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Happy Thanksgiving


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#16 Colin

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Posted 24 November 2004 - 03:24 PM

Papago brewing.

yes!

also, i'm extemely thankful for all of my great friends in phx and boston that i've met because of the shizz.

sappy? yes. true? double yes.

I heard you just want to get in our pants.
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#17 cabinboy

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Posted 24 November 2004 - 03:24 PM

I'm thanksful i never got my dick clipped.

thanks Ma!
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eff it.

#18 Hooray For Everything

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Posted 24 November 2004 - 03:25 PM

ks :lol:
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"HFE...sometimes you seem serious when you are joking and jokey when your serious. You make me laugh and sob all at once. Bless you, and bless the great asshole in the sky that shit you out onto earth. Thank you...thaaaaaaank you. " - bb

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#19 bobby

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Posted 24 November 2004 - 03:33 PM

toilet paper
black, cotton, boxer-briefs
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#20 mancopter

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Posted 24 November 2004 - 03:35 PM

I'm thankful for:

my loving parents
friends who put up with me when i go batshit (both of em)
beer
video games
loud music
quiet music
my fireplace
being able to pay my bills
and, umm, my ebay rating. i dunno. i'm new at this.
i guess adult swim works in there somewhere, too.
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#21 capthfc

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Posted 24 November 2004 - 03:48 PM

guitars
pianos
cameras
guinness
maker's mark
my mom
my dad
my cat
music
the shizz
boobies
girls who let me touch their boobies
the goonies
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throw the children.

#22 Mary

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Posted 24 November 2004 - 08:07 PM

bluegrass
my friends
a bed full of husband and cats
tacos
ice cream
tacos that poop ice cream
being okay enough to help others sometimes
new job with cute little office with window
stopping before I turn this into another thread of little things we like

(but if it were, I would add the new Sprouts market at 28th Street and Indian School)
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#23 ShawnPhase

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Posted 24 November 2004 - 11:22 PM

lisa riley
the shizz:D hell yeah!
all my friends, near and far.
low-resolution music transposed to high-resolution music
airplanes
family
SPARKS COTTON CANDY ALE!
comcast high speed internet
the new primus live cd

and the greatest thing to be thankful for, the gift of life.
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#24 Guest_axlrose7000_*

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Posted 25 November 2004 - 01:32 AM

i'm thankful for:
family
friends
W. Axl Rose
The Shizz (and all members)
Nintendo
Akira Kurosawa (R.I.P)
John goodman
my new job
Saved by the bell
women who are slutly
80's night
pin ball
Stephen King's "IT" (the book)
white trash
hobo's
goth music
vampires
Meeting Jesus at Deep dale
yeah yeah yeah's
minibosses
Guns N' Roses times 500000000000000000000
wiggers
dancing in the dark
push ups
my god like looks
jump ropes
stand by me
fright night
1987
budwiser
the color maze.
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#25 mercatfat

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Posted 25 November 2004 - 09:17 AM

i'm trying to convert to judaism so i'm not sure if i can celebrate thanksgiving.
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#26 PhilT

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Posted 25 November 2004 - 10:11 AM

I'm thankful for the following things:

friends
family
tunes
knock knock jokes
free school
vacation days

beating half life 2
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#27 leahlee

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Posted 25 November 2004 - 10:19 AM

A brief history of Amerikkka's celebration of genocide:

In 1621 the myth of thanksgiving was born. The colonists invited Massasoit, chief of the Wampanoags, to their first feast as a follow up to their recent land deal. Massasoit in turn invited 90 of his men, much to the chagrin of the colonists. Two years later the English invited a number of tribes to a feast "symbolizing eternal friendship." The English offered food and drink, and two hundred Indians dropped dead from unknown poison.
:
: The first day of thanksgiving took place in 1637 amidst the war against the Pequots. 700 men, women, and children of the Pequot tribe were gathered for their annual green corn dance on what is now Groton, Connecticut. Dutch and English mercenaries surrounded the camp and proceeded to shoot, stab, butcher and burn alive all 700 people. The next day the Massachusetts Bay Colony held a feast in celebration and the governor declared "a day of thanksgiving." In the ensuing madness of the Indian extermination, natives were scalped, burned, mutilated and sold into slavery, and a feast was held in celebration every time a successful massacre took place. The killing frenzy got so bad that even the Churches of Manhattan announced a day of "thanksgiving" to celebrate victory over the "heathen savages," and many celebrated by kicking the severed heads of Pequot people through the streets like soccer balls.
:

The most interesting part of thanksgiving is the propaganda that has been put out surrounding it. During the 19th century thanksgiving traditions consisted of turkey and family reunions. Whenever popular art contained both pilgrims and Indians, the scene was usually characterized by violent confrontations between the two groups, not a multi-cultural/multi-racial dinner. In 1914 artist Jennie Brownscombe created the vision of thanksgiving that we see today: community, religion, racial harmony and tolerance, after her notorious painting reached wide circulation in Life magazine.
:
: Adamant protests to the celebration of thanksgiving have taken place over the years. As early as 1863 Pequot Indian Minister William Apess urged "every man of color" to mourn the day of the landing, and bury Plymouth Rock in protest. In 1970 Apess got his way. 1970 was the "350th" anniversary of thanksgiving, and became the first proclaimed national day of mourning for American Indians.

 
Happy Thanksgiving!

 
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#28 mancopter

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Posted 25 November 2004 - 10:21 AM

..... :(
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#29 brian mcphail

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Posted 25 November 2004 - 10:28 AM

Loving my job
Cheese
Getting mail
Finding Colin
Finding Nemo
Vacations
Vacations to see Good friends
Getting over Nerves
Music
Christmas in Muskoka
Cheese
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#30 leahlee

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Posted 25 November 2004 - 10:37 AM

As many people in the US prepare to celebrate the Thanksgiving holiday, we are reminded by animal advocates that the US slaughters nearly 300 million turkeys every year for consumption. Globally, the annual slaughter of turkeys is at least 691 million, suggesting that the US accounts for a sizable portion of the world's turkey slaughter. Per capita consumption of turkey flesh in the US has remained flat for about eight years, from a high of 18.2 pounds per person in 1996 to 17.3 pounds per person in 2004. Fighting against the continued consumption of turkeys during Thanksgiving and throughout the year, a growing number of animal advocates are highlighting the plight of turkeys using personal stories.

A personal account from author and long-time animal activist Jim Mason, featured on the website of Compassion Over Killing, discusses Mason's day working as an artificial inseminator for a Butterball Turkey farm in Missouri. Mason details the process of "breaking" turkey hens in order to inseminate them, as well as other issues like the plight of disadvantaged farm workers looking for employment. Other turkey advocates are emphasizing the positive aspects of vegetarianism, including Farm Sanctuary's "Adopt-A-Turkey" month during all of November, and meatless feed-ins by animal protection groups like Animal Place in California. The aptly named Turkey Story website (http://www.turkeystory.com) provides the story of one rescued turkey named Adam. Adam's rescuer details the circumstances of the birds' conditions on a factory farm and provides an inspiring story of rescue and rehabilitation.

Some animal advocates in California are taking a more direct approach to turkey advocacy. Earlier this year, East Bay Animal Advocates (EBA) conducted an in-depth investigation and open rescue at a turkey farm in Northern California. Since 2003, EBAA has rescued almost 20 turkeys from "free-range" and factory farms. According to one EBAA activist, "Turkeys are just like dogs, they're very animated and intelligent animals. It's hard to say that until you actually meet a turkey."
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