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'Do not fill plastic bags with gasoline': US Consumer Product Safety
Commission weighs in on gas shortage in Southeast

Really? If you have to tell people that, I say let'em go ahead and do
it. Just think, those people are out on the highway with you.

Janet US
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On Wednesday, May 12, 2021 at 2:01:49 PM UTC-5, US Janet wrote:
> 'Do not fill plastic bags with gasoline': US Consumer Product Safety
> Commission weighs in on gas shortage in Southeast
>
> Really? If you have to tell people that, I say let'em go ahead and do
> it. Just think, those people are out on the highway with you.




<boggle>

And glad that I don't drive...!!!

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On Wednesday, May 12, 2021 at 3:01:49 PM UTC-4, US Janet wrote:
> 'Do not fill plastic bags with gasoline': US Consumer Product Safety
> Commission weighs in on gas shortage in Southeast
>
> Really? If you have to tell people that, I say let'em go ahead and do
> it. Just think, those people are out on the highway with you.


No, they should use styrofoam coolers instead.

Cindy Hamilton
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US Janet wrote:

>
> 'Do not fill plastic bags with gasoline': US Consumer Product Safety
> Commission weighs in on gas shortage in Southeast
>
> Really? If you have to tell people that, I say let'em go ahead and do
> it. Just think, those people are out on the highway with you.
>
> Janet US


Brilliant liberal logic: "Just think, those people are out on the
highway with you" AND " I say let'em go ahead and do
it" lol you are stupid

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Cindy Hamilton wrote:

> On Wednesday, May 12, 2021 at 3:01:49 PM UTC-4, US Janet wrote:
> > 'Do not fill plastic bags with gasoline': US Consumer Product
> > Safety Commission weighs in on gas shortage in Southeast
> >
> > Really? If you have to tell people that, I say let'em go ahead and
> > do it. Just think, those people are out on the highway with you.

>
> No, they should use styrofoam coolers instead.
>
> Cindy Hamilton


Ask them, theyre here. "You can stop saying that now. Thank you."

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GM wrote:

> On Wednesday, May 12, 2021 at 2:01:49 PM UTC-5, US Janet wrote:
> > 'Do not fill plastic bags with gasoline': US Consumer Product
> > Safety Commission weighs in on gas shortage in Southeast
> >
> > Really? If you have to tell people that, I say let'em go ahead and
> > do it. Just think, those people are out on the highway with you.

>
>
>
> <boggle>
>
> And glad that I don't drive...!!!


Ask them, theyre here. "You can stop saying that now. Thank you."

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On Wednesday, May 12, 2021 at 2:11:51 PM UTC-5, Roy MacDonalds wrote:
> US Janet wrote:
>
> >
> > 'Do not fill plastic bags with gasoline': US Consumer Product Safety
> > Commission weighs in on gas shortage in Southeast
> >
> > Really? If you have to tell people that, I say let'em go ahead and do
> > it. Just think, those people are out on the highway with you.
> >
> > Janet US

> Brilliant liberal logic: "Just think, those people are out on the
> highway with you" AND " I say let'em go ahead and do
> it" lol you are stupid
>

You can brand that as "liberal," but that's just you also not making sense.
Regardless of anyone's ideology, transporting gasoline unsafely is a bad
thing. You could have commented upon the stupidity of her post without
suggesting that it was liberal or conservative. I assume that she was not
thinking through the implications of these idiots endangering other drivers
more than they otherwise do, by having improperly packaged gasoline in
their cars. She didn't *think twice, post once*, and you didn't either.

Reasonable policies to protect public health and safety shouldn't be
muddled up with ideology. This isn't about you or Janet, but about
everyone. Burning to death in car accidents should be minimized.
>
> --
> The real Roy MacDonalds posts with uni-berly.de - individual.net
>

--Bryan
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On Wed, 12 May 2021 13:41:12 -0700, Bryan Simmons wrote:

> Burning to death in car accidents should be minimized.


Gosh, Brian. Doesn't it depend on who ends up dead?
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On Wed, 12 May 2021 12:08:02 -0700, Cindy Hamilton wrote:

> No, they should use styrofoam coolers instead.


Cindy, you naughty girl! In another life, I sometimes put holes in
people's styrofoam coffee cups by squeezing orange peels to spray the
essential oils at the cups.

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On Wednesday, May 12, 2021 at 10:41:16 AM UTC-10, wrote:
> On Wednesday, May 12, 2021 at 2:11:51 PM UTC-5, Roy MacDonalds wrote:
> > US Janet wrote:
> >
> > >
> > > 'Do not fill plastic bags with gasoline': US Consumer Product Safety
> > > Commission weighs in on gas shortage in Southeast
> > >
> > > Really? If you have to tell people that, I say let'em go ahead and do
> > > it. Just think, those people are out on the highway with you.
> > >
> > > Janet US

> > Brilliant liberal logic: "Just think, those people are out on the
> > highway with you" AND " I say let'em go ahead and do
> > it" lol you are stupid
> >

> You can brand that as "liberal," but that's just you also not making sense.
> Regardless of anyone's ideology, transporting gasoline unsafely is a bad
> thing. You could have commented upon the stupidity of her post without
> suggesting that it was liberal or conservative. I assume that she was not
> thinking through the implications of these idiots endangering other drivers
> more than they otherwise do, by having improperly packaged gasoline in
> their cars. She didn't *think twice, post once*, and you didn't either.
>
> Reasonable policies to protect public health and safety shouldn't be
> muddled up with ideology. This isn't about you or Janet, but about
> everyone. Burning to death in car accidents should be minimized.
> >
> > --
> > The real Roy MacDonalds posts with uni-berly.de - individual.net
> >

> --Bryan


I once changed the fuel filter in a car and the gas just gushed out. The fuel was moving towards the shop light on the ground. My guess was when the gas touched the bare bulb, the bulb would shatter and the gas would ignite. I was stuck under the car holding the end of the hose closed. That was pretty hairy. Obviously, I survived.


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Mike Duffy wrote:

> On Wed, 12 May 2021 12:08:02 -0700, Cindy Hamilton wrote:
>
> > No, they should use styrofoam coolers instead.

