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View Full Version : Kim Jong-un bringing back "Pleasure Squads"



Blake
04-29-2016, 09:35 AM
"Kim Jong-un has reportedly ordered a new*‘pleasure squad’ of teenage girls to serve his every whim.

The North Korean leader originally stopped the practice – which has been employed in the country for decades – following the death of his father and predecessor, Kim Jong-il, in 2011.

However, he has now decided to resurrect the group, according to various reports, and has set about creating a new ‘troupe’.

https://www.yahoo.com/news/kim-jong-un-brings-back-pleasure-squads-of-105047854.html?nhp=1

Blake
04-29-2016, 09:36 AM
"s thought the girls, who reportedly must be tall and beautiful, are hand-picked by high-ranking authorities.

It is believed some of the girls are as young as 13 or 14 and are examined by a doctor to check whether or not they are still virgins......."

Blake
04-29-2016, 09:36 AM
This fat fuck needs to go

CosmicCowboy
04-29-2016, 09:44 AM
Life is good to be Kim Jong Un.

Sucks for the rest of them, though.

MultiTroll
04-29-2016, 10:04 AM
Hmmmn. Pillow talk could bring current phat phuk down?

His father: “The women who entertained his father knew many secrets and they have now been ordered to promise not to reveal any information before being sent back to their home towns", he told the paper.

Wonder what kind of embarrassing stuff the former girls and new girls will have on these creeps? If a bin Lader type snatch could free them and they could speak freely. :lol

I. Hustle
04-29-2016, 10:06 AM
Life is good to be Kim Jong Un.

Sucks for the rest of them, though.

Avante?

I. Hustle
04-29-2016, 10:09 AM
This dude needs to be taken out. How in the hell is this allowed?

SpursforSix
04-29-2016, 10:56 AM
Life is good to be Kim Jong Un.

Sucks for the rest of them, though.

Life is good because he has 13 year old girls service him?

CosmicCowboy
04-29-2016, 11:32 AM
Not perving at all, just commenting on that fat fuck ruling his universe and getting whatever he wants. "I want a fleet of 13 year old virgins"..."uhhh yes SIR!"...Mean little bastard too. Just executed a guy a few weeks ago by having him shot to pieces with an anti-aircraft gun.

Blake
04-29-2016, 11:39 AM
"I want a fleet of 13 year old virgins"..."uhhh yes SIR!"...

Life is good to be Kim Jong!

Ginobilly
04-29-2016, 11:57 AM
Life is good to be Kim Jong!

Don't rich billionaire saudi/muslim/jewish middles eastern princes do the same as Kim Jong? Yet they don't get blasted by the western media over doing it. US: But muzzies could do it because they our oil/banking fwends :cry

This is what I don't get: Saudi Arabia was largely responsible for 9/11 and funds muslim terrorist groups, yet we are still friends with these bastards? Shouldn't we have invaded and conquered Saudi Arabia instead pos Iraq?

Pelicans78
04-29-2016, 12:01 PM
Don't rich billionaire saudi/muslim/jewish middles eastern princes do the same as Kim Jong? Yet they don't get blasted by the western media over doing it. US: But muzzies could do it because they our oil/banking fwends :cry

This is what I don't get: Saudi Arabia was largely responsible for 9/11 and funds muslim terrorist groups, yet we are still friends with these bastards? Shouldn't we have invaded and conquered Saudi Arabia instead pos Iraq?

Twice as many foreign fighters would have come to defend the "holy land", plus Saudia Arabia has defense contracts with several countries including the U.S. so now that would not be a wise option especially considering how disastrous the Iraq War ended up.

Blake
04-29-2016, 12:28 PM
Don't rich billionaire saudi/muslim/jewish middles eastern princes do the same as Kim Jong? Yet they don't get blasted by the western media over doing it. US: But muzzies could do it because they our oil/banking fwends :cry


How did you learn about that?

boutons_deux
04-29-2016, 12:38 PM
He's psychopath with nukes. USA's balls shrink.

