Topic:
Breakfast with Santa!
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santa is not real,,and like it or not,,no human will ever make a saint out of anyone!
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Topic:
Hypocrisy
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I hurt like you hurt, I cry like you cry, I smile like you smile, I love like you love, I bleed like you bleed, I mourn like you mourn, I laugh like you laugh, I am what you are. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . I am human like you are |
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It's not a big problem, it's the only problem the world is facing now or ever has. Lying to obtain stuff, ie: money, power, land, relationships, on and on, anything of material being. The climb to the top of "jacobs ladder" so to speak is impossible if you are not willing to be deceitful. Why? Because jacobs ladder it self is a lie. All I am trying to get people to see here is the fact that many people in the world will distort the truth with many words of "wisdom" (ha) to get what they themselves want. It is a very simple thing this thing we call life. PERIOD
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Topic:
Scientology?
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yeesh,,,,odjgcclik aewoficn ads;oirfc asd hcoiadfc lifnas;oi c , and that settles IT!
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Topic:
Hypocrisy
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BTW, this is my personal life, I am not a corporation, I don't know what that means. |
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Topic:
Hypocrisy
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luv ya |
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Sooooooooooooo, who has the MOST votes so far?? |
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Topic:
Hypocrisy
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luv ya
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Topic:
i need help!
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lately within the past month and half i have really fallen away from the lord and it hurts. i dont want to its just sin has its attrations. my own will takes its toll, i get slacking on reading the word. i just need help like some inspirational words. i fear i am going to commit the inpardonable sin! PLEASE HELP! |
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Topic:
Hypocrisy
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I'm a witch. I'm a Pagan, sometimes appearing to be Catholic, witch. And, before you judge me as wrong because of what the Bible says or your pastor said, you better take a long, hard look at what you do in your personal life that goes completely against the teachings you preach. I'm done. |
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ewwwe! I gotta take a break from the midget porn occasionally man! |
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Topic:
Thread killer
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nope, it's a string now!
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Making a New New Deal: Sitdown Strike in Chicago by John Nichols Much has been made about the prospect that Barack Obama's presidency might, due to economic necessity and the president-elect's interventionist inclinations, be a reprise of the New Deal era. But there will be no "new New Deal" if Americans simply look to Obama to lead them out of the domestic quagmire into which Bill Clinton and George Bush led the country with a toxic blend of free-trade absolutism, banking deregulation and disdain for industrial policy. Just as Roosevelt needed mass movements and militancy as an excuse to talk Washington stalwarts into accepting radical shifts in the economic order, so Obama will need to be able to point to some turbulence at the grassroots. And so he may have it. After the Bank of America -- a $25-billion recipient of Bailout Czar Hank Paulson's "Wall Street First" largesse -- cut off operating credit to the Republic Windows and Doors company, executives of the firm announced Friday that they were shutting its factory in Chicago. Instead of going home to a dismal Holiday season like hundreds of thousands of other working Americans who have fallen victim to the corporate "reduction-in-force" frenzy of recent weeks -- which has seen suddenly-secure banks pocket federal dollars rather than loosen up credit -- the Republic workers occupied the factory where many of them had worked for decades. Members of United Electrical Workers Local 1110, which represents 260 Republic workers, are conducting the contemporary equivalent of the 1930s sit-down strikes that led to the rapid expansion of union recognition nationwide and empowered the Roosevelt administration to enact more equitable labor laws. And, just as in the thirties, they are objecting to policies that put banks ahead of workers; stickers worn by the UE sit-down strikers read: "You got bailed out, we got sold out." "We're going to stay here until we win justice," says Blanca Funes, 55, of Chicago, who was one of the UE members occupying the Republic factory over the weekend for several hours. Most of Republic workers are Hispanic and they want answers from the Bank of America and the company. According to the UE, the workers hope "to force the company and its main creditor to meet their obligations to the workers." "Their goal is to at least get the compensation that workers are owed; they also seek the resumption of operations at the plant," explains the union. "All 260 members of the local were laid off Friday in a sudden plant closing, brought on by Bank of America cutting off operating credit to the company. The bank even refused to authorize the release of money to Republic needed to pay workers their earned vacation pay, and compensation they are owed under the federal WARN Act because they were not given the legally-required notice that the plant was about to close." UE is an independent union that is not affiliated with the AFL-CIO, although its roots go back to the militant labor organizing of the 1930s that gave rise to the groundbreaking Congress of Industrial Organizations. Some of the solidarity of old has been on display in Chicago this weekend, as UE members have been supported by unions that are affiliated with both the AFL-CIO and the Change to Win coalition of major unions. Recognizing the absurdity of taxpayer-funded bailouts that enrich banks that in turn cut credit for American manufacturers, Richard Berg, president of Chicago's powerful Teamsters Local 743, said. "If this bailout should go to anything, it should go to the workers of this country." Invoking Chicago's rich record of labor struggle -- from the Haymarket Martyrs in the 19th century to the steel industry organizing of the 1930s -- American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees Council 31 regional director Larry Spivack hailed its latest expression. "The history of workers is built on issues like this here today," Spivack told union members at the plant. Spivack's right. But it is not just the history of workers that turns on struggles such as this. It is the history of presidents and the United States. Barack Obama will not be the new FDR, and this coming period will not see a "new New Deal" unless labor is inspired to fight once more to keep workers on the job, plants operating and American manufacturing industries muscular enough to survive in the global market. Then, the proper demands can be made on an Obama administration to back up not just unions but their expanding membership. If the right history of this time is written, it will be said that the new New Deal began in Chicago -- not just because Obama comes from the city but because workers there chose to stand up by sitting down. For updates on developments in Chicago, UE website. http://www.commondreams.org/view/2008/12/07-5 |
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Topic:
Hypocrisy
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69 Are you saying that's what you like to do or do I just have my mind in the gutter again? |
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Killing the thread....let's give this a shot.... I wear toe socks and cry when I masturbate while fantasizing about the Queen of England, Rosie O'Donnell and Joan Rivers in a naked oil wrestling match. That way I have to use two tissues. So, Did that kill the thread?...if not, it has to be worth a point for effort. |
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recount, recount, recount, I don't like the results, recount, recount, recount
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woody 1
yomomma 1 rkisit 1 |
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Topic:
Hypocrisy
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I understand there are people who believe all kinds of different things when it comes to Christianity and what it means to be a Christian. But, if you're going to use what it says in the Bible or what you learned from church to tell me that what I practice is "bad" you better damn well be following all the teachings of New Testament first. Otherwise you're just picking and choosing what you want to follow based on what you personally like to do or not do. |
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woody 1
yomomma 1 |
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a64woody now has one vote
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