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flatdawg

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Posts posted by flatdawg

  1. You forgot egotistical and obsessive.  Just kidding.....what kind of appetizers they sporting at this boardwalk bar?  broccoli bites, fried mushrooms, mini tacos, loaded tater skins, hot cheese balls?   :shrug: 

     

    GO RV, then BV

    Apps include steamed oysters, shrimp and clams. Main course would be speckled trout, grouper and stuffed flounder. C'mon down to cape fear Shabs, it'll be a thanksgiving you won't soon forget. It's a rather rough, tough and witty group... you'll fit right in.

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  2. Rothsdad: "and foolish reactionary sheep call for more bombing, again and again." You have had your say. I say sit down you pacifistic azz wipe. Shut up. Listening to types like you screaming at the top of your lungs, "coexist , be tolerant of other cultures and religions, make love not war." Spineless dweebs like you who's policies have been employed, have allowed the tragedies of Paris to occure, this past weekend. Such policies of non-violence, open boarders, and isolationism, did not work at the turn of the last century, WW I, WW II, and it won't work now. You, and your President , fail to see that a people that come to this country and because we are tolerant of their ways as we refuse to apply our laws to them, think us to be weak and inconsequential . Thus they do what they want, wherever they want to do it. They tell you so.

    I gave you the ruby, something I rarely do. And you got it for your lack of comprehensive skills. Maybe you should read Roth's post again.

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  3. I remember this rat very well.  I'm surprised the Reagan administration let him off so lightly.....but they had their hands full with Iran-Contra at the time, so he probably didn't have their full attention.   :mellow: 

     

    GO RV, then BV 

    Shabs, I believe the '81 patriotic libertarian leaning Reagan would have handled it a bit differently. However, post shooting Reagan was a shell of his former self and just another NWO controlled puppet who went along to get along. As for his administration, just a bunch of rothschild firsters.

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  4. Good morning expat,

    Something told you would be the only to respond to this. The othe "patriots" here are too busy calling others libtards and fighting amongst themselves.

    I know this part of NC around Butner. Over the years I've have many customers in that area. Still do.

    Lots of patriotic good ole boys in north central NC. This time of year most of them are wearing camo and have a scoped high powered deer rifle on the rack in the pick up. Sure would be nice for one of 'em to mistake this rat for a deer.

    Who am I kidding?

    This traitor will be whisked away on a Mosad Owned and operated G650er straight off to Rothschildistan where he'll be given the welcome of a national hero. He'll continue to live at the expense of the American taxpayer, this time like a king, with is money coming from US foreign aid to israhell.

    The intelligence this POS stole and sold resulted in the deaths of 200 CIA agents and assets. Hopefully one day one of their contemporaries will finally give the traitor the justice he, and we, deserve.

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  5. CNS News

    WASHINGTON (AP) — Jonathan Pollard, the Navy intelligence analyst whose 1985 arrest for selling secrets to Israel set off a sensational spy saga, is scheduled to be released from federal prison next week, marking the end of a three-decade diplomatic burr in the relationship between the two allies.

    Pollard, 61, had been serving a life sentence, but was granted parole this year under sentencing rules in place at the time of his prosecution that made him presumptively eligible for release this month.

    Although the decision from the U.S. Parole Commission came around the same time as a sharp disagreement between the U.S. and the Israeli governments over a nuclear deal with Iran, officials from both countries have denied the release was in any way tied to that arrangement, or was intended as a concession to Israel.

    The release, scheduled for next Friday, caps a case that divided public opinion in Israel and America and has been a periodic source of legal and diplomatic wrangling between the two countries.

    “In terms of the quantity of stuff he gave away and the classification and the damage to relations, it certainly was a significant case,” said Jeffrey Richelson, a senior fellow at the National Security Archive at George Washington University who has written on Pollard.

    Pollard’s plans aren’t immediately clear. His lawyers said after the parole decision in July that he had lined up a job and housing in the New York area. His lawyers have said that he will be required to remain in the United States for five years, though they called on President Barack Obama to grant him clemency and permit him to move to Israel immediately.

    But the White House quickly shot down that prospect, saying Pollard had committed “very serious crimes” and the president had “no intention of altering the terms of Mr. Pollard’s parole.”

    One of his lawyers, Eliot Lauer, did not respond this week to questions about Pollard’s future and said his client would not be available for an interview.

    The real question, said Washington national security lawyer Mark Zaid, is “not about releasing him, because he’s going to be released. He’s served his time and his sentence is up. … It’s more about, ‘OK, where does he go?'”

