Jump to content

bust

Board Sponsors
  • Posts

    14694
  • Joined

  • Days Won

    226

Everything posted by bust

  1. What was it I had to ask for at the Pharmacy on Soi 20? Or was it Soi 22 :drunk:
  2. It's not just the players
  3. bust

    Any New Jokes

    A man escapes from a prison where he’s been locked up for 15 years. He breaks into a house and inside, he finds a young couple in bed. He ties him to a chair. While tying the wife to the bed, the convict gets on top of her, kisses her neck, then gets up and goes into the bathroom. While he’s in there, the husband whispers over to his wife, “Listen, this guy is an escaped convict. Look at his clothes! He’s probably spent a lot of time in jail and hasn’t seen a woman in years. I saw how he kissed your neck. If he wants sex, don’t resist, don’t complain. Do whatever he tells you. Satisfy him no matter how much he nauseates you. This guy is obviously very dangerous. If he gets angry, he’ll kill us both. Be strong, honey. I love you!†She responds: “He wasn’t kissing my neck. He was whispering in my ear. He told me that he’s gay, thinks you’re cute, and asked if we had any Vaseline. I told him it was in the bathroom. Be strong honey. I love you, too.â€
  4. If it wasn't mine....sure Let's put it this way. If you can fit it under your seat I don't have a problem. Start carrying on 3 or 4 pieces and you are pissing me off big time.
  5. Ornette Coleman, the alto saxophonist and composer who was one of the most powerful and contentious innovators in the history of jazz, died on Thursday in Manhattan. He was 85. The cause was cardiac arrest, a family representative said. Mr. Coleman widened the options in jazz and helped change its course. Partly through his example in the late 1950s and early ’60s, jazz became less beholden to the rules of harmony and rhythm while gaining more distance from the American songbook repertoire.
  6. I would love to see it banned altogether. Or start charging for it. Pisses me off as it slows down disembarking so much.
  7. Alan Bond the man who took the America's Cup from the Amerikans dies aged 77
  8. bust

