Results 51 to 75 of 121
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08-02-2021, 05:23 PM #51
Also, this thread needs the Ogden scale before it gets moved to the HOF.
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08-02-2021, 06:29 PM #52
I was visiting the family a few weeks ago (not the Nazi meth midgets, just to be clear). I drove around a few parts of Pueblo that I don't usually go through, and there are some areas where basement houses would actually be an improvement. Sad.
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08-03-2021, 04:02 AM #53Banned
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You have chosen a very interesting and slippery topic.
Last edited by Envrexperts; 08-03-2021 at 06:50 AM.
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08-03-2021, 05:16 AM #54
Why are Spammers interested in nazi midgets?
It's a war of the mind and we're armed to the teeth.
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08-03-2021, 06:34 AM #55
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08-03-2021, 07:26 AM #56
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08-03-2021, 08:12 AM #57
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08-10-2021, 12:43 PM #58
I wonder if they hate all jews or only the midget jews?
Where do they get midget nazi uniforms?
Are they able to goose step with midget legs?
Do they breed mini versions of Shepherds and Dobermen? or do they ride the full size dogs like a pony?
Are their tenets of national socialism the same as full size nazis?
so many questions. . .
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08-10-2021, 12:49 PM #59
And what do they do when they get to the Uber-mensch part? At least tall, blonde-hair, blue-eyed folks can say: l'm tall, blonde, and blue-eyed...look how attractive I am (at least I imagine Swedish gals say that after they say the word "no" to me).
But how do midgets reconcile?It makes perfect sense...until you think about it.
I suspect there's logic behind the madness, but I'm too dumb to see it.
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08-10-2021, 10:28 PM #60
I’m playing golf with the local Friday money game in Pueblo. I will inquire as to the midget nazi presence.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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08-10-2021, 11:31 PM #61
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10-18-2021, 05:02 PM #62
Think this lady knew these midgets? How did she overlook the meth? Lots of problems with her family
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/ma...5Sw?li=BBnbfcL
Marijuana legalization was a mistake. Highly concentrated pot is destroying my son's life.
I absolutely loved living in Colorado.
Family-oriented Pueblo is the state’s best-kept secret. Lake Pueblo, Pueblo Mountain Park and Devil’s Canyon are perfect places to hike. We lived in an old Craftsman home in the historic district, with a beautiful garden and wonderful neighbors. I felt like I was living in a dream.
And then legalized marijuana came, and everything changed. It has taken nearly a decade for Colorado’s elected leaders to understand the damage pot is doing to our children. I saw it years ago.
My eldest son entered eighth grade in 2014, the year recreational marijuana stores opened in Colorado. Soon, his behavior changed. He became irrational and repeated things that didn’t make sense. I dismissed it as adolescent mood swings. He had just broken up with a girlfriend. That’s all it was, I told myself.
By his freshman year, I realized he was using marijuana. I was still in denial, though, until he attacked his younger brother and then tried to kill himself. The hospital treated him and sent him home. A few days later, when it was clear he was still suicidal, I took him back to the emergency room. Don’t worry, they told me. It’s just marijuana.
Marijuana is a serious drug
Eventually, my son told me he was dabbing, which I had never heard of. A dab (or wax or shatter) is a highly concentrated form of THC, marijuana’s active ingredient. It’s heated and smoked, delivering an instant, overwhelming high. Crack weed, my son called it. He knew it was making him crazy. He wanted to quit, but addiction had him firmly in its grip.
And yes, he was addicted. Addiction is a pediatric disease. In 9 out of 10 cases, it originates with drug or alcohol use before age 21. Marijuana, which has been linked to mental illness and psychosis in teens and young adults, slowly takes away your humanity. That’s what it did to my son, who turned to running the streets with homeless people. He had no trouble finding people to feed his addiction in return for selling their legally homegrown marijuana.
I quit working, making it my full-time job to save my son. I soon found out that getting treatment wasn’t easy. Beds were full. Officials minimized marijuana's addictiveness.
I found a highly regarded treatment center in Utah; they required $36,000 up front that I didn't have. Finally, I found a place in San Diego that helped restore his health. He regained confidence and looked good. In the meantime, I had learned about a recovery community in Houston, where host families provide positive peer support. My son got better when he left Colorado, so I moved him there in 2016. My other son, who had developed posttraumatic stress disorder, and I followed in 2018.
Sadly, my story isn’t unique. Families across Colorado have experienced the same heartbreak and worse. More and more, marijuana is implicated in teen suicides. Marijuana was present in more than a quarter of teen suicides. Pot is taking our children from us.
That’s why a bipartisan legislature this year passed a bill that begins to rein in this monster. The bill:
►Authorizes a study on the effects of high-potency THC products on the developing brain and how to keep those products away from teens. These unbiased experts will make a recommendation for next steps to the legislature.
►Requires doctors issuing medical marijuana recommendations to consider the person's mental health history.
►Orders a report on hospital discharge data when marijuana use is likely.
►Directs coroners to screen for THC in nonnatural deaths.
►Reduces the amount an 18-year-old medical card user can purchase in a single day. This closes a loophole that could be exploited to stock up on marijuana concentrates, which they sell to their younger friends.
It’s a baby step, but it’s significant that the state that pioneered marijuana legalization is finally recognizing there are harmful consequences.
We can’t keep going down this road. We can’t keep sacrificing our children on the altar of pot. Big Marijuana promotes high-potency, addictive concentrates with no proof they are safe for anyone. Colorado’s commission, when it reviews all the research already done, will confirm that this product is dangerous to children and much too easy for them to get.
Maybe lives will be saved. Maybe other states will be warned against following Colorado’s lead. Maybe no more families will have to endure the hell that mine has.
But it comes too late for me and my oldest son. He started using again. I haven’t seen him in a year.
Aubree Adams is director of Every Brain Matters. She is the parent coordinator for a Houston recovery community, where she lives with her youngest son and two dogs.
Aubree Adams in Houston, Texas, in October 2021.© Family handout Aubree Adams in Houston, Texas, in October 2021.
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10-18-2021, 06:51 PM #63
She lived in Pueblo. Her son's "marijuana addiction" was probably pretty low on her list of challenges.
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10-19-2021, 01:47 PM #64Registered User
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The nazi thing happened back in the 90's.
That place has sucked for a long, long time.
I have a new story that happened in Denver 2 Wednesday's back. Its a two parter with meth, a hatchet, a bicyle, my ford, a connex with urine on it and 12 guys. This time I got pictures.
I think I need a new thread for it.
PS
An item was used that almost everyone here has and yet no one has ever thought to sharpen and use as a weapon...
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10-19-2021, 01:58 PM #65
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10-19-2021, 02:13 PM #66
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10-19-2021, 11:02 PM #67
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10-19-2021, 11:46 PM #68
I stayed up way past my bedtime hoping to se3 this story.
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10-20-2021, 02:29 PM #69
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10-20-2021, 03:10 PM #70
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10-20-2021, 04:05 PM #71
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10-20-2021, 04:28 PM #72
Pretty sure anything imaginable and more has been turned into a shank at one point or another.
Let's go with the story OP
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10-20-2021, 05:18 PM #73Registered User
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10-20-2021, 05:26 PM #74
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10-21-2021, 09:18 AM #75Registered User
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- Colorado
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I googled it and it didn't come up as having been sharpened and used as a weapon, ever.
I'm putting it in word then posting it later today but I've been swamped.
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