Page 12 of 18 FirstFirst ... 28910111213141516 ... LastLast
Results 166 to 180 of 262

Thread: Is OMICRON the End of the World?

  1. #166 | Top
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Posts
    71,669
    Thanks
    6,593
    Thanked 12,128 Times in 9,658 Posts
    Groans
    14
    Groaned 504 Times in 477 Posts
    Blog Entries
    1

    Default

    is there lead in the flint, mi water?

  2. #167 | Top
    Join Date
    Nov 2020
    Posts
    10,099
    Thanks
    2,191
    Thanked 4,007 Times in 2,639 Posts
    Groans
    300
    Groaned 404 Times in 391 Posts

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by AssHatZombie View Post
    is there lead in the flint, mi water?
    yep, but that was only hurting poor black folks. the repubs in charge could give a shit about that.

    fluoride has been added to public water for over 75 years. do you not think there would be real signs of trouble by now? go back to sleep.

    Over 75 Years of Community Water Fluoridation | subsection titlehttps://www.cdc.gov › fluoridation › basics › anniversary
    For three-quarters of a century, community water fluoridation has been a major factor in reducing rates of tooth decay in the United States.

    The Story of Fluoridation - National Institute of Dental and ...https://www.nidcr.nih.gov › health-info › fluoride › the...
    In 1945, Grand Rapids became the first city in the world to fluoridate its drinking water.The Grand Rapids water fluoridation study was originally sponsored by ...

  3. #168 | Top
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Posts
    71,669
    Thanks
    6,593
    Thanked 12,128 Times in 9,658 Posts
    Groans
    14
    Groaned 504 Times in 477 Posts
    Blog Entries
    1

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Hoosier Daddy View Post
    yep, but that was only hurting poor black folks. the repubs in charge could give a shit about that.

    fluoride has been added to public water for over 75 years. do you not think there would be real signs of trouble by now? go back to sleep.

    Over 75 Years of Community Water Fluoridation | subsection titlehttps://www.cdc.gov › fluoridation › basics › anniversary
    For three-quarters of a century, community water fluoridation has been a major factor in reducing rates of tooth decay in the United States.

    The Story of Fluoridation - National Institute of Dental and ...https://www.nidcr.nih.gov › health-info › fluoride › the...
    In 1945, Grand Rapids became the first city in the world to fluoridate its drinking water.The Grand Rapids water fluoridation study was originally sponsored by ...
    it is causing harm.

    many municipalities have gotten it removed.

    organizations lie.

  4. #169 | Top
    Join Date
    Jul 2009
    Posts
    134,840
    Thanks
    13,241
    Thanked 40,785 Times in 32,151 Posts
    Groans
    3,660
    Groaned 2,865 Times in 2,752 Posts
    Blog Entries
    3

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by goat View Post
    Arlen Specter manufactured the magic bullet theory out of thin air in the JFK assassination. All the evidence shows that 4 or 5 shots were taken but there's no way Oswald could've done that by himself. At the very minimum it's proof of a government cover up.
    ah, I had assumed it was something relevant to our conversation.......glad to see it was your ignorance of the topic and not mine.....
    Isaiah 6:5
    “Woe to me!” I cried. “I am ruined! For I am a man of unclean lips, and I live among a people of unclean lips, and my eyes have seen the King, the Lord Almighty.”

  5. #170 | Top
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Posts
    71,669
    Thanks
    6,593
    Thanked 12,128 Times in 9,658 Posts
    Groans
    14
    Groaned 504 Times in 477 Posts
    Blog Entries
    1

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Hoosier Daddy View Post
    yep, but that was only hurting poor black folks. the repubs in charge could give a shit about that.

    fluoride has been added to public water for over 75 years. do you not think there would be real signs of trouble by now? go back to sleep.

    Over 75 Years of Community Water Fluoridation | subsection titlehttps://www.cdc.gov › fluoridation › basics › anniversary
    For three-quarters of a century, community water fluoridation has been a major factor in reducing rates of tooth decay in the United States.

    The Story of Fluoridation - National Institute of Dental and ...https://www.nidcr.nih.gov › health-info › fluoride › the...
    In 1945, Grand Rapids became the first city in the world to fluoridate its drinking water.The Grand Rapids water fluoridation study was originally sponsored by ...
    obama went to flint and drank the water as a stunt.

    the community was aghast at his brazen dishonesty.

    was obama a republican?