>
> Cindy, you naughty girl! In another life, I sometimes put holes in
> people's styrofoam coffee cups by squeezing orange peels to spray the
> essential oils at the cups.


One can tell you're a mover and shaker!

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Roy MacDonalds wrote:
> Mike Duffy wrote:
>
>> On Wed, 12 May 2021 12:08:02 -0700, Cindy Hamilton wrote:
>>
>>> No, they should use styrofoam coolers instead.

>>
>> Cindy, you naughty girl! In another life, I sometimes put holes in
>> people's styrofoam coffee cups by squeezing orange peels to spray the
>> essential oils at the cups.

>
> One can tell you're a mover and shaker!
>


Makes it hard for you to get a whiff, master?


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On Wed, 12 May 2021 13:01:45 -0600, US Janet wrote:

> 'Do not fill plastic bags with gasoline': US Consumer Product Safety
> Commission weighs in on gas shortage in Southeast
>
> Really? If you have to tell people that, I say let'em go ahead and do
> it. Just think, those people are out on the highway with you.


Filling up plastic garbage cans with gas was a thing here during the
gas crisis 6-7 years ago.

But putting gas in plastic bags is practically a way of life in
rural Alaska (they huff it).

-sw
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On Wednesday, May 12, 2021 at 7:50:21 PM UTC-5, Mike Duffy wrote:
> On Wed, 12 May 2021 13:41:12 -0700, Bryan Simmons wrote:
>
> > Burning to death in car accidents should be minimized.

> Gosh, Brian. Doesn't it depend on who ends up dead?
>

Minimized, not eliminated.
>

--Bryan
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On Wednesday, May 12, 2021 at 7:52:49 PM UTC-5, Mike Duffy wrote:
> On Wed, 12 May 2021 12:08:02 -0700, Cindy Hamilton wrote:
>
> > No, they should use styrofoam coolers instead.

> Cindy, you naughty girl! In another life, I sometimes put holes in
> people's styrofoam coffee cups by squeezing orange peels to spray the
> essential oils at the cups.
>

And you act like *I'm* naughty.
>

--Bryan


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On 2021-05-13 4:17 a.m., Sqwertz wrote:
> On Wed, 12 May 2021 13:01:45 -0600, US Janet wrote:
>
>> 'Do not fill plastic bags with gasoline': US Consumer Product Safety
>> Commission weighs in on gas shortage in Southeast
>>
>> Really? If you have to tell people that, I say let'em go ahead and do
>> it. Just think, those people are out on the highway with you.

>
> Filling up plastic garbage cans with gas was a thing here during the
> gas crisis 6-7 years ago.
>
> But putting gas in plastic bags is practically a way of life in
> rural Alaska (they huff it).


It seems to be very popular in some communities. About 20 years ago
there was an epidemic of it in a remote native community. They sent the
kids to detox in Montreal and, being so far from home, the government
flew family members down to keep the keeps company. There would be at
least 4 adults sent down with each kid. My son was working at one of
the hotels where they were putting the people out. Ironically,
accompanying the kids to detox translated to bender time for their
escorts and people passing by would come in and ask him to call an
ambulance because there were people passed out on the sidewalk.

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On Thu, 13 May 2021 09:32:39 -0400, Dave Smith wrote:

> On 2021-05-13 4:17 a.m., Sqwertz wrote:


>> But putting gas in plastic bags is practically a way of life in rural
>> Alaska (they huff it).


> It seems to be very popular in some communities.
> [...] there were people passed out on the sidewalk.


In their defence I need to point out a tangential situation wherein I
called an ambulance for a kid that had passed out and hit his head on the
sidewalk from being drunk & sleep-deprived in a below-freezing line-up
for tickets to see The Boss. All his friends could not wake him up. I had
one of those at-the-time ostentatious cell phones, and offered to call an
ambulance. His only friend who said anything was not to call, that they
knew he was passed-out just because of how much alcohol he had consumed.

So I asked her how long they were planning to leave him lying on the
sidewalk before dying of hypothermia / exposure, especially considering
how much alcohol he had consumed.

While she was coming up with an estimate, I dialed 911.

He woke while they were picking him up, but so drunk he couldn't
understand anything. They checked his head for marks / bumps but they
still needed him to sign a waiver. It was on a clipboard, so they just
stuck a pen in his hand and then moved the clipboard around like spinning
a cat's-cradle to make him sign a perfectly neat "X" on the form.
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Bryan Simmons wrote:

> On Wednesday, May 12, 2021 at 7:52:49 PM UTC-5, Mike Duffy wrote:
> > On Wed, 12 May 2021 12:08:02 -0700, Cindy Hamilton wrote:
> >
> > > No, they should use styrofoam coolers instead.

> > Cindy, you naughty girl! In another life, I sometimes put holes in
> > people's styrofoam coffee cups by squeezing orange peels to spray
> > the essential oils at the cups.
> >

> And you act like I'm naughty.
> >

> --Bryan


Ask them, theyre here. "You can stop saying that now. Thank you."

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dsi1 wrote:

> On Wednesday, May 12, 2021 at 10:41:16 AM UTC-10,
> wrote:
> > On Wednesday, May 12, 2021 at 2:11:51 PM UTC-5, Roy MacDonalds
> > wrote:
> > > US Janet wrote:
> > >
> > > >
> > > > 'Do not fill plastic bags with gasoline': US Consumer Product
> > > > Safety Commission weighs in on gas shortage in Southeast
> > > >
> > > > Really? If you have to tell people that, I say let'em go ahead
> > > > and do it. Just think, those people are out on the highway with
> > > > you.
> > > >
> > > > Janet US
> > > Brilliant liberal logic: "Just think, those people are out on the
> > > highway with you" AND " I say let'em go ahead and do
> > > it" lol you are stupid
> > >

> > You can brand that as "liberal," but that's just you also not
> > making sense. Regardless of anyone's ideology, transporting
> > gasoline unsafely is a bad thing. You could have commented upon the
> > stupidity of her post without suggesting that it was liberal or
> > conservative. I assume that she was not thinking through the
> > implications of these idiots endangering other drivers more than
> > they otherwise do, by having improperly packaged gasoline in their
> > cars. She didn't *think twice, post once*, and you didn't either.
> >
> > Reasonable policies to protect public health and safety shouldn't
> > be muddled up with ideology. This isn't about you or Janet, but
> > about everyone. Burning to death in car accidents should be
> > minimized.
> > >
> > > --
> > > The real Roy MacDonalds posts with uni-berly.de - individual.net
> > >

> > --Bryan

>
> I once changed the fuel filter in a car and the gas just gushed out.
> The fuel was moving towards the shop light on the ground. My guess
> was when the gas touched the bare bulb, the bulb would shatter and
> the gas would ignite. I was stuck under the car holding the end of
> the hose closed. That was pretty hairy. Obviously, I survived.


