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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
It is interesting how those who chime in from one side of this argument ignore the science and just either hurl insults - or claim its all a conspiracy by the left, scientists and whoever else they believe can be yoked into their conspiracy theory that this is a plot to destroy American freedom and global industry and a step on the path of the creation a socialist state. I see no flow of posts by these people offering scientific refutations or evidence to challenge Trish's consistantly well informed posts. It honestly should not be a right v left issue. It should be something everyone takes seriously.
I honestly want a world in a few generations time so that Faldur and Russtafa's grand children can argue with the likes of Trish or Ben or Hippiefried me about politics, science, religion or whatever. That's what this is about.
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
I agree with everything you say Prospero.
I think this thread has been taken as far as it can go, because people are arguing from a point of view, not about it, so there is no advance in our understanding of the science, or even the politics; the positions have been staked out, and nothing it seems will change them.
We have been in this situation before where the science of nuclear energy conflicts with the politics and the commerce, so that there is still no consensus on the use of nuclear energy as one of the alternatives to fossil fuels. More serious, as I think I might also have said before, is the casual way in which science itself is seen as merely a political tool with no inherent value, it becomes part of the science-vs-religion dispute in which the negation of scientific fact is seen as medieval and superstitious in parts of the Islamic world; and parts of the USA where anything and everything that happens is the expression of God's Will.
But I don't expect a serious debate about any of these issues in this thread, which should probably be left to rot on the highway. This is a roadkill even vultures can't digest.
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
Well put Stavros. interesting you raise the conflict between science and religion. it is something that ainstream Christianity - even Roman Catholicism - has not had a real problem with now for a long time. Pope John Paul the II said in 1993 that really science and belief were two separate things - and should not conflict. The scientists who work for the vatican Observatory accept the big bang theory - and utilise the anthropic principle to accommodate go and modern astrophysics. The possibility of a peaceful co-existence of modern science and faith was underlined by the evolutionary scientist Stephen Jay Gould (a far brader minded fellow that our own Richard Dawkins) who described them two non-overlapping magisteria. Islam on the other hand does have serious issues with much of science because of the notion of free will and the born-again movement does seek to turn the clock back to the pre-Galileo era of belief - rejecting any science that is not supported by a very literalist interpretation of the Bible. Hence the new age creationists who still cleave to the idea that the earth was made in the time of Genesis and that the fossil record is really either a fake or put there by God to confuse us all or that dinosaurs did walk the earth at the same time as man. There is even a museum in Oklahoma - which presents this as fact. The Bible thus trumping centuries of scientific enquiry.
http://www.travelok.com/listings/view.profile/id.5235
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
i wish you blokes could pay our tax and leave every one else out of it because i fucking don't want to pay it!i am more than happy if you greenie wankers pay the fucking thing
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
Quote:
Originally Posted by
russtafa
i wish you blokes could pay our tax and leave every one else out of it because i fucking don't want to pay it!i am more than happy if you greenie wankers pay the fucking thing
Well Russtafa at least every working person in your country pays taxes, (all but those that earn less than $6k a year). How would you like to live here where 50% of the working people don't pay anything. And on top of it, those 50% spend most of their time bitching and moaning that the rest of us are not paying enough. They call it "shared responsibility", since when does shared mean "I pay nothing", and "you pay more"?
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Faldur
Well Russtafa at least every working person in your country pays taxes, (all but those that earn less than $6k a year). How would you like to live here where 50% of the working people don't pay anything. And on top of it, those 50% spend most of their time bitching and moaning that the rest of us are not paying enough. They call it "shared responsibility", since when does shared mean "I pay nothing", and "you pay more"?
sounds rank .our rich pay phenomenal amounts of tax but our public housing live all their lives in the state housing system and pay very low rents and hardly any tax.our green supporters are middle class and want the working class to suffer because of their beliefs in a green environment.this means no cutting down of trees =bush fires and loss of life,no new dams =drought.and a fucking carbon tax =loss of jobs and economic stress on working families and that's why i hate the pricks as do most Australians
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
Thanks for the well considered post, Stavros. There is one point you make I’d like to address.
