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nostradamus.
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AuthorPosts
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May 2, 2008 at 5:55 PM #12625May 2, 2008 at 6:27 PM #198114
waiting hawk
ParticipantThat was great I listened to both that you suggested.
I been watching this lad for a few days now. He’s not that bad:Edit: This guy is still bad azz to me though:
May 2, 2008 at 6:27 PM #198240waiting hawk
ParticipantThat was great I listened to both that you suggested.
I been watching this lad for a few days now. He’s not that bad:Edit: This guy is still bad azz to me though:
May 2, 2008 at 6:27 PM #198152waiting hawk
ParticipantThat was great I listened to both that you suggested.
I been watching this lad for a few days now. He’s not that bad:Edit: This guy is still bad azz to me though:
May 2, 2008 at 6:27 PM #198180waiting hawk
ParticipantThat was great I listened to both that you suggested.
I been watching this lad for a few days now. He’s not that bad:Edit: This guy is still bad azz to me though:
May 2, 2008 at 6:27 PM #198203waiting hawk
ParticipantThat was great I listened to both that you suggested.
I been watching this lad for a few days now. He’s not that bad:Edit: This guy is still bad azz to me though:
May 2, 2008 at 7:07 PM #198271equalizer
ParticipantOT:
It certaintly is sweet music, but dont let it belie you, they are probably are friends of the Wolfe Tones. Who knows what a title like Swell Season conjures up – memories of those nice bobbies crushing skulls one Sunday, bloody Sunday.
Here's the other link in my head – Peggy Noonan's (Reagan speech writer, everything is rosy) comment about Wright and America. I shouldnt have ten browser tabs open.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120966911007860195.html?mod=todays_columnists "
“This week I talked to a young man, an Irish-American to whom I said, "Am I wrong not to feel anger about Wright?" He more or less saw it as I do, but for a different reason, or from different experience. He said he figures Mr. Wright's followers delight in him the same way he delights in the Wolfe Tones, the Irish folk group named for the 18th-century leader condemned to death by the British occupying forces, as they say on their Web site. They sing songs about the Brits and how they subjugated the Irish and we'll rise up and trounce the bastards. My 20-year-old friend has lived a good life in America and is well aware that he is not an abused farmer in the fields holding secret Mass in defiance of the prohibitions of the English ruling class. His life has not been like that. Yet he enjoys the bitterness. He likes going to Wolfe Tones concerts raising his fist, thinking "Up the Rebels." It is good to feel that old ethnic religious solidarity, and that in part is what he is in search of, solidarity. And it's not so bad to take a little free-floating anger, apply it to politics, and express it in applause. He knows the dark days are over. He just enjoys remembering them even if he didn't experience them. His people did. I know exactly what he feels, for I felt the same when I was his age. And so what? It's just a way of saying, "I'm still loyal to our bitterness." Which is another way of saying, "I'm still loyal." I have a nice life, I'm American, I live far away, an Englishman has never hurt me, and yet I am still Irish. I can prove it. I can summon the old anger. Is this terrible? I don't think so. It's human and messy and warm-blooded, as a human would be. The thing is to not let your affiliation with bitterness govern you, so that you leave the Wolfe Tones concert and punch an Englishman in the nose. In this connection it can be noted there is no apparent record of people leaving a Wright sermon and punching anyone in the nose. Maybe they're in search of solidarity too. Maybe they're showing loyalty too."
May 2, 2008 at 7:07 PM #198233equalizer
ParticipantOT:
It certaintly is sweet music, but dont let it belie you, they are probably are friends of the Wolfe Tones. Who knows what a title like Swell Season conjures up – memories of those nice bobbies crushing skulls one Sunday, bloody Sunday.
Here's the other link in my head – Peggy Noonan's (Reagan speech writer, everything is rosy) comment about Wright and America. I shouldnt have ten browser tabs open.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120966911007860195.html?mod=todays_columnists "
“This week I talked to a young man, an Irish-American to whom I said, "Am I wrong not to feel anger about Wright?" He more or less saw it as I do, but for a different reason, or from different experience. He said he figures Mr. Wright's followers delight in him the same way he delights in the Wolfe Tones, the Irish folk group named for the 18th-century leader condemned to death by the British occupying forces, as they say on their Web site. They sing songs about the Brits and how they subjugated the Irish and we'll rise up and trounce the bastards. My 20-year-old friend has lived a good life in America and is well aware that he is not an abused farmer in the fields holding secret Mass in defiance of the prohibitions of the English ruling class. His life has not been like that. Yet he enjoys the bitterness. He likes going to Wolfe Tones concerts raising his fist, thinking "Up the Rebels." It is good to feel that old ethnic religious solidarity, and that in part is what he is in search of, solidarity. And it's not so bad to take a little free-floating anger, apply it to politics, and express it in applause. He knows the dark days are over. He just enjoys remembering them even if he didn't experience them. His people did. I know exactly what he feels, for I felt the same when I was his age. And so what? It's just a way of saying, "I'm still loyal to our bitterness." Which is another way of saying, "I'm still loyal." I have a nice life, I'm American, I live far away, an Englishman has never hurt me, and yet I am still Irish. I can prove it. I can summon the old anger. Is this terrible? I don't think so. It's human and messy and warm-blooded, as a human would be. The thing is to not let your affiliation with bitterness govern you, so that you leave the Wolfe Tones concert and punch an Englishman in the nose. In this connection it can be noted there is no apparent record of people leaving a Wright sermon and punching anyone in the nose. Maybe they're in search of solidarity too. Maybe they're showing loyalty too."
May 2, 2008 at 7:07 PM #198209equalizer
ParticipantOT:
It certaintly is sweet music, but dont let it belie you, they are probably are friends of the Wolfe Tones. Who knows what a title like Swell Season conjures up – memories of those nice bobbies crushing skulls one Sunday, bloody Sunday.
Here's the other link in my head – Peggy Noonan's (Reagan speech writer, everything is rosy) comment about Wright and America. I shouldnt have ten browser tabs open.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120966911007860195.html?mod=todays_columnists "
“This week I talked to a young man, an Irish-American to whom I said, "Am I wrong not to feel anger about Wright?" He more or less saw it as I do, but for a different reason, or from different experience. He said he figures Mr. Wright's followers delight in him the same way he delights in the Wolfe Tones, the Irish folk group named for the 18th-century leader condemned to death by the British occupying forces, as they say on their Web site. They sing songs about the Brits and how they subjugated the Irish and we'll rise up and trounce the bastards. My 20-year-old friend has lived a good life in America and is well aware that he is not an abused farmer in the fields holding secret Mass in defiance of the prohibitions of the English ruling class. His life has not been like that. Yet he enjoys the bitterness. He likes going to Wolfe Tones concerts raising his fist, thinking "Up the Rebels." It is good to feel that old ethnic religious solidarity, and that in part is what he is in search of, solidarity. And it's not so bad to take a little free-floating anger, apply it to politics, and express it in applause. He knows the dark days are over. He just enjoys remembering them even if he didn't experience them. His people did. I know exactly what he feels, for I felt the same when I was his age. And so what? It's just a way of saying, "I'm still loyal to our bitterness." Which is another way of saying, "I'm still loyal." I have a nice life, I'm American, I live far away, an Englishman has never hurt me, and yet I am still Irish. I can prove it. I can summon the old anger. Is this terrible? I don't think so. It's human and messy and warm-blooded, as a human would be. The thing is to not let your affiliation with bitterness govern you, so that you leave the Wolfe Tones concert and punch an Englishman in the nose. In this connection it can be noted there is no apparent record of people leaving a Wright sermon and punching anyone in the nose. Maybe they're in search of solidarity too. Maybe they're showing loyalty too."
May 2, 2008 at 7:07 PM #198182equalizer
ParticipantOT:
It certaintly is sweet music, but dont let it belie you, they are probably are friends of the Wolfe Tones. Who knows what a title like Swell Season conjures up – memories of those nice bobbies crushing skulls one Sunday, bloody Sunday.
Here's the other link in my head – Peggy Noonan's (Reagan speech writer, everything is rosy) comment about Wright and America. I shouldnt have ten browser tabs open.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120966911007860195.html?mod=todays_columnists "
“This week I talked to a young man, an Irish-American to whom I said, "Am I wrong not to feel anger about Wright?" He more or less saw it as I do, but for a different reason, or from different experience. He said he figures Mr. Wright's followers delight in him the same way he delights in the Wolfe Tones, the Irish folk group named for the 18th-century leader condemned to death by the British occupying forces, as they say on their Web site. They sing songs about the Brits and how they subjugated the Irish and we'll rise up and trounce the bastards. My 20-year-old friend has lived a good life in America and is well aware that he is not an abused farmer in the fields holding secret Mass in defiance of the prohibitions of the English ruling class. His life has not been like that. Yet he enjoys the bitterness. He likes going to Wolfe Tones concerts raising his fist, thinking "Up the Rebels." It is good to feel that old ethnic religious solidarity, and that in part is what he is in search of, solidarity. And it's not so bad to take a little free-floating anger, apply it to politics, and express it in applause. He knows the dark days are over. He just enjoys remembering them even if he didn't experience them. His people did. I know exactly what he feels, for I felt the same when I was his age. And so what? It's just a way of saying, "I'm still loyal to our bitterness." Which is another way of saying, "I'm still loyal." I have a nice life, I'm American, I live far away, an Englishman has never hurt me, and yet I am still Irish. I can prove it. I can summon the old anger. Is this terrible? I don't think so. It's human and messy and warm-blooded, as a human would be. The thing is to not let your affiliation with bitterness govern you, so that you leave the Wolfe Tones concert and punch an Englishman in the nose. In this connection it can be noted there is no apparent record of people leaving a Wright sermon and punching anyone in the nose. Maybe they're in search of solidarity too. Maybe they're showing loyalty too."
May 2, 2008 at 7:07 PM #198145equalizer
ParticipantOT:
It certaintly is sweet music, but dont let it belie you, they are probably are friends of the Wolfe Tones. Who knows what a title like Swell Season conjures up – memories of those nice bobbies crushing skulls one Sunday, bloody Sunday.
Here's the other link in my head – Peggy Noonan's (Reagan speech writer, everything is rosy) comment about Wright and America. I shouldnt have ten browser tabs open.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120966911007860195.html?mod=todays_columnists "
“This week I talked to a young man, an Irish-American to whom I said, "Am I wrong not to feel anger about Wright?" He more or less saw it as I do, but for a different reason, or from different experience. He said he figures Mr. Wright's followers delight in him the same way he delights in the Wolfe Tones, the Irish folk group named for the 18th-century leader condemned to death by the British occupying forces, as they say on their Web site. They sing songs about the Brits and how they subjugated the Irish and we'll rise up and trounce the bastards. My 20-year-old friend has lived a good life in America and is well aware that he is not an abused farmer in the fields holding secret Mass in defiance of the prohibitions of the English ruling class. His life has not been like that. Yet he enjoys the bitterness. He likes going to Wolfe Tones concerts raising his fist, thinking "Up the Rebels." It is good to feel that old ethnic religious solidarity, and that in part is what he is in search of, solidarity. And it's not so bad to take a little free-floating anger, apply it to politics, and express it in applause. He knows the dark days are over. He just enjoys remembering them even if he didn't experience them. His people did. I know exactly what he feels, for I felt the same when I was his age. And so what? It's just a way of saying, "I'm still loyal to our bitterness." Which is another way of saying, "I'm still loyal." I have a nice life, I'm American, I live far away, an Englishman has never hurt me, and yet I am still Irish. I can prove it. I can summon the old anger. Is this terrible? I don't think so. It's human and messy and warm-blooded, as a human would be. The thing is to not let your affiliation with bitterness govern you, so that you leave the Wolfe Tones concert and punch an Englishman in the nose. In this connection it can be noted there is no apparent record of people leaving a Wright sermon and punching anyone in the nose. Maybe they're in search of solidarity too. Maybe they're showing loyalty too."
May 2, 2008 at 7:12 PM #198215equalizer
ParticipantIMDB rating on the movie Once – User Rating: 8.1/10, 16,000+ votes
that is super high rating, have you seen it?
May 2, 2008 at 7:12 PM #198238equalizer
ParticipantIMDB rating on the movie Once – User Rating: 8.1/10, 16,000+ votes
that is super high rating, have you seen it?
May 2, 2008 at 7:12 PM #198150equalizer
ParticipantIMDB rating on the movie Once – User Rating: 8.1/10, 16,000+ votes
that is super high rating, have you seen it?
May 2, 2008 at 7:12 PM #198274equalizer
ParticipantIMDB rating on the movie Once – User Rating: 8.1/10, 16,000+ votes
that is super high rating, have you seen it?
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