Ask them, theyre here. "You can stop saying that now. Thank you."

--
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Sqwertz wrote:

> On Wed, 12 May 2021 13:01:45 -0600, US Janet wrote:
>
> > 'Do not fill plastic bags with gasoline': US Consumer Product Safety
> > Commission weighs in on gas shortage in Southeast
> >
> > Really? If you have to tell people that, I say let'em go ahead and
> > do it. Just think, those people are out on the highway with you.

>
> Filling up plastic garbage cans with gas was a thing here during the
> gas crisis 6-7 years ago.
>
> But putting gas in plastic bags is practically a way of life in
> rural Alaska (they huff it).
>
> -sw


Ask them, theyre here. "You can stop saying that now. Thank you."

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Mike Duffy wrote:

> On Thu, 13 May 2021 09:32:39 -0400, Dave Smith wrote:
>
> > On 2021-05-13 4:17 a.m., Sqwertz wrote:

>
> >> But putting gas in plastic bags is practically a way of life in

> rural >> Alaska (they huff it).
>
> > It seems to be very popular in some communities.
> > [...] there were people passed out on the sidewalk.

>
> In their defence I need to point out a tangential situation wherein I
> called an ambulance for a kid that had passed out and hit his head on
> the sidewalk from being drunk & sleep-deprived in a below-freezing
> line-up for tickets to see The Boss. All his friends could not wake
> him up. I had one of those at-the-time ostentatious cell phones, and
> offered to call an ambulance. His only friend who said anything was
> not to call, that they knew he was passed-out just because of how
> much alcohol he had consumed.
>
> So I asked her how long they were planning to leave him lying on the
> sidewalk before dying of hypothermia / exposure, especially
> considering how much alcohol he had consumed.
>
> While she was coming up with an estimate, I dialed 911.
>
> He woke while they were picking him up, but so drunk he couldn't
> understand anything. They checked his head for marks / bumps but they
> still needed him to sign a waiver. It was on a clipboard, so they
> just stuck a pen in his hand and then moved the clipboard around like
> spinning a cat's-cradle to make him sign a perfectly neat "X" on the
> form.


Ask them, theyre here. "You can stop saying that now. Thank you."

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On 2021-05-13 1:32 p.m., Mike Duffy wrote:
> On Thu, 13 May 2021 09:32:39 -0400, Dave Smith wrote:
>
>> On 2021-05-13 4:17 a.m., Sqwertz wrote:

laska (they huff it).
>
>> It seems to be very popular in some communities.
>> [...] there were people passed out on the sidewalk.

>
> In their defence I need to point out a tangential situation wherein I
> called an ambulance for a kid that had passed out and hit his head on the
> sidewalk from being drunk & sleep-deprived in a below-freezing line-up
> for tickets to see The Boss. All his friends could not wake him up. I had
> one of those at-the-time ostentatious cell phones, and offered to call an
> ambulance. His only friend who said anything was not to call, that they
> knew he was passed-out just because of how much alcohol he had consumed.
>
> So I asked her how long they were planning to leave him lying on the
> sidewalk before dying of hypothermia / exposure, especially considering
> how much alcohol he had consumed.
>
> While she was coming up with an estimate, I dialed 911.
>
> He woke while they were picking him up, but so drunk he couldn't
> understand anything. They checked his head for marks / bumps but they
> still needed him to sign a waiver. It was on a clipboard, so they just
> stuck a pen in his hand and then moved the clipboard around like spinning
> a cat's-cradle to make him sign a perfectly neat "X" on the form.
>


Well yeah, That is really in their defense. Unfortunately, it is a
community with high rates of substance abuse. They like to blame
colonialization and residential schools, but the fact is that it started
with their first contact with alcohol. Those who whine about us not
hnouring treaties should have a look at some of the numbered treaties
with the tribes in the west. They forbid the sale and consumption of
alcohol to and by the Indians because it had wreaked havoc on them.

A friend of mine was part Inuit and his family moved back up to Baker
Lake. It was officially a dry community, but when the mail plane came
half the cargo was booze. Our friendship was seriously affected by his
drinking and drug use. I have to hand it to him, he kept it hidden
pretty well.


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On Thursday, May 13, 2021 at 3:11:10 PM UTC-4, Dave Smith wrote:
> On 2021-05-13 1:32 p.m., Mike Duffy wrote:
> > On Thu, 13 May 2021 09:32:39 -0400, Dave Smith wrote:
> >
> >> On 2021-05-13 4:17 a.m., Sqwertz wrote:

> laska (they huff it).
> >
> >> It seems to be very popular in some communities.
> >> [...] there were people passed out on the sidewalk.

> >
> > In their defence I need to point out a tangential situation wherein I
> > called an ambulance for a kid that had passed out and hit his head on the
> > sidewalk from being drunk & sleep-deprived in a below-freezing line-up
> > for tickets to see The Boss. All his friends could not wake him up. I had
> > one of those at-the-time ostentatious cell phones, and offered to call an
> > ambulance. His only friend who said anything was not to call, that they
> > knew he was passed-out just because of how much alcohol he had consumed.
> >
> > So I asked her how long they were planning to leave him lying on the
> > sidewalk before dying of hypothermia / exposure, especially considering
> > how much alcohol he had consumed.
> >
> > While she was coming up with an estimate, I dialed 911.
> >
> > He woke while they were picking him up, but so drunk he couldn't
> > understand anything. They checked his head for marks / bumps but they
> > still needed him to sign a waiver. It was on a clipboard, so they just
> > stuck a pen in his hand and then moved the clipboard around like spinning
> > a cat's-cradle to make him sign a perfectly neat "X" on the form.
> >

> Well yeah, That is really in their defense. Unfortunately, it is a
> community with high rates of substance abuse. They like to blame
> colonialization and residential schools, but the fact is that it started
> with their first contact with alcohol. Those who whine about us not
> hnouring treaties should have a look at some of the numbered treaties
> with the tribes in the west. They forbid the sale and consumption of
> alcohol to and by the Indians because it had wreaked havoc on them.


