He sure as hell could have.
Say, the virus getting you down? Worried about those food banks, are we?
You've been quite "talkative", recently.
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That's the best a food bank slot player can do?
You don't already know?
I guess that, maybe, there are slot machines at food banks. Say, a food bank of slots. Or, maybe, that you thought that food banks had something to do with world-domination. Who knows. You are the one that keeps re-iterating it.
The real fake "bus" must be in the fake real "shop".
Hehehe.
Again, your problem here is that you take seriously what I post.
Then, again, the irony was almost lost to me.
Look, casinos are where people throw away their last dollars for a cheap but gaudy buffet meal. A glorified "food bank".
The same as people go to vulture slots for a few dollars, or whatever, to support themselves, instead of from some form of welfare.
So, it could be said that food banks have something to do with world-domination (of the idiots who gamble).
I'm sure that your whole existence revolves around the food bank mentality. If you want to call it an attitude, well, then I would call it a Freudian slip on your part. Maybe, a territorial over-reaction to a simple observation. Like a dog snarling at another while eating.
Something I haven't heard you mention is any crafts and hobbies. Stuff that has nothing to do with gambling. Have you never "done the dishes"? If I recall, RS mentioned his poop, a little while back, over at the Wizard's. What's yours look like? What do you think your last thought in life will be? As they say, enquiring minds want to know.
A few days ago it was all the Books at Public Libraries!
Now Our Pets are on Stay at Home Orders!
The Virus will infect your Pets!!
You will not escape the Chinese Virus... It is coming for you!!
The CDC specifically recommends that pet owners do the following:
(Fucking Long Enough List... Geeeesh!!)
(Remember when everyone was hanging out at Arcades or the Mall... good times.)
1. Do not let pets interact with people or other animals outside your house.
2. Keep cats indoors when possible to prevent them from interacting with other animals or people.
3. Walk dogs on a leash, maintaining at least six feet from other people and animals.
4. Avoid dog parks or public places where a large number of people and dogs gather.
5. When possible, have another member of your household care for your pets while you are sick.
6. Avoid contact with your pet, including petting, snuggling, being kissed or licked, and sharing food or bedding.
7. If you must care for your pet or be around animals while you are sick, wear a cloth face covering and wash your hands before and after you interact with them.
Genealogy is my hobby but I've taken it well beyond that. I went thru the learning curve about 10 years ago. I've made discoveries that my family never knew about. Like William Clark of the Lewis & Clark Expedition and I are 1st cousins, 6 generations removed. I have a half dozen 5X or 6X great-grandfathers that were Revolutionary War veterans. My 2X great-grandfather, William Wesley Crimm, along with his 4 brothers served in the Alabama 44th Infantry Regiment during the Civil War. They became a legendary unit. There was a book written about the 44th called Devil's Den. They took Devil's Den at Gettysburg. They were the only Confederate unit to capture Union artillery pieces at Gettysburg. The stats on my Crimm ancestors in the Civil War were pretty bad. 17 served in the Confederacy. 10 died in the War. 2 disabled. Pretty high casualty rate.
Some of the things I've learned in genealogy.
If you have English blood then all genealogy trails lead back to Virginia in the 1600's. There were two migration routes out of Virginia in the 1700's. West to Kentucky and surrounding region. Or south to the Carolinas and Georgia. In the 1800's the migration route was from the Carolinas and Georgia west to the Mississippi Territory and further west. Most Mississippians today trace their ancestry back to Virginia, the Carolinas and Georgia in the 1700's.
More Americans have German surnames than any other ethnic group. This was caused by 100K Germans/German speaking Swiss coming to the colonies in the early to mid 1700's to settle the interior of the colonies and another wave of 1.5 million Germans coming to America in the mid 1800's.
I also wrote the most comprehensive genealogy report on the mystery of who John Roger's (1690-1762) married. Was it Mary Byrd or Rachel Eastham? John Rogers lived in King & Queen County, Virginia. I'm one of thousands of John Roger's descendents. Being his descendent also makes me a descendent of John Rogers, the Smythfield Marty who was the first protestant minister burned at the stake by Bloody Queen Mary in 1555. The Smythfield Marty published the first English version of the bible, considered an act of heresy at the time.
I pretty much solved the mystery of John Roger's wife. Her name was Rachel Eastham (pronounced EE-sum). I had collected a lot of land records and wills in doing so. But the bulk of my proof came out of the Draper Manuscripts. Lyman Draper was a 19th century historian that specialized in the Ohio Valley. He was very interested in the life and times of Gen. George Rogers Clark, the brother of William Clark of the Lewis & Clark expedition....and that means I'm related to him also. Johm Rogers was the grandfather of George Rogers Clark. Clark was the founder of Louisville, Kentucky. During the Revolutionary War, Clark put together an army, went up to Illinois, captured some English towns, and in doing so kept the British from coming down from Canada and coming in the back door of the Colonies. He also pushed the American frontier all the way to the Mississippi River. 25 years later his younger brother, William Clark would push the American frontier all the way to the Pacific Ocean.
