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Everything posted by ChibiHorsewoman
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[quote name='Morpheus']New Orleans' topsoil is to close to the water line for a basement. [/quote] [color=darkviolet]Well, come to think of it houses in the following states don't have basements: Florida, Texas, Louisiana, Arizona, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia. Atleast that I know of, there could be more. If you don't have a basement you can't drown in it.[/color] [quote name='Morpheus']Of course, since staying above ground and being killed by debris (such as glass shards) is so much smarter. [/quote] [color=darkviolet]That's the optomistic spirit I want to see from everyone on this post. I just asked my mom about the peopel she worked with from New Orleans. She said the obvious, they're evacuated and they don't have too much power in their cell phones, no electricity and no land lines to call out. I guess everyone can just hope for the best.... Damn optomism[/color]
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[Quote=MIstress Roxie][color=periwinkle] I heard someone compare Katrina to the Asian Tsunami, and things seem pretty much the same to me. New Orleans, the states of Louisiana, MI, AL, GA, etc., are completely devastated. No lights, no food, no running water - third world conditions. [/color][/QUOTE] [color=darkviolet]I believe I heard the Mayor of Biloxi, MI saying yesturday that this [hurricane] is their Tsunami. I've seen pictures. They've been talking to peopel in my area who have family in the gulf states. One of the local anchormen finally heard from his brother today via text messaging. My mom's just glad that is missed Orlando since one of her friends just moved down there to work at one of the colleges. However she has business collegues in New Orleans- she trained there a few years ago for some really nice people. I have no idea if she's heard from any of them yet. I hope they're okay.[/color] [quote name='MIstress Roxie][color=periwinkle']and that fire raging now, but there's not enough water to put it out. [/color][/quote] [color=darkviolet]How's that for irony? I'm really amazed at the ammount of posts I've received to this since last night. I'm also glad that so far the OB members who reside in LA, MI, AL and the like are out of harm's way although greatly inconvienianced. As I may have mentioned before, I work at a science supply warehouse so I end up shipping things all over the country (US and Canada). Today I had a shipment for a middle school in Baton Rouge, LA- all I could think of was 'Are they going to be able to use this any time soon?' know that's an odd thought, but look who's tyoing. Elf Pirate, I hope you find out good things about your friend soon. And I can't wait to read DanL.'s Landover Baptists link. How un Christian can you get to blame people for a natural occurance? :rolleyes: Blessed be[/color]
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[quote name='Angel]That's probably the same Weed that's mentioned in [u]Of Mice and Men[/u']. My English class laughed when they read the line that said that they "ran out of Weed".[/quote] [color=darkviolet] [i]I[/i] just laughed when I read that. I work for a science supply company, so I get to see a lot of diifferent places. Today I shipped stuff off to somewhere named Research Triangle in North Carolina. I kid you not. [/color]
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[color=darkviolet]I don't have a lot of time to create a decent (for me) thread. I'm just going to say that so far this is the worst and most costliest hurricane to reach the US [i][b] ever[/i][/b]. The worst news now- aside from the loss of life and the fact that idiots are making matters worse by looting- is that one of the levees in New Orleans has broken and now the whole city will be under water. It's terrible in two ways, a historic city will now be in ruins and millions of people have lost their homes. Please share y9our comments on this topic.[/color]
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[QUOTE=Sinistra][FONT=Palatino Linotype]I think there's a Lake Pleasant somewhere around the Adirondacks. And as for Chili, I always drive by that place on my way to Rochester. That just reminded me, isn't there a Churchville somewhere around there? [/FONT][/QUOTE] [color=darkviolet]I believe you mean Lake [i]PLACID[/i]. They have the I love NY Horseshow there.. Yes, Chili- Churchville? I have a friend who lives there. As for New YOrk city and town names: Wheatland (School districts include CHurchville Chili and Wheatland Chili), Scottsville, Pleasentville, Hopewell (technically where Finger Lakes Community College is located), Rush, Henrietta (Their school district is Rush HEnrietta) Holcomb, Bloomfield, West Bloomfield. Pittsford, Mendon, Plattsville, Yonkers, Calcium, (near Watertown) South Otselic (yet there is no [i]North[/i] Otselic, Oswego, Herkimer, Nunda (pronounced Nun day) Castille, Canaseraga, Mumford, Madina, Darien Center, Byron, Bergen, Letchworth, Angelica, Dundee, Dunkirk... The list goes on. One of my mom's friends lives in Williamson- one of Buffalo's few pronouncable suburbs, and I can't say it correctly. But ask me how to say Canaseraga, Kueka or Tonawanda and I'm okay. Oh, Hoosick Hill is the name of a cemetery in Spencerport NY (outside of Rochester). Hoo sick? Nobody ... it's a cemetery, they're all dead!!![/color]
