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Everything posted by warpedskydiver
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Do you have any idea how much like Joe McCarthy that sounds? Do you know for a fact McCarthy was wrong? I bet some people never contemplated that the KGB would furnish files to the FBI someday.
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I was referring to the ideals they both share, shame of the US, seeming to care more about the enemy of the US than the Us and it's citizens. that kind of shit. Yeah I am a sheep huh? BTW I know you don't mean that hey can I be uptight and conservative as well? Maybe even a stick in the mud or a pantywaist? I am looking for a new hobby in case I run out of others. ooh oohh I know, I can be a dyed in the wool redneck, yeah that's the ticket! I bet Narci doesn't know what to think about me actually
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Well now that you've convinced me of that, any false accusation against her is appropriate. Hey, did you guys hear that Jane Fonda steals bread from poor people? And how about the one where Jane Fonda burnt down a disabled children's hospital and toasted marshmallows over the flames of the screaming kids' medicines? And there there's the time Jane Fonda stuck her index finger in the eye of a baby harp seal up to the knuckle just so she could taste its blood and use the eyeball for ceremonial satanic worship. I am sure that you idolize her, as you are both of the same ideological genre.
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Here is what I look like http://www.ufowatchdog.com/jrod.html
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U.S. Seeks Soldiers in Iraq Death Triangle
warpedskydiver replied to warpedskydiver's topic in Speakers Corner
Sounds strange, I'm guessing its so when they declare him KIA his widow will recieve a better pension. -
the DeltaII?
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Freak Brothers Flash Back
warpedskydiver replied to freakbrother's topic in Skydiving History & Trivia
Woohoo! -
tell your dates to quit using rufinol on you
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I can leave a cooked steak on a coffee table and Tyson will not touch it even if I leave it all night long. Beauty the mixed breed would steal candy from a baby... Damn Tyson has more self control than a skydiver!
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OUT!!! as in out of the room we are eating or as in stop and leave the area OUT as in let go of the mangled arm tha is why Raus is used as to not confuse the two commands
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Damn I miss my Father
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did you ever teach her the command "Raus!"
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Or is it that you piss in water bowls?
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Angry Neighbors Battle It Out With Signs
warpedskydiver replied to warpedskydiver's topic in Speakers Corner
Angry Neighbors Battle It Out With Signs By Associated Press Fri Jun 16, 8:13 PM COLUMBIA CITY, Ind. - A feud between neighbors that began over roving pets has sparked a biting dialogue using homemade signs along the side of the road. Pam and Ron Castle say their neighbor, Larry Shrock, shot their beagle mix named Jake on June 1 and burned his body in an incinerator. According to a police report, the Shrocks said they asked the Castles to keep their dogs at home, worried the animals would try to attack rabbit hutches on their property. When the dogs returned, Shrock told police he shot one of the animals. No charges have been filed. Unsatisfied with the response from police and his neighbors, Ron Castle used red paint to write on 4-foot-by-8-foot plywood board: "My Neighbor, Larry Shrock, House on Left up on Hill (arrow) Shot My Dog, Then Burned It." He added an expletive to the sign he posted alongside the road near his house. "I didn't know what else to do," he said. "What can I do to this man that has caused me so much grief?" On June 7, after a second neighbor complained Shrock shot another dog, Castle took out the paint again. "Mowrey Road Dog Killer Ahead On Left, Two Shot and Killed, One Burned." The Shrocks fought back with blue paint and a sign of their own. "Neighbor's Dog Killed My Pet Bunnies, Scared My Granddaughter. I Warned Him Twice." Castle disagreed, and penned a third sign, which denied the rabbit allegations. Shrock has since taken down his sign, but Castle's three messages remain visible to eastbound drivers who crest a small hill in the community of about 7,800 residents about 20 miles northwest of Fort Wayne. "My wife and I fear for our lives," Shrock told The Journal Gazette of Fort Wayne.Quote They should fear for their lives until their entire family is shot dead and burned in the very same incinerator. Posting signs is for pussies. I am sorry if this message has offended any pussies. -
