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jmcquown[_2_] 15-09-2009 02:57 AM

[OT] Patrick Swazye died
 
Died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 57.

Jill

[email protected] 15-09-2009 03:13 AM

Patrick Swazye died
 
On Sep 14, 8:57*pm, "jmcquown" > wrote:
> Died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 57.
>
> Jill


>
>

Yeah, I read that earlier in the evening. Very very few survive this
type of cancer. Too young to leave us but he's out of his misery now.

nospam[_4_] 15-09-2009 03:18 AM

Patrick Swazye died
 
wrote:
> On Sep 14, 8:57 pm, "jmcquown" > wrote:
>> Died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 57.

>
>>
> > Too young to leave us but he's out of his misery now.


You mean he is out of OUR misery now.

nospam[_4_] 15-09-2009 03:18 AM

[OT] Patrick Swazye died
 
jmcquown wrote:
> Died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 57.


Not soon enough.


PeterL[_17_] 15-09-2009 04:28 AM

[OT] Patrick Swazye died
 
"jmcquown" > wrote in news:7h8akoF2rf2ljU1
@mid.individual.net:

> Died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 57.
>
> Jill



For the past 9 months there's been an article on my online news page that
said "Patrick Swazye says goodbye as cancer spreads".

http://www.news.com.au/

It finally caught up with him, the poor bastid :-(



--
Peter Lucas
Brisbane
Australia


If we are not meant to eat animals,
why are they made of meat?

Gregory Morrow[_324_] 15-09-2009 04:53 AM

[OT] Patrick Swazye died
 
jmcquown wrote:

> Died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 57.



<yawn>

Everybody dies, even has - been sho - bizz types that you were in NO way
close to, so just suck it up...


--
Best
Greg





sf[_9_] 15-09-2009 08:20 AM

[OT] Patrick Swazye died
 
On Mon, 14 Sep 2009 19:18:57 -0700, nospam > wrote:

>jmcquown wrote:
>> Died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 57.

>
>Not soon enough.


I see you've been kill filed by so many you had to change your author
name. What a turd.

--
I love cooking with wine.
Sometimes I even put it in the food.

nospam[_4_] 15-09-2009 08:43 AM

[OT] Patrick Swazye died
 
sf wrote:

> snip


I see that you had to verify and provide affirmation of what "sf" stands
for - stupid ****.

cybercat 15-09-2009 08:57 AM

[OT] Patrick Swazye died
 

"nospam" > wrote in message
...
> sf wrote:
>
>> snip

>
> I see that you had to verify and provide affirmation of what "sf" stands
> for - stupid ****.


Another fabulous wit blooms.



nospam[_4_] 15-09-2009 09:03 AM

[OT] Patrick Swazye died
 
cybercat wrote:

> Another fabulous wit blooms.


As another stupid **** stands up to identify themselves.

Linda[_5_] 15-09-2009 09:10 AM

Patrick Swazye died
 

> wrote in message
...
On Sep 14, 8:57 pm, "jmcquown" > wrote:
> Died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 57.
>
> Jill


>
>

Yeah, I read that earlier in the evening. Very very few survive this
type of cancer. Too young to leave us but he's out of his misery now.

I am so sorry (and yet in some ways relieved to hear) that his fight is
finally over.
Goodness knows he (like Farrah) was gutsy in facing the ultimate defeat.

He was a sweet man.
I hope he is sitting out on a deckchair, watching the sun go down, sipping
cocktails, and holding Farrahs hand :-)

Linda (Australia)



atec 7 7 15-09-2009 10:03 AM

[OT] Patrick Swazye died
 
sf wrote:
> On Mon, 14 Sep 2009 19:18:57 -0700, nospam > wrote:
>
>> jmcquown wrote:
>>> Died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 57.

>> Not soon enough.

>
> I see you've been kill filed by so many you had to change your author
> name. What a turd.
>

maybe it's booby ?
any way plonk no spam

Bob Terwilliger[_1_] 15-09-2009 12:49 PM

[OT] Patrick Swazye died
 
Peter's cocksucker wrote:

>> I see you've been kill filed by so many you had to change your author
>> name. What a turd.
>>

> maybe it's booby ?
> any way plonk no spam


Probably ANOTHER sockpuppet from Peter.

