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33359What Bands/Performers Have You Seen Live in Concert?Very, very few. I know that we saw Steppenwolf at King's Island one year.  Some country band at the Grand Ole Opry, can't recall the name. That's pretty much it. :lol:Vaporman87Jan 24, 2017View
33358Old movies set in the pastI like drama films, so I might watch it someday.<div><br></div><div>The 1995 film Casino spans the years 1973-1983.</div><div><br></div><div><img src="https://s23.postimg.org/4q6vml5hn/casino_ver1.jpg"></div><div><br></div><div>Watch this at your own risk.</div>Mr MagicJan 24, 2017View
33357Old movies set in the pastI like drama films, so I might watch it someday.<div><br></div><div>The 1995 film Casino spans the years 1973-1983.</div><div><br></div><div><img width="300" height="300" src="https://s23.postimg.org/4q6vml5hn/casino_ver1.jpg"></div><div><br></div><div>Watch this at your own risk.</div>Mr MagicJan 24, 2017View
33356Valentine's DayI watched the Be My Valentine Charlie Brown DVD which includes the First Kiss special, something I hadn't seen in a long time. That was fun.Vaporman87Jan 24, 2017View
33355Inauguration Day<blockquote rel="Ajimbo" style="font-size: 10pt; font-style: normal; font-weight: normal;"><b>Ajimbo wrote :</b><br><i> I know it's nothing new. However...</i></blockquote><blockquote rel="Ajimbo" style="font-size: 10pt; font-style: normal; font-weight: normal;"><b style="font-size: 13.3333px;">-end quote</b></blockquote><blockquote rel="Ajimbo"><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-style: normal;"><span style="font-size: 13.3333px;">Essentially I'm saying I agree with you, but nothing is going to change that fact. This is the way it's been done for two centuries. All one can do is vote for the representative that least offends them. Whether it's your stance on abortion, or your stance on regulatory reforms, the solution is the same... albeit not a perfect one.</span></span></blockquote><blockquote rel="Ajimbo"><b style="font-size: 13.3333px;">Ajimbo wrote :</b><span style="font-size: 10pt; font-style: normal;"><span style="font-size: 13.3333px;"><br></span><i style="font-weight: normal;">Calling them "murderers" does nothing but harm women... Those women need support.</i></span><br></blockquote><blockquote rel="Ajimbo"><span style="font-style: normal;"><i style="font-size: 10pt; font-weight: normal;">I understand you have personal feelings about this issue, as well, but I do not agree with you on this.</i><br></span><b style="font-size: 13.3333px;">-end quote</b></blockquote><blockquote rel="Ajimbo"><span style="font-style: normal;"><font size="2">I don't expect you to agree with me.&nbsp;</font></span></blockquote><blockquote rel="Ajimbo"><font size="2">I'm sure each person in the marches had their own reasons they felt were valid. My question was more of a response to the idea that somehow rights were going to be taken away from people. I wanted to know what rights specifically were people fearful would be taken from them. I would like someone to point to the specific text in either the Constitution or the Bill of Rights that was going to be trampled upon.</font></blockquote><blockquote rel="Ajimbo"><font size="2">No, I would not weep at the demise of any corrupt organization, but there are always going to be innocent casualties when that happens. I pointed out that thankfully for those affected there would be other organizations that are not corrupt and also not siphoning off tax money.</font></blockquote><blockquote rel="Ajimbo"><font size="2">As for your other point... yes, these women do need support. And they need to be open and able to seek it FROM BOTH POINTS OF VIEW before making a decision as life changing as the killing of the unborn child. But all too often the support they get is from a total stranger who is more of an enabler than a counselor. Because abortion is so politically charged, nobody in a position to help at these clinics is willing to lay out the full breadth of consequences, especially following the procedure. Because if they did, far fewer women would choose that route. What potentially lies down that path is much more devastating than the alternative, which is not without it's own difficulties.</font></blockquote><blockquote rel="Ajimbo"><font size="2">My sister was not perfect by any means. But there was potential for better things for her. But everything she became can be traced back to her decision to have an abortion. Drugs, alcohol, self-harming, promiscuity, an inability to do anything to help better herself. She made it clear that she was against any woman having that done to them. She wanted it banned completely. She died of an overdose, still believing in that.</font></blockquote><blockquote rel="Ajimbo"><font size="2">So yes... I have personal experience with this issue. I also have been down the road of adoption. I know how difficult and expensive that is. And yet there are so many parents that will do about anything for a child of their own. By letting the unborn child live and at least have a shot at a life with one of these families, and stripping away some of the expense and red tape that prohibits so many other families from attempting it, a great deal of pain and suffering can be avoided.</font></blockquote><blockquote rel="Ajimbo"><font size="2">But you won't hear that at a PP. You want to talk about negative consequences... there you go.&nbsp;</font></blockquote><br>Vaporman87Jan 24, 2017View
33354Why do we feel Nostalgia?That was wonderful, DirtyD. Thinking of the good memories to help cope with the pain.Mr MagicJan 24, 2017View
