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(OT) : The dxAcehole Psychosis - human being Envy !
Yep,that was Jennifer doing the WAPT 10:00 PM weather news tonight.She
is tall,tall,tall and blonde and very nicely shaped.She has a soft kind of a squeaky sexy sounding voice on herself,very very pretty,she is. cuhulin |
(OT) : The dxAcehole Psychosis - human being Envy !
"ve3..." wrote: On May 20, 4:03 pm, KE4ODD wrote: On 20 May 2007 12:50:55 -0700, "ve3..." wrote: VE3iut insult return fact to DxEcch May 20 2007 Fact #3 A true quotation " In beloved Iraq, blood is flowing between brothers, in the shadow of an illegitimate foreign occupation, and abhorrent sectarianism threatens a civil war." .....King Abdulla, Saudi Arabia source: Craig Whitlock, Washington Post, March 29, 2007. One of your allies is looking a little shaky there. "illegitimate foreign occupation." "He who is not with us is against us"...Bush. Maybe it's time to smash things and kill people. Wait a minute! Canada isn't with you on this either. Hmmm, Not a good idea. Besides, the US needs the oil....from both countries. So,,,why are Canadians there then? """""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" """""""""' There are no Canadian forces in Iraq. The US invaded Iraq in defiance of a United Nations mandate and Canada is not a rogue nation. Canadian forces are in Afghanistan. The Afghan war is a U.N. - sanctioned invasion. Yeah, if the UN says it's OK then it's got to be good! You Canucks sure are a funny bunch. |
(OT) : The dxAcehole Psychosis - human being Envy !
Ahhhhh,,, comon dudes and dudettes.This CanadianHaHaHa thread is hetting
longer that that Beaver thread/pages that used to be at pipenombnews.org.I think it's some kind of other pipe thingy nowdays.y'all can look it up. Halls of Montezuma movie on tb now,,, me favorite part,,, coming ashore in them Tanks. cuhulin,the Tank |
(OT) : The dxAcehole Psychosis - human being Envy !
Just now had some strawberry shortcake.Doggy,she is cleaning the
plate.Four legged dish washer. cuhulin |
(OT) : The dxAcehole Psychosis - human being Envy !
Minnesotttttttaaaa,,,, Minnesotttttaaaaa,,,,
I have been across Minesota before when my family lived in Bozeman,Montana in 1956 and some of my family (including yours truly) came back home to Jackson on a Greyhound bus.I like Minnesota,lots of purty gals in Minnesota. That will be cashhhhhhh on the barrelhead sonnnnn,,,,, this old Greyhoundddddd gets paidddd to runnnnnnn,,,,,,, cuhulin |
Canada hahaha!
KE4ODD wrote:
On Sat, 26 May 2007 12:26:12 GMT, "Michael A. Terrell" wrote: "ve3..." wrote: By the way, my url says "www" . that means "world wide web" not usaweb. So knock off that "love it or leave it" (the website) crap. I was also tempted to abandon the website because of all the stupidity, but I ain't gonna. Anyone who insults Canada for no good reason is going to get a hit in return even though they seem a hopeless case. Yes, we all know that YOU are using a crappy HTML interface to access usenet, which is NOT part of the World Wide Web. It is an older, text only system, but no one expects YOU to understand. This is not a website, it is a world wide network of news servers, but you can't be bothered to learn the right way to use it. Rage on, moron! Give em hell Mike! Don't you just love the brain dead losers who think Google Groups is something useful? -- Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to prove it. Member of DAV #85. Michael A. Terrell Central Florida |
(OT) : M II - Be Proud And Happy That You Are A Canada -and- GrowOut Of The American Angst !
"ve3..." wrote:
If you really want Canadians to cease their comments on US life, all you have to do is stop posting anti-Canadian slanders on this website. It is not a website, Moron. Its USENET! -- Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to prove it. Member of DAV #85. Michael A. Terrell Central Florida |
(OT) : The Canadian National Psychosis - American Envy !