    The case attracted international attention when Pollard was arrested on Nov. 21, 1985, after trying unsuccessfully to gain asylum at the Israeli Embassy in Washington. He pleaded guilty a year later to conspiracy to commit espionage and was sentenced in 1987 to life in prison. He has argued that his guilty plea was coerced and that his sentence was excessive.

    Justice Department lawyers did not object to Pollard’s release during a hearing this year that took into account Pollard’s behavior in prison and whether he was likely to commit new crimes if released. Under sentencing rules, he was eligible for parole after spending 30 years in custody.

    Though next Saturday marks the 30th anniversary of his arrest, Pollard is actually due out Friday from the Butner, N.C., prison because releases aren’t scheduled on weekends or holidays, said Bureau of Prisons spokesman Ed Ross.

    The case has long been a source of tension between the two countries.

    American presidents have repeatedly denied Pollard’s release even as the Israeli government, which granted Pollard citizenship in the 1990s and recognized him as an Israeli agent, has for years sought his freedom. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in July that he had “consistently raised the issue of (Pollard’s) release in my meetings and conversations with the leadership of successive U.S. administrations.”

    The U.S. last year dangled the prospect of freeing Pollard early as part of a package of incentives to keep Israel at the negotiating table during talks with the Palestinians. But the peace effort collapsed and Pollard remained in prison. He came up for parole last year but was denied.

    Pollard’s supporters, including many Israeli citizens, have long maintained he was punished too harshly for spying on behalf of a U.S. ally and that he provided information critical to Israel’s security interests at a time when the country was under threat from its Middle East neighbors. But U.S. officials have condemned him as a traitor who provided volumes of classified information to Israel, including about radar-jamming techniques and the electronic capabilities of nations hostile to Israel, including Saudi Arabia.

    A damage assessment prepared by the U.S. government after Pollard’s arrest found that he had “eagerly seized an opportunity to volunteer his services to Israeli intelligence,” and after receiving formal instructions and operational planning, began making large biweekly deliveries of classified material and collected a monthly salary for it.

    Pollard drew the suspicion of a supervisor for the large amounts of classified information that he was handling on topics concerning the Middle East that were unrelated to his official duties on North America and the Caribbean.

    A lasting consequence of the case is unusual suspicion within U.S. intelligence toward those who maintain deep Israeli contacts or have spent time there, said Zaid, a lawyer who represents whistleblowers and handles national security matters. But he said that for much of the public, there’s little recollection about it.

    “Frankly, I don’t think the general public remembers him,” Zaid said. “It’s part of history. It’s a generation ago.”

    http://www.cnsnews.com/news/article/release-set-next-week-convicted-spy-jonathan-pollard

    Flatdawg says: I remember him and hopefully the only way this POS gets outta NC is in a box.

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  6. Oh....so 3 million is way less.....hardly an incident at all.   

     

    GO RV, then BV

    I suppose one could look at it that way, or you could say the first number of 6 million was so obviously fictitious that it had to be lowered to something more believable.

    How long have the zionist been telling of the number 6 million? What does that number really represent?

    "As documented in the book The First Holocaust, the Zionists have continuously and hysterically attempted to claim that six million Jews were dead, dying or in grave danger in Europe and Russia since the late 1800’s. Any time there was turmoil in Europe, albeit turmoil often instigated by Jews in the first place, prominent Zionist figures and Jewish-controlled media organizations world wide continuously whipped up a frenzy with phony sob stories to get people to feel sorry for Europe’s Jews and donate money to Jewish charities. It turns out that this mythical six million figure, long since discredited even by mainstream Holohoax historians, comes from a Jewish-Talmudic religious myth that says “ye shall return minus six million” or “you shall return to the land of Israel with six million less”, and of course WW2 birthed the modern state of Israel which was established in 1948. Israeli Jews often excuse their systematic genocide of Palestinians and theft of Palestinian lands by bringing up the so-called Holocaust™ of WW2, which any serious researcher and critical thinker knows by now is a fraud of collosal proportions. The Zionists have so much influence that they turned a delusional Jewish religious prophecy into “historical fact”."

    http://www.thetruthseeker.co.uk/?p=24369

  7. These numbers equate to 80 Jewish births a day in all of Europe over 15 years.....lest not forget all the Jews who were fortunate enough to flee Europe. Mathematically, it seems quite telling. As always, just my opinion. :shrug:

    GO RV, then BV

    If you went to the link you'll see that the International Committee of the Red Cross says 272,000 concentration camp inmates died in German custody, about half of them Jews.