Its the poverty whenever you see run-down places. Because there is drinking, gun fascination and and drug use among teens in all communities. There is no way to stop it. That's why legalization is gaining steam.

If all that stuff is legal (like in many places in Europe) it actually goes out of style.
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On Thursday, May 13, 2021 at 3:44:12 PM UTC-4, bruce bowser wrote:
> On Thursday, May 13, 2021 at 3:11:10 PM UTC-4, Dave Smith wrote:
> > On 2021-05-13 1:32 p.m., Mike Duffy wrote:
> > > On Thu, 13 May 2021 09:32:39 -0400, Dave Smith wrote:
> > >
> > >> On 2021-05-13 4:17 a.m., Sqwertz wrote:

> > laska (they huff it).
> > >
> > >> It seems to be very popular in some communities.
> > >> [...] there were people passed out on the sidewalk.
> > >
> > > In their defence I need to point out a tangential situation wherein I
> > > called an ambulance for a kid that had passed out and hit his head on the
> > > sidewalk from being drunk & sleep-deprived in a below-freezing line-up
> > > for tickets to see The Boss. All his friends could not wake him up. I had
> > > one of those at-the-time ostentatious cell phones, and offered to call an
> > > ambulance. His only friend who said anything was not to call, that they
> > > knew he was passed-out just because of how much alcohol he had consumed.
> > >
> > > So I asked her how long they were planning to leave him lying on the
> > > sidewalk before dying of hypothermia / exposure, especially considering
> > > how much alcohol he had consumed.
> > >
> > > While she was coming up with an estimate, I dialed 911.
> > >
> > > He woke while they were picking him up, but so drunk he couldn't
> > > understand anything. They checked his head for marks / bumps but they
> > > still needed him to sign a waiver. It was on a clipboard, so they just
> > > stuck a pen in his hand and then moved the clipboard around like spinning
> > > a cat's-cradle to make him sign a perfectly neat "X" on the form.
> > >

> > Well yeah, That is really in their defense. Unfortunately, it is a
> > community with high rates of substance abuse. They like to blame
> > colonialization and residential schools, but the fact is that it started
> > with their first contact with alcohol. Those who whine about us not
> > hnouring treaties should have a look at some of the numbered treaties
> > with the tribes in the west. They forbid the sale and consumption of
> > alcohol to and by the Indians because it had wreaked havoc on them.

> Its the poverty whenever you see run-down places. Because there is drinking, gun fascination and and drug use among teens in all communities. There is no way to stop it. That's why legalization is gaining steam.
>
> If all that stuff is legal (like in many places in Europe) it actually goes out of style.


In Amsterdam and Zurich, drugs and guns are legal. Nobody gives a damn.
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bruce bowser wrote:

> On Thursday, May 13, 2021 at 3:44:12 PM UTC-4, bruce bowser wrote:
> > On Thursday, May 13, 2021 at 3:11:10 PM UTC-4, Dave Smith wrote:
> > > On 2021-05-13 1:32 p.m., Mike Duffy wrote:
> > > > On Thu, 13 May 2021 09:32:39 -0400, Dave Smith wrote:
> > > >
> > > >> On 2021-05-13 4:17 a.m., Sqwertz wrote:
> > > laska (they huff it).
> > > >
> > > >> It seems to be very popular in some communities.
> > > >> [...] there were people passed out on the sidewalk.
> > > >
> > > > In their defence I need to point out a tangential situation
> > > > wherein I called an ambulance for a kid that had passed out and
> > > > hit his head on the sidewalk from being drunk & sleep-deprived
> > > > in a below-freezing line-up for tickets to see The Boss. All
> > > > his friends could not wake him up. I had one of those
> > > > at-the-time ostentatious cell phones, and offered to call an
> > > > ambulance. His only friend who said anything was not to call,
> > > > that they knew he was passed-out just because of how much
> > > > alcohol he had consumed.
> > > >
> > > > So I asked her how long they were planning to leave him lying
> > > > on the sidewalk before dying of hypothermia / exposure,
> > > > especially considering how much alcohol he had consumed.
> > > >
> > > > While she was coming up with an estimate, I dialed 911.
> > > >
> > > > He woke while they were picking him up, but so drunk he
> > > > couldn't understand anything. They checked his head for marks /
> > > > bumps but they still needed him to sign a waiver. It was on a
> > > > clipboard, so they just stuck a pen in his hand and then moved
> > > > the clipboard around like spinning a cat's-cradle to make him
> > > > sign a perfectly neat "X" on the form.
> > > >
> > > Well yeah, That is really in their defense. Unfortunately, it is
> > > a community with high rates of substance abuse. They like to
> > > blame colonialization and residential schools, but the fact is
> > > that it started with their first contact with alcohol. Those who
> > > whine about us not hnouring treaties should have a look at some
> > > of the numbered treaties with the tribes in the west. They forbid
> > > the sale and consumption of alcohol to and by the Indians because
> > > it had wreaked havoc on them.

> > Its the poverty whenever you see run-down places. Because there is
> > drinking, gun fascination and and drug use among teens in all
> > communities. There is no way to stop it. That's why legalization is
> > gaining steam.
> >
> > If all that stuff is legal (like in many places in Europe) it
> > actually goes out of style.

>
> In Amsterdam and Zurich, drugs and guns are legal. Nobody gives a
> damn.


Guns are not legal in Amsterdam. Drugs aren't legal either, except
weed. Don't talk poop.

--
The real Walter de Rochebrune posts with uni-berlin.de - individual.net


  #26 (permalink)   Report Post  
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On Thursday, May 13, 2021 at 9:11:10 AM UTC-10, Dave Smith wrote:
> On 2021-05-13 1:32 p.m., Mike Duffy wrote:
> > On Thu, 13 May 2021 09:32:39 -0400, Dave Smith wrote:
> >
> >> On 2021-05-13 4:17 a.m., Sqwertz wrote:

> laska (they huff it).
> >
> >> It seems to be very popular in some communities.
> >> [...] there were people passed out on the sidewalk.