Quote:
We have been in this situation before where the science of nuclear energy conflicts with the politics and the commerce, so that there is still no consensus on the use of nuclear energy as one of the alternatives to fossil fuels.
There is a significant difference between the debate on nuclear energy and the climate debate.
The opponents of nuclear energy do believe in the science. They grant that one can extract energy from the atom and use it to power cities. There the debate is about whether it should be done; and there are disagreements concerning the more complex issue of benefits vs costs vs potential hazards. (My opinion on nuclear energy is that soon we won’t be able to avoid it’s use, and the sooner we get practical minds working on the nuclear waste disposal problem, the better).
The opponents of various climate initiatives deny the science. This to me is unbelievable. The mechanisms are simple, easy to understand. At this late date the evidence is voluminous and there is now a scientific consensus which didn’t exist a thirty years ago. The jury is in. Yet we still have people who deny the science. Surely it would be more rational and eminently more practical to start with the science and focus debate on what, if anything, can and should be done about global heat imbalance. (Personally, yes you guessed it, I subscribe to the well accepted view of my scientific colleagues that anthropogenic global warming is happening and has been since the mid to late nineteenth century. However, I am not a liberal on the issue of what to do about it, if anything. I’m not conservative either. I’m open to suggestions).
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
On the subject of religion:
The parallel between climate science and biological evolution is somewhat tighter. The consensus in biology is much older and the principles of selection and evolution are not only explanatory of anatomic and genetic comparisons between species but also organize and illuminate the whole of natural history. Evolution is therefore fundamentally integrated into our modern biological understanding. The theory of evolution is as epistemologically well established as any biological theory can be. Yet American “religious sensibilities” are so threatened by this one hundred and fifty year old discovery that the science again has to be denied. One might understand this vehement rejection of the truth on the part of fundamental religionists were the theory pointing ahead to some potential hazard or disaster that would require big tax payer dollars to avoid. But this is not the case. As threats to governmental budgets go, evolution is a piker. The only issue relevant to public policy is that high school biologists simply want to teach biology and not a ancient controversy that died in the 1890’s.
To save their children from “heresy” we find fundamentalists employing all the same strategies climate deniers employ; e.g. cardboard institutes, shady journals, cherry picking the data, ad hoc refusal to accept carbon dating etc. Some believe there was no evolution, some believe there’s evidence of the sky-god’s intervention in a process that's something like evolution. The ordinary fundamentalist in the street doesn’t really care which version of anti-evolution is right, as long as the Christian god is in there somewhere. There is no real interest among the fundamentalists in biology nor in natural history (it's just God's garden...what more do you need to know?); their only interest is in passing on a bogus religious ideology through the generations.
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
Some pertinent posts to respond to:
1) Prospero -it will sound patronising of me, but I believe your evidence suggests there are people who find more comfort in 'God's Plan' as they understand it than in science, and don't really have an intellectual response to any issue; we just have to accept that their positions will not change and just hope policy contiunes to be made on the basis of science, but the policies have to be effective to be worth supporting.
2) Faldur and Russtafa -as usual, it is taxes that are the issue for you, not the science, which makes it pointless to claim the science is wrong when you advance not a shred of evidence that has been tested or examined through established scientific methods to prove your point.
Yes, discuss the tax regimes we all have, how people at the bottom get tax relief, how people at the top employ accountants and lawyers to successfully avoid paying taxes leaving the rest of society in the middle to carry the main burden -but that is not part of the debate on climate change as a scientific fact. It has already been proven that reducing carbon emissions can be achieved though technological change -to motor vehicles, to industrial plant, and many industries have done it without central or local government raising taxes. Tackling the industry that is denuding the world of forests and all the plant life in it -the most precious rain forest we have on earth- is a political-economic, not a tax issue. Changing the way we use the land to grow crops and at the same time avoid soil erosion and the waste of water, again, political and economic not a tax issue, and they all feed into the natural processes of earth's biology that keep the planet going. I think these are more practicable issue we can deal with that don't have a tax profile, rather than carbon trading and taxes. Its a question of priorities. That is where the tax debate should be.