  6. #171 | Top
    Join Date
    Nov 2020
    Posts
    10,099
    Thanks
    2,191
    Thanked 4,007 Times in 2,639 Posts
    Groans
    300
    Groaned 404 Times in 391 Posts

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by AssHatZombie View Post
    it is causing harm.

    many municipalities have gotten it removed.

    organizations lie.
    no, you are just a paranoid freak. relax, goon. you get a lot worse crap in your meat and water than fluoride.

  7. #172 | Top
    Join Date
    Nov 2020
    Posts
    10,099
    Thanks
    2,191
    Thanked 4,007 Times in 2,639 Posts
    Groans
    300
    Groaned 404 Times in 391 Posts

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by AssHatZombie View Post
    obama went to flint and drank the water as a stunt.

    the community was aghast at his brazen dishonesty.

    was obama a republican?
    no, but you are a gullible fool who believes goofy ass right wing shit- he drank the water in flint AFTER IT HAD BEEN CLEANED UP.....moron.

    Quick Take
    Social media posts distort the facts to misleadingly claim that President Barack Obama “declared Flint water crisis a National Emergency and never fixed it.”

    Full Story
    After President Donald Trump declared a national emergency to secure funding for his proposed border wall, misleading social media posts took aim at the decision by contrasting it with the Flint, Michigan, water crisis.

    Now, Facebook posts are again invoking that water contamination issue, this time directing ire at former President Barack Obama.

    “Here is another fun fact!” the posts read. “Obama declared Flint water crisis a National Emergency and never fixed it.”

    That’s misleading, too.

    As we previously wrote, Obama signed an emergency declaration for Michigan in January 2016 — a move that allowed for federal resources to aid in the response to the lead contamination in the city’s water supply.

    There’s a distinction between that emergency and the national emergency declared by Trump, which cites the National Emergencies Act and aims to divert billions in federal funds to finance the wall.

    The emergency declaration signed by Obama was a designation under the Stafford Act, a disaster relief law, that allowed for federal aid of up to $5 million (not including additional assistance from federal agencies that didn’t require the declaration). Such emergency declarations bolster state or local “efforts in providing emergency services, such as the protection of lives, property, public health, and safety, or to lessen or avert the threat of a catastrophe in any part of the United States,” the Federal Emergency Management Agency notes.

    The federal government’s response included measures such as distributing water and providing water filters and water sampling. The emergency declaration ended in August 2016.

    According to the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality, “[s]ince July 2016, the city of Flint’s water system has tested below action levels of the federal Lead and Copper Rule (LCR).” In early 2018, the state declared the water quality “restored” after repeated tests showed that 90 percent of samples from “higher risk” locations were below half the federal threshold of 15 parts per billion (ppb) for the Lead and Copper Rule.

    Obama also signed the Water Infrastructure Improvements for the Nation (WIIN) Act in December 2016. The act provided $170 million for communities grappling with drinking water emergencies and Flint was specifically mentioned as an intended recipient. The Environmental Protection Agency officially awarded Flint $100 million of the WIIN-authorized funding in March 2017, then under the Trump administration, to help fund water infrastructure replacements and upgrades.

    Work remains ongoing to replace lead and galvanized steel pipes throughout Flint, and distribution of donated bottled water has continued in the meantime. Even so, to say “Obama declared Flint water crisis a National Emergency and never fixed it” is misleading in several respects.

    https://www.factcheck.org/2019/03/po...n-obama-flint/

  8. #173 | Top
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Posts
    71,669
    Thanks
    6,593
    Thanked 12,128 Times in 9,658 Posts
    Groans
    14
    Groaned 504 Times in 477 Posts
    Blog Entries
    1

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Hoosier Daddy View Post
    no, but you are a gullible fool who believes goofy ass right wing shit- he drank the water in flint AFTER IT HAD BEEN CLEANED UP.....moron.

    Quick Take
    Social media posts distort the facts to misleadingly claim that President Barack Obama “declared Flint water crisis a National Emergency and never fixed it.”

    Full Story
    After President Donald Trump declared a national emergency to secure funding for his proposed border wall, misleading social media posts took aim at the decision by contrasting it with the Flint, Michigan, water crisis.

    Now, Facebook posts are again invoking that water contamination issue, this time directing ire at former President Barack Obama.