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[color=darkviolet]I actually know the origins of some place names: [b]Hooker OK-[/b] Named after a General Hooker, a Union officer in the Civil war [b]Ft. Hood and Bell County TX[/b]- Named after the same Confederate General. A [i]very[/i] unlucky guy. [b]Lake Mead[/b]- A man made lake named after another Union General [b]Pheonix AZ-[/b] Named after a mythical bird. I think AZ translates to arrid place I'm not sure. I [i]do[/i] know that Sierra Nevada translates to Saw of Snow so the State Nevada means Of Snow- Rather ironic huh? Now for some places I don't know the origin of. Bumfuc Egypt. I'm serious. It probably means something completely different in Egyption (Arabic?) But from an English POV it's funny. Number Four New York. It's a small town in the Adirondack region of NEw York. I'm not sure why they named it Number Four.[/color]
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[color=darkviolet]Whew boy do I have a few! I live in a town called Gates named after General Horatio Gates (Granny Gates) from the American Revolution. I told someone that once and he asked if it was near Fences- ha ha ha. The town my granparents and my mom's two sisters live in is called Chili and is pronounced the way it's spelled. But people from out of twpm pronounce it like the food chili. The town have a festival every year called the Chili (like the food) fest. The next town over from me is Greece, and we also have a Warsaw and a Rome so I can drive to those places in a day. I've driven through a place in Kentucky called Bucksnort. I'm serious, Bucksnort Kentucky. There is also a Bone Lick State park somewhere down south. In Eastern New York we have Rensseler, Rotterdam, Amsterdam and the ever famous Fishkill as well as the Catskill mountains. FYI kill is creek in dutch and the first settlers of New York were Dutch. Buffalo has some of the best suburbs though, Tonawanda, Cheektowaga, Depew, ect. Around the Batavia area there is a town called LeRoy (French for The King) Around Watertown there is a simular town called LeRay. I have no more.... Oh wait I do, there is a town in PA called Intercourse! I'm not kidding.[/color]
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[color=darkviolet]Ok, I just watched the first episode of the dub MewMew Power. Honestly it wasn't all that bad for a dub that doesn't even have it's original name! They have a Meg in the show, promising. But I can't understand why some dubs [i]insist[/i] on changing the names. The show reminds me of SailorMoon. Zoey- the first MewMew girl even has this device that looks nearly identicle to SuperSailorCHibiMoon's Twinkle Bell from SailorMoonSs. scary! So yeah, not bad for a dub, but I can't wait to go and buy a DVD for the original version of it. Tokyo MewMew[/color]
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[color=darkviolet]Okay, requesting permission to b-yotch slap Donald Rumsfeld and the rest of this government. Read on please: [quote=Yahoo News]Walter Reed Medical Center to Be Closed WASHINGTON - Siding with the Pentagon, the base-closing commission voted Thursday to shut down the Army's historic Walter Reed hospital and move about 20,000 defense workers miles away from their offices just outside the nation's capital. The nine-member panel also started deciding which Air Force facilities should be closed or consolidated as part of the Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld's nationwide restructuring of military bases. Overall, the commission endorsed much of Rumsfeld's broader plan to streamline support services across the Army, Navy and Air Force. In many cases, it voted to merge programs scattered around military facilities across the country to centralized locations. Just before adjourning for the day, the commissioners decided to shutter Air Force facilities in Alaska and California. But they postponed until Friday votes on the service branch's most contentious recommendations. The Air Force wants to vastly reconfigure the Air National Guard, a move that states fiercely oppose. It also wants to close Ellsworth Air Force Base in South Dakota and Cannon Air Force Base in New Mexico. Anticipating the high-stakes votes, the entire South Dakota congressional delegation ? Sens. John Thune, a Republican, and Tim Johnson, a Democrat, and Democratic Rep. Stephanie Herseth (news, bio, voting record) ? attended the hearing, as did Democratic Gov. Bill Richardson of New Mexico. Late Thursday, the commission decided to approve its own