Dj5-F electrical problems
#122
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Dj5-F electrical problems
My son-in-law insists that it is only the Parisiens who don't wash, are
rude, and are otherwise objectionable. Spain is different. They
conveniently opted out of WWII, by "prekilling" a large segment of their
population in a civil war that some say was intentional. Although they
dispensed with the Fascist regime some twenty-five years ago, you can still
see signs of it everywhere. Like an irrational respect for authority
coupled with blatant disrespect for every kind of law, I just don't get it.
"Courage" does not seem to be a national virtue. Neither does "honesty".
Both got lots of people killed or expelled in the Civil War. Paradoxically,
this means that brave and honest people stand out everywhere they are found.
You recognize them immediately, like they are wearing halos or something.
They got into the Iraq fiasco with us, because they wanted to recoup some of
their national glory riding on our coattails. When it didn't work out, they
elected a Socialist who looks like Mr. Bean. Their politics is
incomprehensible. They are absorbed at the current moment with the question
of whether Spain should be four countries or one. Arguments for four are
regional cultures, languages and traditions. Arguments for one are the fact
that people of Castillian heritage are the majority, everywhere. The most
intelligent statement that the Popular Party of former president José Maria
Aznar (http://tinyurl.com/oxnnz) is able to make is "you regional
independence people better involve us in your negotiations". The current
Socialist president, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, responds to pleas for
regional autonomy with "Spain is great, don't you like being Spaniards?"
Even ethnic Spaniards in places like País Vasco and Galicia are starting to
doubt this.
Courage is hard to define. If you saw the pedestrians in País Vasco you
would swear they are the bravest people on Earth. In Madrid they have more
fear. In Santiago de Compostela I saw a restaurant advertising vampire fish
("lampreas"). You would have to be brave to eat that.
Earle
"L.W. (ßill) ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:441DD512.7D96DC91@***.net...
> Hi Earle,
> When I was over there they didn't bath, shave their arm pit that
> made them smell like Susie rotten crouch. And unwrapped bread we can use
> as a hammer. I'm really beginning to wonder if they had an "underground"
> during **** occupation???? If that were true they must have been all
> killed, leaving no brave descendants. You were in Spain this year is
> still that way?
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
> >
> > You mean besides beautiful women, bread you can sink your teeth into,
and
> > being right about Iraq?
> >
> > Earle
rude, and are otherwise objectionable. Spain is different. They
conveniently opted out of WWII, by "prekilling" a large segment of their
population in a civil war that some say was intentional. Although they
dispensed with the Fascist regime some twenty-five years ago, you can still
see signs of it everywhere. Like an irrational respect for authority
coupled with blatant disrespect for every kind of law, I just don't get it.
"Courage" does not seem to be a national virtue. Neither does "honesty".
Both got lots of people killed or expelled in the Civil War. Paradoxically,
this means that brave and honest people stand out everywhere they are found.
You recognize them immediately, like they are wearing halos or something.
They got into the Iraq fiasco with us, because they wanted to recoup some of
their national glory riding on our coattails. When it didn't work out, they
elected a Socialist who looks like Mr. Bean. Their politics is
incomprehensible. They are absorbed at the current moment with the question
of whether Spain should be four countries or one. Arguments for four are
regional cultures, languages and traditions. Arguments for one are the fact
that people of Castillian heritage are the majority, everywhere. The most
intelligent statement that the Popular Party of former president José Maria
Aznar (http://tinyurl.com/oxnnz) is able to make is "you regional
independence people better involve us in your negotiations". The current
Socialist president, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, responds to pleas for
regional autonomy with "Spain is great, don't you like being Spaniards?"
Even ethnic Spaniards in places like País Vasco and Galicia are starting to
doubt this.
Courage is hard to define. If you saw the pedestrians in País Vasco you
would swear they are the bravest people on Earth. In Madrid they have more
fear. In Santiago de Compostela I saw a restaurant advertising vampire fish
("lampreas"). You would have to be brave to eat that.
Earle
"L.W. (ßill) ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:441DD512.7D96DC91@***.net...
> Hi Earle,
> When I was over there they didn't bath, shave their arm pit that
> made them smell like Susie rotten crouch. And unwrapped bread we can use
> as a hammer. I'm really beginning to wonder if they had an "underground"
> during **** occupation???? If that were true they must have been all
> killed, leaving no brave descendants. You were in Spain this year is
> still that way?