3) Trish, on the nuclear issue I agree with your point of view. THe nuclear option is part of the debate on the changing fuel mix of the future as part of the wider debate about what that alternative to fossil fuel the mix should be, so I see it as a response to the long-term anxiety about the impact of climate change, and although I understand your generally positive view of it, Germany has moved against the nuclear alternative, and the continuing problems of Fukushima continue to make this a problematic issue. But I agree that the science in the nuclear option is not the issue. It is about costs, and safety.
On religion, all I can say is that as Prospero also pointed out, there is no necessary cleavage between science and religion, and there are a lot of Christians outside the USA as well as inside it, who don't recognise the strident opposition of the fundamentalists you refer to as being part of their own discourse. As I said at the beginning, I don't know if there is anything that can be done to change minds which, intellectually, are not really working at that level. I might be wrong, but it seems to be that religion is more central to the political debate in the USA than it is in other liberal democracies, and it does seem to have had some impact on policies, such as abortion, but I don't know how much more it actually informs policy making. Americans, it seems, need to hear their politicians, as it says in the song, Praise the Lord, and pass the ammunition.
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Prospero
It is interesting how those who chime in from one side of this argument ignore the science and just either hurl insults - or claim its all a conspiracy by the left, scientists and whoever else they believe can be yoked into their conspiracy theory that this is a plot to destroy American freedom and global industry and a step on the path of the creation a socialist state. I see no flow of posts by these people offering scientific refutations or evidence to challenge Trish's consistantly well informed posts. It honestly should not be a right v left issue. It should be something everyone takes seriously.
I honestly want a world in a few generations time so that Faldur and Russtafa's grand children can argue with the likes of Trish or Ben or Hippiefried me about politics, science, religion or whatever. That's what this is about.
And, too, well, we can engage in a so-called debate about a so-called climate change hoax or whatever.
But the fact is there is no debate about climate change. It ended awhile ago. Climate change is real and it poses serious challenges and threats.
You've 98 percent of climate SCIENTISTS agreeing that global warming is real and dangerous and we need to do something about it.
And the other 2 percent or so are not scientists. They simply serve the powerful oil sector. Which is understandable.
Because the oil industry have a lot on the line. Like trillions of dollars in future profits. They will not go down without a massive fight. They have a lot at stake in the oil game....
Cigarette companies did the same in the 1960s. A massive propaganda campaign to deny ANY LINK between cigarette smoking and cancer. Why? Well, money, big money.
The oil sector is doing the same today. Again, it's understandable when all you're concerned about is maximizing profit. Ya know, nothing else matters. Future generations aren't considered. And they can't be.
Rex Tillerson, the CEO of Exxon, wouldn't be doing his job if he was concerned about climate change.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2...nd-output-rise
Naomi Klein Implicates Corporate Climate Lobbyists at COP15 - YouTube
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
Quote:
Originally Posted by trish
On the subject of religion:
Trish,
You're going to hell. I talked to Dad & called you a special case, but He was unmoved. He says He just can't deal with your blasphemy anymore. I even tried to get the bird to intervene, & offered to go through another crucifixion, or something comparable in these modern times. He said once is enough. He wouldn't even let you work it off in Pergatory. No probation. No parole. You're doomed to hellfire through eternity. I'll come visit, butt while you're here, you might as well get totally depraved since there's no way out of your fate anyway. We should do a meat & greet. :twisted:
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
I'll just think of it as God's molten rock garden. Hope He doesn't mind if I test it for unstable isotopes of potassium and their decay residues. I'd like to get measurement of the age of those rocks. Maybe put a date on creation. I'm wondering if there are any interesting rock formations in Hell, or if everything is all just melted into a flat dull bubbling lake. Hmmm I wonder what the viscosity of liquid hellfire is? Could sulfur metabolizing organisms have evolved there? If the measurements show Hell is older than 13 billion years, will I get sent to another Hell?