    “Here is another fun fact!” the posts read. “Obama declared Flint water crisis a National Emergency and never fixed it.”

    That’s misleading, too.

    As we previously wrote, Obama signed an emergency declaration for Michigan in January 2016 — a move that allowed for federal resources to aid in the response to the lead contamination in the city’s water supply.

    There’s a distinction between that emergency and the national emergency declared by Trump, which cites the National Emergencies Act and aims to divert billions in federal funds to finance the wall.

    The emergency declaration signed by Obama was a designation under the Stafford Act, a disaster relief law, that allowed for federal aid of up to $5 million (not including additional assistance from federal agencies that didn’t require the declaration). Such emergency declarations bolster state or local “efforts in providing emergency services, such as the protection of lives, property, public health, and safety, or to lessen or avert the threat of a catastrophe in any part of the United States,” the Federal Emergency Management Agency notes.

    The federal government’s response included measures such as distributing water and providing water filters and water sampling. The emergency declaration ended in August 2016.

    According to the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality, “[s]ince July 2016, the city of Flint’s water system has tested below action levels of the federal Lead and Copper Rule (LCR).” In early 2018, the state declared the water quality “restored” after repeated tests showed that 90 percent of samples from “higher risk” locations were below half the federal threshold of 15 parts per billion (ppb) for the Lead and Copper Rule.

    Obama also signed the Water Infrastructure Improvements for the Nation (WIIN) Act in December 2016. The act provided $170 million for communities grappling with drinking water emergencies and Flint was specifically mentioned as an intended recipient. The Environmental Protection Agency officially awarded Flint $100 million of the WIIN-authorized funding in March 2017, then under the Trump administration, to help fund water infrastructure replacements and upgrades.

    Work remains ongoing to replace lead and galvanized steel pipes throughout Flint, and distribution of donated bottled water has continued in the meantime. Even so, to say “Obama declared Flint water crisis a National Emergency and never fixed it” is misleading in several respects.

    https://www.factcheck.org/2019/03/po...n-obama-flint/
    he went and drank the water as a stunt to prove it's safe.

  9. #174 | Top
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Posts
    71,669
    Thanks
    6,593
    Thanked 12,128 Times in 9,658 Posts
    Groans
    14
    Groaned 504 Times in 477 Posts
    Blog Entries
    1

  10. #175 | Top
    Join Date
    Nov 2020
    Posts
    10,099
    Thanks
    2,191
    Thanked 4,007 Times in 2,639 Posts
    Groans
    300
    Groaned 404 Times in 391 Posts

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by AssHatZombie View Post
    he went and drank the water as a stunt to prove it's safe.
    why is that a stunt? he did it so people would not think it was unsafe and waste money they did not have on bottled water. clown.

  11. #176 | Top
    Join Date
    Jul 2016
    Location
    ohio
    Posts
    11,869
    Thanks
    6,396
    Thanked 4,386 Times in 3,225 Posts
    Groans
    57
    Groaned 189 Times in 178 Posts

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Into the Night View Post
    Covid19 does not kill.
    That is what I said!

  12. #177 | Top
    Join Date
    Jul 2009
    Posts
    134,840
    Thanks
    13,241
    Thanked 40,785 Times in 32,151 Posts
    Groans
    3,660
    Groaned 2,865 Times in 2,752 Posts
    Blog Entries
    3

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Hoosier Daddy View Post
    why is that a stunt? he did it so people would not think it was unsafe and waste money they did not have on bottled water. clown.
    dude, the government is STILL providing free bottled water in Flint, just to prove how much they care.......
    Isaiah 6:5
    “Woe to me!” I cried. “I am ruined! For I am a man of unclean lips, and I live among a people of unclean lips, and my eyes have seen the King, the Lord Almighty.”

  13. #178 | Top
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Posts
    71,669
    Thanks
    6,593
    Thanked 12,128 Times in 9,658 Posts
    Groans
    14
    Groaned 504 Times in 477 Posts
    Blog Entries
    1

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Hoosier Daddy View Post
    why is that a stunt? he did it so people would not think it was unsafe and waste money they did not have on bottled water. clown.
    it was unsafe. he was trying to convince people it was safe.

    it was a deceptive stunt.

    he's a liar.

    the chain of custody on the water he drank was unverified.