Anyway USA doesn't GAF about non-white non-christians, ask Japanese survivors

Ginobilly
04-29-2016, 01:08 PM
How did you learn about that?


The news, documentary's,etc. Do you ever watch the news or read up on middle eastern muslim culture? Female child and teenage molestation are big in muslim culture in case you didn't know. It's no secret that muzzies like underage women. Esp the elite Muslim establishment. The wasp/jewish elite like em to. Ever heard of the franklin cover up? The only difference is, these guys could get away with it because they control the currency and judicial system in their countries. That Franklin cover up book mentions Cheney and Bush fucking 14/15 year old orphaned girls, somewhere in the bahamas, while giving them alcohol, weed, and cocaine. Yeah, but only Kim jong does those evil perverted things to teenage girls:rolleyes Muzzies, Jewies, and xtians are stand up citizens that will never do such a thing:lol

Blake
04-29-2016, 01:11 PM
The news, documentary's,etc. Do you ever watch the news or read up on middle eastern muslim culture?

You mean like western media?

Ginobilly
04-29-2016, 01:21 PM
You mean like western media?

nope. They claim it in their own media and books and non mainstream alternative media. Western media tries to hide all their perverted shit.(like the germans trying to hide their brutal rapes on new years and the english covering up muslim pedophilia and pedestry.)
Go visit a muslim country with your daughter or gf and you'll have dudes offering you money/goats/camels for your daughter and gf. You probably most likely wont see that in western countries.

Blake
04-29-2016, 01:32 PM
nope. They claim it in their own media and books and non mainstream alternative media. Western media tries to hide all their perverted shit.(like the germans trying to hide their brutal rapes on new years and the english covering up muslim pedophilia and pedestry.)
Go visit a muslim country with your daughter or gf and you'll have dudes offering you money/goats/camels for your daughter and gf. You probably most likely wont see that in western countries.

You just asked me if I watch the news. Is your news source "non mainstream alternative media"?

spurraider21
04-29-2016, 01:38 PM
did somebody mention muslims? i'm on the job!

https://redmalehummingbird.files.wordpress.com/2015/08/tumblr_static_white_knight.jpg

TheSanityAnnex
04-29-2016, 01:40 PM
From 2011 not sure if anything has changed

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2011/nov/08/saudi-arabia-child-brides-marriage (http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2011/nov/08/saudi-arabia-child-brides-marriage)

Atgaa, 10, and her sister Reemya, 8, are about to be married to men in their 60s. Atgaa will be her husband's fourth wife. Their wedding celebrations (http://international.daralhayat.com/ksaarticle/324325) are scheduled for this week and will take place in the town of Fayaadah Abban in Qasim, Saudi Arabia.The girls are getting married because their financially struggling father needs the money that their dowries will provide: young girls of this age can fetch as much as $40,000 each.
Many readers might be shocked at this news. How can it be legal? The answer is that Saudi Arabia (http://www.theguardian.com/world/saudiarabia) has no minimum age for marriage, and it is perfectly legal to marry even an hour-old child.
Three Saudi ministries share the blame for allowing and facilitating child marriages. The health ministry is tasked with conducting genetic tests for couples considering marriage. Saudi law requires potential brides and grooms to provide certificates of genetic testing before marriages can officially proceed.
The justice ministry regulates the marriage process and issues licences. And the interior ministry registers families and documents the relationships between family members. It is also the most powerful government agency; it has authority over all other ministries and can direct their activities at will.
As with many pernicious practices, child marriage would not exist without tacit support and approval from the country's leadership. Far from condemning child marriage, the Saudi monarchy itself has a long history of marrying very young girls.
Sarah, who is now a brilliant Saudi doctor, told me she was barely 12 when the late prince Sultan proposed to her after seeing her walking at a military base where she had lived with her father. Luckily, her father had the wits to claim that she was chronically ill, at which point the proposal was swiftly rescinded.
Camel festivals, held at his time of the year in Saudi Arabia, witness the practice called akheth ("taking") in which girls aged 14 to 16 are "gifted" to the usually elderly members of the monarchy for a few days or weeks. This practice, reminiscent of the infamous droit du seigneur (http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/532829/droit-du-seigneur) in medieval Europe, is maintained to this day with the monarchy's protection.
Saudi Arabia has probably the highest number of child marriages in the Middle East and yet there has been almost no international outrage or objection directed at the practice. I have personally sent two letters to Ann Veneman, the director of United Nations Children's Fund (Unicef), regarding the Saudi practice and asking her to make her views on the issue public, as she did with Yemen (http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=32052&Cr=yemen&Cr1).
Advertisement


