Because you have no argument... you've stated you've done it before and I am certain I was not somehow involved in you posting the (as of now, hypothetical) pic. Must be a logistical nightmare to post a picture of your skank.
I had to search the wife's FB to be sure these pics weren't on there. She was an FSO so it's not prudent to be searchable by pics. Wife with youngest; other pics are of my middle and oldest:
I did not realise there was a passing grade requirement from you.....shall I call you sir or something i'll make it easy for you - put me on your ignore list, and I will give you the reasons why..... I will probably not say anything you want to read, even if i did you would not agree with it, even if it might be more interesting than half the crap that gets spewed out here that you would prefer to read you have already made your mind up about things and the rest is simple reinforcement for your own pleasure - but as this is chat so its all good..... Ignoring people in a discussion makes a lot of sense for continued discussion but that's not what you are interested in. and one for good measure that seems to be the flavour of these discussions that people can relate to.... you are a scum sucking/parasitic/capitalist /socialist pig/homo/Obama/George/Putin/Nazi/tax paying (dirtiest word ever)/hard working/lazy/bleeding heart/conservative/liberal/lite beer drinking/cookie crumb spreading/silent but deadly fart/waste of oxygen......hope I didnt offend you with the hard working jibe.
as this is chat, and I am distracting myself from the markets at present...... I agree that sucks, but at least you have a job, you have freedoms and a fairly safe society where people dont need to rule exclusively via violence. You are always free to move to those places that have more freedoms and less taxes, train yourself to be in better paying jobs etc. Life is full of trade offs. Gov certainly lacks accountability and efficiency - but I dont think individuals/corporates are much better, and ultimately all types of individuals scam the system not just those more unfortunate than you - from public servants who milk pension funds, lobbyists, industry subsidies and bailouts, lawyers, monopolistic rent seeking companies, doctors and pharma draining the public purse. my guess more money is lost in these things rather than those who really cant help themselves.....but I think you are more interested in loss of freedoms than anything - which I agree with - this comes from all sides of political fence (the is a book out about Cheney and Bush I want to read which seems scarily interesting) and also from scaremongering amongst those who claim to protect individual freedoms. (I am anti authoritarian in all forms but with individual freedoms comes social responsibility) Either way - with aging populations, changing demographics and most peoples inability to save for their own retirement - even if they could afford to - like it or not there is growing proportion of have nots in society (world wide) and the middle class as we know it may have just been a blip in history, as might the ideas of individual freedoms and privacy. (I hope not - but I certainly dont look forward to the possibility of running out of money when i cant wipe my own ass - the trade off between lifestyle now and savings later - I do believe in Euthanasia) Its all doom and gloom - and yet collectively the world is probably wealthier, healthier, safer and better (maybe not environmentally) than ever before. Bitching an moaning about a few folks scamming on welfare misses the point and plays directly into the hands of extremists on all sides, life has always been unfair in some manner, and there are trades offs we have to live with......there are bigger things out there and more dimensions to it. enough blathering.
Well it would appear that either you DO or I'm not a random pedo on the internet. LOL Why in the world would you post your kids? And why no photo of YOU? Bragging or complaining? Personal I think <s>you</s> your wife's dad overpaid.