Sheehan Supports U.S. Deserters in Canada
warpedskydiver replied to warpedskydiver's topic in Speakers Corner
Sheehan Supports U.S. Deserters in Canada Anti-war activist Cindy Sheehan, left, hugs an unidentified U.S. military deserter, at the... Sheehan Supports U.S. Deserters in Canada Sunday, June 18, 2006 4:37 AM EDT The Associated Press By CAROLYN THOMPSON FORT ERIE, Ontario (AP) — A group of American military deserters publicly embraced their new lives in Canada on Saturday with the support of "peace mom" Cindy Sheehan, who said she wished the son she lost in Iraq was among them. "I begged him not to go to Iraq," the anti-war activist said through tears at a rally in support of the former soldiers, who wore black T-shirts emblazoned with "AWOL." "And I wish he was standing up here with these people because he didn't want to go." Sheehan was making her second visit to Canada in support of sanctuary for those fleeing the U.S. military. The Canadian government has so far denied political asylum to U.S. soldiers who have sought it but appeals are pending. "They're trying to deport me," said Darrell Anderson of Lexington, Ky., who arrived in Canada by way of Niagara Falls in January 2005. He spent seven months in Iraq with the Army's 1st Armored Division and received a purple heart following a roadside bomb attack before deciding during a leave he would not go back. "When I was in Iraq, we were killing innocent people for oil. It was obvious they didn't want us there," said Anderson, 24, who is petitioning to remain in Canada. The gathering at a park in the town of Fort Erie, across the border from Buffalo, N.Y., was organized by peace groups on both sides of the border. About 20 former U.S. soldiers, referred to as war resisters, have applied for refugee status in Canada. Organizers estimated there may be as many as 200 soldiers in the country who have not yet sought formal protection. "They say we're traitors, we're deserters," said former Marine Chris Magaoay, 20, of the Hawaiian island of Maui. "No, I'm a Marine and I stand up for what I believe in, and I believe the Constitution of the United States of America is being pushed aside as a scrap piece of paper." The soldiers thanked Canadians for their hospitality and were cheered by about 100 in an audience that included Iraq veterans opposed to the war and Vietnam-era resisters who sought refuge in Canada decades earlier. "I know that their choice has been difficult but I know that they made the right choice," said Bruce Beyer, who spent five years in Canada as a draft resister during Vietnam. "I know that they miss their family and their friends that they're cut off from," Beyer said. "But I know that you Canadians have stepped up and stood behind them and I thank you from the bottom of my heart." Sheehan, who energized the anti-war movement last summer with her monthlong protest outside President Bush's Texas ranch, said she has spent time with many of the resisters. "They're moral human beings who don't want to go to Iraq and kill innocent people to line the pockets of George Bush and the war machine," she said. Quote Americans must realize that there are agents* operating in this Country attempting to undermine our Country and it's leadership through our democratic principles in an effort to achieve a foreign country's goal. A prime example of such a person during the Vietnam War was Jane Fonda, an admitted Socialist, who blatantly supported North Vietnam. * Agent - Any person who works to obtain the goals of another nation either for money or for their own political beliefs -
Paper: Boy Once Falsely Accused Arrested
warpedskydiver replied to warpedskydiver's topic in Speakers Corner