Instead, Unicef lauded Saudi efforts (http://archive.arabnews.com/?page=1&section=0&article=122422&d=12&m=5&y=2009) to protect child rights and even honoured Prince Naif, whose interior ministry is one of the departments overseeing child marriages. So no wonder the Saudi monarchy feels confident that such a practice can continue.
The US government has been similarly indifferent to the plight of child brides in the kingdom. In April 2009, I wrote to William Burns (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Joseph_Burns), the undersecretary of state, regarding the case of Sharooq, 8 – also from Qasim. I never heard back from him.
At a public conference, I asked a former senator, Chuck Hagel (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chuck_Hagel) (seated next to Prince Turki al-Faisal, a former head of Saudi intelligence), if he personally or the US would accept the friendship and alliance of a family that allows child marriage. The answer was nothing short of shocking: "We cannot decide for other countries what is appropriate or not," he said.
So far, no UN body, such as Unicef or the human rights council, has issued a single statement condemning child marriages in Saudi Arabia [see footnote]. In fact, not one country has made a statement in the human rights council on this issue, and not a single western government has asked the Saudi monarchy to stop the practice. The ugly tradition of child marriage thus continues with the help of the monarchy and its apologists in the west.
If any governments, especially in the west, are seriously concerned with this barbaric and medieval practice, they should ban the heads of Saudi justice, interior and health ministries from entering their countries. If this action were taken against government leaders facilitating crimes against children we would soon see a resolution of this issue.
Saudi Arabia must be pressured to set a minimum age for marriage and save children like Atgaa and Reemya.

Blake
04-29-2016, 01:42 PM
http://ia.media-imdb.com/images/M/MV5BMTQ4OTk3NDI2M15BMl5BanBnXkFtZTgwODcyNzE4MjE@._ V1_UX182_CR0,0,182,268_AL_.jpg

Ginobilly
04-29-2016, 02:11 PM
You just asked me if I watch the news. Is your news source "non mainstream alternative media"?

it's from non-mainstream news and I actually been to middle eastern countries(Morocco and Israel). And I have friends that have done tours in Iraq/Afghanistan. And none of my friends had anything good to say about how Muslim men treat there women, children, and animals.

Blake
04-29-2016, 02:15 PM
From 2011 not sure if anything has changed

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2011/nov/08/saudi-arabia-child-brides-marriage (http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2011/nov/08/saudi-arabia-child-brides-marriage)