Bob




Jean B.[_1_] 15-09-2009 02:05 PM

[OT] Patrick Swazye died
 
jmcquown wrote:
> Died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 57.
>
> Jill


Pancreatic cancer is the pits. So young, too.

--
Jean B.

sf[_9_] 15-09-2009 05:25 PM

[OT] Patrick Swazye died
 
On Tue, 15 Sep 2009 00:43:38 -0700, nospam > wrote:

>sf wrote:
>
>> snip

>
>I see that you had to verify and provide affirmation of what "sf" stands
>for - stupid ****.


same ole same ole... gotta try harder than that.

--
I love cooking with wine.
Sometimes I even put it in the food.

sf[_9_] 15-09-2009 05:26 PM

[OT] Patrick Swazye died
 
On Tue, 15 Sep 2009 19:03:14 +1000, atec 7 7 <"atec >
wrote:

>sf wrote:
>> On Mon, 14 Sep 2009 19:18:57 -0700, nospam > wrote:
>>
>>> jmcquown wrote:
>>>> Died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 57.
>>> Not soon enough.

>>
>> I see you've been kill filed by so many you had to change your author
>> name. What a turd.
>>

>maybe it's booby ?
> any way plonk no spam


no spam will spam no more! LOL


--
I love cooking with wine.
Sometimes I even put it in the food.

Dave Smith[_1_] 15-09-2009 05:26 PM

Patrick Swazye died
 
Jean B. wrote:

>> Too many cancers kill too fast. Like my dad's. If I were to get
>> cancer, I want one that kills fast. My dad was only 71 and had
>> esophageal cancer, diagnosed in Jan and died in Jun.

>
> For better or for worse??? My mom lived a miserable 5 weeks after
> being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. On one hand, it was all
> shocking and the thought of her imminent death (she was given 5 months)
> was horrible. On the other, it soon became clear that death was a
> better option than prolonged suffering with no hope.
>
> At the same time that my mom was struggling with this, a friend received
> the same diagnosis. He hung on for about a year....



Cancer is a nasty disease. I think that one of the luckiest people I
ever heard of was my wife's best friend's father who was diagnosed with
lung cancer but dropped dead of a heart attack a few weeks later. I have
had a number of family members and friends who went through a lot of
suffering and slow painful deaths from cancer. My grandmother went
quite quickly when she had liver cancer. When I went to see her she was
jaundiced and said they told her she was very sick but that she did not
feel bad. She was dead a week later.

My sister in law is having a bad time with her liver cancer. She had
been quite optimistic about the experimental chemotherapy she was
undergoing and her tumour had shrunk by 50%. Then it stopped shrinking.
The chemo had done a number on her immune system and a few weeks ago
she was rushed to the hospital with congestive heart failure. She was
treated for that and for a bladder infection. She looks awful. She is a
nice lady and I know that my brother will be devastated when she goes,
but I really have to wonder if she would have been saved a lot of
prolonged suffering if a heart problem would have taken her quickly.

It was 11 years ago this week that my father went into the hospital to
spend his final days. He was already taking lots of pain medication but
he lingered there for another four weeks so pumped up with morphine he
could hardly think straight, and the last four days in a morphine coma,
and still groaning in pain.

George Shirley 15-09-2009 05:52 PM

Patrick Swazye died
 
Dave Smith wrote:
> Jean B. wrote:
>
>>> Too many cancers kill too fast. Like my dad's. If I were to get
>>> cancer, I want one that kills fast. My dad was only 71 and had
>>> esophageal cancer, diagnosed in Jan and died in Jun.

>>
>> For better or for worse??? My mom lived a miserable 5 weeks after
>> being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. On one hand, it was all
>> shocking and the thought of her imminent death (she was given 5
>> months) was horrible. On the other, it soon became clear that death
>> was a better option than prolonged suffering with no hope.
>>
>> At the same time that my mom was struggling with this, a friend
>> received the same diagnosis. He hung on for about a year....

