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Posts That Were Thanked by Speedy Parker

  1. aldra JIDF Controlled Opposition
    pretty cool, shame it's limited to ~20 minutes flight time though. that translates roughly to modern quadcopter dronesso it's likely a limitation of the battery/motor/weight limitations
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  2. Grylls Cum Looking Faggot [abrade this vocal tread-softly]
    Man that’s cold
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  3. Originally posted by Quick Mix Ready I'v been on a mirrored NetB server for probably since 9/11

    The top brass killing their own. the expendables. Jeff Hunter COO of Ea Sports which his division I read worked on defense contracts for military hardware simulation training.

    EA Sport bought out Maxis gaming system (out of the bay area) which as simple as it sounds, the AI algorithm in SIM City was pretty advance for a simple looking gaming system.

    7x7x7

    also Flight 77

    there's your warning angels, 555

    Aw sweet a schizo meltdown
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  4. St|1 and Tech have preconceived beliefs. That means they have a belief, and then they struggle to support it at all costs. Like ramming a square peg into a round hole.
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  5. Quick Mix Ready Dark Matter [jealously defalcate my upanishad]
    Originally posted by Lanny I hear y’all have a walled homeless encampment in civic center now. Sounds kinda crappy but maybe there’s finally affordable housing now, as long as you don’t mind living in a tent

    I was a loner as homeless. I would find a place to crash on my own if I didn't have the luxery of the back of my pickup truck with a crappy tin shell to try and stay warm in.

    I would take lunch breaks when I was doing uber. busy spots of course ar the Mission Dist and Castro. no not as many gays as there used to be. lots of tech families moved in. anywho I would park and sit at the huge hedges people had in front of their estate houses in upper castro and saying, Hell lots of parking here. I could grab a tarp from home depot and build a pod home inside that hedge and no one would know because I would split at 5:30 am, get in my car and not come back till it gets dark again.

    or up in a tree in Golden Gate Park. lots of places to crash. you just got to be creative. I don't understand why all of these homeless people gravitate towards one another. I think someone encourages them to do this. it's more of a political agenda by far leftist paid for by a non-leftist activist George Soros or people like him. That old mother fucker is an evil fuck. old Joo who would rat out his own people so he could survive.
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  6. Nile bump
    Originally posted by Technologist Ummm I literally did not. Show me the quote you liar.

    Seem a bit shook. Trek walkn all over u
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  7. Originally posted by Technologist And you KNOW this how? Do you know these “Arab” men? Do you know Kyle rittenhouse?

    You do this all the time soi boi. You make up bullshit when you read things into a story, that’s just not there. You don’t understand how that way of thinking causes you to be miserable?

    And yet I'm usually right.

    You literally started talking about how Ahmed Aubrery was a jogger and interested in construction when the media told you to do so.
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  8. AngryOnion Big Wig [the nightly self-effacing broadsheet]
    Of course they will support it.
    They do exactly what they are told and they think are smarter than everyone else.
    Pride before the fall motherfuckers.
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  9. blaster master victim of incest
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  10. Nile bump
    Lurching ever on towards str8 dictatorship
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  11. Originally posted by Speedy Parker What? Look in the mirror to check if its still you?

    When I lift my right arm, and the arm in the mirror stays at my side, I don't make any serious decisions that day.
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  12. the man who put it in my hood Black Hole [miraculously counterclaim my golf]



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  13. I hope he's telling the truth.
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  14. Originally posted by Speedy Parker Why do you think you woukd have died without the jab?

    I'm pretty sure one of stl1's copy pastas said so.
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  15. Guise... the Democrats are literally being flushed down the toilet right now.
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  16. Originally posted by stl1 The New York Times
    How Tyson Foods Got 60,500 Workers to Get the Coronavirus Vaccine Quickly
    Lauren Hirsch and Michael Corkery


    SPRINGDALE, Ark. — When Tyson, one of the world’s largest meatpacking companies, announced in early August that all of its 120,000 workers would need to be vaccinated against the coronavirus or lose their jobs, Diana Eike was angry. Ms. Eike, an administrative coordinator at the company, had resisted the vaccine, and not for religious or political reasons like many others here in her home state.

    “It was just something personal,” she said.

    Now, Ms. Eike is fully vaccinated, and she is relieved that Tyson made the decision for her. The company, she said, “took the burden off of me making the choice.”

    Across the country, workers have reacted to vaccine mandates with a mix of emotions. Employer requirements are taking effect without major controversy in many areas. But in some cities, government workers have marched through the streets in protest, while others have quit. Numerous companies, fearing a wave of resignations, have hesitated on mandates, even as they struggled with new coronavirus outbreaks.

