poster to continually make this mistake. https://blog.hubspot.com/marketing/common-grammar-mistakes-list 21) Of vs. HaveI have a bad habit of overusing a phrase that goes like this: "Shoulda, coulda, woulda." That basically means I regret not doing something, but it's too late to dwell on it now. For example, "I shoulda done my laundry on Sunday." But "shoulda," "coulda," and "woulda" are all short for something else. What's wrong with this statement? I should of done my laundry on Sunday. Since it's so common for us to throw around fake worlds like "shoulda," the above mistake is an easy one to make -- "shoulda" sounds like a shortened version of "should of." But really, "shoulda" is short for "should have." See how it works in these sentences: I should have done my laundry on Sunday. I could have taken a shorter route. I would have gone grocery shopping on Friday, if I had time. So next time, instead of saying, "shoulda, woulda, coulda," I should probably say, "should've, would've, could've."
  5. Well, she did destroy a lot of the energy of her supporters.
  6. He thinks the Great Depression was funnier than Benghazi.
  7. After socialism failed, Jamestown, VA flourished by adopting a libertarian philosophy.
  8. Hey, after all she's done without going to jail, she can most likely avoid gravity too.
  9. I'm not sure she is healthy enough to fall down stairs.
  10. http://reason.com/blog/2017/09/14/bernie-sanders-medicaid-for-all-bankrupt Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) introduced new legislation yesterday to expand Medicare to everyone in the United States. The bill, which came with 15 Democratic co-sponsors, envisions universal coverage, paid for by tax increases, that would be far more generous than what is offered by any other first-world government-run health care system offers. Notably absent from Sanders' proposed single-payer system was a detailed plan to pay for it. The senator said he would lay out the tax hikes necessary to fund his new system in separate legislation. That may be because enthusiasm for single payer tends to die down pretty quickly once people get a sense of what sort of tax increases would be necessary to fund it. An Urban Institute analysis of a previous version of Sanders' plan estimated that it would cost $32 trillion over a decade. Back in 1987, a much younger Bernie Sanders apparently had that sense too. He warned that expanding Medicaid, the jointly run federal-state health care program for the poor and disabled, to everyone in the country would "bankrupt the nation." "If we expanded Medicaid [to] everybody. Give everybody a Medicaid card—we would be spending such an astronomical sum of money that, you know, we would bankrupt the nation."
  11. He doesn't see it as radical because he is far left himself.
  12. Marching orders? Since he can't go to the right, it's more like: to the left, left, left, left. Them's hopping orders.
  13. Thanks for volunteering. By your own criteria you seem imminently qualified.
  14. Now this is some long term planning. Do you guys realize that most of you won't be around in 900 years?
  15. Studying 33's farts. Sorta weird of you, but each to his own.
  16. He was Confuced.
  17. This is how they work: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Testicle The testicle or testis is the male gonad in animals. Like the ovaries to which they are homologous, the testicles (testes) are components of both the reproductive system and the endocrine system. The primary functions of the testes are to produce sperm (spermatogenesis) and to produce androgens, primarily testosterone. Both functions of the testicle are influenced by gonadotropic hormones produced by the anterior pituitary. Luteinizing hormone (LH) results in testosterone release. The presence of both testosterone and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) is needed to support spermatogenesis. It has also been shown in animal studies that if testes are exposed to either too high or too low levels of estrogens (such as estradiol; E2) spermatogenesis can be disrupted to such an extent that the animals become infertile.[1]
  18. Hall of Famer Members 15,862 posts Posted 07 September 2017 - 03:32 PM More than 5,000 out-of-state voters may have tipped New Hampshire against Trump Over 6,000 individuals registered to vote in New Hampshire for Election Day Nov. 8 using out-of-state driver’s licenses — and since then the vast majority have neither obtained an in-state license nor registered a motor vehicle. Speaker of the New Hampshire House Shawn Jasper, a Republican, issued the findings on Thursday based on inquiries he made to the Department of State, which oversees elections, and the Department of Safety. Since election days, Republicans have charged that a significant number of non-resident Democrats, principally from Massachusetts, flowed into New Hampshire to vote illegally, tilting close elections to their party. Mr. Jasper’s findings give credence, though not outright proof, to those allegations. The numbers read this way: 6,540 people voted using out-of-state licenses There are 196 people today who are being investigated for voting illegally both in New Hampshire and in other states. Hillary Clinton defeated Donald Trump in News Hampshire by 2,736 votes. Democratic Sen. Maggie Hassan defeated incumbent Republican Kelly Ayotte by 1,017 votes. Last February, while meeting with senators at the White House, Mr. Trump said he lost New Hampshire because thousands of Massachusetts residents crossed state lines to vote. He also said Mrs. Ayotte lost for the same reason: illegal voting. The liberal media dismissed his allegations. The Boston Globe called them “groundless.” http://www.washingto...shire-presiden/
  19. You cut her too much slack.
  20. https://www.bing.com/videos/search?q=joe+biden+villages+song&&view=detail&mid=387D647B6AF3E7BFFA5F387D647B6AF3E7BFFA5F&rvsmid=864070FC5313C663497D864070FC5313C663497D&FORM=VDQVAP With this being played non stop by any of his opponents?
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