[Rhodes22-list] for Brad's eyes and those who reason only ...
John Shulick
jsbudda at verizon.net
Mon Nov 10 10:45:50 EST 2008
hparsons wrote:
>
> Sorry John, let's just say that your word for it wouldn't be good enough
> for me, you do keep records, right? If we're just going to say what the
> percentage is, we can say.
>
> Didn't think you had the stones to back up your BS
>
> "Not interested in your social security. That's not giving, that's the
> government taking."
>
> Not interested in ever seeing me collect social security would be more
> accurate
>
> "As to your Wiki entry, thanks for confirming what I was trying to say.
> It's good to see you are actually capable of learning. 1830 was a tad
> later than the founding father's period."
>
> Obviously you have trouble comprehending what you read.
>
>
> John Shulick wrote:
>>
>> "I've got a heck of a deal for you. I'll buy your boat from you
>> at the price that I determine is fair, and you can chose to accept it or
>> .... oh wait, that would be your only choice.
>>
>> You do understand the implementation of eminent domain, right?"
>>
>> If you came for my boat I would sink it. If you came for my house I would
>> burn it. If you came for my land I would render it unusable. You could
>> have
>> it after you have have hauled my dead body off it.
>>
>> "The only thing you can do to a free man is kill him." Robert A. Heinlein
>>
>> "You need to study history a little closer. The trail of tears happened
>> LONG after the founding fathers did their thing, you can't blame that
>> one on them."
>>
>> Excerpt from the Wikipedia
>>
>> The Trail of Tears was the forced relocation of Native Americans from
>> their
>> homelands to Indian Territory (present day Oklahoma) in the Western
>> United
>> States. The phrase originated from a description of the removal of the
>> Choctaw Nation in 1831. Many Native Americans suffered from exposure,
>> disease, and starvation while en route to their destinations, and many
>> died,
>> including, for example, 4,000 of the 15,000 relocated Cherokee. Thousands
>> of
>> enslaved and free African-Americans (as slaves accompanying their Native
>> American slaveowners and as former runaway slaves that were assisted by,
>> assimilated by, or married to members of the tribes) accompanied the
>> removed
>> nations on the Trail of Tears.
>> In 1830, the Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Muscogee (Creek), and Seminole
>> (sometimes collectively referred to as the Five Civilized Tribes) were
>> living as autonomous nations in what would be called the American Deep
>> South. The process of cultural transformation (proposed by GEORGE
>> WASHINGTON
>> and HENERY KNOX) was gaining momentum, especially among the Cherokee and
>> Choctaw. Indian removal was first proposed by THOMAS JEFFERSON. Andrew
>> Jackson was the first U.S. President to implement removal with the
>> passage
>> of the Indian Removal Act of 1830. In 1831 the Choctaw were the first to
>> be
>> removed, and they became the model for all other removals. After the
>> Choctaw, the Seminole were removed in 1832, the Creek in 1834, then the
>> Chickasaw in 1837, and finally the Cherokee in 1838.
>>
>> "I'll make my tax returns for the last
>> 10 years public on here to show how much I've given to charity if you'll
>> do the same."
>>
>> To many pages to post, HOWEVER I'm Prepared to release my annual social
>> security statement showing what I've earned in my lifetime and will write
>> in
>> how many jobs I had to work to make it along with what I gave to
>> charity.(Care to dance?)
>>
>> John Shulick
>>
>>
>>
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