Paper: Boy Once Falsely Accused Arrested Saturday, June 17, 2006 8:16 PM EDT The Associated Press CALUMET PARK, Ill. (AP) — A boy who won a $2 million settlement with the city of Chicago after being wrongly accused of murdering an 11-year-old girl in 1998 has been arrested in a double shooting in a south suburb, according to a news report. The boy, now 15, was caught committing the crime on video surveillance with his older brother, Calumet Park Cmdr. Mel Davis told the Chicago Sun-Times for its Saturday editions. "He turned around and looked at the camera with a gun in his hand," Davis said. "It doesn't get any clearer than that." One of the shooting victims, whose name was not released, was on life support at an area hospital, Calumet Park police Chief Mark Davis told the paper. The other victim suffered a bullet wound in the leg, but has talked to investigators. Calumet Park police declined to comment to The Associated Press on Saturday and a spokesman for the prosecutor's office did not immediately return a telephone call. The shooting happened around noon Wednesday at a gas station. The victims were parked in a car at the station when the 15-year-old allegedly approached the driver's side door and his brother approached the passenger's side, each holding handguns, the police chief said. The teenager has not given a statement to police because his mother is "concerned for his safety and wanted to be in the room with him while he was being questioned," Mel Davis said. In 1998 the teen, then 7, and another boy, then 8, were accused in the death of Ryan Harris, making them the youngest murder suspects in the nation at the time. It took almost a month before they were cleared in the killing after tests showed semen on the girl's clothing could not have come from the children. DNA tests later led prosecutors to charge Floyd Durr, a convicted sex offender, who pleaded guilty in April and was sentenced to life in prison.Quote 2 million bucks, and he chose to be what he could have escaped -
Girl Scouts Meet in Prison, With Fathers
warpedskydiver replied to warpedskydiver's topic in Speakers Corner
Girl Scouts Meet in Prison, With Fathers Saturday, June 17, 2006 5:31 PM EDT The Associated Press By DEBORAH HASTINGS LIMA, Ohio (AP) — The convicts stand in a circle, three fingers pointed skyward, nine faces set in stone, their deep, male voices raised in slow recitation: "On my honor, I will try, "To serve God and my country, "To help people at all times, "And to live by the Girl Scout Law." At their sides stand their daughters, their small fingers also raised in the Girl Scout salute. This is the regular monthly meeting of Troop 884 — not in a school, not in a church, but at the Allen Correctional Institution, a medium-security prison rising from the rolling farmlands of northwestern Ohio. Lugging boxes filled with sandwiches, Hawaiian Punch, potato chips and sashes bearing merit badges, the girls file into a linoleum-floored visiting room on Wednesday afternoon. They range in age from 6 to 12; they are in shorts and purple Girl Scout T-shirts, in tennis shoes and ankle socks, their hair bouncing in pony tails, swept back with headbands, tied with sparkling barrettes. Their dads — most of them imprisoned for drug trafficking, serving sentences ranging from 36 months to 18 years — hang back for a few heartbeats, adjusting to an abrupt shift in reality. They have just been strip-searched before being allowed to change into identical polo shirts and khaki trousers, rewards for good behavior and participating in this program. Eight-year-old Paige, a precocious child with crooked teeth and chin-length brown hair, gathers the ends of her big T-shirt, trying to tie a knot so it hangs just so on her tiny waist. Her dad, Ben, who just turned 27 while serving a five-year sentence for selling drugs, appears baffled by how to solve his little girl's fashion dilemma. He tentatively puts an arm around her shoulders, as if afraid he might break her, and lowers his blue eyes to her hazel ones. "Hi," he says. And so the meeting begins. It takes about 30 minutes and copious amounts of sandwiches and chips and bright pink drinks for dads and daughters to catch up and settle in. Then there are cake and cookies and games and merit badge work and projects designed to help parent and child — the latest is a lesson in how to open a small business. Many nail and hair salons are planned. The meetings last about two hours, give or take the time it takes to herd a giggling gaggle of girls, running high on refined sugar, out the door. The fathers put on brave faces that drop like rain the