>
>
> Cancer is a nasty disease. I think that one of the luckiest people I
> ever heard of was my wife's best friend's father who was diagnosed with
> lung cancer but dropped dead of a heart attack a few weeks later. I have
> had a number of family members and friends who went through a lot of
> suffering and slow painful deaths from cancer. My grandmother went
> quite quickly when she had liver cancer. When I went to see her she was
> jaundiced and said they told her she was very sick but that she did not
> feel bad. She was dead a week later.
>
> My sister in law is having a bad time with her liver cancer. She had
> been quite optimistic about the experimental chemotherapy she was
> undergoing and her tumour had shrunk by 50%. Then it stopped shrinking.
> The chemo had done a number on her immune system and a few weeks ago
> she was rushed to the hospital with congestive heart failure. She was
> treated for that and for a bladder infection. She looks awful. She is a
> nice lady and I know that my brother will be devastated when she goes,
> but I really have to wonder if she would have been saved a lot of
> prolonged suffering if a heart problem would have taken her quickly.
>
> It was 11 years ago this week that my father went into the hospital to
> spend his final days. He was already taking lots of pain medication but
> he lingered there for another four weeks so pumped up with morphine he
> could hardly think straight, and the last four days in a morphine coma,
> and still groaning in pain.


Some of us are lucky, some aren't. Both my parents died in their sleep
at ages 71 and 89. A friend found out he had lung cancer that had
metastasized into his brain. He elected to take early retirement from
his job, turned down all treatment, went home and kept smoking and
drinking, gave away all his stuff (he was single) to friends, left his
house to his sister, died in his own bed after a tough three months. His
cojones were obviously a lot larger than those of many of us. I don't
think I would want to go out that way myself.

Omelet[_7_] 15-09-2009 07:07 PM

Patrick Swazye died
 
In article
>,
wrote:

> On Sep 14, 8:57*pm, "jmcquown" <j > wrote:
> > Died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 57.
> >
> > Jill

>
> >
> >

> Yeah, I read that earlier in the evening. Very very few survive this
> type of cancer. Too young to leave us but he's out of his misery now.


So did my favorite Uncle, two days ago, from Lymphocytic leukemia.

Death comes to us all. :-(

I'll miss Uncle Tommy more...
He was good people.
--
Peace! Om

"Human nature seems to be to control other people until they put their foot down."
--Steve Rothstein


Subscribe:


Jean B.[_1_] 15-09-2009 07:13 PM

Patrick Swazye died
 
Dave Smith wrote:
> Jean B. wrote:
>
>>> Too many cancers kill too fast. Like my dad's. If I were to get
>>> cancer, I want one that kills fast. My dad was only 71 and had
>>> esophageal cancer, diagnosed in Jan and died in Jun.

>>
>> For better or for worse??? My mom lived a miserable 5 weeks after
>> being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. On one hand, it was all
>> shocking and the thought of her imminent death (she was given 5
>> months) was horrible. On the other, it soon became clear that death
>> was a better option than prolonged suffering with no hope.
>>
>> At the same time that my mom was struggling with this, a friend
>> received the same diagnosis. He hung on for about a year....

>
>
> Cancer is a nasty disease. I think that one of the luckiest people I
> ever heard of was my wife's best friend's father who was diagnosed with
> lung cancer but dropped dead of a heart attack a few weeks later. I have
> had a number of family members and friends who went through a lot of
> suffering and slow painful deaths from cancer. My grandmother went
> quite quickly when she had liver cancer. When I went to see her she was
> jaundiced and said they told her she was very sick but that she did not
> feel bad. She was dead a week later.
>
> My sister in law is having a bad time with her liver cancer. She had
> been quite optimistic about the experimental chemotherapy she was
> undergoing and her tumour had shrunk by 50%. Then it stopped shrinking.
> The chemo had done a number on her immune system and a few weeks ago
> she was rushed to the hospital with congestive heart failure. She was
> treated for that and for a bladder infection. She looks awful. She is a
> nice lady and I know that my brother will be devastated when she goes,
> but I really have to wonder if she would have been saved a lot of
> prolonged suffering if a heart problem would have taken her quickly.
>
> It was 11 years ago this week that my father went into the hospital to
> spend his final days. He was already taking lots of pain medication but
> he lingered there for another four weeks so pumped up with morphine he
> could hardly think straight, and the last four days in a morphine coma,
> and still groaning in pain.


How awful! Such experiences make one think about these
situations, and death vs. clinging to life when there is no hope.

Even though I managed to compartmentalize as far as my own
mortality went when mom was dying, my thoughts have been evolving
since then. Before, I would have thought there would never be ANY
circumstance under which I would choose death. Now, I can see
that there are such circumstances.

