BBF

Hello, and welcome to Big Boob Friday.

 

 

FYI:  the song of the day gets a little raunchy at the 0600 mark, if you make it that far Jimbro.

 

Your model for today was born on November 15th, 1993 in Florida, USA.  She stands 5′ 5” and measures 38E2436 and 121 lbs.  Please make some room for Miss Dillion Carter.

 

 

 

162 Comments

  1. Hmm. Somethin’ about the face doesn’t seem quite right. Otherwise a fine specimen.

  2. Yes, something about her face is…off.

    It’s obvious she isn’t a model or worked with high-end photographers. Those poses…she should think about bed dusting.

  3. I like the Ray Wylie Hubbard version of this song more than the McMurtry version.

  4. The “make some room” gif link tells you all you need to know in the lower right corner

  5. I have this song on a CD that I may or may not have given to Ben to trade in at Bullmoose for credit. The version I’ve heard is a little different, shorter with an increased tempo, but great to listen to. Never fails to make me smile as did this version today!

  6. 6/10 would smash all the different girls in these pictures.

  7. Alex is back for real? Great.

    I’m sure Car in will drive him off by lunch.

  8. wakey wakey

  9. I’m too busy to drive anyone off today. Mare is up this week.

  10. I’ve got a book idea. Working title: “How Minneapolis was Destroyed”.

    What do you think?

  11. Sounds pretty good so far. Can I write the sex scenes?

    Mayor Frey was just about to submit and scream out the safe word when he found his inner Hillary and decided he could take more abuse.

  12. https://legalinsurrection.com/2020/05/amy-klobuchar-vp-chances-take-a-big-hit/

    This, and her pallor

  13. “How” is easy. There’s a livestream of that.

    We need “why”.

  14. This, and her pallor

    ——

    It’s funny how they like to pretend this doesn’t matter…to them.

    Unless it’s Joe Biden saying outright he needs a black woman.

  15. https://bringmethenews.com/minnesota-news/a-list-of-the-buildings-damaged-looted-in-minneapolis-riots

    That’s a lot of damage.

  16. My new fav for VP is Keisha Lance Bottoms. She’s would be good on the ticket. I think Harris is way overhyped. She’s like a 2 glass wine mom trying to be coquettish but it just looks sloppy.

  17. *tries Oso-Translator on MJ’s comment*

  18. *breaks it*

  19. Is Lance her middle name or is she carrying her maiden name to make herself sound like a male porn star?

  20. a 2 glass wine mom trying to be coquettish but it just looks sloppy.

    Hey, some guys are really into that.

  21. I’m pretty sure she could nail the smirking look over the shoulder while you check out her hiney, so she has that going for her, and that’s not nothing.

  22. Oh, sorry, I missed a step and thought we were talking about today’s hooooooooormodel.

  23. I like the Scottish pronouncian of hooooooooor.

    It makes me smile picturing Blackadder or some hilarious character in the show. Or Outlander.

  24. I’ll call it what it is, riots in Minnesota are fricken thieves stealing like the garbage people they are.

  25. The only thing whitey has to answer for are the disastrous lefty, bullshit, policies that decimated the American Black Family.

  26. – Under construction affordable housing development at 26th and 29th: Fire, destroyed.

    Nice going, fucktards.

  27. Kiling a dude: bad

    Burning down your neighborhood: bad

    Burning down your local police precinct: justified and funny as hell

  28. – Under construction affordable housing development at 26th and 29th: Fire, destroyed.

    Nice going, fucktards.

    ———

    Exactly. Animals.

  29. These dumbshits riot (ruin and steal everything in sight) and yet this is the one time everyone kind of agrees that the police should get their ass kicked. I haven’t seen one person, white or black try and defend these cops.