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
> >
> > You mean besides beautiful women, bread you can sink your teeth into,
and
> > being right about Iraq?
> >
> > Earle
#123
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Dj5-F electrical problems
My son-in-law insists that it is only the Parisiens who don't wash, are
rude, and are otherwise objectionable. Spain is different. They
conveniently opted out of WWII, by "prekilling" a large segment of their
population in a civil war that some say was intentional. Although they
dispensed with the Fascist regime some twenty-five years ago, you can still
see signs of it everywhere. Like an irrational respect for authority
coupled with blatant disrespect for every kind of law, I just don't get it.
"Courage" does not seem to be a national virtue. Neither does "honesty".
Both got lots of people killed or expelled in the Civil War. Paradoxically,
this means that brave and honest people stand out everywhere they are found.
You recognize them immediately, like they are wearing halos or something.
They got into the Iraq fiasco with us, because they wanted to recoup some of
their national glory riding on our coattails. When it didn't work out, they
elected a Socialist who looks like Mr. Bean. Their politics is
incomprehensible. They are absorbed at the current moment with the question
of whether Spain should be four countries or one. Arguments for four are
regional cultures, languages and traditions. Arguments for one are the fact
that people of Castillian heritage are the majority, everywhere. The most
intelligent statement that the Popular Party of former president José Maria
Aznar (http://tinyurl.com/oxnnz) is able to make is "you regional
independence people better involve us in your negotiations". The current
Socialist president, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, responds to pleas for
regional autonomy with "Spain is great, don't you like being Spaniards?"
Even ethnic Spaniards in places like País Vasco and Galicia are starting to
doubt this.
Courage is hard to define. If you saw the pedestrians in País Vasco you
would swear they are the bravest people on Earth. In Madrid they have more
fear. In Santiago de Compostela I saw a restaurant advertising vampire fish
("lampreas"). You would have to be brave to eat that.
Earle
"L.W. (ßill) ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:441DD512.7D96DC91@***.net...
> Hi Earle,
> When I was over there they didn't bath, shave their arm pit that
> made them smell like Susie rotten crouch. And unwrapped bread we can use
> as a hammer. I'm really beginning to wonder if they had an "underground"
> during **** occupation???? If that were true they must have been all
> killed, leaving no brave descendants. You were in Spain this year is
> still that way?
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
> >
> > You mean besides beautiful women, bread you can sink your teeth into,
and
> > being right about Iraq?
> >
> > Earle
rude, and are otherwise objectionable. Spain is different. They
conveniently opted out of WWII, by "prekilling" a large segment of their
population in a civil war that some say was intentional. Although they
dispensed with the Fascist regime some twenty-five years ago, you can still
see signs of it everywhere. Like an irrational respect for authority
coupled with blatant disrespect for every kind of law, I just don't get it.
"Courage" does not seem to be a national virtue. Neither does "honesty".
Both got lots of people killed or expelled in the Civil War. Paradoxically,
this means that brave and honest people stand out everywhere they are found.
You recognize them immediately, like they are wearing halos or something.
They got into the Iraq fiasco with us, because they wanted to recoup some of
their national glory riding on our coattails. When it didn't work out, they
elected a Socialist who looks like Mr. Bean. Their politics is
incomprehensible. They are absorbed at the current moment with the question
of whether Spain should be four countries or one. Arguments for four are
regional cultures, languages and traditions. Arguments for one are the fact
that people of Castillian heritage are the majority, everywhere. The most
intelligent statement that the Popular Party of former president José Maria
Aznar (http://tinyurl.com/oxnnz) is able to make is "you regional
independence people better involve us in your negotiations". The current
Socialist president, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, responds to pleas for
regional autonomy with "Spain is great, don't you like being Spaniards?"
Even ethnic Spaniards in places like País Vasco and Galicia are starting to
doubt this.
Courage is hard to define. If you saw the pedestrians in País Vasco you
would swear they are the bravest people on Earth. In Madrid they have more
fear. In Santiago de Compostela I saw a restaurant advertising vampire fish
("lampreas"). You would have to be brave to eat that.
Earle
"L.W. (ßill) ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:441DD512.7D96DC91@***.net...
> Hi Earle,
> When I was over there they didn't bath, shave their arm pit that
> made them smell like Susie rotten crouch. And unwrapped bread we can use
> as a hammer. I'm really beginning to wonder if they had an "underground"
> during **** occupation???? If that were true they must have been all
> killed, leaving no brave descendants. You were in Spain this year is
> still that way?