--
Jean B.

Jean B.[_1_] 15-09-2009 07:22 PM

Patrick Swazye died
 
George Shirley wrote:
> Dave Smith wrote:
>> Jean B. wrote:
>>
>>>> Too many cancers kill too fast. Like my dad's. If I were to get
>>>> cancer, I want one that kills fast. My dad was only 71 and had
>>>> esophageal cancer, diagnosed in Jan and died in Jun.
>>>
>>> For better or for worse??? My mom lived a miserable 5 weeks after
>>> being diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. On one hand, it was all
>>> shocking and the thought of her imminent death (she was given 5
>>> months) was horrible. On the other, it soon became clear that death
>>> was a better option than prolonged suffering with no hope.
>>>
>>> At the same time that my mom was struggling with this, a friend
>>> received the same diagnosis. He hung on for about a year....

>>
>>
>> Cancer is a nasty disease. I think that one of the luckiest people I
>> ever heard of was my wife's best friend's father who was diagnosed
>> with lung cancer but dropped dead of a heart attack a few weeks later.
>> I have had a number of family members and friends who went through a
>> lot of suffering and slow painful deaths from cancer. My grandmother
>> went quite quickly when she had liver cancer. When I went to see her
>> she was jaundiced and said they told her she was very sick but that
>> she did not feel bad. She was dead a week later.
>>
>> My sister in law is having a bad time with her liver cancer. She had
>> been quite optimistic about the experimental chemotherapy she was
>> undergoing and her tumour had shrunk by 50%. Then it stopped
>> shrinking. The chemo had done a number on her immune system and a few
>> weeks ago she was rushed to the hospital with congestive heart
>> failure. She was treated for that and for a bladder infection. She
>> looks awful. She is a nice lady and I know that my brother will be
>> devastated when she goes, but I really have to wonder if she would
>> have been saved a lot of prolonged suffering if a heart problem would
>> have taken her quickly.
>>
>> It was 11 years ago this week that my father went into the hospital to
>> spend his final days. He was already taking lots of pain medication
>> but he lingered there for another four weeks so pumped up with
>> morphine he could hardly think straight, and the last four days in a
>> morphine coma, and still groaning in pain.

>
> Some of us are lucky, some aren't. Both my parents died in their sleep
> at ages 71 and 89. A friend found out he had lung cancer that had
> metastasized into his brain. He elected to take early retirement from
> his job, turned down all treatment, went home and kept smoking and
> drinking, gave away all his stuff (he was single) to friends, left his
> house to his sister, died in his own bed after a tough three months. His
> cojones were obviously a lot larger than those of many of us. I don't
> think I would want to go out that way myself.


I'd prefer to go with as little pain as possible. Another thing:
I think it would be comforting to think that one could end one's
own life (and have help if necessary) even if one didn't do that.
Just knowing one had an out if things got too bad would be nice.

--
Jean B.

George Leppla 15-09-2009 07:46 PM

Patrick Swazye died
 

"Omelet" > wrote in message
...
> In article
> >,
> wrote:
>
>> On Sep 14, 8:57 pm, "jmcquown" <j > wrote:
>> > Died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 57.
>> >
>> > Jill

>>
>> >
>> >

>> Yeah, I read that earlier in the evening. Very very few survive this
>> type of cancer. Too young to leave us but he's out of his misery now.

>
> So did my favorite Uncle, two days ago, from Lymphocytic leukemia.
>
> Death comes to us all. :-(
>
> I'll miss Uncle Tommy more...
> He was good people.



That sucks.... you have my condolences.

Life... 100% fatal. No one gets out alive.

George L


Dymphna[_21_] 15-09-2009 09:21 PM

Patrick Swazye died
 

God rest his soul. WOLVERINES! (Red Dawn)


--
Dymphna
Message origin: www.TRAVEL.com


D 2[_4_] 15-09-2009 11:48 PM

[OT] Patrick Swazye died
 
jmcquown wrote:
> Died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 57.
>
> Jill


No shit? I'm so glad we have breaking news here. How would anyone find
out about the world's events without rfc?

Back to you, Jill...

D 2[_4_] 15-09-2009 11:49 PM

[OT] Patrick Swazye died
 
Gregory Morrow wrote:
> jmcquown wrote:
>
>> Died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 57.