  30. Mom was watching the coverage of the riots and said she thought it was more than a bit justified. The news program showed briefly what was happening, and replayed the footage of the murder. Then they showed a little montage of civil rights activists from times past. I had an argument with her about it. “They didn’t show the lady in the wheelchair who was being assaulted.” She had not heard about that. I said, “If you were angry at your brother, would you go burn down a neighbor’s house?” She stuck to her guns, “No, but I can understand the anger, the police MURDERED that man! I’m sick of seeing this keep happening to these people!”

    She’s getting brainwashed by the bullshit news. She thinks the stealing is wrong, but the destruction is understandable to her. I think this is soft liberal racism of a sort where you know that if you you yourself were in a conflict you would never harm an unrelated third party over it, because smashing things when you’re mad is for retards and children. But it’s “understandable” when someone else who is also supposedly an intelligent adult does it?

  31. If you’re stealing flatscreens and booze, it ain’t a fucking protest.

  32. I think this is soft liberal racism of a sort where you know that if you you yourself were in a conflict you would never harm an unrelated third party over it, because smashing things when you’re mad is for retards and children. But it’s “understandable” when someone else who is also supposedly an intelligent adult does it?

    ——-

    Good point.

    I think it’s absolutely wrong to drop all of the media-hyped, white cops on black perp deaths in the same pile.

    This particular case seems particularly egregious. Based on the video it appears to be an unnecessary death.

  33. Co-worker said this is how she feels trying to work at home with kids during the pandemic.

    youtube.com/watch?v=I-ovzUNno7g

  34. Comment by leoncaruthers on May 29, 2020 8:54 am
    If you’re stealing flatscreens and booze, it ain’t a fucking protest.

    ——-

    This is the bottom line for me.

    There are areas (even around where I live) where nice stores will not get into the market because of projected theft. Why are these people making their neighborhoods worse? Target would be insane to go back into that market. If they do I have no sympathy for the total loss off all merchandise in this Minnesota store.

  35. That’s pretty funny, Roamy.

  36. I haven’t seen one person, white or black try and defend these cops.
    —–
    I was half listening to Rush yesterday and I think he, at one point between condemning the cops’ actions, played the role of Devil’s Advocate as in “What you’ll hear some people say …”

  37. condemning

    The “n” in condemning is so fucking weird. It annoys me just by being there.

    I’m going to start a riot in n’s neighborhood

  38. I like how Trump says, “Man, Mayor Frey sucks. Minneapolis deserves better,” and then Frey says, “You don’t know how strong Minneapolis is!”

    Nice attempt to conflate yourself with the city.

  39. Seriously, is it justified to burn down the police station?

    I think it is, mostly because they are perceived as protecting the cops involved.

    The preferred state would be the non violent protest demanding justice but there’s zero trust it’ll happen. So…disco inferno it is!

  40. The “n” in condemning is so fucking weird. It annoys me just by being there.

    It’s like the lack of “e” in judgment.

  41. At least the police precinct could be considered a proper target given the grievances in question. Also it’s clear something’s gone badly wrong with the PD there, and a serious wake-up call is needed. This more extreme than I would condone, but I suspect nothing less would have been effective. Maybe some badly-needed sunlight is going to get shined on them as a result of this disaster.

    Nah, who am I kidding, libtards gonna libtard, goons gonna goon.

  42. The “n” is likely still there because we took some antecedent to “condemnation” from Latin while the gerund form (-ing) in modern English comes from Anglish-German, leaving you with a silent letter.

  43. It’s still stoopid.

    *adds gerund to list of rioting targets, throws in schwa sound for good measure*

  44. Don’t you be looking at me dangling participle!

  45. I enjoy dangling participles!

    *hooooooooooor*

  46. I heard that Henry Cavil wasn’t too bad as Gerund of Rivia, but the show itself is kind of a mess.

  47. Ugh, overcast, cool, and 97% humidity. The skeeters are gonna be on me like mostly peaceful protesters on a disabled old lady.

    Also, had I known how easy it is to root softwood cuttings of rosemary, I’d have a forest of the stuff by now.