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
> >
> > You mean besides beautiful women, bread you can sink your teeth into,
and
> > being right about Iraq?
> >
> > Earle
#124
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Dj5-F electrical problems
My son-in-law insists that it is only the Parisiens who don't wash, are
rude, and are otherwise objectionable. Spain is different. They
conveniently opted out of WWII, by "prekilling" a large segment of their
population in a civil war that some say was intentional. Although they
dispensed with the Fascist regime some twenty-five years ago, you can still
see signs of it everywhere. Like an irrational respect for authority
coupled with blatant disrespect for every kind of law, I just don't get it.
"Courage" does not seem to be a national virtue. Neither does "honesty".
Both got lots of people killed or expelled in the Civil War. Paradoxically,
this means that brave and honest people stand out everywhere they are found.
You recognize them immediately, like they are wearing halos or something.
They got into the Iraq fiasco with us, because they wanted to recoup some of
their national glory riding on our coattails. When it didn't work out, they
elected a Socialist who looks like Mr. Bean. Their politics is
incomprehensible. They are absorbed at the current moment with the question
of whether Spain should be four countries or one. Arguments for four are
regional cultures, languages and traditions. Arguments for one are the fact
that people of Castillian heritage are the majority, everywhere. The most
intelligent statement that the Popular Party of former president José Maria
Aznar (http://tinyurl.com/oxnnz) is able to make is "you regional
independence people better involve us in your negotiations". The current
Socialist president, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, responds to pleas for
regional autonomy with "Spain is great, don't you like being Spaniards?"
Even ethnic Spaniards in places like País Vasco and Galicia are starting to
doubt this.
Courage is hard to define. If you saw the pedestrians in País Vasco you
would swear they are the bravest people on Earth. In Madrid they have more
fear. In Santiago de Compostela I saw a restaurant advertising vampire fish
("lampreas"). You would have to be brave to eat that.
Earle
"L.W. (ßill) ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:441DD512.7D96DC91@***.net...
> Hi Earle,
> When I was over there they didn't bath, shave their arm pit that
> made them smell like Susie rotten crouch. And unwrapped bread we can use
> as a hammer. I'm really beginning to wonder if they had an "underground"
> during **** occupation???? If that were true they must have been all
> killed, leaving no brave descendants. You were in Spain this year is
> still that way?
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
> >
> > You mean besides beautiful women, bread you can sink your teeth into,
and
> > being right about Iraq?
> >
> > Earle
rude, and are otherwise objectionable. Spain is different. They
conveniently opted out of WWII, by "prekilling" a large segment of their
population in a civil war that some say was intentional. Although they
dispensed with the Fascist regime some twenty-five years ago, you can still
see signs of it everywhere. Like an irrational respect for authority
coupled with blatant disrespect for every kind of law, I just don't get it.
"Courage" does not seem to be a national virtue. Neither does "honesty".
Both got lots of people killed or expelled in the Civil War. Paradoxically,
this means that brave and honest people stand out everywhere they are found.
You recognize them immediately, like they are wearing halos or something.
They got into the Iraq fiasco with us, because they wanted to recoup some of
their national glory riding on our coattails. When it didn't work out, they
elected a Socialist who looks like Mr. Bean. Their politics is
incomprehensible. They are absorbed at the current moment with the question
of whether Spain should be four countries or one. Arguments for four are
regional cultures, languages and traditions. Arguments for one are the fact
that people of Castillian heritage are the majority, everywhere. The most
intelligent statement that the Popular Party of former president José Maria
Aznar (http://tinyurl.com/oxnnz) is able to make is "you regional
independence people better involve us in your negotiations". The current
Socialist president, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, responds to pleas for
regional autonomy with "Spain is great, don't you like being Spaniards?"
Even ethnic Spaniards in places like País Vasco and Galicia are starting to
doubt this.
Courage is hard to define. If you saw the pedestrians in País Vasco you
would swear they are the bravest people on Earth. In Madrid they have more
fear. In Santiago de Compostela I saw a restaurant advertising vampire fish
("lampreas"). You would have to be brave to eat that.
Earle
"L.W. (ßill) ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:441DD512.7D96DC91@***.net...