proposal to close the Galena Airport Forward Operation Location in Alaska, which the Air Force uses for training and to land fighter jets when necessary. The Air Force had wanted to keep it open, but commissioners say other Air Force bases in Alaska suffice. The commercial airport there would continue operating. The panel also chose to keep Eielson Air Force Base in Alaska operational, rejecting a Pentagon plan to sharply scale back personnel and aircraft there. But commissioners did side with military planners in approving the closure of two other major bases ? Onizuka Air Force Station in California and Brooks City-Base in Texas. As the commission tackled proposals that affected all the service branches, members focused on recommendations that sometimes were complex and interconnected. "In this case, I'm pretty confident we got it right," commissioner Harold Gehman said, while considering a plan to consolidate some research and development activities. "But I'm telling you we're going to be faced with a bunch of these ... where I honestly do not know if we got it right or not." Commissioner James Hill called the day's deliberations on the joint-services section agony and said the lengthy debate "highlights the complexity of these issues." The politicians milled around the Arlington, Va., hotel ballroom where the hearings were held near the Pentagon, serving as constant reminders of their efforts to spare the bases that provide thousands of jobs in each state. The commission signed off on many recommendations to merge education, medical, administrative and training programs, although it made adjustments in some cases. In others, the panel rejected the proposals outright. But those were in the minority. The Defense Department is trying to achieve what it calls "jointness" ? the services combining their strengths, rather than working separately ? to save money and promote efficiency. Part of that effort was closing Walter Reed ? the crown jewel of U.S. military hospitals ? and moving much of its staff and services across town to the National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda, Md., which will be updated and expanded. In a nod to the Army hospital's century-old heritage, the expanded facility will be renamed Walter Reed. Some of the old hospital's personnel and operations also will move to a community hospital at Fort Belvoir in Virginia. The commission said care at Walter Reed, which has treated presidents and foreign leaders as well as veterans and soldiers, is considered first-rate but the facility is showing its age. "Kids coming back from Iraq and Afghanistan, all of them in harm's way, deserve to come back to 21st century medical care," said commission Chairman Anthony Principi. "It needs to be modernized." The panel also largely sided with the Pentagon on shifting more than 20,000 military and civilian defense jobs from leased office space in northern Virginia suburbs of Washington to military bases farther away from the capital city. Opponents had argued that such a massive job shift could create traffic nightmares. But the Pentagon said military bases will provide a more secure setting, given threats of terrorism following the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. On that day, one of the hijacked airplanes slammed into the Pentagon. The commission must send its final report to President Bush by Sept. 8. The president can accept it, reject it or send it back for revisions. Congress also will have a chance to veto the plan in its entirety but it has not taken that step in four previous rounds of base closings. If ultimately approved, the changes would occur over the next six years. In May, the Pentagon proposed closing or consolidating a record 62 major military bases and 775 smaller installations to save $48.8 billion over 20 years, streamline the services and reposition the armed forces. [/quote] THe next thing you know they'll announce the closure of Ft. Hood because it's too big. I'm really too tired to think up a good response but I think they're crazy to go and shift so much stuff. Just another friendly message from Chibi Horsewoman[/color]
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[color=darkviolet]*Hug* Yay! You're back in one piece! :p Did you have anyone pass out... wait you guys don't really get outside in the desert much do you? Okay well, do you have any interesting stories to share? I have a few. PM me or call if you want. Take care and I'm glad you're back! They took the Port-A-John away? Chibi Horsewoman[/color]
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[color=darkviolet]I just heard the dumbest song today! And it's by one of my favorite bands :animecry: [b][u]My Humps[/u]- By Black Eyed Peas[/b] That song is so wrong and stupid. If I ever have to sit through that whole song again I'll throw something at the radio. Seriously music is going downhill.[/color]
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Mother of slain son holds vigil in Crawford.