  48. Morning Hostages.

    *looks around online for decent prices on ammo*

  49. Gerund of Rivia is merely a ripoff of Article of Melnibone

  50. Y’know, it’s a funny thing, going to college in the Twin Cities 30 years ago I took crap for being from Alabama, due to our historical rep. Fast forward to 2020…it ain’t Alabama burning. Who’s got the race problem now, you smug motherfuckers?

  51. Right now a bunch of idiots are trying to figure out how to get a guy with swiss cheese brain to take advantage of a tragedy.

    LOL

    I can’t wait to see the outcome.

  52. You ain’t black if you’re not rioting!

  53. If you ain’t burning down an Arby’s, you’re a racist!

  54. For Car in

  55. I learned yesterday that pointing out that black folks riot and loot when they’re whipped up about “racism” … is racist.

    Despite the fact that they do.

  56. Can you give me the reader’s digest of that Alex? I don’t have 23 min right now and I may forget.

  57. Blacks rioting and looting whenever they get whipped up about “racism” might be one of those things that leads non-blacks to think racist thoughts more often and more authentically. These things are a total self-pwn to the “Black Community” but it just keeps happening.

  58. Liberal friend going NUTS over the RACISM stuff, and she is beyond reasoning. Just posted a picture with this caption:
    ******
    6th and Jefferson, Louisville KY. This is a line of white people forming a barrier to protect black protestors from the police.

    This is what you do with your privilege. #NoJusticeNoPeace #SayHerName #BreonnaTaylor
    Photo credit: Tim Druck
    *****

    I So badly wanted to write – could those “white people” make a barrier to protected the businesses (that serve the local communities) from the violent rioters and looters?

  59. Part of the thing, imho, is that the rioters/looters are definitely not of your “educated” classes. These are the black pre-med students (although some may be gender studies, etc – but I think in general mostly the smarter folks know enough to get out of dodge before the mayhem starts). That being said – these folks are a LOT more vulnerable to the STUPID FUCKING OVER THE TOP RHETORIC being made by … liberals everywhere. When they hear “They are hunting black people” – they literally think that is happening. They don’t know the stats. They see what they live, and often can’t make the connection between “I dress and act like a thug, but why do people treat me like I’m a criminal?”

    Given this perspective, their actions … in their minds – are more justified. They “are” fighting the power.

    The words being made by just about EVERY FUCKING LIBERAL out there – are the fire that is lighting the match. They don’t hear the lone voices of reason. Just the inflammatory shit.

  60. I So badly wanted to write – could those “white people” make a barrier to protected the businesses (that serve the local communities) from the violent rioters and looters?

    ——–

    This.

  61. Idiots keeping thugs from reaping the consequences of their choices? Talk about an apt summary of how we got here.

  62. When you created SWAT teams, put the cops in military apparel, gave them assault vehicles, dressed them in all black, and put them behind masks, you created an enemy to be feared.

    I don’t condone the rioting and looting by any means, but the fucking cops should have never been turned into a paramilitary force.

    Once upon a time I believed that cops would not turn on private citizens at the behest of the government. Since Covid, I no longer believe that.

  63. Oh, and Carin, why didn’t you write it?

  64. For the next two weeks, they are taking orders for commercial launch T-shirts. nasa.nogginhed.com Veteran-owned small business, cool shirts. (Well, I can’t say I care for the “quaranteam” shirt because I want to forget this bullshit asap, but the Launch America gets thumbs up.)

  65. And by some fucked up “code” cops protect their own – even when they have thugs in their ranks. If anything they should have self-policed the animals out of their own ranks.

  66. The unions have the animals’ backs. It makes it that much harder to weed out the bad ones. So you have thugs in uniforms and thugs in ghetto gear and oh look, someone died and shit’s burning.