> Hi Earle,
> When I was over there they didn't bath, shave their arm pit that
> made them smell like Susie rotten crouch. And unwrapped bread we can use
> as a hammer. I'm really beginning to wonder if they had an "underground"
> during **** occupation???? If that were true they must have been all
> killed, leaving no brave descendants. You were in Spain this year is
> still that way?
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
> >
> > You mean besides beautiful women, bread you can sink your teeth into,
and
> > being right about Iraq?
> >
> > Earle
#125
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Dj5-F electrical problems
My son-in-law insists that it is only the Parisiens who don't wash, are
rude, and are otherwise objectionable. Spain is different. They
conveniently opted out of WWII, by "prekilling" a large segment of their
population in a civil war that some say was intentional. Although they
dispensed with the Fascist regime some twenty-five years ago, you can still
see signs of it everywhere. Like an irrational respect for authority
coupled with blatant disrespect for every kind of law, I just don't get it.
"Courage" does not seem to be a national virtue. Neither does "honesty".
Both got lots of people killed or expelled in the Civil War. Paradoxically,
this means that brave and honest people stand out everywhere they are found.
You recognize them immediately, like they are wearing halos or something.
They got into the Iraq fiasco with us, because they wanted to recoup some of
their national glory riding on our coattails. When it didn't work out, they
elected a Socialist who looks like Mr. Bean. Their politics is
incomprehensible. They are absorbed at the current moment with the question
of whether Spain should be four countries or one. Arguments for four are
regional cultures, languages and traditions. Arguments for one are the fact
that people of Castillian heritage are the majority, everywhere. The most
intelligent statement that the Popular Party of former president José Maria
Aznar (http://tinyurl.com/oxnnz) is able to make is "you regional
independence people better involve us in your negotiations". The current
Socialist president, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, responds to pleas for
regional autonomy with "Spain is great, don't you like being Spaniards?"
Even ethnic Spaniards in places like País Vasco and Galicia are starting to
doubt this.
Courage is hard to define. If you saw the pedestrians in País Vasco you
would swear they are the bravest people on Earth. In Madrid they have more
fear. In Santiago de Compostela I saw a restaurant advertising vampire fish
("lampreas"). You would have to be brave to eat that.
Earle
"L.W. (ßill) ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:441DD512.7D96DC91@***.net...
> Hi Earle,
> When I was over there they didn't bath, shave their arm pit that
> made them smell like Susie rotten crouch. And unwrapped bread we can use
> as a hammer. I'm really beginning to wonder if they had an "underground"
> during **** occupation???? If that were true they must have been all
> killed, leaving no brave descendants. You were in Spain this year is
> still that way?
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
> >
> > You mean besides beautiful women, bread you can sink your teeth into,
and
> > being right about Iraq?
> >
> > Earle
rude, and are otherwise objectionable. Spain is different. They
conveniently opted out of WWII, by "prekilling" a large segment of their
population in a civil war that some say was intentional. Although they
dispensed with the Fascist regime some twenty-five years ago, you can still
see signs of it everywhere. Like an irrational respect for authority
coupled with blatant disrespect for every kind of law, I just don't get it.
"Courage" does not seem to be a national virtue. Neither does "honesty".
Both got lots of people killed or expelled in the Civil War. Paradoxically,
this means that brave and honest people stand out everywhere they are found.
You recognize them immediately, like they are wearing halos or something.
They got into the Iraq fiasco with us, because they wanted to recoup some of
their national glory riding on our coattails. When it didn't work out, they
elected a Socialist who looks like Mr. Bean. Their politics is
incomprehensible. They are absorbed at the current moment with the question
of whether Spain should be four countries or one. Arguments for four are
regional cultures, languages and traditions. Arguments for one are the fact
that people of Castillian heritage are the majority, everywhere. The most
intelligent statement that the Popular Party of former president José Maria
Aznar (http://tinyurl.com/oxnnz) is able to make is "you regional
independence people better involve us in your negotiations". The current
Socialist president, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, responds to pleas for
regional autonomy with "Spain is great, don't you like being Spaniards?"
Even ethnic Spaniards in places like País Vasco and Galicia are starting to
doubt this.
Courage is hard to define. If you saw the pedestrians in País Vasco you
would swear they are the bravest people on Earth. In Madrid they have more
fear. In Santiago de Compostela I saw a restaurant advertising vampire fish
("lampreas"). You would have to be brave to eat that.