  14. #179 | Top
    Join Date
    Nov 2020
    Posts
    10,099
    Thanks
    2,191
    Thanked 4,007 Times in 2,639 Posts
    Groans
    300
    Groaned 404 Times in 391 Posts

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by PostmodernProphet View Post
    dude, the government is STILL providing free bottled water in Flint, just to prove how much they care.......
    so what, bitch? if true, why is that bad? read this, you stupid fuck-

    A story of environmental injustice and bad decision making, the water crisis in Flint, Michigan, began in 2014, when the city switched its drinking water supply from Detroit’s system to the Flint River in a cost-saving move. Inadequate treatment and testing of the water resulted in a series of major water quality and health issues for Flint residents—issues that were chronically ignored, overlooked, and discounted by government officials even as complaints mounted that the foul-smelling, discolored, and off-tasting water piped into Flint homes for 18 months was causing skin rashes, hair loss, and itchy skin. The Michigan Civil Rights Commission, a state-established body, concluded that the poor governmental response to the Flint crisis was a “result of systemic racism.”

    Later studies would reveal that the contaminated water was also contributing to a doubling—and in some cases, tripling—of the incidence of elevated blood lead levels in the city’s children, imperiling the health of its youngest generation. It was ultimately the determined, relentless efforts of the Flint community—with the support of doctors, scientists, journalists, and citizen activists—that shined a light on the city’s severe mismanagement of its drinking water and forced a reckoning over how such a scandal could have been allowed to happen.

    Flint Water Crisis Summary
    Long before the recent crisis garnered national headlines, the city of Flint was eminently familiar with water woes. For more than a century, the Flint River, which flows through the heart of town, has served as an unofficial waste disposal site for treated and untreated refuse from the many local industries that have sprouted along its shores, from carriage and car factories to meatpacking plants and lumber and paper mills. The waterway has also received raw sewage from the city’s waste treatment plant, agricultural and urban runoff, and toxics from leaching landfills. Not surprisingly, the Flint River is rumored to have caught fire—twice.

    As the industries along the river’s shores evolved, so too did the city’s economy. In the mid-20th century, Flint—the birthplace of General Motors—was the flourishing home to nearly 200,000 people, many employed by the booming automobile industry. But the 1980s put the brakes on that period of prosperity, as rising oil prices and auto imports resulted in shuttered auto plants and laid-off workers, many of whom eventually relocated. The city found itself in a precipitous decline: Flint’s population has since plummeted to just 100,000 people, a majority of whom are African-American, and about 45 percent of its residents live below the poverty line. Nearly one in six of the city’s homes has been abandoned.

    This was the lay of the land in 2011, when Flint, cash-strapped and shouldering a $25 million deficit, fell under state control. Michigan Governor Rick Snyder appointed an emergency manager (basically an unelected official chosen to set local policy) to oversee and cut city costs. This precipitated the tragic decision in 2013 to end the city’s five-decade practice of piping treated water for its residents from Detroit in favor of a cheaper alternative: temporarily pumping water from the Flint River until a new water pipeline from Lake Huron was built. Although the river water was highly corrosive, Flint officials failed to treat it, and lead leached out from aging pipes into thousands of homes.

    Lead levels in Flint water
    Soon after the city began supplying residents with Flint River water in April 2014, residents started complaining that the water from their taps looked, smelled, and tasted foul. Despite protests by residents lugging jugs of discolored water, officials maintained that the water was safe. A study conducted the following year by researchers at Virginia Tech revealed the problem: Water samples collected from 252 homes through a resident-organized effort indicated citywide lead levels had spiked, with nearly 17 percent of samples registering above the federal “action level” of 15 parts per billion (ppb), the level at which corrective action must be taken. More than 40 percent measured above 5 ppb of lead, which the researchers considered an indication of a “very serious” problem.

    Even more alarming were findings reported in September 2015 by Flint pediatrician Mona Hanna-Attisha: The incidence of elevated blood-lead levels in children citywide had nearly doubled since 2014—and nearly tripled in certain neighborhoods. As Hanna-Attisha noted, “Lead is one of the most damning things you can do to a child in their entire life-course trajectory.” In Flint, nearly 9,000 children were supplied lead-contaminated water for 18 months.