33353Why do we feel Nostalgia?To me it's a way of coping with stress by remembering simpler happier times. Like when My Great Aunt Rose died a few months ago the service and the wake were in a church and a VFW in one of the neighborhoods I lived in as a kid. It helped me remember happier times and doing things like riding my bike down to this one park or playing with some of the other kids in the neighborhood. I saw one of the houses I lived in and it reminded me of me and my brother playing with our GI Joes at the bottom of the staircase or the time this one kid down the street turned his basement into a haunted house and we all ended up pretending to be Jason, Freddy Krueger, monsters and zombies. Seeing and talking to my relatives at the wake helped me remember the things I did with them. It was almost like it brought back the ones who have died if only in my memories. It helped to take a lot of the pain away.&nbsp;<div><span style="font-size: 10pt;"><br></span></div><div><span style="font-size: 10pt;">To me nostalgia isn't just about stuff, it's also about the people in your life, the places you've been, and the things you've done. That's the kind of articles I like reading on nostalgia sites. Articles about how whatever it is the writer is talking about affected them. What memories it brings them. &nbsp; &nbsp;</span></div>DirtyD79Jan 24, 2017View
33352Inauguration DayI know it's nothing new. However, this is an immediate and relevant issue for women right NOW. Trump signed the "Mexico City Policy" hours ago. Women WILL be impacted by this in poor and developing countries. That was just in the first few days of his administration. Women are protesting because he could do more things like this in America for the next 4 years, at least. And you and I would still not be impacted by it directly.<br><br>A propane business owner is a job you choose to do, and I would assume it is a comparatively niche market.&nbsp; I'll admit that don't know about that business, but I'm sure it is impacted by safety regulations, market trends, taxes, permits, supply and demand, etc..&nbsp; I also assume propane laws aren't as controversial, don't impact that many people, and are based on safety standards regarding inflammable materials and potential explosive risk/danger among other things. That hardly seems like an accurate comparison to living, breathing women.&nbsp; I suppose propane business owners could protest if they felt they needed to, but that is not the issue here today.<br><br>I'm talking about 50% of the population that would potentially be impacted by these laws. Women don't choose their bodies, it isn't a job that needs regulating, and not every pregnancy is planned or made with love and sunshine with two loving parents and a white picket fence.&nbsp; It is unfortunate, but a full and happy life has never been guaranteed to every egg cell that gets fertilized.&nbsp; Miscarriages, complications, stress and trauma, and abortion all happen and they will still happen even if you cut funding for services that provide reproductive health and education for women.&nbsp; That will just harm the life of the woman more. It is a women's health issue, both for their bodies and their minds.&nbsp; <br>Calling them "murderers" does nothing but harm women.&nbsp; Korean War veterans were called "baby-killers" and were hated by the country they served when they came home from war and suffered from high rates of PTSD, depression, chemical dependence, and suicide.&nbsp; Those labels are a problem because instead of giving them love and understanding relationships to recover, they are alienated from their own friends and family.&nbsp; What do the family members get out of those judgemental glares, mutterings of "murderer" under their breath, and continued reminders of how THEY were the ones "robbed"?&nbsp; Anger, disgust, resentment? Those feelings solve nothing, can lead women to isolate themselves, turn to drugs and alcohol to cope, and engage in self-harm.&nbsp; Those scenarios place an undue burden on the women and are entirely avoidable if they have understanding supportive relationships. It only takes one time for a suicidal person to be successful in order for it to be too late to help.&nbsp; I have personally intervened when a woman was suicidal after she became pregnant after she was raped while unconscious. She weighed every option she had available by law, and it was easier in her mind to end it all than go through any more torment from friends, family, and the rapist for 18+ years to life.&nbsp; Cracking down on laws restricting her would have made the decision that much easier for her, and I might not have saved HER life. The life in front of me mattered, and I would never de-value her life out of negativity and resentment.&nbsp; Those women need support.<br><br>I understand you have personal feelings about this issue, as well, but I do not agree with you on this.&nbsp; And it should not be up to just men to pass judgment on women, either legally or emotionally.&nbsp; I'm not going to push this issue any further, but I want you to understand this isn't a black and white issue and it is not taken lightly.&nbsp; <br>I was trained on how to handle people with mental health issues when I was getting my graduate degree, and I used my knowledge to save a life.&nbsp; It is unfortunate that you lost someone, and I'm sorry.<br><br><br>You said you didn't get why they were protesting, so I provided some reasons.&nbsp; You said one was always an issue, but compared human rights to propane laws.&nbsp; And the other issue is automatically negated and untouchable due to your personal experience.<br>It is already against the law to use tax dollars to perform abortions in America, but you want the entirety of Planned Parenthood gone because you choose not to see the other services they provide. Yeah, I'm sure that won't have any negative consequences whatsoever...<br><br>Women are marching for their voices to be heard. They just need to march their way to the polls at each local election if they want their votes to be heard.&nbsp; <br>Get someone to speak for propane if you feel you have a valid complaint.AjimboJan 24, 2017View
33351Inauguration DayThese women really are nothing more then a group of paranoid, uneducated lunatics. They have every right to protest, but what their grounds for their protest is full of shit.Rick Ace RhodesJan 24, 2017View
33350Inauguration Day<img src="/images/postImages/148523496310492070_366346530183661_7768568659109645542_n.jpg">ThatDudeintheHoodieJan 24, 2017View