  67. Police have always been brutal. The internet and cell phones mean that brutality is on display in ways that it wasn’t in the past. Thirty or more years ago, figuring out if a cop had a history of problems would have required a lot more digging around by reporters or activists.

    The problem today consists of four factors:
    1) The release of the mentally ill onto the streets. Many of them are violent drug addicts.
    2) The rise in drugs like meth, pcp, crack, etc. which turn people crazy.
    3) The increasing density in urban areas, pushed by left-wing governments.
    4) An increasingly diverse culture with no common bond or shared ethical system.

  68. Self-policing is a myth in any profession.

  69. Punchline is, you know the cops there will use this whole thing to justify asking for new gear and budget increases.

    Riots they helped trigger.

  70. I’d say the last 60-80 years of US and European history have put paid to the idea that “multiculturalism” is possible. I’d talk about other places, but nowhere else even tried it.

  71. I didn’t write it because the gal who posted it is just … gone. There is zero point engaging. Even her family has taken to asking her WTF is going through her head.

  72. nice, roamy, love the NASA NOLA

  73. Self-policing is a myth in any profession where unions are involved.

    fixt

    As a young architect, we didn’t tolerate people who didn’t pull their weight, or who were constantly making mistakes.

    My carpenters (not union) are the same way.

    In my experience, the private sector self-polices quite well.

  74. Sad to see this happen

    https://tinyurl.com/ycbsomo7

    Whoever said they’re making their own neighborhoods worse is right. Who the fuck would open up again after rebuilding their riot damaged business?

  75. Whoever said they’re making their own neighborhoods worse is right. Who the fuck would open up again after rebuilding their riot damaged business?

    I see a gubmint stimulus opportunity here! Your place burned down? Here! Free money to put it back in the same shithole neighborhood!

  76. This was her commentary elsewhere about it:

    “A change is gonna come. One way or another ✊🏽

    Read the post, read the comments, learn from BIPOC, understand the rage and why it got here. This isn’t going to stop until we do our part, until there is change. You can come at me and talk about “peaceful protests” but that argument is tired and exhausting because you have seen “peaceful protests” and people were still finding faults in it. You got peaceful and the same thing is still happening Every. Damn. Day. 👏🏽 what did you think was going to happen? “

  77. The fuck is BIPOC?

  78. Balls In Place Of Cunts

  79. Remind me when there was last a peaceful protest over anything to do with the “Black Community”. Baltimore a couple years ago? LA in the 90s?

    They rioted when OJ went to jail for murder, FFS.

  80. They’re rioting and smashing windows in the state capitol building. My office is right across the street. Honestly, I kind of want it to continue so I don’t have to go into work next week.

  81. Megaton McCain sounding off!

    https://www.thedailybeast.com/meghan-mccain-warns-joe-biden-not-to-make-her-fathers-sarah-palin-mistake-on-the-view

    No Megan, your father was a crappy candidate.

  82. And yet Lansing is safe, ironically because the protesters are armed and actually protesting rather than burning shit down and looting.

  83. Yikes! Stay safe, CoAlex! Crazy times…

  84. I had to look it up: The BIPOC Project aims to build authentic and lasting solidarity among Black, Indigenous and People of Color (BIPOC), in order to undo Native invisibility, anti-Blackness, dismantle white supremacy and advance racial justice.

  85. I read taht they were protesting in Ohio. Just why?

  86. You misspelled “rioting” Carin.

    And BIPOC certainly sounds like a culture with which one may not co-exist.

  87. in order to undo Native invisibility, anti-Blackness, dismantle white supremacy and advance racial justice.

    1) my fucking head hurts
    2) I’m guessing their definition of “justice” and mine are a weeee bit different

  88. Authentic movement with professional agitators with bullhorns.

  89. No, I will not contribute money to get protestors rioters out of jail, but I WILL offer to help pay the transportation for YOU to Minneapolis so you can join the struggle.