Anyways, George Clark died in 1818. In the 1840's Lyman Draper corresponded with cousins of George Rogers Clark to get his ancestral background. When Draper died in 1891 he left his work to the Wisconsin Historical Society. Its a 500 volume work. I didn't write about it much but when I was traveling the country hitting the casinos I was also doing genealogy research. I went to the St. Louis County Library and found the pertinent information in the Draper Manuscripts. It was information most descendents had never seen before. I've alos been to graveyards where these people are buried.
Glad to hear that you have perfected it, and the art of doing dishes.
"Four decades later, genealogy is the second most popular hobby in the U.S. after gardening, according to ABC News, and the second most visited category of websites, after pornography."
The search for reality, I guess, ends at Trump, gardening and guns.
With a resultant insecurity so great that people are afraid of a real fake "bus".
Oh, the symbolism.
You don't even have to catch the Virus to Die from it.
This Doctor couldn't take the stress and decided to check out.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/27/n...ronavirus.html
Ancestry.com revolutionized genealogy research. I have access to the 1790 to 1940 U.S. censuses right on my laptop. Along with millions of birth, marriage, land, death, Wills, military records. I can even show you the honorable discharge one of my distant great-grandfathers received from his service during the Revolutionary War.
Your Trump Derangement Syndrome has gotten the best of you.
Ooh, a couple of "tough guys" who never saw any real action in life to know how thin that "line" is for all of us. It's easy to be cowards from the peanut gallery.
Quote:
Dr. Breen, 49, did not have a history of mental illness, her father said. But he said that when he last spoke with her, she seemed detached, and he could tell something was wrong. She had described to him an onslaught of patients who were dying before they could even be taken out of ambulances.
“She was truly in the trenches of the front line,” he said.
He added: “Make sure she’s praised as a hero, because she was. She’s a casualty just as much as anyone else who has died.”
No, no she isn’t a hero. She tried to do her job and couldn’t do it for whatever reason. Calling her a hero is an insult to every person out there DOING their job.
She took the easy way out, she’s no hero.
But it was an opportunity for you to take a shot at Monet and I. Trust me, unlike Dr Breen, we won’t take it personally and WILL live.
The easy way out from what? She was a successful doctor. She, like many nurses, and nursing home workers, who did, could have quit, or gone on vacation.
She "snapped". Unless you've been under a similar stress, you have no idea. I have. I know exactly what it's like. Different persons react in different ways, but we each have that special sequence of events that "sets" us off. No one is anymore immune from a mental disorder than from a physical illness.
LMR, you’re basically making boz’s point for him. The point is she a “hero” or is she not? You basically said she “snapped” and that’s probably true. Typically, I don’t think of heroes as “snapping” and committing suicide.
It’s sad when someone commits suicide, but I understand when people say that’s the easy way out. Suicide is only thinking about yourself, and not thinking about all your loved ones, who are going to have go through a lot by you taking your life.
He's 2nd only to Nathan/Tasha and her 18 socks.
Look, she was working in conditions where many other doctors and nurses died, before her. She "snapped". That the latter happened, well, doesn't change the former. The Taoist might say that, "Nothing was diminished."
How many here have put their lives on the line for another, strangers? Seriously, it's like you guys celebrate death, and dying wherever and whenever it happens. As if it makes you big men for twisting things around.
Suicide is about not looking far enough ahead for things to get better. People think they are at the end. It's not about thinking of themselves, or others. It's a state-of-mind that has to be considered.
Not always a bad thing. Some older persons who were once great in some respect find that they are becoming cynical, lashing out at others, and, etc, so, they can no longer live with themselves. Some persons choose not to grow old to avoid the getting old. I mean, let's face it, there's no grace in growing old, mentally and/or physically.
I'll put my posting history over these gambling boards up against anyone else's, any day of the week.
It's been an adventure for me, even though these boards are primarily about, let's face it, loners who try to dominate the "shit pile". Well, "shit piles" eventually, dry up. It's like the persons posting never realize what they are doing. Nothing is ever truly gained, and, then, the "pile" dries up.
This board has become like the former, Gamblers Glen, one of the earlier ones, from the turn of the 2000's, in its latter days, except, being a non-AP board, I guess, everyone at the Glen still stuck to writing about the games, even in its latter days. Actually, the AP boards were the "nuttiest", with all the trying to really prove something out.
Psychologically speaking, the internal narrative of "defeating the casinos". I mean, why does anyone have to defeat any casino? Regardless, no matter what any of you guys do, the casinos will always be gaining on all of you. You guys will be at it till the days you die because you can't find real satisfaction at any casino.
Some never miss an opportunity to take advantage of a situation.
https://www.fox2detroit.com/news/pro...ed-of-covid-19
- A temporary frontline worker stands accused of stealing an engagement ring from a patient at an assisted living facility in Denver, Colo., who died of COVID-19. Prosecutors said Elizabeth Daniels, 29, also used the woman’s credit card to purchase a vehicle the day the woman passed away“