ChibiHorsewoman replied to ChibiHorsewoman's topic in General Discussion
[quote name='DeathBug'] And I'm completely sick of "We support the troops, but not the war". Oh, we think want you're doing is evil and it should fail, because that would show the Bush Nazi's...but we think you guys are okay. BS. [/quote] [color=darkviolet]So, you can [i]only[/i] support the troops [i]and[/i] the war, but not just the troops? That doesn't add up to me, I think it has to do with the whole, I supported my ex through this whole army thing, but I really don't agree with this war. I think the war is wrong.I think the reasons for going to war are wrong and I think Bush is as dumb as a bag of hammers, but that doesn't make me the bad guy. I supprot the troops, I'll support them because they're doing their job, not because I agree with what their boss told them to do. Okay so give me a cookie since I'm going to put something you said in my signature for a while[/color] -
[color=darkviolet]Personally I think if these televangelist guys want to do some worth while praying and suggesting they should start praying for a cure for AIDS or world hunger or the war on terror? Or at the very least lower gas prices. I mean, I [i]know[/i] God (dess) has a sense of humor- but shouldn't (S)He stop laughing now? But no they have to pray for a meteor to hit Disney Land :rolleyes: and take out a guy fixing poor people's eyesight. Go figure. God you can stop laughing now![/color]
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[QUOTE=Bloodseeker]My question is why the hell did the news people need to go and make a big deal out of it? If they hadn't brought it up, I never would have known, and there's a good chance that it never would have reached the middle east and made things even more tense than they already were. Sometimes the stupidity of our news media amazes me...[/QUOTE] [color=darkviolet]Word of advice buddy, [i]don't[/i] go on Jeopardy. Venezuela is in South America, I think it was mentioned in the article.[/color]
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[QUOTE=Siren]You know...I don't know which is more insanely disturbing? Jerry Falwell saying we need to hunt down the terrorists in the name of God, or Pat Robertson playing Pretend Overt CIA Agents.[/QUOTE] [color=darkviolet]Yes, but isn't he a nice distraction from the rising price of gas? Too bad he doesn't get it in his head to pray for that. :animesigh [/color]
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[color=darkviolet]Who knows, maybe you've heard this maybe not- all I'll say is damn that's screwed up. Here's the whole story.: [quote=CBS.com][b](CBS/AP) Venezuela's vice president accused religious broadcaster Pat Robertson on Tuesday of making "terrorist statements" by suggesting that American agents assassinate President Hugo Chavez. "We have the ability to take him out, and I think the time has come that we exercise that ability," Robertson said Monday on the Christian Broadcast Network's "The 700 Club." "We don't need another $200 billion war to get rid of one, you know, strong-arm dictator," he continued. "It's a whole lot easier to have some of the covert operatives do the job and then get it over with." Chavez was winding up a visit to Cuba when he was asked at Havana's airport about a U.S. religious leader having said he should be killed. "I haven't read anything. We haven't heard anything about him," Chavez said. "I don't even know who that person is." CBS News Producer Portia Siegelbaum reports that Chavez, when asked about Robertson's call for his assasination, said he'd rather talk about life not death. Chavez, dressed in his trademark long sleeve red shirt, proceeded to talk about Plan Milagro, a joint Cuban-Venezuelan medical project to return eyesight to tens of thousands of Latin America's poor by performing eye operations free of charge, Siegelbaum reports. Vice President Jose Vicente Rangel said Venezuela was studying its legal options, adding that how Washington responds to Robertson's comments would put its anti-terrorism policy to the test. "The ball is in the U.S. court, after this criminal statement by a citizen of that country," Rangel told reporters. "It's huge hypocrisy to maintain this discourse against terrorism and at the same time, in the heart of that country, there are entirely terrorist statements like those." CBS News Correspondent Gloria Borger reports that this is not the first time Robertson has made controversial statements. Recently he said on national television that so-called activist judges were worse than the 9/11 terrorists. Relations between the Chavez government and the Bush administration have been strained for some time, reports CBS News State Department Reporter Charles Wolfson, but Robertson's call for assassination was something the State Department wanted no part of. CBS/AP) State Department spokesman Sean McCormack called Robertson's remarks "inappropriate." "This is not the policy of the United States government. We do not share his views," McCormack said. Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld, appearing at a Pentagon news conference, said when asked: "Our department doesn't do that kind of thing. It's against the law. He's a private citizen. Private citizens say all kinds of things all the time." There was no immediate comment from Chavez, who was winding up an official visit to Cuba on Tuesday. Scores of journalists awaited Chavez at the airport, where he was to board a plane for a trip to Jamaica to discuss a Venezuela initiative to supply petroleum to Caribbean countries under favorable financial terms. Chavez has emerged as one of the most outspoken critics of President Bush, accusing the United States of conspiring to topple his government and possibly backing plots to assassinate him. U.S. officials have called the accusations ridiculous. "You know, I don't know about this doctrine of assassination, but if he thinks we're trying to assassinate him, I think that we really ought to go ahead and do it," Robertson said. "It's a whole lot cheaper than starting a war ... and I don't think any oil shipments will stop." Rangel called Robertson "a man who seems to have quite a bit of influence in that country," adding sarcastically that his words were "very Christian." The comments "reveal that religious fundamentalism is one of the great problems facing humanity in these times," Rangel said. Robertson's remarks appear likely to further stoke tensions between Washington and Caracas. Chavez has repeatedly claimed that American officials are plotting to oust or kill him ? charges U.S. officials have denied. The United States is the top buyer of Venezuelan crude, but Chavez has made it clear he wants to decrease the country's dependence on the U.S. market by finding other buyers. "A part of the danger of this is that people will take him at his word and believe that he actually speaks with some kind of divine mandate," Dr. Bill Leonard, dean and professor of church history at Wake Forest University's School of Divinity, told CBS Radio News. "It also feeds the idea that America ... has a particular kind of Christianity that is destructive and promotes war and assassination." Chavez has survived a brief 2002 coup, a devastating two-month strike that ended in early 2003 and recall referendum in 2004. The former army paratroop commander, a close ally of Cuban leader Fidel Castro, is up for re-election next year, and polls suggest he is the favorite. [/b][/quote] You know I hate to throw this word around but this guy is a friggin' hypocrite. How does 'Assasinate this guy' manage to sound Christian? Maybe I just didn't hear him say it the way it should be said? Oh well, read and share your veiws.[/color]
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Mother of slain son holds vigil in Crawford.
ChibiHorsewoman replied to ChibiHorsewoman's topic in General Discussion
[color=darkviolet]*Points up* Did I mention lately that I worship Siren? Some people do join the military because they have a sense of duty and honor- you know why [i]talk[/i] about fixing the problem when you can [i]fix[/i] the problem? Support your country blah blah blah. Sorry I just can't wrap my mind around that idea, but I know people who have done that. However the grand majority of military personnel are in the military for less than glamorous reasons. My ex-husband is a high school drop out with one parent descased (priorly non existant) and the other is on SSI- he did it because it was a steady paycheck- and when he watched the recount in 2000 in Ft. Knox KY (TN) he wondered what he got himself into. One of his co-workers saw it as teh only way out of her dead end life, and a girl that graduated with me just didn't want to go to college and joined the Navy. There are different reasons for joiningthe military and you can't fault their reasons, who knows maybe some of the guys who are infantry really [i]are[/i] closet psychopaths. Maybe this woman's son felt like he was doing his patriotic duty or maybe he just didn't want to go to college. The point is he died and she's upset and now wants to protest the war. She also has a lot of people and the media paying attention to her get over it. And if anyone brings up this as the reason for a divorce again I'll unleash my Chibi Usa clones[/color] -
Mother of slain son holds vigil in Crawford.
ChibiHorsewoman replied to ChibiHorsewoman's topic in General Discussion
[QUOTE=Red]You asked what everyone thought - I told you what I do. ;] I didn't decide what isn't and what is the right way to grieve for someone, that's up to the individual. What I'm saying is that it sounds as if she has an agenda, one that gets the current situation nowhere. ![/QUOTE] [color=darkviolet]I said I wanted to hear what you thought, I [i]didn't[/i] say I would agree with it or make a comment. Perhaps she does have an agenda to get more people on her side I have noticed that Bush has been protested at the last two stops he's made- Hell even the Mayor of Salt Lake City turned out to protest him yesturday. Maybe all she wants is attention, well she's got pleanty now.[/color] -
Mother of slain son holds vigil in Crawford.
ChibiHorsewoman replied to ChibiHorsewoman's topic in General Discussion
[QUOTE=Red]You don't really know if Bush doesn't sympathise with her. I doubt that even with all the things you could verbally hang him for doing, he doesn't feel some sort of sadness when people he helped send to war die. I think the woman has found the wrong way to grieve her son's death. She can look for any explanation from Bush that she wants, the pure & simple fact is that he [i]chose[/i] to sign up for the military. Part of that decision is acknowledging that you could be sent to war, any time, any place.[/QUOTE] [color=darkviolet]While I will give you the top comment I dissagree with teh bottom. How can youdecide what is a right way and a wronmg way to grieve for everyone? People deal with their emotions in different ways maybe she feels that she's doing the right thing. So Bush's vacation gets ruined ah well. And in the end, America has an all volunteer military, these men and women know that joining the military there is a chance that they will be going to war. Parents can griecve what ever way they want, but they should also realize that their kid knew what they were in for signing up.[/color] -
[color=darkviolet]Oh songs that annoy me! [b]Mr. Brightside- by the Killers[/b] This song was catchy annoying at first, but I've heard it so many times I think I'm going to punch out a radio if I hear it again. I've suddenly stopped caring that this guy was in a cage and then someone got laid and it wasn't him. Boo Hoo, too bad let's all move on.[/color]
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[quote name='Chabichou][COLOR=#004a6f']I personally disagree with giving up children for adoption. As I see it, if you are not willing to care for children (or unable to), then don't risk having them. Abstinence is the key.[/COLOR][/quote] [color=darkviolet]Chabichou, you're usually one of my favoirte peopleon this board... just not this time. I'm adopted, I think it was a very brave thing for my birth mother to do. Especially since I went through nine months of not enough caffiene and seven months of no horseback riding to have my beautiful baby girl. Yes i know I sound shallow but I love caffiene and horseback riding, I also love my dauighter it'd be hard to give her up. It's nice to say abstinence is the key to not having children but it's not as easy in real life as it is on paper- I can tell you that for a fact some times physical emotions are stronger than what's going on in your head. I'm glad that my birth mother thought enough about me to give me a chance for a better life. She was sixteen years old and trying to be able to get her GED and then go on with her life, we don't know anything about the father. She would have been risking being on welfare (okay so I'm going on welfare, but for different reasons?) and like i said before, I'm glad she did it. Molleta you're my hero and I commend you for making such a hard discission, I don't know how you did it, but I'm sure looking back your child will be glad you did and and so will you. I know the parents are happy to finally have a child. My parents started looking into adoption back in 1977 I believe and it took four years and El knows how much money. Adoption is [i]not[/i] cheap. So in a way you helped three people. I guess you can think of it that way. Yes, I know that my post was uncooridindated, but I don't care.[/color]
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[color=darkviolet]I've realized that my car can be sited as a disaster area because I have so much crap in there. So I'm going to tell everyone what I have in there and why. Then others can share, but please say why it's in there. If you don't have a car, you can use your parent's car instead. I hope this thread works. [b][u][center]A short list of what's in my car[/u][/center] Riding helmet-[/b] I take horsebackriding lessons every Sunday so I want to make sure I don't forget my helmet or I'd have to use one provided for me by the stable... no thank you. I need to buy a new one soon since I've fallen on my head (no comments please) a few too many times. [b]Riding Crop/bat[/b]- Previous reasoning as well, I like to use my own things. Besides there is pretty much always a shortage of decent crops. [b]Car Seat-[/b] I have a ten month old girl and since NY state law requires children under 4'6 and I think 60lbs I'll need this one for a while. [b]CD cases-[/b]You can only listen to radio stations for so long before they start to play commercials or crappy music on all six preset stations. And some of the bands I like to listen to aren't on the radio or the songs I like aren't always played. I'm a control freak, I like my music to be played at all times. [b]Stroller[/b]- Okay so that's really in the [i]trunk[/i] (boot) of my car, but enough technicalities, as I've stated I have a baby, she's almost 20lbs, and she can't walk. I don't want to have her crawling everywhere and she's too heavy to carry. So this stroller comes in handy. Plus it has a basket underneath to contain the next item. [b]Diaper bag-[/b] Because buying diapers, formula, bottles, toys, plugs, (pacifires binkies nukes ect ect) extra clothes wipes and whatever else I may need takes a toll on my bank account and I don't want to do it ever time I go out. And I have to keep it in the car for when I drop my baby off at the baby sitters every morning for work. [b]Two bags of diapers][/b]- I went to the grocery store last night to buy diapers, it was pouring when I got home you do the math. [b]A bag of socks-[/b] Well one good reason is because I can't find them, another is that I keep them in my car for when I go to work, and my best reason is so my brother or his buddy don't take them. And yes I just bought the socks. [b]Can of formula-[/b] Because it will last longer than a three sectioned serving container and I don't have the money for a new formula server right now. [b]Saddle[/b]- Okay it's not in my car yet, but it is for most of the week, I just took it out becuase when I leave it in my 5 person car becomes a three person and techincally it's only a two person then since the car seat takes up one seat already. I hope I interested you with my car's contents, too bad I took the soda out already that would have been a good story. So share your lists.[/color]
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Gwen Stefani- What was she thinking!?