> >
> > In their defence I need to point out a tangential situation wherein I
> > called an ambulance for a kid that had passed out and hit his head on the
> > sidewalk from being drunk & sleep-deprived in a below-freezing line-up
> > for tickets to see The Boss. All his friends could not wake him up. I had
> > one of those at-the-time ostentatious cell phones, and offered to call an
> > ambulance. His only friend who said anything was not to call, that they
> > knew he was passed-out just because of how much alcohol he had consumed.
> >
> > So I asked her how long they were planning to leave him lying on the
> > sidewalk before dying of hypothermia / exposure, especially considering
> > how much alcohol he had consumed.
> >
> > While she was coming up with an estimate, I dialed 911.
> >
> > He woke while they were picking him up, but so drunk he couldn't
> > understand anything. They checked his head for marks / bumps but they
> > still needed him to sign a waiver. It was on a clipboard, so they just
> > stuck a pen in his hand and then moved the clipboard around like spinning
> > a cat's-cradle to make him sign a perfectly neat "X" on the form.
> >

> Well yeah, That is really in their defense. Unfortunately, it is a
> community with high rates of substance abuse. They like to blame
> colonialization and residential schools, but the fact is that it started
> with their first contact with alcohol. Those who whine about us not
> hnouring treaties should have a look at some of the numbered treaties
> with the tribes in the west. They forbid the sale and consumption of
> alcohol to and by the Indians because it had wreaked havoc on them.
>
> A friend of mine was part Inuit and his family moved back up to Baker
> Lake. It was officially a dry community, but when the mail plane came
> half the cargo was booze. Our friendship was seriously affected by his
> drinking and drug use. I have to hand it to him, he kept it hidden
> pretty well.


Alcohol is a big problem for the white man too. rfc needs a Usenet Posting Field Sobriety test big time! I figures most of yoose is posting drunk off your asses.
  #27 (permalink)   Report Post  
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On 2021-05-13 3:45 p.m., bruce bowser wrote:
> On Thursday, May 13, 2021 at 3:44:12 PM UTC-4, bruce bowser wrote:
>> On Thursday, May 13, 2021 at 3:11:10 PM UTC-4, Dave Smith wrote:
>>> On 2021-05-13 1:32 p.m., Mike Duffy wrote:


>>> Well yeah, That is really in their defense. Unfortunately, it is a
>>> community with high rates of substance abuse. They like to blame
>>> colonialization and residential schools, but the fact is that it started
>>> with their first contact with alcohol. Those who whine about us not
>>> hnouring treaties should have a look at some of the numbered treaties
>>> with the tribes in the west. They forbid the sale and consumption of
>>> alcohol to and by the Indians because it had wreaked havoc on them.

>> Its the poverty whenever you see run-down places. Because there is drinking, gun fascination and and drug use among teens in all communities. There is no way to stop it. That's why legalization is gaining steam.
>>
>> If all that stuff is legal (like in many places in Europe) it actually goes out of style.

>
> In Amsterdam and Zurich, drugs and guns are legal. Nobody gives a damn.
>



That is not at all accurate. Drugs are not legal in Amsterdam. It's
more like criminalization. They police don't bother with it. Guns are
prohibited.
  #28 (permalink)   Report Post  
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On 2021-05-13 1:45 p.m., bruce bowser wrote:
> On Thursday, May 13, 2021 at 3:44:12 PM UTC-4, bruce bowser wrote:
>> On Thursday, May 13, 2021 at 3:11:10 PM UTC-4, Dave Smith wrote:
>>> On 2021-05-13 1:32 p.m., Mike Duffy wrote:
>>>> On Thu, 13 May 2021 09:32:39 -0400, Dave Smith wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> On 2021-05-13 4:17 a.m., Sqwertz wrote:
>>> laska (they huff it).
>>>>
>>>>> It seems to be very popular in some communities.
>>>>> [...] there were people passed out on the sidewalk.
>>>>
>>>> In their defence I need to point out a tangential situation wherein I
>>>> called an ambulance for a kid that had passed out and hit his head on the
>>>> sidewalk from being drunk & sleep-deprived in a below-freezing line-up
>>>> for tickets to see The Boss. All his friends could not wake him up. I had
>>>> one of those at-the-time ostentatious cell phones, and offered to call an
>>>> ambulance. His only friend who said anything was not to call, that they
>>>> knew he was passed-out just because of how much alcohol he had consumed.
>>>>
>>>> So I asked her how long they were planning to leave him lying on the
>>>> sidewalk before dying of hypothermia / exposure, especially considering
>>>> how much alcohol he had consumed.
>>>>
>>>> While she was coming up with an estimate, I dialed 911.
>>>>
>>>> He woke while they were picking him up, but so drunk he couldn't
>>>> understand anything. They checked his head for marks / bumps but they
>>>> still needed him to sign a waiver. It was on a clipboard, so they just
>>>> stuck a pen in his hand and then moved the clipboard around like spinning
>>>> a cat's-cradle to make him sign a perfectly neat "X" on the form.
>>>>
>>> Well yeah, That is really in their defense. Unfortunately, it is a
>>> community with high rates of substance abuse. They like to blame
>>> colonialization and residential schools, but the fact is that it started
>>> with their first contact with alcohol. Those who whine about us not
>>> hnouring treaties should have a look at some of the numbered treaties
>>> with the tribes in the west. They forbid the sale and consumption of
>>> alcohol to and by the Indians because it had wreaked havoc on them.

>> Its the poverty whenever you see run-down places. Because there is drinking, gun fascination and and drug use among teens in all communities. There is no way to stop it. That's why legalization is gaining steam.
>>
>> If all that stuff is legal (like in many places in Europe) it actually goes out of style.