Atgaa, 10, and her sister Reemya, 8, are about to be married to men in their 60s. Atgaa will be her husband's fourth wife. Their wedding celebrations (http://international.daralhayat.com/ksaarticle/324325) are scheduled for this week and will take place in the town of Fayaadah Abban in Qasim, Saudi Arabia.The girls are getting married because their financially struggling father needs the money that their dowries will provide: young girls of this age can fetch as much as $40,000 each.
Many readers might be shocked at this news. How can it be legal? The answer is that Saudi Arabia (http://www.theguardian.com/world/saudiarabia) has no minimum age for marriage, and it is perfectly legal to marry even an hour-old child.
Three Saudi ministries share the blame for allowing and facilitating child marriages. The health ministry is tasked with conducting genetic tests for couples considering marriage. Saudi law requires potential brides and grooms to provide certificates of genetic testing before marriages can officially proceed.
The justice ministry regulates the marriage process and issues licences. And the interior ministry registers families and documents the relationships between family members. It is also the most powerful government agency; it has authority over all other ministries and can direct their activities at will.
As with many pernicious practices, child marriage would not exist without tacit support and approval from the country's leadership. Far from condemning child marriage, the Saudi monarchy itself has a long history of marrying very young girls.
Sarah, who is now a brilliant Saudi doctor, told me she was barely 12 when the late prince Sultan proposed to her after seeing her walking at a military base where she had lived with her father. Luckily, her father had the wits to claim that she was chronically ill, at which point the proposal was swiftly rescinded.
Camel festivals, held at his time of the year in Saudi Arabia, witness the practice called akheth ("taking") in which girls aged 14 to 16 are "gifted" to the usually elderly members of the monarchy for a few days or weeks. This practice, reminiscent of the infamous droit du seigneur (http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/532829/droit-du-seigneur) in medieval Europe, is maintained to this day with the monarchy's protection.
Saudi Arabia has probably the highest number of child marriages in the Middle East and yet there has been almost no international outrage or objection directed at the practice. I have personally sent two letters to Ann Veneman, the director of United Nations Children's Fund (Unicef), regarding the Saudi practice and asking her to make her views on the issue public, as she did with Yemen (http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=32052&Cr=yemen&Cr1).
Advertisement


Instead, Unicef lauded Saudi efforts (http://archive.arabnews.com/?page=1§ion=0&article=122422&d=12&m=5&y=2009) to protect child rights and even honoured Prince Naif, whose interior ministry is one of the departments overseeing child marriages. So no wonder the Saudi monarchy feels confident that such a practice can continue.
The US government has been similarly indifferent to the plight of child brides in the kingdom. In April 2009, I wrote to William Burns (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Joseph_Burns), the undersecretary of state, regarding the case of Sharooq, 8 – also from Qasim. I never heard back from him.
At a public conference, I asked a former senator, Chuck Hagel (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chuck_Hagel) (seated next to Prince Turki al-Faisal, a former head of Saudi intelligence), if he personally or the US would accept the friendship and alliance of a family that allows child marriage. The answer was nothing short of shocking: "We cannot decide for other countries what is appropriate or not," he said.
So far, no UN body, such as Unicef or the human rights council, has issued a single statement condemning child marriages in Saudi Arabia [see footnote]. In fact, not one country has made a statement in the human rights council on this issue, and not a single western government has asked the Saudi monarchy to stop the practice. The ugly tradition of child marriage thus continues with the help of the monarchy and its apologists in the west.
If any governments, especially in the west, are seriously concerned with this barbaric and medieval practice, they should ban the heads of Saudi justice, interior and health ministries from entering their countries. If this action were taken against government leaders facilitating crimes against children we would soon see a resolution of this issue.
Saudi Arabia must be pressured to set a minimum age for marriage and save children like Atgaa and Reemya.

That looks like western mainstream media blasting to me.

There you go, Billy

Ginobilly
04-29-2016, 02:38 PM
That looks like western mainstream media blasting to me.

There you go, Billy

didn't read.

will you see this story on primetime CNN/Fox or your local news where it reaches 99% of americans? Like I said, you only see these stories buried on websites that most people don't read except for us geeks.

Blake
04-29-2016, 02:55 PM
didn't read.

will you see this story on primetime CNN/Fox or your local news where it reaches 99% of americans? Like I said, you only see these stories buried on websites that most people don't read except for us geeks.