minute their daughters leave. This Daddies and Daughters chapter is a pilot, part of the Girl Scouts' Beyond Bars program, a 14-year-old effort funded by the Justice Department. It is the only one that unites fathers and daughters. Every other troop — about 40 across the country — brings mothers and daughters together. The goal is to establish a relationship between parent and child, in some cases where none existed. Each group is taught how to understand the other. Parents learn how to lead by example, how to set goals and how to simply spend time with their children. The girls learn how to deal with the burden of having a parent in prison, how to respect themselves, how to be a responsible kid. Having fun is part of the plan. The troop plays charades using a boxed set of cards, a game that delights the girls and makes shy men out of convicted felons. "Daddy," Paige says, "I want you to buy this for me when you get out." It is, without doubt, a surreal slice of life. Grown men who've spent much of their lives living on the wrong side of the law are singing Girl Scout songs, sewing and making purses. Little girls who've just come from school are sitting inside an all-male prison, ringed by five vertical rows of concertina wire. Yet here they are, each one struggling to condense a month of news, hopes and thoughts into two hours. Briefly, they know the comfort of a father's touch and the warmth of a daughter's embrace. Six-year-old Lazaria will be a grown woman when her father is released after serving 18 years; she is an intelligent, gregarious little girl who smiles and twirls so her sequined, orange dirndl skirt flies around her knees. But when a prison door clangs shut behind her, locking her in, she freezes. Her eyes fill with tears and fear. She clings to the legs of her troop leader, and it takes a few minutes of soft words and gentle prying to unclench her fingers and persuade her to keep walking. "Come on, Lazaria, it's OK," the girls murmur. Dwayne, 36, is serving three years for drug possession. His daughter, 5-year-old Autumn, is a Daisy scout and the youngest troop member. She's gone to visit relatives on vacation and is not here today. Dwayne looks forlorn, alone at a table of chattering girls and their fathers. But he smiles when he talks about activities at the meetings. "I like the sewing part," he says, and the other cons nod in agreement and grin sheepishly. "I look forward to it." He has not told his daughter why he is in prison. "I just told her I was going to college." But Autumn doesn't miss much, even at age 5. "Every time she walks out that door, she turns to me and says "Call me. We'll talk later.'" And Dwayne convulses in laughter. "Like she the parent. Like she the one paying the bills." Dwayne once served seven years for armed robbery. He has five children by five different women, none of them his wife. His oldest daughter no longer speaks to him. "She's angry," he says. "I haven't been around much. I tried to give them material things, no matter what it cost. They didn't care about that. If I had given them more of my time, I wouldn't be here." But here he is, in prison, four days before Father's Day, amid other fathers and daughters who are planning small businesses. They compile two lists: There are "Needs," the things that must be seen to first, like clothes, electricity, a place to live. And then there are "Wants." Ben has written a wish list including a cottage, a speed boat, and a new wardrobe. His daughter's desires run from toys to clothes. Last on the list? "Dad to come home." "I couldn't think of anything else," Paige says, and dissolves into giggles. Her father laughs, too. "Thanks a lot, kid," he says. -
Americans must realize that there are agents* operating in this Country attempting to undermine our Country and it's leadership through our democratic principles in an effort to achieve a foreign country's goal. A prime example of such a person during the Vietnam War was Jane Fonda, an admitted Socialist, who blatantly supported North Vietnam. * Agent - Any person who works to obtain the goals of another nation either for money or for their own political beliefs.
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Samuel Clements, borrow from the best I say!
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It has been many years since I read those transcripts, and I wonder now if Michael Moore is her unclaimed love child.