>
>
> <yawn>
>
> Everybody dies, even has - been sho - bizz types that you were in NO way
> close to, so just suck it up...
>
>


She lives for drama and it ain't happening in here new house.

D

Sqwertz 16-09-2009 12:46 AM

[OT] Patrick Swazye died
 
On Mon, 14 Sep 2009 21:57:42 -0400, jmcquown wrote:

> Died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 57.


That makes one less homo in the world today.

-sw

jmcquown[_2_] 16-09-2009 01:04 AM

[OT] Patrick Swazye died
 
"Sqwertz" > wrote in message
...
> On Mon, 14 Sep 2009 21:57:42 -0400, jmcquown wrote:
>
>> Died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 57.

>
> That makes one less homo in the world today.
>
> -sw




Really.... the man was married to his high school sweetheart for 30+
years...

Jill


PeterL[_17_] 16-09-2009 01:34 AM

Memories of Swazye as a skydiver [OT] Patrick Swazye died
 
"jmcquown" > wrote in news:7haoccF2sdpseU1
@mid.individual.net:

> "Sqwertz" > wrote in message
> ...
>> On Mon, 14 Sep 2009 21:57:42 -0400, jmcquown wrote:
>>
>>> Died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 57.

>>
>> That makes one less homo in the world today.
>>
>> -sw

>
>
>
> Really.... the man was married to his high school sweetheart for 30+
> years...
>
> Jill
>
>




One wonders why you even bother replying to that idiot.

You do know that a sqwert is a drip under pressure, don't you?



But, back on topic, I watched the 20/20 interview that Barbara Walters(?)
did with Swazye and his wife.

He was obviously very devoted to her as whenever I saw him out at the
Perris Valley drop zone, he had a whole *pile* of females from the DZ
'hanging off him'...... but we never once heard any talk of any of them
shagging him, even though most of them would have at the drop of a hat.

Then there were the male skydivers that used to be part of that pack as
well, wanting to say that Swazye was their buddy!! It was quite pathetic
to watch those sort of people fawning all over someone just because he
made some movies.

We did a jump together for my mate Jerry (Jerome) Macauley's 46th
birthday..... Jerry was later to be shot and killed (Jan 2008) courtesy of
a drive-by shooting on Route Irish in Baghdad.

It was a 46way, and I'd come in at the last moment because I was busy
jumping with other groups. I got told my slot as we walked to the plane
and made sure to recognize the jumpsuits of the two guys I had to grab.
I made my slot, and then shortly thereafter was hit quite hard on both
sides, I turned and looked back and, sure-enough, on one leg was Patrick,
and on the other was his brother Don.

After we landed I went up to Patrick and just said "Pretty hard dock there
mate." He laughed at my 'accent' and said "Sorry, do you want me to sign
your logbook?" Everyone else was standing in line to get him to sign off
their jump... I looked around and saw his brother standing off to the side
being ignored, and said, "No thanks, I'll get Don to sign it."

He just got a suprised look on his face, and I walked over to Don and got
him to sign my logbook.

Don was even more suprised when I asked him :-)

--
Peter Lucas
Brisbane
Australia


If we are not meant to eat animals,
why are they made of meat?

atec 7 7 16-09-2009 05:11 AM

[OT] Patrick Swazye died
 
Sqwertz wrote:
> On Mon, 14 Sep 2009 21:57:42 -0400, jmcquown wrote:
>
>> Died of pancreatic cancer at the age of 57.

>
> That makes one less homo in the world today.
>
> -sw

with any luck you might die during tonight's sleep
oh and plonk

Sqwertz 16-09-2009 06:25 AM

[OT] Patrick Swazye died
 
On Tue, 15 Sep 2009 20:04:13 -0400, jmcquown wrote:

> "Sqwertz" > wrote in message
> ...
>
>> That makes one less homo in the world today.

>
> Really.... the man was married to his high school sweetheart for 30+
> years...


Rock Huson was married, too. So he must have been straight as well.
Matter of fact, all married people are automatically straight.

-sw

sf[_9_] 16-09-2009 09:59 AM

[OT] Patrick Swazye died
 
On Tue, 15 Sep 2009 20:04:13 -0400, "jmcquown" >
wrote:

>.... the man was married to his high school sweetheart for 30+
>years...
>
>Jill


I wondered who would say it first. Why is that being married for 30+
years long worthy of public scandal? It only goes to show how jaded
people are.