    “It was just something personal,” Diana Eike, a Tyson employee, said of her initial resistance to being vaccinated.© Jacob Slaton for The New York Times “It was just something personal,” Diana Eike, a Tyson employee, said of her initial resistance to being vaccinated.
    Tyson’s announcement that it would require vaccinations across its corporate offices, packing houses and poultry plants, many of which are situated in the South and Midwest where resistance to the vaccines is high, was arguably the boldest mandate in the corporate world.

    “We made the decision to do the mandate, fully understanding that we were putting our business at risk,” Tyson’s chief executive, Donnie King, said in an interview last week. “This was very painful to do.”

    But it was also bad for business when Tyson had to shut facilities because of virus outbreaks. Since announcing the policy, roughly 60,500 employees have received the vaccine, and more than 96 percent of its work force is vaccinated.

    At a plant in Camilla, Ga., Dextrea Dennard, a member of the Retail, Wholesale Department Store Union, was initially upset that Tyson mandated vaccination. “I felt like our rights were being violated,” she said.

    Ms. Dennard had seen the effect of the disease up close. Her brother had contracted the virus early on in the pandemic and was on a ventilator for 30 days. A number of workers died at the plant where she worked, a 15-minute drive away in Albany, one of the early epicenters of the outbreak.

    “In my community, you know, we have a lot of deaths,” Ms. Dennard said. “I thought about what my brother had went through and overcame — and I just felt like it was time for me to do what I needed to do, as far as for my daughter, who’s 10 years old, who can’t be vaccinated.”

    Ms. Dennard decided to get vaccinated after talking with a physician the company brought in to discuss his time treating Covid-19 patients.

    “And once I got it, a lot of my co-workers that was feeling kind of funny about it — they got it later,” she said.

    Others never got the shot. Monday was the last day on the job for Calvin Miller, who worked in dry storage at a Tyson plant in Sedalia, Mo., where the local vaccination rate is 46 percent. Mr. Miller, who worked for Tyson for 12 years, said he felt “betrayed” by the mandate: “A lot of good workers and longtime workers lost their jobs because they didn’t trust the vaccine,” he said. He is considering looking for a job in retail, even though it won’t pay as much as the $17.20 an hour base rate he made at Tyson, he said. The complex in which the Sedalia plant operates is now 96 percent vaccinated.

    The company said that “a very limited number” of employees have quit over the mandate. There are still roughly 4,000 unvaccinated U.S. workers employed by Tyson who were either granted religious or medical exemptions, or who were previously on unrelated leave. Some of those with exemptions were transferred to a position that allowed them to socially distance. Others were furloughed.

    Six employees have sued Tyson, claiming it violated Tennessee law by placing workers granted such exemptions on unpaid leave. The case is pending.

    Mr. King said he has received comments from workers in emails and text messages.

    “I wanted to know what people were thinking,” he said. Some of the feedback was angry. “I’ve gotten a death threat posted on a bathroom wall in one of our plants,” he said.

    To help make clear the mandate was about keeping workers safe, Tyson needed support from its largest unions, the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union and the United Food and Commercial Workers Union. In exchange for their backing, Tyson agreed to offer more benefits for all workers, like paid sick leave.

    “People who run large corporate enterprises think in two areas: What’s best for my employees and what’s best for the company to keep going?” said William Schaffner, an infectious disease expert at Vanderbilt University. “And in this instance, the two mesh beautifully.”

    As the number of coronavirus cases and hospitalizations climbed over the summer, Ms. Eike, the administrative coordinator at Tyson in Springdale, began to question her decision to not get vaccinated. Around the same time, Mr. King announced the company mandate, giving her no choice. After Ms. Eike got the vaccine, her adult son, who had suffered a traumatic brain injury that made him fearful of the shot, received one. She now thinks that, considering the stakes, her resistance had been “selfish.”

    “I kind of beat myself up,” she said, “and think, why did it take somebody else to help me see that?”

    North Korean style propaganda about how people learned to appreciate their leaders making all their decisions for them.
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  17. Nile bump
    Yea David Lynch's take left A LOT to be desired.
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  18. Nile bump
    I meant the new one... I think.

    Check it out its worth a watch.
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  19. Meikai Heck This Schlong
    Originally posted by Speedy Parker Ed Durr, a truck driver with no political experience, defeated longtime NJ Senate president Democrat Steve Sweeney and spent only $153 on his campaign.

    Like half of it was just spent on Dunkin Donuts for his staff, too.
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  20. Sudo Black Hole [my hereto riemannian peach]
    Originally posted by Speedy Parker What happened to the first nine Malcoms'?

    I only know about the 5th one

    He was the one in the middle. His dad was a dentist who made meth
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