>
> In Amsterdam and Zurich, drugs and guns are legal. Nobody gives a damn.
>

The Dutch are saved by being dammed.
  #29 (permalink)   Report Post  
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US Janet wrote:

>
> 'Do not fill plastic bags with gasoline': US Consumer Product Safety
> Commission weighs in on gas shortage in Southeast
>
> Really? If you have to tell people that, I say let'em go ahead and do
> it. Just think, those people are out on the highway with you.
>
> Janet US



Ask them, theyre here. "You can stop saying that now. Thank you."

--
The real Walter de Rochebrune posts with uni-berly.de - individual.net
  #30 (permalink)   Report Post  
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Sqwertz wrote:

> On Wed, 12 May 2021 13:01:45 -0600, US Janet wrote:
>
> > 'Do not fill plastic bags with gasoline': US Consumer Product Safety
> > Commission weighs in on gas shortage in Southeast
> >
> > Really? If you have to tell people that, I say let'em go ahead and
> > do it. Just think, those people are out on the highway with you.

>
> Filling up plastic garbage cans with gas was a thing here during the
> gas crisis 6-7 years ago.
>
> But putting gas in plastic bags is practically a way of life in
> rural Alaska (they huff it).
>
> -sw



Ask them, theyre here. "You can stop saying that now. Thank you."

--
The real Walter de Rochebrune posts with uni-berly.de - individual.net


  #31 (permalink)   Report Post  
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GM GM is offline
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Posts: 2,482
Default Way OT; from Consumer Safety org.

On Thursday, May 13, 2021 at 4:40:15 PM UTC-5, Graham wrote:
> On 2021-05-13 1:45 p.m., bruce bowser wrote:
> > On Thursday, May 13, 2021 at 3:44:12 PM UTC-4, bruce bowser wrote:
> >> On Thursday, May 13, 2021 at 3:11:10 PM UTC-4, Dave Smith wrote:
> >>> On 2021-05-13 1:32 p.m., Mike Duffy wrote:
> >>>> On Thu, 13 May 2021 09:32:39 -0400, Dave Smith wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>>> On 2021-05-13 4:17 a.m., Sqwertz wrote:
> >>> laska (they huff it).
> >>>>
> >>>>> It seems to be very popular in some communities.
> >>>>> [...] there were people passed out on the sidewalk.
> >>>>
> >>>> In their defence I need to point out a tangential situation wherein I
> >>>> called an ambulance for a kid that had passed out and hit his head on the
> >>>> sidewalk from being drunk & sleep-deprived in a below-freezing line-up
> >>>> for tickets to see The Boss. All his friends could not wake him up. I had
> >>>> one of those at-the-time ostentatious cell phones, and offered to call an
> >>>> ambulance. His only friend who said anything was not to call, that they
> >>>> knew he was passed-out just because of how much alcohol he had consumed.
> >>>>
> >>>> So I asked her how long they were planning to leave him lying on the
> >>>> sidewalk before dying of hypothermia / exposure, especially considering
> >>>> how much alcohol he had consumed.
> >>>>
> >>>> While she was coming up with an estimate, I dialed 911.
> >>>>
> >>>> He woke while they were picking him up, but so drunk he couldn't
> >>>> understand anything. They checked his head for marks / bumps but they
> >>>> still needed him to sign a waiver. It was on a clipboard, so they just
> >>>> stuck a pen in his hand and then moved the clipboard around like spinning
> >>>> a cat's-cradle to make him sign a perfectly neat "X" on the form.
> >>>>
> >>> Well yeah, That is really in their defense. Unfortunately, it is a
> >>> community with high rates of substance abuse. They like to blame
> >>> colonialization and residential schools, but the fact is that it started
> >>> with their first contact with alcohol. Those who whine about us not
> >>> hnouring treaties should have a look at some of the numbered treaties
> >>> with the tribes in the west. They forbid the sale and consumption of
> >>> alcohol to and by the Indians because it had wreaked havoc on them.
> >> Its the poverty whenever you see run-down places. Because there is drinking, gun fascination and and drug use among teens in all communities. There is no way to stop it. That's why legalization is gaining steam.
> >>
> >> If all that stuff is legal (like in many places in Europe) it actually goes out of style.

> >
> > In Amsterdam and Zurich, drugs and guns are legal. Nobody gives a damn.
> >

> The Dutch are saved by being dammed.



"The Dutch are chatterboxes, dilettantes and swindlers..."

- Joseph Goebbels

--
Best
Greg
  #32 (permalink)   Report Post  
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Posts: 4,452
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Dave Smith wrote:
> On 2021-05-13 1:32 p.m., Mike Duffy wrote:
>> On Thu, 13 May 2021 09:32:39 -0400, Dave Smith wrote:
>>
>>> On 2021-05-13 4:17 a.m., Sqwertz wrote:

> laska (they huff it).
>>
>>> It seems to be very popular in some communities.
>>> [...] there were people passed out on the sidewalk.

>>
>> In their defence I need to point out a tangential situation
>> wherein I
>> called an ambulance for a kid that had passed out and hit his
>> head on the
>> sidewalk from being drunk & sleep-deprived in a below-freezing
>> line-up
>> for tickets to see The Boss. All his friends could not wake him
>> up. I had
>> one of those at-the-time ostentatious cell phones, and offered to
>> call an
>> ambulance. His only friend who said anything was not to call,
>> that they
>> knew he was passed-out just because of how much alcohol he had
>> consumed.
>>
>> So I asked her how long they were planning to leave him lying on the
>> sidewalk before dying of hypothermia / exposure, especially
>> considering
>> how much alcohol he had consumed.
>>
>> While she was coming up with an estimate, I dialed 911.
>>
>> He woke while they were picking him up, but so drunk he couldn't
>> understand anything. They checked his head for marks / bumps but
>> they
>> still needed him to sign a waiver. It was on a clipboard, so they
>> just
>> stuck a pen in his hand and then moved the clipboard around like
>> spinning
>> a cat's-cradle to make him sign a perfectly neat "X" on the form.
>>

>
> Well yeah, That is really in their defense.* Unfortunately, it is a
> community with high rates of substance abuse.* They like to blame
> colonialization and residential schools, but the fact is that it
> started with their first contact with alcohol. Those who whine
> about us not hnouring treaties should have a look at some of the
> numbered treaties with the tribes in the west.* They forbid the
> sale and consumption of alcohol to and by the Indians because it
> had wreaked havoc on them.
>
> A friend of mine was part Inuit and his family moved back up to
> Baker Lake. It was officially a dry* community, but when the mail
> plane came half the cargo was booze. Our friendship was seriously
> affected by his drinking and drug use.* I have to hand it to him,
> he kept it hidden pretty well.
>
>


I thought canadians are close to perfect. Never drink booze, never
even fart outside the government regulation.