Here's one on CNN I found in 10 seconds:

".....

updated 7:44 a.m. EST, Sat January 17, 2009


Top Saudi cleric: OK for young girls to wed

STORY HIGHLIGHTSGrand mufti speaks out after judge refuses to annul marriage of man, 47, to girl, 8*
Sheikh Abdul Aziz Al-Sheikh: "Shariah law has not brought injustice to women"
Human Rights Commission fighting child marriages
Next Article in World »

Saudi cleric Sheikh Abdul Aziz Al-Sheikh says it's OK for a girl age 10 or 12 to get married.

(CNN)*-- The debate over the controversial practice of child marriage in Saudi Arabia was pushed back into the spotlight this week, with the kingdom's top cleric saying that it's OK for girls as young as 10 to wed.

"It is incorrect to say that it's not permitted to marry off girls who are 15 and younger," Sheikh Abdul Aziz Al-Sheikh, the kingdom's grand mufti, said in remarks quoted Wednesday in the regional Al-Hayat newspaper. "A girl aged 10 or 12 can be married. Those who think she's too young are wrong and they are being unfair to her."

The issue of child marriage has been a hot-button topic in the deeply conservative kingdom in recent weeks.

Late last month, a Saudi judge refused to annul the marriage of an 8-year-old girl to a 47-year-old man.

The judge, Sheikh Habib Abdallah al-Habib, rejected a petition from the girl's mother, whose lawyer said the marriage was arranged by her father to settle a debt with "a close friend." The judge required the girl's husband to sign a pledge that he would not have sex with her until she reaches puberty.

Al-Sheikh was asked during a Monday lecture about parents forcing their underage daughters to marry.

Don't MissSaudi judge refuses to annul marriage of girl, 8

"We hear a lot in the media about the marriage of underage girls," he said, according to the newspaper. "We should know that Shariah law has not brought injustice to women."

Christoph Wilcke, a Saudi Arabia researcher for*Human Rights Watch, recently told CNN that his organization has heard many other cases of child marriages.

"We've been hearing about these types of cases once every four or five months because the Saudi public is now able to express this kind of anger -- especially so when girls are traded off to older men," Wilcke said.

Wilcke explained that while Saudi ministries may make decisions designed to protect children, "It is still the religious establishment that holds sway in the courts, and in many realms beyond the court."

Last month, Zuhair al-Harithi, a spokesman for the Saudi government-run Human Rights Commission, said his organization is fighting against child marriages.

"The Human Rights Commission opposes child marriages in*Saudi Arabia," al-Harithi said. "Child marriages violate international agreements that have been signed by Saudi Arabia and should not be allowed." He added that his organization has been able to intervene and stop at least one child marriage from taking place.

Wajeha al-Huwaider, co-founder of the Society of Defending Women's Rights in Saudi Arabia, told CNN last month that achieving human rights in the kingdom means standing against those who want to "keep us backward and in the dark ages."

She said the marriages cause girls to "lose their sense of security and safety. Also, it destroys their feeling of being loved and nurtured. It causes them a lifetime of psychological problems and severe depression."......

http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/meast/01/17/saudi.child.marriage/"


For being a self proclaimed geek, you suck at using the internets

Blake
04-29-2016, 02:58 PM
5 second Google re: Fox News

"Outraged human rights groups are calling the decision by a Saudi court to — not once, but twice — refuse to void the marriage of an 8-year-old girl to a man several years her senior a form of human trafficking........"

http://www.foxnews.com/story/2009/04/15/saudi-court-refuses-to-block-marriage-girl-8-to-older-man.html

Ginobilly
04-29-2016, 03:12 PM
Here's one on CNN I found in 10 seconds:

".....

updated 7:44 a.m. EST, Sat January 17, 2009


Top Saudi cleric: OK for young girls to wed

STORY HIGHLIGHTSGrand mufti speaks out after judge refuses to annul marriage of man, 47, to girl, 8*
Sheikh Abdul Aziz Al-Sheikh: "Shariah law has not brought injustice to women"
Human Rights Commission fighting child marriages
Next Article in World »

Saudi cleric Sheikh Abdul Aziz Al-Sheikh says it's OK for a girl age 10 or 12 to get married.