    Vegans

    Kong I was expecting Marquee Moon
  9. bust

    Vegans

    What is television?
  10. I hear you and agree with a lot of those points. As for the children how damaged are they now? The wife is a piece of work in my opinion. My "guess" she wants to return to recruit. If she was that concerned about her children in the beginning she would never have taken them to Syria. Just sounds like she wants the goal posts moved to suit her own personal agenda. Australia is no better you and I both know it. Look at our refugee policies and immigration laws. As far as revoking citizenship I would say this is an extreme situation. Let's hope the Mad Monk isn't around much longer.
  11. I don't really consider this the same. These people are fundamentalists duty-bound to implement and enforce medieval and barbaric laws to slowly convert the world to their beliefs. They are not really defending anything.
  12. Yep have to agree with you. It is also an issue of what influence they may have on others when they return. Spread the propoganda. Young minds are always easily manipulated. That is one of the main fear of the government.
  13. I thought they never clearly said who did it. Was up to the viewer to decide
  14. And that is the debate. Khaled Sharrouf has had his passport cancelled already. His wife has supported him so should her's be as well? As for the kids I say tuff. Let's keep the family together in Syria where they chose to be.
  15. Notorious Australian Islamic State fighter Khaled Sharrouf's wife and children, including the son who was photographed holding a severed head, are seeking to return to Australia. Fairfax Media understands the family of Sharrouf's wife, Tara Nettleton, is trying to help her and the couple's five children return to Sydney. Khaled Sharrouf, whose family reportedly want to return to Australia. Photo: Supplied Agencies recently traced Ms Nettleton's mother, Karen, on a trip to Malaysia in what police suspect was an effort to arrange the repatriation of Sharrouf's wife and children. Advertisement One senior police source said intelligence suggested a reason behind the desire to return was because living conditions in Syria are very poor. While there is no evidence that Khaled Sharrouf himself wants to come back – a move which would see him face certain prosecution and a lengthy jail sentence – the predicament of his children raises sensitive issues due to their young age. Khaled Sharrouf has paraded his young sons on social media. The photo posted on Facebook last year of Sharrouf's seven-year-old boy holding a decapitated head in Syria sent shockwaves around the world. It is understood Sharrouf's three young boys and two teenage daughters are viewed by some senior security sources as victims of their father's extremism. However, the case of Tara Nettleton is more vexed. She is suspected of helping to spirit her children to Syria via Malaysia after Sharrouf flew out of Sydney in December 2013 using his brother's passport. During this trip, police suspect Ms Nettleton had travelled on return tickets and was accompanied by her mother Karen in order to evade detection by security agencies. Karen reportedly returned to Australia from Malaysia while her daughter and the children flew to the Middle East. The revelations about the possible return of Sharrouf's children bring to the fore the debate about the citizenship rights of those who join IS. On Tuesday, the federal cabinet agreed to introduce laws to strip dual citizens of Australian citizenship if they are suspected of terrorism. A cabinet revolt turned down a proposal to strip sole Australian citizens of their rights. Tara Nettleton's father Peter has previously pleaded publicly for his grandchildren to be returned to Australia, saying he was deeply concerned about their welfare. Ms Nettleton converted to Islam and had the first of her five children with Sharrouf when she was 17. Mr Sharrouf was convicted and jailed for terrorism offences in Australia, as part of the Pendennis plot, but was released before joining ISIS. He has posted shocking pictures on social media, including those showing his children, while fighting with the terrorist group. Last Week, Fairfax Media interviewed Australian nurse Adam Brookman, who claimed he was forced to join ISIS after flying to Syria last year to perform humanitarian work. Mr Brookman also claimed he managed to escape the group and, in comments viewed sceptically by senior police, that he abhorred ISIS's operations. The federal police initially blocked efforts by Mr Brookman's lawyers to attempt to facilitate his return to Melbourne. It is understood that police have since agreed to speak to his lawyers.
  16. Just started watching the Better Call Saul series.......hilarious
  17. Joan Chen is still hot.....
  18. US mathematician John Nash, who inspired the Oscar-winning film A Beautiful Mind, has died in a car crash with his wife, police have said. Nash, 86, and his 82-year-old wife Alicia were killed when their taxi crashed in New Jersey, they said. The mathematician is renowned for his work in game theory, winning the Nobel Prize for Economics in 1994. His breakthroughs in maths - and his struggles with schizophrenia - were the focus of the 2001 film. Russell Crowe, who played him, tweeted "Stunned... My heart goes out to John & Alicia & family. An amazing partnership. Beautiful minds, beautiful hearts." The film's director, Ron Howard, also paid his tribute to the "brilliant" John Nash and his "remarkable" wife. Alicia Nash helped care for her husband, and the two later became prominent mental health advocates. The two were thrown from their vehicle, police said. Media reports said the couple may not have been wearing seatbelts when they crashed. Their taxi driver, and a passenger in another car, were also injured. Born in Bluefield, West Virginia, Nash first studied in Pittsburgh before moving to Princeton. His recommendation letter contained just one line: "This man is a genius." Nash married Alicia Larde in 1957, after publishing some of his breakthrough works in game theory, which is the mathematical study of decision-making. But he developed severe schizophrenia soon after, and Alicia had him committed for psychiatric care several times. The couple divorced in 1962.Nash and his wife attended the Oscars in 2002 "I was disturbed in this way for a very long period of time, like 25 years," Nash said in an interview on the Nobel website. The two stayed close, and his condition had begun to improve by the 1980s. They remarried in 2001. The President of Princeton, Christopher Eisgruber, said he was "stunned and saddened" to hear of their deaths. "John's remarkable achievements inspired generations of mathematicians, economists and scientists who were influenced by his brilliant, groundbreaking work in game theory," he said. Even this week, Nash received the Abel Prize, another top honour in the field of mathematics.
  19. I met a Nigerian guy in Pratunam once that I am convinced I got an email from
×
×
  • Create New...