On May 15, 2:43 am, Eric F. Richards wrote:
"ve3..." wrote: Believe me that thisCanadiancould insult you so bad that you would end up curled up in a corner in a fetal position sucking your thumb. But I think you are a peacemaker so I would never do it. Best Regards. http://www.hamiltonspectator.com/NAS...r?pagename=ham... It's lonely being pro-American in Canada -- and sometimes at a dinner party, after a good ration of wine, slightly dangerous. But why should it be so? The friendliest city I've ever walked in -- and I've visited scores on five continents -- is New York. The most pristine beach I've ever stood on is in Florida. The best food I've ever eaten -- sorry Italy, France! -- is in California's Sonoma Valley. Still, you won't hear many people admit that. No, we love to hate America -- and Americans. We sniff that our medical system is superior to theirs, then sneak down to their world-class clinics when we fall sick. We call ourselves peacemakers and Americans warmongers -- but do the math on peacekeeping assignments and the United States comes out ahead. It picks up 26 per cent of the annual $5 billion budget for UN Peacekeeping, and despite the fact it's slightly distracted by the war in Iraq, it currently has twice as many UN peacekeepers in the field as Canada. Meanwhile, we sniff our disdain for Hollywood movies, though we attend them in droves (as we should, they make some of the best) -- while completely ignoring our own. And as author, journalist and Carleton University professorAndrewCohenpoints out in his intelligently argued and entertaining new book, TheUnfinishedCanadian(McClelland & Stewart, $29.99), which delivers both amusing and incredible insight into theCanadianpsyche, we're not afraid to attack Americans -- not only when we're wrong, but when we know we're wrong. Consider former Prime Minister Paul Martin's 2005 election campaign "chiding" of the US over its commitment to the Kyoto accord. "The United States lacked 'a global conscience' for reneging on its obligations under Kyoto," he said, though America's emissions have risen 13 per cent since 1990 while ours are up 24 per cent. "Rebuking the Americans on Kyoto -- fully aware that Canada's record was even worse than America's -- was trafficking in hyperbole and hypocrisy,"Cohennotes. So why do it? Anti-Americanism wins votes. And we think their politicians are pathetic? How about our snobbery that we're multiculturalists and bilingual ("Quoi?" dit le Quebec!) -- and they're not. Consider,Cohenasks, that of the 41 million Hispanics in the United States, 31 million speak Spanish at home, and that automatic tellers in major cities provide instructions in Spanish and English, as ours do in English and French. Or that "in 1973, 78 per cent of students in public schools were white, and 22 per cent were minorities while in 2004, 57 per cent were white and 43 per cent were minorities." Or how about this: A 2005 Ipsos-Reid poll reported: "When asked whether people from diverse backgrounds would be better off if they became more like the majority, 44 per cent of Canadians said yes in contrast to 38 per cent of Americans." "Is this a melting pot?"Cohenasks rhetorically. Say no more. Here's another: They're fat and we're fit! Ahem.Cohenreports half of Americans are fat, while a third of Canadians are. And, alarmingly, he says: "The rate of growth in obesity is about the same on both sides of the border." And I've interviewedCanadianobesity experts who say our adult obesity rate is already at the halfway mark, and that 37 per cent of our children are also overweight. So who's calling whom fat? While myth bashing quickly gets the point across,Cohen'schapter on the AmericanCanadian(the others he analyzes are the Hybrid, Observed, Unconscious, Casual, Capital, Chameleon and Future Canadians) also makes a strong analytical case that suggests our values are converging with those of Americans. In the end, the American-Canadian"watches American movies and television, wears American jeans, listens to American music, reads American books and magazines. "He drinks coffee at Starbucks, eats hamburgers at McDonald's and ice cream at Ben and Jerry's,"Cohennotes. "He aspires to the American Dream, whether it is represented by minivan or an SUV, and the greatest obstacle to achieving it isn't desire but money." Oh yeah, they're better at creating wealth -- which they use to feed the world, promote democracy and human rights, and defend the free world -- than we are. Now there's a difference we can be proud of. In short,Cohenpoints out: "If Canadians were really anti-American, we would have to denounce ourselves, or everything about our country and our place in it." So how does he define us? "We are contradictory, inconsistent and, yes, occasionally hypocritical." In short, we're not so different from Americans as we may like to believe. And those of us who value the freedoms that attract refugees and immigrants the world over think that's a good thing. Vive l'Amerique libre! Dianne Rinehart is a Toronto-based writer. Unfortunately, it's true we resemble Americans too much; Canadians are indeed a nation of polluters and fatty mcbutterpants but I for one am not cheering. As regards beaches and beachside homes, some of the ugliest developments I have ever seen are in Florida. Just heard Cohen on the CBC talking a little too rapidly for his own good. I distinctly heard him say that we Canadians are not "crawling around a rain forest". Who is? |
(OT) : The Canadian National Psychosis - American Envy !