    More problems with Flint water
    Flint’s water supply was plagued by more than lead. The city’s switch from Detroit water to the Flint River coincided with an outbreak of Legionnaires’ disease (a severe form of pneumonia) that killed 12 and sickened at least 87 people between June 2014 and October 2015. The third-largest outbreak of Legionnaires’ disease recorded in U.S. history—as well as the discovery in 2014 of fecal coliform bacteria in city water—was likely a result of the city’s failure to maintain sufficient chlorine in its water mains to disinfect the water. Ironically, the city’s corrective measure—adding more chlorine without addressing other underlying issues—created a new problem: elevated levels of total trihalomethanes (TTHM), cancer-causing chemicals that are by-products of the chlorination of water.

    In early 2016, a coalition of citizens and groups—including Flint resident Melissa Mays, the local group Concerned Pastors for Social Action, NRDC, and the ACLU of Michigan—sued the city and state officials in order to secure safe drinking water for Flint residents. Among the demands of the suit: the proper testing and treatment of water for lead and the replacement of all the city’s lead pipes. In March 2016, the coalition took additional action to address an urgent need, filing a motion to ensure that all residents—including children, the elderly, and others unable to reach the city’s free water distribution centers—would have access to safe drinking water through a bottled water delivery service or a robust filter installation and maintenance program.

    Those efforts paid off. In November 2016, a federal judge sided with Flint residents and ordered the implementation of door-to-door delivery of bottled water to every home without a properly installed and maintained faucet filter. A more momentous win came the following March with a major settlement requiring the city to replace the city’s thousands of lead pipes with funding from the state, and guaranteeing further funding for comprehensive tap water testing, a faucet filter installation and education program, free bottled water through the following summer, and continued health programs to help residents deal with the residual effects of Flint’s tainted water.

    https://www.nrdc.org/stories/flint-w...-you-need-know

  15. #180 | Top
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Posts
    71,669
    Thanks
    6,593
    Thanked 12,128 Times in 9,658 Posts
    Groans
    14
    Groaned 504 Times in 477 Posts
    Blog Entries
    1

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Hoosier Daddy View Post
    so what, bitch? if true, why is that bad? read this, you stupid fuck-

    A story of environmental injustice and bad decision making, the water crisis in Flint, Michigan, began in 2014, when the city switched its drinking water supply from Detroit’s system to the Flint River in a cost-saving move. Inadequate treatment and testing of the water resulted in a series of major water quality and health issues for Flint residents—issues that were chronically ignored, overlooked, and discounted by government officials even as complaints mounted that the foul-smelling, discolored, and off-tasting water piped into Flint homes for 18 months was causing skin rashes, hair loss, and itchy skin. The Michigan Civil Rights Commission, a state-established body, concluded that the poor governmental response to the Flint crisis was a “result of systemic racism.”

    Later studies would reveal that the contaminated water was also contributing to a doubling—and in some cases, tripling—of the incidence of elevated blood lead levels in the city’s children, imperiling the health of its youngest generation. It was ultimately the determined, relentless efforts of the Flint community—with the support of doctors, scientists, journalists, and citizen activists—that shined a light on the city’s severe mismanagement of its drinking water and forced a reckoning over how such a scandal could have been allowed to happen.

    Flint Water Crisis Summary
    Long before the recent crisis garnered national headlines, the city of Flint was eminently familiar with water woes. For more than a century, the Flint River, which flows through the heart of town, has served as an unofficial waste disposal site for treated and untreated refuse from the many local industries that have sprouted along its shores, from carriage and car factories to meatpacking plants and lumber and paper mills. The waterway has also received raw sewage from the city’s waste treatment plant, agricultural and urban runoff, and toxics from leaching landfills. Not surprisingly, the Flint River is rumored to have caught fire—twice.

    As the industries along the river’s shores evolved, so too did the city’s economy. In the mid-20th century, Flint—the birthplace of General Motors—was the flourishing home to nearly 200,000 people, many employed by the booming automobile industry. But the 1980s put the brakes on that period of prosperity, as rising oil prices and auto imports resulted in shuttered auto plants and laid-off workers, many of whom eventually relocated. The city found itself in a precipitous decline: Flint’s population has since plummeted to just 100,000 people, a majority of whom are African-American, and about 45 percent of its residents live below the poverty line. Nearly one in six of the city’s homes has been abandoned.