(CNN)*-- The debate over the controversial practice of child marriage in Saudi Arabia was pushed back into the spotlight this week, with the kingdom's top cleric saying that it's OK for girls as young as 10 to wed.

"It is incorrect to say that it's not permitted to marry off girls who are 15 and younger," Sheikh Abdul Aziz Al-Sheikh, the kingdom's grand mufti, said in remarks quoted Wednesday in the regional Al-Hayat newspaper. "A girl aged 10 or 12 can be married. Those who think she's too young are wrong and they are being unfair to her."

The issue of child marriage has been a hot-button topic in the deeply conservative kingdom in recent weeks.

Late last month, a Saudi judge refused to annul the marriage of an 8-year-old girl to a 47-year-old man.

The judge, Sheikh Habib Abdallah al-Habib, rejected a petition from the girl's mother, whose lawyer said the marriage was arranged by her father to settle a debt with "a close friend." The judge required the girl's husband to sign a pledge that he would not have sex with her until she reaches puberty.

Al-Sheikh was asked during a Monday lecture about parents forcing their underage daughters to marry.

Don't MissSaudi judge refuses to annul marriage of girl, 8

"We hear a lot in the media about the marriage of underage girls," he said, according to the newspaper. "We should know that Shariah law has not brought injustice to women."

Christoph Wilcke, a Saudi Arabia researcher for*Human Rights Watch, recently told CNN that his organization has heard many other cases of child marriages.

"We've been hearing about these types of cases once every four or five months because the Saudi public is now able to express this kind of anger -- especially so when girls are traded off to older men," Wilcke said.

Wilcke explained that while Saudi ministries may make decisions designed to protect children, "It is still the religious establishment that holds sway in the courts, and in many realms beyond the court."

Last month, Zuhair al-Harithi, a spokesman for the Saudi government-run Human Rights Commission, said his organization is fighting against child marriages.

"The Human Rights Commission opposes child marriages in*Saudi Arabia," al-Harithi said. "Child marriages violate international agreements that have been signed by Saudi Arabia and should not be allowed." He added that his organization has been able to intervene and stop at least one child marriage from taking place.

Wajeha al-Huwaider, co-founder of the Society of Defending Women's Rights in Saudi Arabia, told CNN last month that achieving human rights in the kingdom means standing against those who want to "keep us backward and in the dark ages."

She said the marriages cause girls to "lose their sense of security and safety. Also, it destroys their feeling of being loved and nurtured. It causes them a lifetime of psychological problems and severe depression."......

http://www.cnn.com/2009/WORLD/meast/01/17/saudi.child.marriage/"


For being a self proclaimed geek, you suck at using the internets

Sorry, i work for a living and don't have the time to fully research stuff all the time. Ok, all this info about how shitty this culture is to girls/women, male children, yet why do liberal gov still cover for them in the US/Europe? Instead of pressuring them to change their perverted ways and holding them accountable when they rape. Probation in Germany for rape? lol Will a white guy get probation for rape? It's like a mom covering for her drug addicted son who steals money from the family to fund his addiction( mi hijo no es malo:cry), or some fat feminist welfare/financial aid working whale covering for her prison thug boyfriend who beats her and steals from her. (it's cause he luvs me:cry)

Blake
04-29-2016, 03:25 PM
Sorry, i work for a living and don't have the time to fully research stuff all the time.

Yeah, that 15 seconds I took to research was much more time consuming than the 20 it took for you to post that.

Aztecfan03
04-29-2016, 04:36 PM
didn't read.

will you see this story on primetime CNN/Fox or your local news where it reaches 99% of americans? Like I said, you only see these stories buried on websites that most people don't read except for us geeks.