Sounds like you have an injun uprising.

Best call the goddam mounted police, then hide dave!






  #33 (permalink)   Report Post  
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Walter de Rochebrune wrote:
> bruce bowser wrote:
>
>> On Thursday, May 13, 2021 at 3:44:12 PM UTC-4, bruce bowser wrote:
>>> On Thursday, May 13, 2021 at 3:11:10 PM UTC-4, Dave Smith wrote:
>>>> On 2021-05-13 1:32 p.m., Mike Duffy wrote:
>>>>> On Thu, 13 May 2021 09:32:39 -0400, Dave Smith wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> On 2021-05-13 4:17 a.m., Sqwertz wrote:
>>>> laska (they huff it).
>>>>>
>>>>>> It seems to be very popular in some communities.
>>>>>> [...] there were people passed out on the sidewalk.
>>>>>
>>>>> In their defence I need to point out a tangential situation
>>>>> wherein I called an ambulance for a kid that had passed out and
>>>>> hit his head on the sidewalk from being drunk & sleep-deprived
>>>>> in a below-freezing line-up for tickets to see The Boss. All
>>>>> his friends could not wake him up. I had one of those
>>>>> at-the-time ostentatious cell phones, and offered to call an
>>>>> ambulance. His only friend who said anything was not to call,
>>>>> that they knew he was passed-out just because of how much
>>>>> alcohol he had consumed.
>>>>>
>>>>> So I asked her how long they were planning to leave him lying
>>>>> on the sidewalk before dying of hypothermia / exposure,
>>>>> especially considering how much alcohol he had consumed.
>>>>>
>>>>> While she was coming up with an estimate, I dialed 911.
>>>>>
>>>>> He woke while they were picking him up, but so drunk he
>>>>> couldn't understand anything. They checked his head for marks /
>>>>> bumps but they still needed him to sign a waiver. It was on a
>>>>> clipboard, so they just stuck a pen in his hand and then moved
>>>>> the clipboard around like spinning a cat's-cradle to make him
>>>>> sign a perfectly neat "X" on the form.
>>>>>
>>>> Well yeah, That is really in their defense. Unfortunately, it is
>>>> a community with high rates of substance abuse. They like to
>>>> blame colonialization and residential schools, but the fact is
>>>> that it started with their first contact with alcohol. Those who
>>>> whine about us not hnouring treaties should have a look at some
>>>> of the numbered treaties with the tribes in the west. They forbid
>>>> the sale and consumption of alcohol to and by the Indians because
>>>> it had wreaked havoc on them.
>>> Its the poverty whenever you see run-down places. Because there is
>>> drinking, gun fascination and and drug use among teens in all
>>> communities. There is no way to stop it. That's why legalization is
>>> gaining steam.
>>>
>>> If all that stuff is legal (like in many places in Europe) it
>>> actually goes out of style.

>>
>> In Amsterdam and Zurich, drugs and guns are legal. Nobody gives a
>> damn.

>
> Guns are not legal in Amsterdam. Drugs aren't legal either, except
> weed. Don't talk poop.
>


Have another whiff master druce.


  #34 (permalink)   Report Post  
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GM wrote:
> On Thursday, May 13, 2021 at 4:40:15 PM UTC-5, Graham wrote:
>> On 2021-05-13 1:45 p.m., bruce bowser wrote:
>>> On Thursday, May 13, 2021 at 3:44:12 PM UTC-4, bruce bowser wrote:
>>>> On Thursday, May 13, 2021 at 3:11:10 PM UTC-4, Dave Smith wrote:
>>>>> On 2021-05-13 1:32 p.m., Mike Duffy wrote:
>>>>>> On Thu, 13 May 2021 09:32:39 -0400, Dave Smith wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On 2021-05-13 4:17 a.m., Sqwertz wrote:
>>>>> laska (they huff it).
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> It seems to be very popular in some communities.
>>>>>>> [...] there were people passed out on the sidewalk.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> In their defence I need to point out a tangential situation wherein I
>>>>>> called an ambulance for a kid that had passed out and hit his head on the
>>>>>> sidewalk from being drunk & sleep-deprived in a below-freezing line-up
>>>>>> for tickets to see The Boss. All his friends could not wake him up. I had
>>>>>> one of those at-the-time ostentatious cell phones, and offered to call an
>>>>>> ambulance. His only friend who said anything was not to call, that they
>>>>>> knew he was passed-out just because of how much alcohol he had consumed.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> So I asked her how long they were planning to leave him lying on the
>>>>>> sidewalk before dying of hypothermia / exposure, especially considering
>>>>>> how much alcohol he had consumed.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> While she was coming up with an estimate, I dialed 911.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> He woke while they were picking him up, but so drunk he couldn't
>>>>>> understand anything. They checked his head for marks / bumps but they
>>>>>> still needed him to sign a waiver. It was on a clipboard, so they just
>>>>>> stuck a pen in his hand and then moved the clipboard around like spinning
>>>>>> a cat's-cradle to make him sign a perfectly neat "X" on the form.
>>>>>>
>>>>> Well yeah, That is really in their defense. Unfortunately, it is a
>>>>> community with high rates of substance abuse. They like to blame
>>>>> colonialization and residential schools, but the fact is that it started
>>>>> with their first contact with alcohol. Those who whine about us not
>>>>> hnouring treaties should have a look at some of the numbered treaties
>>>>> with the tribes in the west. They forbid the sale and consumption of
>>>>> alcohol to and by the Indians because it had wreaked havoc on them.
>>>> Its the poverty whenever you see run-down places. Because there is drinking, gun fascination and and drug use among teens in all communities. There is no way to stop it. That's why legalization is gaining steam.
>>>>
>>>> If all that stuff is legal (like in many places in Europe) it actually goes out of style.
>>>
>>> In Amsterdam and Zurich, drugs and guns are legal. Nobody gives a damn.
>>>

>> The Dutch are saved by being dammed.