    (my thoughts on see the plea from my liberal friend)

  90. Love the Twits complaining that the CDC is bowing to political pressure as evidence rolls in that the CDC over-reacted by several orders of magnitude and is issuing new guidelines that are basically “Shoo! Go back to living your life! Our bad!”

    These are a concentric circle with the anti-vaxxers, the essential oils rubbers and horoscope readers.

  91. Fucking jackasses. Don’t say I can’t condemn a bad culture just because there are “good” people in the mix.

  92. For the historical record, the change from police being soft style community to more para military style was in response to the organized militant left wing terrorists at the time. The SDS, The Weathermen, NOI, Black Panthers, and all the splinters. Another negative outcome ultimately introduced by the shitbird progressives.

  93. So this stupid bitch has never heard of Martin Luther King, Jr.?

  94. I wonder if Atlanta will burn? I doubt it, but then again, who knows.

  95. This is why we can’t have nice things.

    No, really, this is why.

  96. Slept for shit last night. Irritable as hell today if ya didn’t notice. I’d apologize but with Hotspur around I look like a goddamn saint.

  97. So I was hoping Pendejo would weigh-in on the apparent texas colloquialism “like a old bois d’ arc fence post you could hang a pipe rail gate from”. I had to google bois d’arc and thought it was kind of fascinating.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maclura_pomifera

  98. I snort-laughed.

    https://tinyurl.com/y8vvdk5k

  99. There’s a bois d’arc tree on my commute that drops fruit on the highway. First time I saw them, I thought they were tennis balls in the road.

  100. Heh, from Faceplant:
    The “you don’t need guns, we have the police for that” crowd is awfully quiet this week.

  101. Roamy, in Michigan those are called Osage Orange trees. They were planted by farmers as hedgerows to control wind erosion.

  102. Hotspur, that makes sense. Not sure why they are planted here except maybe for decoration. Mom called them mock oranges and didn’t like them.

  103. Leon, have you ever watched Joel Salatin’s talk at Google? It’s on youtube, it’s really good (so far, I’m only 17 minutes in). I bet it was a real challenge to the worldview of lots of people in that audience.

  104. I’ve watched a lot of his talks and read a couple of his books, but I can’t say I’ve seen that one.

  105. https://tinyurl.com/ycqqrsva

  106. Hedge apples!

  107. He’s hitting a point right now about the self-actualization realized by direct participation in the processes of life that used to be normal activities but from which we have now become estranged.

    A little while ago I was thinking that the simple act of walking out to my garden, seeing my accomplishments and the abundance that I created, is so deeply enjoyable. Today I picked a big mess of beautiful spinach leaves and gave them to my mother in law, who really enjoys them. There is no success much more innately satisfying to me.

  108. He’s hitting a point right now about the self-actualization realized by direct participation in the processes of life that used to be normal activities but from which we have now become estranged.

    ——–

    I’m sure the same feeling as bringing down a deer/elk/whatever.

  109. I’ve seen it as mock orange in the Fedco tree catalog

    https://www.fedcoseeds.com/trees/blizzard-mockorange-553

    They call it a bush and don’t focus on the fruits at all. Reading Pupster’s link makes me think humans are responsible for its survival and widespread propagation

  110. They are bushes around here, jimbro.

  111. Trump would be smart to make a rose garden talk about how this cop had 17 complaints against him and how Klobachar refused to address the issue with the union about getting rid of him.

  112. This really makes me angry at police, and pulling back from the MN neighborhood being burned.

    https://disrn.com/news/black-business-owner-weeps-after-looters-destroy-his-sports-bar-i-dont-know-what-were-gonna-do

    This guy wanted to give back, and what does he get? His dream burned to the ground. Same with the liquor store guy, the Auto Zone, the Wendys down the street.