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
Ben - you are right there should be no such debate. But the fact remans that there are, as this strand so lucidly shows, those who continue to argue that black is white - thus this "debate" (to dignify it )does exist. But as Stavros observed it is also a pointless one here. For reasons either of the simplicity of faith in this context or for rather more cynical ideological purposes there is no intelligent debate going on here - simply the restatement of a certain position against the overwhelming body of evidence and a simple minded bloody mindedness and abusive response from another quarter - informed only by a gut reaction to local economic and social conditions. Roadkill is a good word. Trish and you have both offerered a well established and intelligent flow of well supported argument here. Others offer abuse, the re-iteration of bad science and repetitive rhetoric.
And yes Stavros, of course there are people who have no intellectual response to issues. The "truth" has been revealed to them and cannot be questioned. In the case of islam such questioning can bring the most brutal of responses. Mainstream Christianity has at least left that behind following the reformation. For American fundamentalists, brutality with regard to abortion seems resurgent and scarey. But then all our most ludicrous religious people fled to the America's centuries ago.
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
Quote:
Could sulfur metabolizing organisms have evolved there?
I would imagine you can evolve whatever metabolized orgasms you like. You'll have nothing but time. I didn't pay attention in God school. I was preoccupied with what I was about to go through. Precognition can be a drag sometimes.
As for the technical stuff:
I'm a redeemer, not a creator. You'd have to ask Dad, but He'll know that your prayers are disingenuous. He can be vengeful, & He's already pissed, So you might not want to antagonize him. Lighning bolts ya know...
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
Quote:
Originally Posted by
trish
Thanks for the well considered post, Stavros. There is one point you make I’d like to address.
There is a significant difference between the debate on nuclear energy and the climate debate.
The opponents of nuclear energy do believe in the science. They grant that one can extract energy from the atom and use it to power cities. There the debate is about whether it should be done; and there are disagreements concerning the more complex issue of benefits vs costs vs potential hazards. (My opinion on nuclear energy is that soon we won’t be able to avoid it’s use, and the sooner we get practical minds working on the nuclear waste disposal problem, the better).
The opponents of various climate initiatives deny the science. This to me is unbelievable. The mechanisms are simple, easy to understand. At this late date the evidence is voluminous and there is now a scientific consensus which didn’t exist a thirty years ago. The jury is in. Yet we still have people who deny the science. Surely it would be more rational and eminently more practical to start with the science and focus debate on what, if anything, can and should be done about global heat imbalance. (Personally, yes you guessed it, I subscribe to the well accepted view of my scientific colleagues that anthropogenic global warming is happening and has been since the mid to late nineteenth century. However, I am not a liberal on the issue of what to do about it, if anything. I’m not conservative either. I’m open to suggestions).
As you and others say, it's probably not worth debating with those with deliveried truths. Biological evolution is as solid as any part of biology - there is scientific debate but that is how it should be. As scientists, we assume the minimum (Ockham's razor), we observe the natural world, determine the nature of a phenomenon, i.e. ask a question or identify a problem. Develop one or more hypotheses. The hypotheses should be predictive - given a set of circumstances, the hypothesis should predict an outcome (you can't point only backwards in time and say "God did that." You must say if x occurs then y will happen). Devise experiments to test the hypotheses. All scientific hypotheses must be capable of being disproved (Karl Popper - empirical falsification). Check how results fit the hypotheses - accept, refine or reject.
Easy really! Evolutionary theory has all these elements - there is little to question unless you totally reject the scientific method and maintain an irrational belief in fables. It's up to you. End of lecture!!!
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
Thanks martin. It does seem many people prefer fables and to reside with the comfort zone of the fairytale or the fable. And others like conspiracy theories. Sometimes the two seem to overlap.
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
fuck you lot and your bullshit
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
Quote:
Originally Posted by
russtafa
fuck you lot and your bullshit
Well, we were all waiting for a well thought out & coherent argument against the climate change theories...
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
there is no global warming just cooling yah dicks
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
Quote:
Originally Posted by
russtafa
fuck you lot and your bullshit
Perhaps, extinction of the species would have some advantages. Gives evolution a chance to start again.
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
well you wouldn't survive
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
Quote:
Originally Posted by
martin48
Perhaps, extinction of the species would have some advantages. Gives evolution a chance to start again.
There are 200 species going extinct every single day. And we are but 1 of 30 million species.