Earle
"L.W. (ßill) ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:441DD512.7D96DC91@***.net...
> Hi Earle,
> When I was over there they didn't bath, shave their arm pit that
> made them smell like Susie rotten crouch. And unwrapped bread we can use
> as a hammer. I'm really beginning to wonder if they had an "underground"
> during **** occupation???? If that were true they must have been all
> killed, leaving no brave descendants. You were in Spain this year is
> still that way?
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
> >
> > You mean besides beautiful women, bread you can sink your teeth into,
and
> > being right about Iraq?
> >
> > Earle
#126
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Dj5-F electrical problems
"halos" I like being identified by that, rather than Liberal's
party of cowards that kill their babies, butt f**k, and take prayer out
of our schools.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Earle Horton wrote:
>
> My son-in-law insists that it is only the Parisiens who don't wash, are
> rude, and are otherwise objectionable. Spain is different. They
> conveniently opted out of WWII, by "prekilling" a large segment of their
> population in a civil war that some say was intentional. Although they
> dispensed with the Fascist regime some twenty-five years ago, you can still
> see signs of it everywhere. Like an irrational respect for authority
> coupled with blatant disrespect for every kind of law, I just don't get it.
> "Courage" does not seem to be a national virtue. Neither does "honesty".
> Both got lots of people killed or expelled in the Civil War. Paradoxically,
> this means that brave and honest people stand out everywhere they are found.
> You recognize them immediately, like they are wearing halos or something.
>
> They got into the Iraq fiasco with us, because they wanted to recoup some of
> their national glory riding on our coattails. When it didn't work out, they
> elected a Socialist who looks like Mr. Bean. Their politics is
> incomprehensible. They are absorbed at the current moment with the question
> of whether Spain should be four countries or one. Arguments for four are
> regional cultures, languages and traditions. Arguments for one are the fact
> that people of Castillian heritage are the majority, everywhere. The most
> intelligent statement that the Popular Party of former president José Maria
> Aznar (http://tinyurl.com/oxnnz) is able to make is "you regional
> independence people better involve us in your negotiations". The current
> Socialist president, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, responds to pleas for
> regional autonomy with "Spain is great, don't you like being Spaniards?"
> Even ethnic Spaniards in places like País Vasco and Galicia are starting to
> doubt this.
>
> Courage is hard to define. If you saw the pedestrians in País Vasco you
> would swear they are the bravest people on Earth. In Madrid they have more
> fear. In Santiago de Compostela I saw a restaurant advertising vampire fish
> ("lampreas"). You would have to be brave to eat that.
>
> Earle
party of cowards that kill their babies, butt f**k, and take prayer out
of our schools.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Earle Horton wrote:
>
> My son-in-law insists that it is only the Parisiens who don't wash, are
> rude, and are otherwise objectionable. Spain is different. They
> conveniently opted out of WWII, by "prekilling" a large segment of their
> population in a civil war that some say was intentional. Although they
> dispensed with the Fascist regime some twenty-five years ago, you can still
> see signs of it everywhere. Like an irrational respect for authority
> coupled with blatant disrespect for every kind of law, I just don't get it.
> "Courage" does not seem to be a national virtue. Neither does "honesty".
> Both got lots of people killed or expelled in the Civil War. Paradoxically,
> this means that brave and honest people stand out everywhere they are found.
> You recognize them immediately, like they are wearing halos or something.
>
> They got into the Iraq fiasco with us, because they wanted to recoup some of
> their national glory riding on our coattails. When it didn't work out, they
> elected a Socialist who looks like Mr. Bean. Their politics is
> incomprehensible. They are absorbed at the current moment with the question
> of whether Spain should be four countries or one. Arguments for four are
> regional cultures, languages and traditions. Arguments for one are the fact
> that people of Castillian heritage are the majority, everywhere. The most
> intelligent statement that the Popular Party of former president José Maria
> Aznar (http://tinyurl.com/oxnnz) is able to make is "you regional
> independence people better involve us in your negotiations". The current
> Socialist president, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, responds to pleas for
> regional autonomy with "Spain is great, don't you like being Spaniards?"
> Even ethnic Spaniards in places like País Vasco and Galicia are starting to
> doubt this.
>
> Courage is hard to define. If you saw the pedestrians in País Vasco you
> would swear they are the bravest people on Earth. In Madrid they have more
> fear. In Santiago de Compostela I saw a restaurant advertising vampire fish
> ("lampreas"). You would have to be brave to eat that.