--
I love cooking with wine.
Sometimes I even put it in the food.

jmcquown[_2_] 16-09-2009 10:30 AM

[OT] Patrick Swazye died
 
"sf" > wrote in message
...
> On Tue, 15 Sep 2009 20:04:13 -0400, "jmcquown" >
> wrote:
>
>>.... the man was married to his high school sweetheart for 30+
>>years...
>>
>>Jill

>
> I wondered who would say it first. Why is that being married for 30+
> years long worthy of public scandal? It only goes to show how jaded
> people are.
>
>


Everyone assumes men who dance and act and who are also married are ***.
Sorry, that's just not true. I have nothing against *** people. I'm all
for *** marriage and equal rights under the law. Patrick Swazye was not
***.

Rock Hudson lived in a time when being *** wasn't "accepted" so of course he
was a pretender. I've known a few "pretenders" in my lifetime. No reason
to hide it these days.

Jill


PeterL[_17_] 16-09-2009 10:39 AM

[OT] Patrick Swazye died
 
sf > wrote in news:9891b55d8ue9v545voohi0iuqs65f3nves@
4ax.com:

> On Tue, 15 Sep 2009 20:04:13 -0400, "jmcquown" >
> wrote:
>
>>.... the man was married to his high school sweetheart for 30+
>>years...
>>
>>Jill

>
> I wondered who would say it first. Why is that being married for 30+
> years long worthy of public scandal? It only goes to show how jaded
> people are.
>
>



As I said in a previous post, I saw women throwing themselves at him time and
time again, but word never came back of someone actually 'doing it'.

And believe me, word would have come back. Skydivers are like that,
especially around a campfire at 3 in the morning and full of **** :-)

--
Peter Lucas
Brisbane
Australia


If we are not meant to eat animals,
why are they made of meat?

sf[_9_] 16-09-2009 11:30 AM

[OT] Patrick Swazye died
 
On Wed, 16 Sep 2009 14:11:40 +1000, atec 7 7 <"atec >
wrote:

> oh and plonk


Good idea. ;)

--
I love cooking with wine.
Sometimes I even put it in the food.

atec 7 7 16-09-2009 12:45 PM

[OT] Patrick Swazye died
 
sf wrote:
> On Wed, 16 Sep 2009 14:11:40 +1000, atec 7 7 <"atec >
> wrote:
>
>> oh and plonk

>
> Good idea. ;)
>

Been thinking about for a couple of days
after all booby can't insult me and his carry on makes me all the more
certain when he was in the forces he certainly " took one for the boys"
know what I mean (wink)

ps: yes I read your other comments and some of them were off a bit

brooklyn1 16-09-2009 02:55 PM

[OT] Patrick Swazye died
 
On Wed, 16 Sep 2009 05:30:51 -0400, "jmcquown" >
wrote:

>"sf" > wrote in message
.. .
>> On Tue, 15 Sep 2009 20:04:13 -0400, "jmcquown" >
>> wrote:
>>
>>>.... the man was married to his high school sweetheart for 30+
>>>years...
>>>
>>>Jill

>>
>> I wondered who would say it first. Why is that being married for 30+
>> years long worthy of public scandal? It only goes to show how jaded
>> people are.
>>
>>

>
>Everyone assumes men who dance and act and who are also married are ***.
>Sorry, that's just not true. I have nothing against *** people. I'm all
>for *** marriage and equal rights under the law. Patrick Swazye was not
>***.
>
>Rock Hudson lived in a time when being *** wasn't "accepted" so of course he
>was a pretender. I've known a few "pretenders" in my lifetime.
>
>No reason to hide it these days.
>
>

That depends a LOT on circumstance. If one is involved in the arts
(actor, musician, comic) probably no reason to hide anything, in fcct
the more dirt disclosed the further their career will go, but if one
is interviewing for a hospital administrator position with Cathelic
Charities, head Proctologist, or even a public school teacher, it's
probably best to hang way at the back of the closet. If ones
occupation is Cosmotologist it may even be beneficial to announce ones
coming out debut with a big bash, but highly unlikely in the building
trades (I haven't seen any steel workers walking girders fifty stories
up wearing pink hardhats and lace trimmed welding gloves). And let's
not even mention the US military.