We cannot continue to despoil the planet and live on it. Albeit we can make believe that we can destroy the planet and live on it as well.
Plus 90 percent of the big fish in the ocean are gone.
1,000 Americans die every single day from cancer.
I mean, it is kinda bleak, as it were.
But we can change.
Naomi Klein: 'If You Take Climate Change Seriously, You Have to Throw Out the Free-Market Playbook':
http://www.thesolutionsjournal.com/node/1053
Big-Fish Stocks Fall 90 Percent Since 1950, Study Says:
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/n...shdecline.html
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
man made global warming is a farse designed to extract carbon taxes out of the general population despite what Al Gore preaches, if you wanna worry about the environment, then lets worry about nuclear power, GMOs, water pollution and gene splicing among other more serious threats
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
:Bowdown::Bowdown::Bowdown::Bowdown::Bowdown::Bowd own::Bowdown::Bowdown:
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Gouki
man made global warming is a farse designed to extract carbon taxes out of the general population despite what Al Gore preaches, if you wanna worry about the environment, then lets worry about nuclear power, GMOs, water pollution and gene splicing among other more serious threats
you got that right
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
Even though it's evident to every serious climatologist in the world that anthropogenic climate warming is a fact, you are correct that it's not as urgent a problem as water pollution. As far as GMOs, gene splicing and nuclear power are concerned, all three are practicable with the appropriate regulation and enforcement (or were you proposing to ban them altogether; i.e. extreme regulation)?
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
Quote:
Originally Posted by
trish
Even though it's evident to every serious climatologist in the world that anthropogenic climate warming is a fact, you are correct that it's not as urgent a problem as water pollution. As far as GMOs, gene splicing and nuclear power are concerned, all three are practicable with the appropriate regulation and enforcement (or were you proposing to ban them altogether; i.e. extreme regulation)?
and a great idea for taxing the sweat off the taxpayer ,a money maker fer sure
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
that's the objective of this carbon tax to tax the fuck out of everyone.nothing like taxing thin air lol
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
the Australian government is now considering silencing any debate about the carbon tax by passing a law forbidding any critism of it on newspapers ,radio, blogs or twitter
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
Quote:
Originally Posted by
russtafa
the Australian government is now considering silencing any debate about the carbon tax by passing a law forbidding any critism of it on newspapers ,radio, blogs or twitter
Well, that's the problem solved then!
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
Quote:
Originally Posted by
martin48
Well, that's the problem solved then!
hey you could be part of the thought police yah good little commo:censor
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
i knew you lot were all communists and this proves it
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
Quote:
Originally Posted by
martin48
Well, that's the problem solved then!
And here I was thinking they're all racists and yahoos down there. I guess it demonstrates one can't generalize from too small a sample size.
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
:fuckin::fuckin::fuckin:you would love it come knocking on my door yah little commie and i will give yah a treat
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
Quote:
Originally Posted by
russtafa
:fuckin::fuckin::fuckin:you would love it come knocking on my door yah little commie and i will give yah a treat
we can fuck and hit the piss and then you can arrest me and take me away to your commie camp yah sexy wench:kiss::kiss::kiss::kiss::kiss::kiss::kiss::ki ss:
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
How juvenile! You truly are a stupid loser. I bested you so badly in argument, this tiny ploy is the best you can come with! The mods really should put you out of your misery.
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
Quote:
Originally Posted by
trish
How juvenile! You truly are a stupid loser. I bested you so badly in argument, this tiny ploy is the best you can come with! The mods really should put you out of your misery.
lets have a root baby :smileysex: and you best me at nothing yah sexy wench .lets sink some piss and then yah can tell me i am a really very,very bad man aye
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
I killed you in argument and you know it. That why you've reverted to the comebacks of a twelve year old with tiny bald genitals. It's all you got left. You're sooo fucking pathetic. I bet all the girls laugh at you right in your face.
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Re: Climate change could mean the extinction of our species
oh baby i have big one and yah want to see it and that's understandable and if you are a bad girl i will put you over my knee and give you a spanking and then a good root and we can fuck and argue all the time