    This was the lay of the land in 2011, when Flint, cash-strapped and shouldering a $25 million deficit, fell under state control. Michigan Governor Rick Snyder appointed an emergency manager (basically an unelected official chosen to set local policy) to oversee and cut city costs. This precipitated the tragic decision in 2013 to end the city’s five-decade practice of piping treated water for its residents from Detroit in favor of a cheaper alternative: temporarily pumping water from the Flint River until a new water pipeline from Lake Huron was built. Although the river water was highly corrosive, Flint officials failed to treat it, and lead leached out from aging pipes into thousands of homes.

    Lead levels in Flint water
    Soon after the city began supplying residents with Flint River water in April 2014, residents started complaining that the water from their taps looked, smelled, and tasted foul. Despite protests by residents lugging jugs of discolored water, officials maintained that the water was safe. A study conducted the following year by researchers at Virginia Tech revealed the problem: Water samples collected from 252 homes through a resident-organized effort indicated citywide lead levels had spiked, with nearly 17 percent of samples registering above the federal “action level” of 15 parts per billion (ppb), the level at which corrective action must be taken. More than 40 percent measured above 5 ppb of lead, which the researchers considered an indication of a “very serious” problem.

    Even more alarming were findings reported in September 2015 by Flint pediatrician Mona Hanna-Attisha: The incidence of elevated blood-lead levels in children citywide had nearly doubled since 2014—and nearly tripled in certain neighborhoods. As Hanna-Attisha noted, “Lead is one of the most damning things you can do to a child in their entire life-course trajectory.” In Flint, nearly 9,000 children were supplied lead-contaminated water for 18 months.

    More problems with Flint water
    Flint’s water supply was plagued by more than lead. The city’s switch from Detroit water to the Flint River coincided with an outbreak of Legionnaires’ disease (a severe form of pneumonia) that killed 12 and sickened at least 87 people between June 2014 and October 2015. The third-largest outbreak of Legionnaires’ disease recorded in U.S. history—as well as the discovery in 2014 of fecal coliform bacteria in city water—was likely a result of the city’s failure to maintain sufficient chlorine in its water mains to disinfect the water. Ironically, the city’s corrective measure—adding more chlorine without addressing other underlying issues—created a new problem: elevated levels of total trihalomethanes (TTHM), cancer-causing chemicals that are by-products of the chlorination of water.

    In early 2016, a coalition of citizens and groups—including Flint resident Melissa Mays, the local group Concerned Pastors for Social Action, NRDC, and the ACLU of Michigan—sued the city and state officials in order to secure safe drinking water for Flint residents. Among the demands of the suit: the proper testing and treatment of water for lead and the replacement of all the city’s lead pipes. In March 2016, the coalition took additional action to address an urgent need, filing a motion to ensure that all residents—including children, the elderly, and others unable to reach the city’s free water distribution centers—would have access to safe drinking water through a bottled water delivery service or a robust filter installation and maintenance program.

    Those efforts paid off. In November 2016, a federal judge sided with Flint residents and ordered the implementation of door-to-door delivery of bottled water to every home without a properly installed and maintained faucet filter. A more momentous win came the following March with a major settlement requiring the city to replace the city’s thousands of lead pipes with funding from the state, and guaranteeing further funding for comprehensive tap water testing, a faucet filter installation and education program, free bottled water through the following summer, and continued health programs to help residents deal with the residual effects of Flint’s tainted water.

    https://www.nrdc.org/stories/flint-w...-you-need-know
    it proves the government knows the water is bad.

    obama drank it to deceive.

    he's a liar.

Similar Threads

  1. Omicron is an anagram for Moronic
    By Stone in forum Current Events Forum
    Replies: 74
    Last Post: 11-30-2021, 03:32 PM
  2. Biden tells the world ‘America is back.’ The world isn’t so sure.
    By BidenPresident in forum Current Events Forum
    Replies: 38
    Last Post: 03-01-2021, 03:10 AM
  3. Replies: 0
    Last Post: 06-20-2018, 10:17 AM
  4. Replies: 25
    Last Post: 01-23-2018, 09:48 PM
  5. APP - when it comes to marriage in most of the world, it is an older to elderly man's world
    By Don Quixote in forum Above Plain Politics Forum
    Replies: 2
    Last Post: 03-09-2013, 12:24 AM

Bookmarks

Posting Rules

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •