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2025-02-07 at 11:52 PM UTCIn America they've introduced a law so that women's healthcare must address the needs of men and the community, it literally says that. I've taken into account that a professor suggested using brain dead women as surrogate mothers. I thought I could just kill myself if I ever got pregnant, but there's the risk of surving and getting brain damage, so I have to get sterilised now.
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2025-02-07 at 11:52 PM UTC
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2025-02-07 at 11:55 PM UTC
Originally posted by Dirtbag In America they've introduced a law so that women's healthcare must address the needs of men and the community, it literally says that. I've taken into account that a professor suggested using brain dead women as surrogate mothers. I thought I could just kill myself if I ever got pregnant, but there's the risk of surving and getting brain damage, so I have to get sterilised now.
Men have half custody of the unborn child. -
2025-02-08 at 12:02 AM UTC
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2025-02-08 at 12:07 AM UTC
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2025-02-08 at 12:18 AM UTC
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2025-02-08 at 12:48 AM UTC
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2025-02-08 at 1:01 AM UTCHELP
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2025-02-08 at 2 AM UTC
Originally posted by Dirtbag It's not the time for jokes frala.
It's time for fat jokes.
A lifeguard approaches frala and says, "Excuse me ma'am, could you please leave the beach?" Frala replies, "Why? What's wrong?" Well you see, says the lifeguard, "It's getting pretty late, and the tide wants to come in!" -
2025-02-08 at 2:10 AM UTC
Originally posted by Speedy Parker It's time for fat jokes.
A lifeguard approaches frala and says, "Excuse me ma'am, could you please leave the beach?" Frala replies, "Why? What's wrong?" Well you see, says the lifeguard, "It's getting pretty late, and the tide wants to come in!"
That's not nice to make comments about her body like that. -
2025-02-08 at 2:21 AM UTC
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2025-02-08 at 3:15 AM UTCTranny Skeezer and gay squirrels.
No thanks needed -
2025-02-08 at 3:16 AM UTC
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2025-02-08 at 3:18 AM UTCHis full name is Fargon Mortalak and he's got a pretty darn long fantastical history. Sufficeth to say though that he's pretty powerful. One of the few people who have mastered combining physical combat with Energy Manipulation.
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2025-02-08 at 3:21 AM UTC
Originally posted by Elbow His full name is Fargon Mortalak and he's got a pretty darn long fantastical history. Sufficeth to say though that he's pretty powerful. One of the few people who have mastered combining physical combat with Energy Manipulation.
Charles Deenen
Allister Brimble (Amiga)
Matt Furniss (Genesis)
They steal My image to make The Lost Vikings, game. -
2025-02-08 at 3:30 AM UTC
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2025-02-08 at 11:39 AM UTCThat post is still up on intosanc and I gotta admit I respect the hell out of Arnox for never deleting it.
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2025-02-08 at 1:27 PM UTC
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2025-02-08 at 5:30 PM UTC
Chaldean Numerology
The numerical value of skezzer in Chaldean Numerology is: 4
Pythagorean Numerology
The numerical value of skezzer in Pythagorean Numerology is: 2
Codie
Originally posted by Speedy Parker He's only lvl 42
Hitchhikers guide supercomputer
molybdenum aka MO
MO= Modus OperandiModus operandi is a Latin term used in English-speaking circles to describe an individual's or group's habitual way of operating, which forms a discernible pattern. The term is primarily used when discussing criminal behavior, but it is not exclusively uttered in this context.
Oh No "Free Association" Obama's CTO- HARPER REED 1992 Oh Nooooo
Contra Costa Modus OperandiMODEM OPERANDI: Tips on crime go on-line
by: Michael Liedtke
staff writer for the Contra Costa Times
Wednesday, July 28, 1993
Tips on how to commit fraud, murder and other mayhem are just a phone call away in the Bay Area, courtesy of rabble-rousing electronic bulletin boards that turn the personal computer into a clearinghouse for crime.
Using the First Amendment as a legal shield, a group of electronic bulletin boards in the Bay Area has created an information network providing criminal insights to anyone with a phone, personal computer and modem.
Essentially, these computer forums, known as bulletin board services, are electronic libraries. While some computer bulletin boards are limited to paying subscribers, the rebel network distributing criminal expertise is open to everyone, free of charge.
Most of the bulletin board files can be fetched over phone lines and brought into the caller's home. In turn, callers to the bulletin boards are encouraged to send in files, so the systems can accumulate advice from experts and novices.
More than 45,000 computer users have called an underground Bay Area bulletin board, known as "Lied Unlimited," that offers a roguish gallery of information. File titles include:
"How to Make Your Own Valid American Express Card"
"How to Rob a Bank"
"How to Break Into Houses"
"Stealing Toyotas and What to Do With Them"
"Simple Way to Make a Car Go BOOM!"
"Twenty-two Ways to Kill"
The bulletin boards also have other categories offering more-mainstream advice and entertainment, but they appear to be primarily interested in promoting disorder.
In a self-description appearing on a bulletin board review, Lied Unlimited said it tries to focus "on political realities. The point being that this reality is created by consensus, and the only way to change the reality is to change the consensus."
Lies Unlimited plans to shut down today and reopen next month after the system operator, listed a Mick Freen, moves from South San Francisco, to Salt Lake City. Mischievous information similar to Lies Unlimited's archives remains available on several other Bay Area bulletin boards, including a Walnut Creek-based system known as "And the Temple of the Screaming Electron."
Based on computer files retrieved by the Times, other contributors in this unorthodox network include "My Dog Bit Jesus" in Berkeley, "realitycheck," in Albany, "Burn This Flag" in San Jose and "The New Dork Sublime" in San Francisco.
Among them, the bulletin boards offer hundreds of files providing instructions on credit card fraud, money laundering, mail fraud, counterfeiting, drug smuggling, cable-tv theft, bomb- making and murder.
The Times left electronic messages on several of those bulletin boards seeking interviews with the system operators. None of the operators responded by late Tuesday.
Virtually anyone who understands how to use a computer and modem can tap into the rogue bulletin boards, if they have the phone numbers. The boards allow callers to create their own logons and passwords, opening the door for kids to get into the system. Based on their content, the bulletin boards appear to be particularly popular among teen-agers.
"This shows why people need to be much more aware of what kids are doing with their computers," said Hans Von Braun, a computer security expert who works for San Francisco-based Comsec.
One bulletin board, Burn This Flag, requires callers to fill out an application before gaining access to an adults-only section that contains files describing "bizarre sexual behavior." But in a written message, Burn This Flag's system operator, known as "Zardoz," acknowledges there is no foolproof way to ensure all users of the adult section are at least 18.
The Time isn't publishing the phone numbers of the rebel bulletin boards as a children's safeguard.
The bulletin boards remain open by straddling a fine line between the legal definitions of free speech and criminal behavior.
Under First Amendment rights guaranteeing free speech, the law allows the bulletin boards to serve as criminal primers, as long a the advice is limited to generic instructions. Essentially, it's legal for individuals to discuss how to commit a crime as long as they don't solicit or encourage the commission of a crime.
"We're aware of these types of bulletin boards," said Rick Smith, an FBI spokesman in San Francisco. "But to shut them down, you have to make a link between the discussion of a crime and the commission of a crime."
Law enforcement officials and security experts said they snoop through rogue bulletin boards to stay abreast of advice available to prospective criminals. These periodic checks might spot possible weaknesses in security systems and help authorities take precautions.
Pacific Bell can't refuse phone access to the underground bulletin boards, even though the forums often contain advice on how to commit phone fraud. For instance, one file on the "realitycheck" board is titled "basic telephone sabotage."
Silver Fox 7172 <-- wud mean? :/ -
2025-02-08 at 5:31 PM UTC