Sorry, i work for a living and don't have the time to fully research stuff all the time. Ok, all this info about how shitty this culture is to girls/women, male children, yet why do liberal gov still cover for them in the US/Europe? Instead of pressuring them to change their perverted ways and holding them accountable when they rape. Probation in Germany for rape? lol Will a white guy get probation for rape? It's like a mom covering for her drug addicted son who steals money from the family to fund his addiction( mi hijo no es malo:cry), or some fat feminist welfare/financial aid working whale covering for her prison thug boyfriend who beats her and steals from her. (it's cause he luvs me:cry)

So you have time to read the less read websites, but not the major news websites?

Blake
04-29-2016, 05:21 PM
Lol

Ghazi
04-29-2016, 06:27 PM
This guys a nut.

Ginobilly
04-29-2016, 11:31 PM
Yeah, that 15 seconds I took to research was much more time consuming than the 20 it took for you to post that.

congratulations blakito! I guess you win some internet prize of some sort.

Blake
04-29-2016, 11:51 PM
congratulations blakito! I guess you win some internet prize of some sort.

How'd you find time to post that

Ginobilly
04-30-2016, 12:01 AM
So you have time to read the less read websites, but not the major news websites?

I read both when I can. I don't keep up at times with worldly current events(except weather) because I own my business and I'm out doing service calls all over south Texas, have a GF and two kids I need to attend to sometimes. I'm also out at my parents ranch at times shooting shit and feeding animals. I don't have the time some of you have of being able to spend all day on the internet like blake, koolaid, chump( I think these guys live with their abuela, parents or something?). So I take sometimes eons to respond to something or not at all because something more important and worthwhile takes my time: Family, business, gym, traveling cool places(I've been all over the world mijo).

I'll be in california for a cousins graduation next month, then off to vegas and aspen after that for some blazin time. Advice for some of you: Women like men who work and fuck em good. Once you stop doing one of the two, or both, you will get cheated on/left. Just something to think about for some of you, especially Blake.

Blake
04-30-2016, 10:39 AM
I read both when I can. I don't keep up at times with worldly current events(except weather) because I own my business and I'm out doing service calls all over south Texas, have a GF and two kids I need to attend to sometimes. I'm also out at my parents ranch at times shooting shit and feeding animals. I don't have the time some of you have of being able to spend all day on the internet like blake, koolaid, chump( I think these guys live with their abuela, parents or something?). So I take sometimes eons to respond to something or not at all because something more important and worthwhile takes my time: Family, business, gym, traveling cool places(I've been all over the world mijo).

I'll be in california for a cousins graduation next month, then off to vegas and aspen after that for some blazin time. Advice for some of you: Women like men who work and fuck em good. Once you stop doing one of the two, or both, you will get cheated on/left. Just something to think about for some of you, especially Blake.

Tldr. How long did it take you to post that

CosmicCowboy
04-30-2016, 12:00 PM
:lmao BURN.

Give up Blake.

Big Dog
04-30-2016, 12:18 PM
I read both when I can. I don't keep up at times with worldly current events(except weather) because I own my business and I'm out doing service calls all over south Texas, have a GF and two kids I need to attend to sometimes. I'm also out at my parents ranch at times shooting shit and feeding animals. I don't have the time some of you have of being able to spend all day on the internet like blake, koolaid, chump( I think these guys live with their abuela, parents or something?). So I take sometimes eons to respond to something or not at all because something more important and worthwhile takes my time: Family, business, gym, traveling cool places(I've been all over the world mijo).

I'll be in california for a cousins graduation next month, then off to vegas and aspen after that for some blazin time. Advice for some of you: Women like men who work and fuck em good. Once you stop doing one of the two, or both, you will get cheated on/left. Just something to think about for some of you, especially Blake.
W

Blake
04-30-2016, 01:41 PM
Lol cheer leading

It's hilarious when someone says they don't have time to be here in a long, thought-out wall of text.

Especially after claiming to be a geek that reads a bunch of edgy alternative media.