>
> Earle
#127
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Dj5-F electrical problems
"halos" I like being identified by that, rather than Liberal's
party of cowards that kill their babies, butt f**k, and take prayer out
of our schools.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Earle Horton wrote:
>
> My son-in-law insists that it is only the Parisiens who don't wash, are
> rude, and are otherwise objectionable. Spain is different. They
> conveniently opted out of WWII, by "prekilling" a large segment of their
> population in a civil war that some say was intentional. Although they
> dispensed with the Fascist regime some twenty-five years ago, you can still
> see signs of it everywhere. Like an irrational respect for authority
> coupled with blatant disrespect for every kind of law, I just don't get it.
> "Courage" does not seem to be a national virtue. Neither does "honesty".
> Both got lots of people killed or expelled in the Civil War. Paradoxically,
> this means that brave and honest people stand out everywhere they are found.
> You recognize them immediately, like they are wearing halos or something.
>
> They got into the Iraq fiasco with us, because they wanted to recoup some of
> their national glory riding on our coattails. When it didn't work out, they
> elected a Socialist who looks like Mr. Bean. Their politics is
> incomprehensible. They are absorbed at the current moment with the question
> of whether Spain should be four countries or one. Arguments for four are
> regional cultures, languages and traditions. Arguments for one are the fact
> that people of Castillian heritage are the majority, everywhere. The most
> intelligent statement that the Popular Party of former president José Maria
> Aznar (http://tinyurl.com/oxnnz) is able to make is "you regional
> independence people better involve us in your negotiations". The current
> Socialist president, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, responds to pleas for
> regional autonomy with "Spain is great, don't you like being Spaniards?"
> Even ethnic Spaniards in places like País Vasco and Galicia are starting to
> doubt this.
>
> Courage is hard to define. If you saw the pedestrians in País Vasco you
> would swear they are the bravest people on Earth. In Madrid they have more
> fear. In Santiago de Compostela I saw a restaurant advertising vampire fish
> ("lampreas"). You would have to be brave to eat that.
>
> Earle
party of cowards that kill their babies, butt f**k, and take prayer out
of our schools.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Earle Horton wrote:
>
> My son-in-law insists that it is only the Parisiens who don't wash, are
> rude, and are otherwise objectionable. Spain is different. They
> conveniently opted out of WWII, by "prekilling" a large segment of their
> population in a civil war that some say was intentional. Although they
> dispensed with the Fascist regime some twenty-five years ago, you can still
> see signs of it everywhere. Like an irrational respect for authority
> coupled with blatant disrespect for every kind of law, I just don't get it.
> "Courage" does not seem to be a national virtue. Neither does "honesty".
> Both got lots of people killed or expelled in the Civil War. Paradoxically,
> this means that brave and honest people stand out everywhere they are found.
> You recognize them immediately, like they are wearing halos or something.
>
> They got into the Iraq fiasco with us, because they wanted to recoup some of
> their national glory riding on our coattails. When it didn't work out, they
> elected a Socialist who looks like Mr. Bean. Their politics is
> incomprehensible. They are absorbed at the current moment with the question
> of whether Spain should be four countries or one. Arguments for four are
> regional cultures, languages and traditions. Arguments for one are the fact
> that people of Castillian heritage are the majority, everywhere. The most
> intelligent statement that the Popular Party of former president José Maria
> Aznar (http://tinyurl.com/oxnnz) is able to make is "you regional
> independence people better involve us in your negotiations". The current
> Socialist president, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, responds to pleas for
> regional autonomy with "Spain is great, don't you like being Spaniards?"
> Even ethnic Spaniards in places like País Vasco and Galicia are starting to
> doubt this.
>
> Courage is hard to define. If you saw the pedestrians in País Vasco you
> would swear they are the bravest people on Earth. In Madrid they have more
> fear. In Santiago de Compostela I saw a restaurant advertising vampire fish
> ("lampreas"). You would have to be brave to eat that.
>
> Earle
#128
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Dj5-F electrical problems
"halos" I like being identified by that, rather than Liberal's
party of cowards that kill their babies, butt f**k, and take prayer out
of our schools.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Earle Horton wrote:
>
> My son-in-law insists that it is only the Parisiens who don't wash, are
> rude, and are otherwise objectionable. Spain is different. They
> conveniently opted out of WWII, by "prekilling" a large segment of their
> population in a civil war that some say was intentional. Although they
> dispensed with the Fascist regime some twenty-five years ago, you can still
> see signs of it everywhere. Like an irrational respect for authority
> coupled with blatant disrespect for every kind of law, I just don't get it.