ChibiHorsewoman replied to ChibiHorsewoman's topic in Noosphere
[quote name='sakurasuka][CENTER][SIZE=1What I think is unhealthy is how everyone obseses about famous people. They already have plenty of people judging thier every move, and they're just people, REALLY. Get over it ~_^[/SIZE'][/CENTER][/quote] [color=darkviolet]But if we stopped obsessing about celebraties we'd have to go out and get [i]real[/i] lives! :animestun In some ways I feel sorry for famous people since they really don't get a moment of privacy and everyone is always saying they're either too fat or too skinny (although I fail to see how having the ladder rail (nice little physical feature where you can see the bones arouind where your boobs might be) But they also have tons of money abnd they knew what they were in for when they became famous. Live and let die I guess.[/color] -
Funny and/or meaningful Quotes lines and sayings
ChibiHorsewoman replied to ChibiHorsewoman's topic in General Discussion
[QUOTE=The_Mix_Breed][COLOR=DarkOrange] WARNING: RANDOMNESS!!! [B] Men, I want you just thinking of one word all season. One word and one word only: Super Bowl.[/B][/COLOR][/QUOTE] [color=darkviolet]That one is funny because Super Bowl is [i]two[/i] words. [center][u]Here's a few more from me:[/u][/center] [b]By the way, I wasn't undressing you! I was adding a straight jacket![/b]- This guy at work-I'll call him Mike becuase that's his name- ( was yelling at me for looking at him and saying I was undressing him with my eyes. So my brilliant idea was to yell the above quote at him while I was leaving. Should I mention he's the same guy who asks me to kiss him when I'm wearing my kissing booth shirt? I should also mention that he's the same Mike who found out that eyelid skin is the same as testicle skin because I think that should be noted. This guy is [i]not[/i] stable. [b]Me: So says the guy who wears tighty whities. Mike: They're [i]not[/i] Tighty whities. They're boxers and they're red Me: So? They look liek tighty whities. Mike: But they're [i]red[/i]. Me; So? I couldn't think of anything that rhymes with red having to do with underwear.[/b]- I have conversations with this guy of this nature on a daily basis, if he wasn't good looking I think I'd tell him where to stick it- okay so I told him where to stick a bag of flo-pack (packing foam), but that's just another conversation. Too bad he's the type of guy who takes people at face vaule- in other words since I'm not skinny I'm not good enough- wanker. [b]You know what? Just do it, I dare you. I bet you're too chicken to do it![/b]- pretty much any conversation involving my co-worker Mike The stupidhead [b][u][center]Words from other people:[/u][/center] In other news, Exxon said they won't be lowering the price on gas, instead to lessen the pain they will provide containers of Vasiline at the pump.-Jay Leno[/b] Sad but true. and if you don't get the joke go figure. [/color] -
Gwen Stefani- What was she thinking!?
ChibiHorsewoman replied to ChibiHorsewoman's topic in Noosphere
[quote name='Queen Asuka][color=hotpink][size=1]. She can still dance, and she still has fun.[/color'][/size][/quote] [color=darkviolet] If you call teetering around on stilletos dancing go right ahead. Same with saying thjat you're hungry and not eatting anything being fun. She makes a crap load of money selling her over priced clothes and singing songs that pale in comparison to her old stuff. Yeah, I like [b]Cool[/b] it reminds me of [b]running[/b] And I did catch the Fiddler on the roof (if I were a Rich man) sampling on if I were a rich girl. She also did good in The Aviator, but why can't she try dancing in comfortable shoes?[/color]