>
>
> "The Dutch are chatterboxes, dilettantes and swindlers..."
>
> - Joseph Goebbels
>


And Ass sniffers.


  #35 (permalink)   Report Post  
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Posts: 4,452
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dsi1 wrote:
> On Thursday, May 13, 2021 at 9:11:10 AM UTC-10, Dave Smith wrote:
>> On 2021-05-13 1:32 p.m., Mike Duffy wrote:
>>> On Thu, 13 May 2021 09:32:39 -0400, Dave Smith wrote:
>>>
>>>> On 2021-05-13 4:17 a.m., Sqwertz wrote:

>> laska (they huff it).
>>>
>>>> It seems to be very popular in some communities.
>>>> [...] there were people passed out on the sidewalk.
>>>
>>> In their defence I need to point out a tangential situation wherein I
>>> called an ambulance for a kid that had passed out and hit his head on the
>>> sidewalk from being drunk & sleep-deprived in a below-freezing line-up
>>> for tickets to see The Boss. All his friends could not wake him up. I had
>>> one of those at-the-time ostentatious cell phones, and offered to call an
>>> ambulance. His only friend who said anything was not to call, that they
>>> knew he was passed-out just because of how much alcohol he had consumed.
>>>
>>> So I asked her how long they were planning to leave him lying on the
>>> sidewalk before dying of hypothermia / exposure, especially considering
>>> how much alcohol he had consumed.
>>>
>>> While she was coming up with an estimate, I dialed 911.
>>>
>>> He woke while they were picking him up, but so drunk he couldn't
>>> understand anything. They checked his head for marks / bumps but they
>>> still needed him to sign a waiver. It was on a clipboard, so they just
>>> stuck a pen in his hand and then moved the clipboard around like spinning
>>> a cat's-cradle to make him sign a perfectly neat "X" on the form.
>>>

>> Well yeah, That is really in their defense. Unfortunately, it is a
>> community with high rates of substance abuse. They like to blame
>> colonialization and residential schools, but the fact is that it started
>> with their first contact with alcohol. Those who whine about us not
>> hnouring treaties should have a look at some of the numbered treaties
>> with the tribes in the west. They forbid the sale and consumption of
>> alcohol to and by the Indians because it had wreaked havoc on them.
>>
>> A friend of mine was part Inuit and his family moved back up to Baker
>> Lake. It was officially a dry community, but when the mail plane came
>> half the cargo was booze. Our friendship was seriously affected by his
>> drinking and drug use. I have to hand it to him, he kept it hidden
>> pretty well.

>
> Alcohol is a big problem for the white man too. rfc needs a Usenet Posting Field Sobriety test big time! I figures most of yoose is posting drunk off your asses.
>


Indeed! Only gooks are sober!

I wouldn't even trust hiwaiians.




  #36 (permalink)   Report Post  
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Hank Rogers wrote:

> Walter de Rochebrune wrote:
> > bruce bowser wrote:
> >
> > > On Thursday, May 13, 2021 at 3:44:12 PM UTC-4, bruce bowser wrote:
> > > > On Thursday, May 13, 2021 at 3:11:10 PM UTC-4, Dave Smith wrote:
> > > > > On 2021-05-13 1:32 p.m., Mike Duffy wrote:
> > > > > > On Thu, 13 May 2021 09:32:39 -0400, Dave Smith wrote:
> > > > > >
> > > > > > > On 2021-05-13 4:17 a.m., Sqwertz wrote:
> > > > > laska (they huff it).
> > > > > >
> > > > > > > It seems to be very popular in some communities.
> > > > > > > [...] there were people passed out on the sidewalk.
> > > > > >
> > > > > > In their defence I need to point out a tangential situation
> > > > > > wherein I called an ambulance for a kid that had passed out
> > > > > > and hit his head on the sidewalk from being drunk &
> > > > > > sleep-deprived in a below-freezing line-up for tickets to
> > > > > > see The Boss. All his friends could not wake him up. I had
> > > > > > one of those at-the-time ostentatious cell phones, and
> > > > > > offered to call an ambulance. His only friend who said
> > > > > > anything was not to call, that they knew he was passed-out
> > > > > > just because of how much alcohol he had consumed.
> > > > > >
> > > > > > So I asked her how long they were planning to leave him
> > > > > > lying on the sidewalk before dying of hypothermia /
> > > > > > exposure, especially considering how much alcohol he had
> > > > > > consumed.
> > > > > >
> > > > > > While she was coming up with an estimate, I dialed 911.
> > > > > >
> > > > > > He woke while they were picking him up, but so drunk he
> > > > > > couldn't understand anything. They checked his head for
> > > > > > marks / bumps but they still needed him to sign a waiver.
> > > > > > It was on a clipboard, so they just stuck a pen in his hand
> > > > > > and then moved the clipboard around like spinning a
> > > > > > cat's-cradle to make him sign a perfectly neat "X" on the
> > > > > > form.
> > > > > >
> > > > > Well yeah, That is really in their defense. Unfortunately, it
> > > > > is a community with high rates of substance abuse. They like
> > > > > to blame colonialization and residential schools, but the
> > > > > fact is that it started with their first contact with
> > > > > alcohol. Those who whine about us not hnouring treaties
> > > > > should have a look at some of the numbered treaties with the
> > > > > tribes in the west. They forbid the sale and consumption of
> > > > > alcohol to and by the Indians because it had wreaked havoc on
> > > > > them.
> > > > Its the poverty whenever you see run-down places. Because there
> > > > is drinking, gun fascination and and drug use among teens in all
> > > > communities. There is no way to stop it. That's why
> > > > legalization is gaining steam.
> > > >
> > > > If all that stuff is legal (like in many places in Europe) it
> > > > actually goes out of style.
> > >
> > > In Amsterdam and Zurich, drugs and guns are legal. Nobody gives a
> > > damn.

> >
> > Guns are not legal in Amsterdam. Drugs aren't legal either, except
> > weed. Don't talk poop.
> >

>
> Have another whiff master druce.



Ask them, theyre here. "You can stop saying that now. Thank you."

--
The real Walter de Rochebrune posts with uni-berly.de - individual.net
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