> "Courage" does not seem to be a national virtue. Neither does "honesty".
> Both got lots of people killed or expelled in the Civil War. Paradoxically,
> this means that brave and honest people stand out everywhere they are found.
> You recognize them immediately, like they are wearing halos or something.
>
> They got into the Iraq fiasco with us, because they wanted to recoup some of
> their national glory riding on our coattails. When it didn't work out, they
> elected a Socialist who looks like Mr. Bean. Their politics is
> incomprehensible. They are absorbed at the current moment with the question
> of whether Spain should be four countries or one. Arguments for four are
> regional cultures, languages and traditions. Arguments for one are the fact
> that people of Castillian heritage are the majority, everywhere. The most
> intelligent statement that the Popular Party of former president José Maria
> Aznar (http://tinyurl.com/oxnnz) is able to make is "you regional
> independence people better involve us in your negotiations". The current
> Socialist president, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, responds to pleas for
> regional autonomy with "Spain is great, don't you like being Spaniards?"
> Even ethnic Spaniards in places like País Vasco and Galicia are starting to
> doubt this.
>
> Courage is hard to define. If you saw the pedestrians in País Vasco you
> would swear they are the bravest people on Earth. In Madrid they have more
> fear. In Santiago de Compostela I saw a restaurant advertising vampire fish
> ("lampreas"). You would have to be brave to eat that.
>
> Earle
party of cowards that kill their babies, butt f**k, and take prayer out
of our schools.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Earle Horton wrote:
>
> My son-in-law insists that it is only the Parisiens who don't wash, are
> rude, and are otherwise objectionable. Spain is different. They
> conveniently opted out of WWII, by "prekilling" a large segment of their
> population in a civil war that some say was intentional. Although they
> dispensed with the Fascist regime some twenty-five years ago, you can still
> see signs of it everywhere. Like an irrational respect for authority
> coupled with blatant disrespect for every kind of law, I just don't get it.
> "Courage" does not seem to be a national virtue. Neither does "honesty".
> Both got lots of people killed or expelled in the Civil War. Paradoxically,
> this means that brave and honest people stand out everywhere they are found.
> You recognize them immediately, like they are wearing halos or something.
>
> They got into the Iraq fiasco with us, because they wanted to recoup some of
> their national glory riding on our coattails. When it didn't work out, they
> elected a Socialist who looks like Mr. Bean. Their politics is
> incomprehensible. They are absorbed at the current moment with the question
> of whether Spain should be four countries or one. Arguments for four are
> regional cultures, languages and traditions. Arguments for one are the fact
> that people of Castillian heritage are the majority, everywhere. The most
> intelligent statement that the Popular Party of former president José Maria
> Aznar (http://tinyurl.com/oxnnz) is able to make is "you regional
> independence people better involve us in your negotiations". The current
> Socialist president, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, responds to pleas for
> regional autonomy with "Spain is great, don't you like being Spaniards?"
> Even ethnic Spaniards in places like País Vasco and Galicia are starting to
> doubt this.
>
> Courage is hard to define. If you saw the pedestrians in País Vasco you
> would swear they are the bravest people on Earth. In Madrid they have more
> fear. In Santiago de Compostela I saw a restaurant advertising vampire fish
> ("lampreas"). You would have to be brave to eat that.
>
> Earle
#129
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Dj5-F electrical problems
"halos" I like being identified by that, rather than Liberal's
party of cowards that kill their babies, butt f**k, and take prayer out
of our schools.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Earle Horton wrote:
>
> My son-in-law insists that it is only the Parisiens who don't wash, are
> rude, and are otherwise objectionable. Spain is different. They
> conveniently opted out of WWII, by "prekilling" a large segment of their
> population in a civil war that some say was intentional. Although they
> dispensed with the Fascist regime some twenty-five years ago, you can still
> see signs of it everywhere. Like an irrational respect for authority
> coupled with blatant disrespect for every kind of law, I just don't get it.
> "Courage" does not seem to be a national virtue. Neither does "honesty".