Is the Rumor About French Youth Leaving France Really True? Renée Kaplan Posted on 12 December 2013 "The worried question has been in headlines for months now. Are Franceâs young people being forced to leave? Every week thereâs another talk show, another investigative report, another survey showing that French 20-somethings are leaving France and going abroad to work in higher numbers than ever before. And instead of cheering the entrepreneurialism of their ambitious youth, the refrain echoing in the media is, well, much more typically French: Why isnât France good enough to keep its youth? "The fact that itâs a question at all is part of the problem in France. So young people in France are interested in seeing what the rest of the world has to offer? They think that there might be interesting jobs, exciting experiences, money to be made, a better immediate future elsewhere, outside of Franceâ¦So what? Why so much shameful soul-searching? "The shame and the handwringingâoh, the opprobrium of an expatriated youth!âis rooted in another tacit belief about France, one that goes deep into the identity of this country which has always been a land of immigration and a not emigration (unlike Ireland, Italy, or Spain, there has never been a French diaspora). The belief is that there is no good reason that you should you want to leave France. "The French seem to be experiencing this trend of youth expatriation as a kind of slap in the face, a reproach to its image of itself as an irresistible land of opportunity capable of nurturing a successful elite. Today, there are over 150,000 18 to 25-year-olds living abroad. The French could view it as a salutary leap onto the globalization train, with its best and its brightest going out into the increasingly borderless global economy. Instead theyâre wondering why the best and the brightest just donât want to stick around anymore. "But the question of whatâs wrong with France isnât just a question of pride. The reality, aside from this French crisis of identityâWhat? Pastures are greener elsewhere?âis that that there are very real reasons that the bright young things of France want to leave, and itâs not just to get a flavour of the great wide world. And France should be worried about these reasons. "First, thereâs the level of youth unemployment in France, with 25% of the French under the age of 25 who are jobless. That means that fully one quarter of Franceâs youth canât get a first job. But the European average for youth unemployment is actually not much lower, at 23,3%. So, arguably, that problem is not a uniquely French one. (In Spain, itâs 50%, in Italy, 40%). "The uniquely French aspect of its youthâs expatriation is that a disproportionately large number of those leaving are highly-educated graduates: 12% have a PhD (when only 1% of all French youths have a PhD), 41% have a Masterâs degree, and over a third have at least one to three years of higher education. So itâs not so much that 25% who are registered as unemployed who are leavingâthat would make sense, and France might have an easier time forgiving itself and blaming the economic crisis. "Instead, the expatriates are a much smaller percentage of its elite, freshly graduated and, theoretically, highly recruitable. Except they are choosing to start out in life elsewhere. In part itâs because they want to seize the wonderful opportunity to broaden their horizons and see the worldâno offense to France!âand they can, precisely because they have prestigious degrees, access to the know-how, and the professional networks to get a job abroad. "A few weeks ago, I moderated a debate at the university of Sciences Poâone of the prestigious French institutions whose graduates are going abroadâwhose topic was, âIs France a country one must leave at all costs?â The panellistsâwho included Helene Conway-Mouret, the junior minister in charge of French nationals abroadâall agreed that was preposterous. They agreed that certainly youths are leaving, but mainly by choice, and that it is a good thing. "But thereâs also a much more disgruntled portion of this expatriating population. And undoubtedly itâs their story thatâs keeping the question going in the media. These young expatriates say they donât feel they have any choice but to leave, claiming that only the graduates of Franceâs most elite traditional institutions are getting good jobs. That opportunities offered are few, poorly paid, below the level of responsibility that their educational background might justifiably lead them to expect. "They describe a professional world that is, for the most part, conservative and risk-averse, a culture that expects them to work their way quietly up through low-paying junior jobs for years before, by virtue finally of seniority acquired, getting a chance at something more ambitious. "Whatâs pushing these kids to leave is simply the impression that itâs not going to happen for them in France, because France isnât a happening place. There is an ambient sense of a lack of dynamism, of creative energy, of risk-taking and giving the improbable-but-promising a chance. Itâs this culture that theyâre not finding in France and that theyâre seeking elsewhere. "The preferred destinations are Switzerland, the United Kingdom and Germanyânot really destinations where you go in search of exoticism. They are places that, professionally, offer a sense of opportunity and sheer possibility that this self-conscious and handwringing nation had better start figuring out how to create. "Right now, a majority of the French expatriates polled plan on coming back. But coming back to what? Thatâs what France should be worrying about." Article
That's why I put dumbasses ON IGNORE... that and those who (1) dis the US Constitution, and (2) express Liberal/Communist philosophies as good for America. Request granted.
lol I can see why you held out. 2.4 was an excellent get in Incline on an acre. I paid cash from a wire out of my Wedbush account, but thanks for the concern.