  113. He’s especially correct when it comes to jobs where the only thing moved at the end of the day is electrons and bits, Laura. The human brain was meant to work through the hands onto crude matter in three physical dimensions. We can apply the intellect to deeply abstract tasks like writing code or analyzing network flow data, but it’s fundamentally unsatisfying to most of us. Even when you “build” something and it “works” the evidence is just as abstract as the work itself was.

    The feedback loop on something as simple as a small garden or a tiny flock of egg-laying hens is, by contrast, tight and visceral. Whatever work you do — or fail to do! — is indisputable and concrete.

    By the same token, the massive switchover from 90% of the human population being directly involved in the production of food and livestock to fewer than 1% has enormous ramifications for the species and our relationships to food and the very idea of work.

  114. I get great satisfaction from electron manipulation. I move lots of data-cats in herds.

  115. Osage orange would be an entire chapter in my “Defensive Horticulture” book, Jimbro. The hedges one can form from it would deter most shambling hordes. Hide a few sharpened stakes in them as “supports” and it’s even better.

  116. Time to go mow the lawn 2-3 times. The section left from after the flat tire is as tall as Sinema’s hooker boots.

  117. Got my lawn mowed yesterday. I’m also mowing the Japanese Knotweed over by my neighbor which is a rough part of the field. It’s ultimately going to be futile but it really annoys them. The neighbor is a family practice doctor, Vietnam vet, on hospice now with cardiac amyloidosis. He’s a bit of a prick but I feel like I can pretend to care about the knotweed for him while he’s still alive as a form of showing that I give a shit.

    It’s a long story but he was Paula’s ex husband’s PCP and was prescribing him enough OxyContin to kill an extended family which ended up with him addicted to narcotics. As you might imagine she hates his guts but his wife is a good person.

  118. I regret not taking a farrier class when I had the chance. I think I would have been happier doing that. Of course, it’s also possible I’d be sitting somewhere saying, “man, I wish I’d gone to grad school instead.”

  119. Montreal Steak seasoning is pretty tasty on poultry. I ground some fine and used it together with some of the coarse, as a dry brine/rub for a grilled chicken the other day. Very nice. We have a whole bone-in turkey breast cooking on the BGE right now that got the same treatment. Hope it comes out just as good.

    It kind of reminds me of Kenny Rogers Roasters chicken but it’s missing that citrus element. I wonder if I could add that back in with some minced preserved lemon and lemon juice.

  120. Horseshoeing can be a good gig if your body holds up. It takes a while to build a client list with good horses. At first, you have to deal with clients and horses that have bad manners (try to kick/bite/hurt/don’t pay you). But in a good area, you can get rid of the bad customers. Most people quit after a couple of years.

  121. I wish I’d gone to technical school instead of traditional college. Odds are I’d be making bank and probably much happier.

  122. Or studied architecture. I loved building stuff as a kid, Legos and erector sets and all that. Carries over to my usual choice of computer entertainment today.

    Pretty much anything but the thirty year clusterfuck of a life path I’ve lived.

  123. My dad went to technical school in Ireland to learn the HVAC trade. Given the state of HVAC technology in Ireland in the late 50’s/early 60’s I’d say he learned much more during his apprenticeship here in the US. With the education system over there he had a really good foundation and knew a lot of stuff with a broad application. He built the house we grew up in and did the framing, plumbing, wiring, heating and finish carpentry with help from friends. We all lived on the first floor of the house until he got around to finishing the second floor which roughly coincided with my sister needing her own room as she got to 3rd or 4th grade.

  124. Twice, online, I’ve seen different “protestors” wearing ear gear. As in a coordinated effort.

    Yeah, I have to agree with the chief of police in Minneapolis, people are being flown in and someone well known on twitter said someone close to them saw protestors arriving at the airport.

  125. It’s an Op. That’s why it’s “spreading organically” to cities in other states. They plan this for any convenient pretense, just like hurricane thieves.

  126. Rioting tends to precede republican election victories.

  127. That could be a D.E.R.P.

    Democrats envy Republican people.