> Both got lots of people killed or expelled in the Civil War. Paradoxically,
> this means that brave and honest people stand out everywhere they are found.
> You recognize them immediately, like they are wearing halos or something.
>
> They got into the Iraq fiasco with us, because they wanted to recoup some of
> their national glory riding on our coattails. When it didn't work out, they
> elected a Socialist who looks like Mr. Bean. Their politics is
> incomprehensible. They are absorbed at the current moment with the question
> of whether Spain should be four countries or one. Arguments for four are
> regional cultures, languages and traditions. Arguments for one are the fact
> that people of Castillian heritage are the majority, everywhere. The most
> intelligent statement that the Popular Party of former president José Maria
> Aznar (http://tinyurl.com/oxnnz) is able to make is "you regional
> independence people better involve us in your negotiations". The current
> Socialist president, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, responds to pleas for
> regional autonomy with "Spain is great, don't you like being Spaniards?"
> Even ethnic Spaniards in places like País Vasco and Galicia are starting to
> doubt this.
>
> Courage is hard to define. If you saw the pedestrians in País Vasco you
> would swear they are the bravest people on Earth. In Madrid they have more
> fear. In Santiago de Compostela I saw a restaurant advertising vampire fish
> ("lampreas"). You would have to be brave to eat that.
>
> Earle
party of cowards that kill their babies, butt f**k, and take prayer out
of our schools.
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Earle Horton wrote:
>
> My son-in-law insists that it is only the Parisiens who don't wash, are
> rude, and are otherwise objectionable. Spain is different. They
> conveniently opted out of WWII, by "prekilling" a large segment of their
> population in a civil war that some say was intentional. Although they
> dispensed with the Fascist regime some twenty-five years ago, you can still
> see signs of it everywhere. Like an irrational respect for authority
> coupled with blatant disrespect for every kind of law, I just don't get it.
> "Courage" does not seem to be a national virtue. Neither does "honesty".
> Both got lots of people killed or expelled in the Civil War. Paradoxically,
> this means that brave and honest people stand out everywhere they are found.
> You recognize them immediately, like they are wearing halos or something.
>
> They got into the Iraq fiasco with us, because they wanted to recoup some of
> their national glory riding on our coattails. When it didn't work out, they
> elected a Socialist who looks like Mr. Bean. Their politics is
> incomprehensible. They are absorbed at the current moment with the question
> of whether Spain should be four countries or one. Arguments for four are
> regional cultures, languages and traditions. Arguments for one are the fact
> that people of Castillian heritage are the majority, everywhere. The most
> intelligent statement that the Popular Party of former president José Maria
> Aznar (http://tinyurl.com/oxnnz) is able to make is "you regional
> independence people better involve us in your negotiations". The current
> Socialist president, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, responds to pleas for
> regional autonomy with "Spain is great, don't you like being Spaniards?"
> Even ethnic Spaniards in places like País Vasco and Galicia are starting to
> doubt this.
>
> Courage is hard to define. If you saw the pedestrians in País Vasco you
> would swear they are the bravest people on Earth. In Madrid they have more
> fear. In Santiago de Compostela I saw a restaurant advertising vampire fish
> ("lampreas"). You would have to be brave to eat that.
>
> Earle
#130
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Dj5-F electrical problems
Tell you what, Bill, about the time that the hemeriods start acting up
you start to wish you had one of those for yourself. Preferably with
nice warm water. But you should know about that if you drove a truck
for long - occupational hazard for pilots and long-haul drivers.
On Sun, 19 Mar 2006 22:16:29 UTC L.W.(ßill) ------ III
<----------@***.net> wrote:
> Hi Lon,
> At least, some use that toilet looking thingie that squirts their
> tw*t.
> I wonder if Americans still have to carry their own toilet paper?
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Lon wrote:
> >
> > You keep the bread, I'll sink my teeth into the women.
--
Will Honea
you start to wish you had one of those for yourself. Preferably with
nice warm water. But you should know about that if you drove a truck
for long - occupational hazard for pilots and long-haul drivers.
On Sun, 19 Mar 2006 22:16:29 UTC L.W.(ßill) ------ III
<----------@***.net> wrote:
> Hi Lon,
> At least, some use that toilet looking thingie that squirts their
> tw*t.
> I wonder if Americans still have to carry their own toilet paper?
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Lon wrote:
> >
> > You keep the bread, I'll sink my teeth into the women.
--
Will Honea