    Additionally, sometime in the last 10 years or so the plague at Auschwitz has been adjusted downwards from 4 million deaths to 1 million. That 3 million has never been deducted from the "official number" of 6 million.

    The numbers just don't add up any longer.

  8. Many Germans I spoke to don't deny the Holocaust.

     

     

    I guess in todays' world; Right is Wrong and Wrong is now the New Right. Same to be said for Truths and Lies . . . You'll never be where I've been, you'll never see the things I've seen. You going to tell me I shouldn't believe my lying eyes, huh !! Sod off . . .

    Of course they don't deny the holocaust, they'd go to jail if they did.

    "It's easier to fool people than convince them they've been fooled." Mark Twain

  9. without even KNOWING exactly what I have seen you judge my veracity....I don't think anyone except GOD knows the exact number of those who were gassed and burned to ash...the number is beside the point...the point is that these were animals among many animals... for the Japanese themselves were no slouches when it came to atrocities...and I understand the Russians did some horrible things too...what I do say is that there WAS a HOLOCAUST....many Jews, Christians, Gypsies (fill in the blank) were slaughtered mercilessly...some gassed...some machine-gunned....some (fill in the blank)...I wont waste my time telling you what I DID actually see...for your mind is clearly made up....I'm done with this

    Telling us what YOU DID see would not be wasting your time. Pretending you've seen something no one else has and not sharing... well, that's wasting my time.

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  10. This whole thing is just far to blown out.

     

    I'm happy for all you wonderful "free thinkers" that have decided to take to your higher ground amongst the other elitists who have also dismissed us commoners struggles as unworthy.

    The rest of us have been waiting for one of those "almighty ones" to finally have mercy and explain a real path to regain our freedoms, because we're apparently just too stupid to see anything of substance in your innuendos, and have have yet to decipher life's clues from your arrogant snubs.

    We are so caught up in our dogma of trying to reform any political party to a constitutional base, that our hands are just too dirty from working the land to see that apparently most excellent writing on the wall that all you so much more knowledgeable "beautiful ones" understand is common knowledge among yourselves.

    You see, the only take away we get is that none of you have any actual plan at all anyway. So while we realize ours is not an easy one, it is the only plan we can see that has a realistic path to get America where she needs to be.

    Maybe you or one of your other far-more-gifted-humans-than-any-commoner could hold your nose just long enough to bequeath us a detailed stratagem to finally defeat the globalists, seeing as they are the ones daring to challenge your claim of being the only true elites, I'm sure that alone must make the rest of you just aquiver with indignation. 

    There's a LOT of professors floating around on that elitist stupor trance cloud, maybe they could consider it a benevolent gift for the unwashed masses?

     

    So, until I hear of something else that might actually work, I'm going to continue to call out the BS where I see it.

    Just telling people they are too stupid for words doesn't usually inspire them, until they prove they are, in which case, it kinda feels good.

    I have found taking the time to explain the core mechanics goes a long way to guide people to their own personal realization of the hypocrisy.

    For as long as we have a solid and growing foothold in the republican party, I will continue to support the people that are taking the fight toe to toe against the establishment.

    Just as I will continue to call out those that claim to support, but only offer lip service instead.

    As far as I can see, it's been the lip service from fake patriots that really helped Americas decline.

     

    It wasn't an elitist that got Boehner to resign, it was us muddy handed knuckle dragging commoners.

    So, when your finally ready to spill the beans, feel free to enlighten the rest.

     

    One thing is for sure, I need some time off, starting to go crazy talking to so many that are so much smarter than I that they believe their scorn is all that's needed for others to drop to their knees.

     

    Only person I get on my knees for is Jesus Christ. Guess He sorta beat you to the "gig", so you might want to take that up with Him if you expect to ever obtain your "rightful" position.

    I'm flattered you consider me an elitist... I think.

    In reality, I'm just another commoner with another small business.

    Our main difference is I don't chomp down on every smelly piece of bait that the pressitutes and neocon bloggers drag in front of me. I'll stick with the issues that can bring Americans together against our common enemies, not the divisive ones the PTB want you to go with.

    I feel your frustrations and I resect your passion, and agree that you need some time off. Start with turning off the divisive neocon wind bags on the idiot box and talk radio.

    Peace

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  11. roflmao, guess I should have bothered with a proof read before posting.

    That said, I DID use the correct name more often than the wrong one, and even managed to use the right one for the title.

    That's what I get for running a company during the day and stopping to put out a quick note.