  128. Bois d’arc doesn’t grow in my part of Texas, Pupster. I don’t know much about except that it’s sposta be harder than Japanese arithmetic. I think it grows mostly over in east Texas and Louisiana.

  129. I hate being part of the oppressor class. I never get to riot.

  130. https://tinyurl.com/Leon-Lamprey

  131. Pupster, did you see the link I left for you yesterday?

  132. I did, thank you Alex. Just a quick perusal did not turn up many names but I shall endeavor to persevere for the sake of my art.

  133. The names are usually in the first comment.

  134. This is a really interesting question or thought you guys are talking about.

    What gives you a sense of accomplishment and what is work? How are the two related?

  135. Carin, I just saw that on Instagram. Another bullshit narrative riling up the blacks before the election. Is it Scott or someone on twitter who always says “everything you see is fake.”

  136. What gives you a sense of accomplishment and what is work? How are the two related?

    Your mom.

  137. The side street that runs next to our house was originally (early 1900’s) called Bois d’Arc; at some point in time it was renamed Baltimore.

  138. Bois d’arc = pronounced “Bodark” by various southern folks I know. I know a guy who makes axe and hatchet handles out of it. Very tough stuff.

  139. How does the smoke taste?

  140. My first choice of tinyurl alias was taken…

    https://tinyurl.com/L-to-R-MJ-Pupster

  141. Neighbor still has one in his yard. Supposedly lots of them grew along the street when the neighborhood was young.

    I still come across the yellow-orange roots in the yard every once in a while, but no trees have grown in our yard since we have been here (35 years).

  142. It’s funny to look out the window and see that tree when the fruits are ripe – looks like a bunch of neon green/yellow tennis balls hanging on the branches 😄

  143. Apparently Osage Orange makes a really good long bow too.

    http://www.osageorange.com/Osage_Bows_tha.html

    My dad had a quite a few of the tress on a one of the farms. The thorns are nasty. If I remember correctly deer like the fruit.

  144. Osage orange also makes great fence post and almost never rots away.

  145. Neighbor has a backhoe. Tomorrow he is going to dig a deep 2′ wide trench around the garden.

    Fuck you tree roots!

    He thinks it will take him 10-15 minutes.

    It would take us a couple of days with hand tools.

    Best neighbor ever!

  146. https://tinyurl.com/Leon-Lamprey

    Just found my spirit animal.

  147. Comment by Pupster on May 29, 2020 7:45 pm
    https://tinyurl.com/Leon-Lamprey

    Omnomnomnom

  148. WooHoo for backhoes

  149. Your mom’s a backhoe.

  150. What gives you a sense of accomplishment and what is work? How are the two related?

    This deserves a better answer than I can give at the moment. I’m deep into the cocktail hour after mowing the lawn twice over.

  151. Carin, clamping down on the carotid arteries in the neck will kill you and not be a technical ‘death by asphyxiation,’ since you may still breathe.

  152. Am I providing abundance for my family?

    Do I feel secure, well provided for?

    Are the physical protections I have created visible to me, and is my family really benefiting from these protections (are they workable, daily)?

    Did I buy enough ammo? [this is a trick question]

  153. Lauraw,
    Anita got really pissed at one of our friends when he started bitching about his wife spending *his* money, again.
    She told him to stop.
    He did not.
    She reached across the table, pinched his carotids, hard.
    It took about 5 seconds for him to fall off the chair and on to the floor. It was very cool.
    He was confused when he woke up…

  154. my god, this shit is getting real. Hope we have a country tomorrow.

  155. Mobilized the Army, for possible deployment?

  156. Now White Supremicists are being blamed, for traveling in and causing trouble. Cartels too.

  157. Disappointment established Raoul’s pessimism.

  158. Those Jui Jitsu folks know how to compress a carotid.

  159. […] H2 has Big Boob Friday. And some Rule 5 for the […]


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