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U.S. Seeks Soldiers in Iraq Death Triangle
warpedskydiver replied to warpedskydiver's topic in Speakers Corner
U.S. Seeks Soldiers in Iraq Death Triangle Saturday, June 17, 2006 6:20 PM EDT The Associated Press By KIM GAMEL Listen to Audio BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) — U.S. troops on Saturday searched for two soldiers missing after an attack that killed one of their comrades at a checkpoint in the so-called "Triangle of Death" south of Baghdad. U.S. Maj. Gen. William Caldwell said four raids had been carried out since Friday's attack and that ground forces, helicopters and airplanes were taking part in the search. He said a dive team also was going to search for the men, whose checkpoint was located by a Euphrates River canal near Youssifiyah, 12 miles south of Baghdad. The New York Times reported that Iraqi residents in the area said they saw two soldiers taken prisoner by a group of masked guerrillas. It said the two surviving soldiers were led to two cars and driven away. Fellow soldiers at a nearby checkpoint heard small-arms fire and explosions, and a quick-reaction force reached the scene in 15 minutes, the military said. The force found one soldier dead but no sign of the two others. "We are currently using every means at our disposal on the ground, in the air and in the water to find them," said Caldwell, the spokesman for U.S. forces in Baghdad. The area is known as the Triangle of Death because of the frequent ambushes and attacks against U.S. soldiers and Iraqi troops. The spokesman noted the military was still searching for Sgt. Keith Matthew Maupin, who went missing on April 9, 2004. "We continue to search using every means available and will not stop looking until we find the missing soldiers," he said. Maupin was captured when insurgents ambushed his fuel convoy with the 724th Transportation Co. west of Baghdad. A week later, Arab television network Al-Jazeera aired a videotape showing Maupin sitting on the floor surrounded by five masked men holding automatic rifles. That June, Al-Jazeera aired another tape purporting to show a U.S. soldier being shot. But the dark, grainy tape showed only the back of the victim's head and did not show the actual shooting. The Army ruled it was inconclusive whether the soldier was Maupin. A 20-year-old private first class at the time of his capture, Maupin has been promoted twice since then. -
Thank you all so very much!
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5 Teens Killed in New Orleans Shootout
warpedskydiver replied to warpedskydiver's topic in Speakers Corner
5 Teens Killed in New Orleans Shootout By CAIN BURDEAU, Associated Press Writer 50 minutes ago NEW ORLEANS - Five people ranging in age from 16 to 19 were killed in a street shooting early Saturday, the most violent crime reported in this slowly repopulating city since Hurricane Katrina hit last August. All were believed to have been gunned down in a volley of bullets on a street in the Central City neighborhood just outside the central business district. Three of the victims were found in a sport utility vehicle rammed against a utility pole and two were found nearby on the street. Authorities said they were looking for one or more suspects but did not elaborate. Capt. John Bryson said police think the shootings were either drug-related or some type of retaliation attack. A semiautomatic weapon was used and "multiple, multiple rounds" were fired, he said. "I think the motivation we're looking at is pretty obvious," he said. "Somebody wanted them dead." Bryson said he could not remember the last time this many people were killed in once incident _ before or after Katrina. "I can't remember five," he said. Four of the victims _ a 16-year-old, a 17-year-old and two 19-year-olds _ died at the scene. Another 19-year-old, believed to be the brother of the youngest victim, died later at a hospital, police said. There was no immediate word if any of the victims had been armed. Their identities were not immediately released. Terrance Rayly, 23, who was staying in a home nearby, said he heard the shots after getting in from a music club. "It was like 15 gun shots," he said. "I heard pop, pop, pop, pop, pop." The shooting left many people feeling unsafe in the poor Central City neighborhood where people sat on porches and discussed the incident Saturday. "Lord, this is like the sixth person killed around here in the last month," said Monique Jackson, a 27-year-old housekeeper who lives around the corner from the crime scene. "It's getting bad now." She added: "I don't want to ever hear about a murder ever again. It's just young people doing it to each other." Crime, including murder, has been creeping back after Katrina emptied the city of its residents when it hit on Aug. 29, flooding 80 percent of New Orleans. Current population estimates vary but the city is believed to have less than half its pre-storm population of about 455,000. So far, 52 people have been murdered in the city since Jan. 1, half the number of murders at this time last year, Bryson said. There were only 17 killings in January through March. But the rate picked up after that _ there were 13 in April alone, followed by 22 in May and June, including Saturday's killings. Bryson said the recent spike in murders, which he said was connected to drugs, was not just a "police problem" or a "New Orleans problem." "It's a Louisiana problem, it's a United States problem," he said. "We're begging the citizens to join with us to coordinate with watch groups." Quote Geez it sure is a good thing Ray Nagin confiscated all the guns he could from LEGAL gun owners. Welcome to the "Chocolate City" he dreamed of -
you mean the one credited with recently downing a US Aircraft?(at that time)