notbob 16-09-2009 04:48 PM

[OT] Patrick Swazye died
 
On 2009-09-16, brooklyn1 > wrote:

> That depends a LOT on circumstance. If one is involved in the arts
> (actor, musician, comic) probably no reason to hide anything, in fcct
> the more dirt disclosed the further their career will go, but if one
> is interviewing for a hospital administrator position with Cathelic
> Charities, head Proctologist, or even a public school teacher, it's
> probably best to hang way at the back of the closet. If ones
> occupation is Cosmotologist it may even be beneficial to announce ones
> coming out debut with a big bash, but highly unlikely in the building
> trades (I haven't seen any steel workers walking girders fifty stories
> up wearing pink hardhats and lace trimmed welding gloves). And let's
> not even mention the US military.


military

blake murphy[_2_] 16-09-2009 06:59 PM

[OT] Patrick Swazye died
 
On Wed, 16 Sep 2009 13:55:32 GMT, brooklyn1 wrote:

> On Wed, 16 Sep 2009 05:30:51 -0400, "jmcquown" >
> wrote:
>
>>"sf" > wrote in message
. ..
>>> On Tue, 15 Sep 2009 20:04:13 -0400, "jmcquown" >
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>>.... the man was married to his high school sweetheart for 30+
>>>>years...
>>>>
>>>>Jill
>>>
>>> I wondered who would say it first. Why is that being married for 30+
>>> years long worthy of public scandal? It only goes to show how jaded
>>> people are.
>>>
>>>

>>
>>Everyone assumes men who dance and act and who are also married are ***.
>>Sorry, that's just not true. I have nothing against *** people. I'm all
>>for *** marriage and equal rights under the law. Patrick Swazye was not
>>***.
>>
>>Rock Hudson lived in a time when being *** wasn't "accepted" so of course he
>>was a pretender. I've known a few "pretenders" in my lifetime.
>>
>>No reason to hide it these days.
>>
>>

> That depends a LOT on circumstance. If one is involved in the arts
> (actor, musician, comic) probably no reason to hide anything, in fcct
> the more dirt disclosed the further their career will go, but if one
> is interviewing for a hospital administrator position with Cathelic
> Charities, head Proctologist, or even a public school teacher, it's
> probably best to hang way at the back of the closet. If ones
> occupation is Cosmotologist it may even be beneficial to announce ones
> coming out debut with a big bash, but highly unlikely in the building
> trades (I haven't seen any steel workers walking girders fifty stories
> up wearing pink hardhats and lace trimmed welding gloves). And let's
> not even mention the US military.


is that why you're still cooped up in that closet, sheldon?

blaek

blake murphy[_2_] 16-09-2009 07:00 PM

[OT] Patrick Swazye died
 
On Wed, 16 Sep 2009 09:39:46 GMT, PeterL wrote:

> sf > wrote in news:9891b55d8ue9v545voohi0iuqs65f3nves@
> 4ax.com:
>
>> On Tue, 15 Sep 2009 20:04:13 -0400, "jmcquown" >
>> wrote:
>>
>>>.... the man was married to his high school sweetheart for 30+
>>>years...
>>>
>>>Jill

>>
>> I wondered who would say it first. Why is that being married for 30+
>> years long worthy of public scandal? It only goes to show how jaded
>> people are.
>>

>
> As I said in a previous post, I saw women throwing themselves at him time and
> time again, but word never came back of someone actually 'doing it'.
>
> And believe me, word would have come back. Skydivers are like that,
> especially around a campfire at 3 in the morning and full of **** :-)


maybe he had some class that you obviously lack.

blake

Bob Terwilliger[_1_] 16-09-2009 10:02 PM

[OT] Patrick Swazye died
 
Peter's cocksucker wrote:

> after all booby can't insult me and his carry on makes me all the more
> certain when he was in the forces he certainly " took one for the boys"
> know what I mean (wink)


Ah, the same old song... Don't you EVER come up with new material? Here, let
me give you some new ideas: Peter's cocksucker also loves to snuffle into
rotting piles of dead sheep.

Reminds him of his dear old mum.


> ps: yes I read your other comments and some of them were off a bit


Rather like your head and that "cream" you save up and pour into your
coffee!


Bob





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