wrote in message ups.com... On May 15, 2:43 am, Eric F. Richards wrote: "ve3..." wrote: Believe me that thisCanadiancould insult you so bad that you would end up curled up in a corner in a fetal position sucking your thumb. But I think you are a peacemaker so I would never do it. Best Regards. http://www.hamiltonspectator.com/NAS...r?pagename=ham... It's lonely being pro-American in Canada -- and sometimes at a dinner party, after a good ration of wine, slightly dangerous. But why should it be so? The friendliest city I've ever walked in -- and I've visited scores on five continents -- is New York. The most pristine beach I've ever stood on is in Florida. The best food I've ever eaten -- sorry Italy, France! -- is in California's Sonoma Valley. Still, you won't hear many people admit that. No, we love to hate America -- and Americans. We sniff that our medical system is superior to theirs, then sneak down to their world-class clinics when we fall sick. We call ourselves peacemakers and Americans warmongers -- but do the math on peacekeeping assignments and the United States comes out ahead. It picks up 26 per cent of the annual $5 billion budget for UN Peacekeeping, and despite the fact it's slightly distracted by the war in Iraq, it currently has twice as many UN peacekeepers in the field as Canada. Meanwhile, we sniff our disdain for Hollywood movies, though we attend them in droves (as we should, they make some of the best) -- while completely ignoring our own. And as author, journalist and Carleton University professorAndrewCohenpoints out in his intelligently argued and entertaining new book, TheUnfinishedCanadian(McClelland & Stewart, $29.99), which delivers both amusing and incredible insight into theCanadianpsyche, we're not afraid to attack Americans -- not only when we're wrong, but when we know we're wrong. Consider former Prime Minister Paul Martin's 2005 election campaign "chiding" of the US over its commitment to the Kyoto accord. "The United States lacked 'a global conscience' for reneging on its obligations under Kyoto," he said, though America's emissions have risen 13 per cent since 1990 while ours are up 24 per cent. "Rebuking the Americans on Kyoto -- fully aware that Canada's record was even worse than America's -- was trafficking in hyperbole and hypocrisy,"Cohennotes. So why do it? Anti-Americanism wins votes. And we think their politicians are pathetic? How about our snobbery that we're multiculturalists and bilingual ("Quoi?" dit le Quebec!) -- and they're not. Consider,Cohenasks, that of the 41 million Hispanics in the United States, 31 million speak Spanish at home, and that automatic tellers in major cities provide instructions in Spanish and English, as ours do in English and French. Or that "in 1973, 78 per cent of students in public schools were white, and 22 per cent were minorities while in 2004, 57 per cent were white and 43 per cent were minorities." Or how about this: A 2005 Ipsos-Reid poll reported: "When asked whether people from diverse backgrounds would be better off if they became more like the majority, 44 per cent of Canadians said yes in contrast to 38 per cent of Americans." "Is this a melting pot?"Cohenasks rhetorically. Say no more. Here's another: They're fat and we're fit! Ahem.Cohenreports half of Americans are fat, while a third of Canadians are. And, alarmingly, he says: "The rate of growth in obesity is about the same on both sides of the border." And I've interviewedCanadianobesity experts who say our adult obesity rate is already at the halfway mark, and that 37 per cent of our children are also overweight. So who's calling whom fat? While myth bashing quickly gets the point across,Cohen'schapter on the AmericanCanadian(the others he analyzes are the Hybrid, Observed, Unconscious, Casual, Capital, Chameleon and Future Canadians) also makes a strong analytical case that suggests our values are converging with those of Americans. In the end, the American-Canadian"watches American movies and television, wears American jeans, listens to American music, reads American books and magazines. "He drinks coffee at Starbucks, eats hamburgers at McDonald's and ice cream at Ben and Jerry's,"Cohennotes. "He aspires to the American Dream, whether it is represented by minivan or an SUV, and the greatest obstacle to achieving it isn't desire but money." Oh yeah, they're better at creating wealth -- which they use to feed the world, promote democracy and human rights, and defend the free world -- than we are. Now there's a difference we can be proud of. In short,Cohenpoints out: "If Canadians were really anti-American, we would have to denounce ourselves, or everything about our country and our place in it." So how does he define us? "We are contradictory, inconsistent and, yes, occasionally hypocritical." In short, we're not so different from Americans as we may like to believe. And those of us who value the freedoms that attract refugees and immigrants the world over think that's a good thing. Vive l'Amerique libre! Dianne Rinehart is a Toronto-based writer. Unfortunately, it's true we resemble Americans too much; Canadians are indeed a nation of polluters and fatty mcbutterpants but I for one am not cheering. As regards beaches and beachside homes, some of the ugliest developments I have ever seen are in Florida. Just heard Cohen on the CBC talking a little too rapidly for his own good. I distinctly heard him say that we Canadians are not "crawling around a rain forest". Who is? Well, I can agree with most of the foregoing except for two essentials: "Carleton University professorAndrewCohenpoints out in his intelligently argued" I have considerable difficulty believing that a professor at Carleton can argue intelligently. "He drinks coffee at Starbucks," Maybe "intelligent" professors from Carleton do; but Canadians get their coffee at Tim's. Dave |
(OT) : The Canadian National Psychosis - American Envy !
350 jobs planned for hard-hit West Point. www.clarionledger.com
(Business section) West Point,Mississippi. www.internationaldelivers.com Those Armored vehicles will save some lives. Three more Mississippi National Guard units are going to Iraq. cuhulin |
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