    Maybe if I didn't usually have two lines on hold and someone outside waiting for a meeting I'd have more time to weed out mistakes.

     

    How dare I be human.

    Love your happy little pet name, coming from a progressive libtard troll like you, all I can say is,[/size]

    THANK YOU!!!!

    As long as I am making people like you get their knickers in a bunch, I must be doing  something right.

     

    Either you are willing to stand for freedom, or you are not.

    My greatest fault is that I care far too much to be silent as America is destroyed.

    What's a progressive libtard troll? Short for the Constitutional Libertarian that I am? A true free thinker that has Progressed past the false left-right paradigm that seems to be your biggest stumbling block?

    My post was in jest. Until you can get past the labeling and name calling no one that matters will take you seriously.

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  12. 9:17a ETPosted by Clay Travis

    Steve Spurrier will always be my favorite SEC coach, the visor-tossing, herky jerky moving maniacal head coach giving out the shotgun sign to his quarterbacks from the sideline and tossing off cocky one liners -- "You can't spell Citrus without UT," -- that simultaneously made you want to strangle him and yet share a beer with him at the same time.

    For my generation of Southern college football fans Steve Spurrier represents the last link to our childhoods, the old coach who would always be there, prowling the sideline. Spurrier arrived at Florida in 1990, when I was 11 years old, a fifth grader in a local Nashville elementary school and by the time he left Florida, in 2001, I was a first year law student at Vanderbilt University. During those 11 years I feel like I grew up -- at least partly -- and Spurrier was my fall companion for the entire ride.

    Just now, when news came that Spurrier was stepping down, I was putting my seven year and five year old boys to bed. And I'll be honest, I teared up a little bit when I read the news. Because I can't imagine the SEC without Steve Spurrier. If you aren't my age and you didn't grow up in the South watching Steve Spurrier hiking up and down the sideline with the Florida Gator fun and gun offense roaring around behind him, you probably won't understand what he meant to all of us, but if you're like me then you know exactly what I'm writing about.

    And exactly how I feel tonight.

    Steve Spurrier was different, man.

    At a time when Southern coaches rarely opened their mouth to say anything interesting in public, Spurrier was as provocative with his off-field commentary as he was with his on-field offense. He was brash and opinionated and cocky as all getout. Three yards and a cloud of dust? To hell with that. Spurrier changed SEC football forever with his vertical passing attack. Why run when you could pass?

    In his heyday you hoped that your team would only give up a first down to him on 4th and 15. I lost count of the number of times Spurrier's Gators dropped back to pass and I'd think to myself, how is it possible for there to be 22 people on the field and 21 of them are nowhere near this other guy, who is suddenly streaking, all alone, down the sideline for a touchdown?

    Oh, I hated the Florida Gators growing up.

    In 1993 when Spurrier's Gators beat my beloved Volunteers and their quarterback Heath Shuler, I told my dad after the game, "I hate Steve Spurrier, dad."

    And my dad, who was nervous even then about my mouth, said, "You don't really hate him, Clay."

    And I said, "No, dad, I really do hate him."

    And the hate grew.

    In 1996, when Florida scored 35 consecutive points on my beloved Tennessee Volunteers, I let loose with a string of epithets that still upsets my mom nearly twenty years later. I stormed out of my parent's house, barefoot, stalked down our driveway and walked up and down the street swinging my arms and cursing aloud like a crazy man for ten minutes or more. A couple of times I even swore that I was going to give up all my other schooling and devote myself to studying defensive football just so I could stop Steve Spurrier from scoring on Tennessee. Seriously, I thought that, as a nearly grown adult.

    That's what Steve Spurrier did to you, he made you crazy.

    But a funny thing also happened, somewhere along the way I also came to love Spurrier too.

    It suprised me, the suddenness of this realization that happened sometime around my freshman year of college. As I got ready for the UT-Florida game that year, I realized I'd grown to like Spurrier. He made football more fun. And even though sometimes I wanted to strangle him to death, I couldn't imagine the SEC without him.

    In 1998 when Tennessee finally ended five consecutive years of losses -- that was back when Tennessee losing to Florida five years in a row still felt like a long time -- I enjoyed watching Spurrier try to make his way to the locker room amid a sea of orange. Three years later the Vols ruined Spurrier's final SEC game as a Gator, beating Florida in the Swamp 34-32. Both are wins that still bring a smile to my face nearly a generation later. Spurrier made those wins more special, you wanted to vanquish a champ, not an afterthought.

    Put it this way, no one remembers what it was like to beat Ron Zook.

    Spurrier was just like every Southern family's crazy uncle. He pissed the hell out of you and somehow while he was pissing the hell out of you, he found a way to make you like him even more. It was uncanny. Sure, Spurrier won the Heisman trophy and revolutionized offensive football in the South on his way to snagging a national championship and becoming the greatest coach in the history of two different SEC schools, but he still managed to climb up on top of a NASCAR double wide and drink Coors Light shirtless. He was your crazy ass uncle on his third wife who also happened to have a degree in nuclear engineering, a Southern man in full who didn't need to apologize for anything.

    Best of all, he was ours.

    Spurrier was one of the last football coaches to feel like he was from where he coached.

    Listen to Steve Spurrier talk for ten minutes and you knew exactly where he was from, he was like us, a Southern guy who grew up and became a football coach. That used to be common in the SEC. Nowadays there are a bunch of football mercenaries in the South. Butch Jones, Bret Bielema, Mark Stoops, do any of these guys seem like they grew up on SEC football, whiskey, and sundresses?

    Spurrier didn't just live the SEC, he was the SEC.

    I mean, Steve Spurrier? That name was made to be said with a Southern accent. If you put ten different men in a line and someone said, which one of these guys is named Steve Spurrier, every single one of us would pick the cocky-sideways smirking ******* in the visor.

    Every single one of us.

    Spurrier's the second greatest coach in the history of the SEC -- 1. Bryant 2. Spurrier 3. Neyland 4. Saban is the SEC's own Mt. Rushmore -- and he's got something even more remarkable on his resume -- he's the greatest football coach in Florida and South Carolina history. How many other coaches can say they're the greatest coach in the history of two different schools?

    Do you know how many bowl wins South Carolina football had when Steve Spurrier got to Columbia? Three! South Carolina didn't even win its first bowl game until 1995. Spurrier won five bowl games at South Carolina, two more than the program had ever won in its history before he got there. How many coaches have more bowl wins than their school did before they got there.

    Hell, he won 11 games three straight years there. That's the equivalent of two national championships at Alabama.

    And how about Florida, the Gators were atrocious before Spurrier got there. Do you know how many SEC titles Florida had before Spurrier got there?

    Zero.

    As in, none.

    Mississippi State had a more illustrious football history than Florida did before Spurrier arrived in Gainesville. (Sorry, Mississippi State, but at least y'all had a 1941 SEC title on your resume.)

    Spurrier won six SEC titles at Florida. During the 12 years he coached the Gators, he won more SEC titles than he had home losses at the Swamp. I mean, is this real life?

    And he also won an ACC title at Duke.

    Duke!

    In football.

    But to our generation of SEC fans he'll always be something more, an icon, a mythic figure from our childhoods who came to personify the game that so many of us grew to love, the fast talking smart aleck Southerner with a droll wit, the man who always had a play guaranteed to get you a first down no matter the down and distance, and the guy who always had an insult at the ready. The only thing faster than Spurrier's wit was his trigger on his quarterbacks. This was a guy so cocky that he switched quarterbacks on every play for an entire game.

    I mean, who else would even think to do that?

    And while I'd like to see Spurrier go out with a long goodbye for the rest of this season to the SEC and its fans -- I'm convinced he'd go the remarkable and receive a standing ovation from a Neyland Stadium crowd -- Spurrier leaving without any fan fare is actually the most Spurrier move possible. He didn't coach for us, he coached for himself. Which, perfectly enough, made us like him that much more. Spurrier's the anti-Alex Rodriguez, a sports figure who cared so little what we all thought of him, that everyone ended up loving him for it.

    I'm incredibly fortunate to get to do what i do for a living and for the rest of my life Steve Spurrier will be the only person in sports that I've ever felt like I needed to pinch myself after I asked him a question. Every time I spoke to Spurrier I always thought in the back of my head, "Is this real life, am I really talking to Steve Spurrier?"

    The Steve Spurrier? The coach from my boyhood, still coaching now that I was all grown up, the timeless and ageless shadow on a sideline, the coaching icon who always spiked his visor on the field yet never managed to get a grass stain on it.

    And if you're like me at all, no matter who you root for, there will only ever be one head ball coach.

    God Bless Steve Spurrier.

    http://www.foxsports.com/college-football/outkick-the-coverage/god-bless-steve-spurrier-101215

    Flatdawg says: I teared up just a bit this morning. Spurrier was the last of the breed. Like myself, a little abrasive. Saturdays won't be the same.

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