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I do tricks. Im a trick poodle. M trained me

Posted By: Shelly on 2008-11-22
In Reply to: Poodles do that? (sm) - Just the big bad

s


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    Yes, they are trained to
    refer to their SUPERIORS as ma'am and sir, and their inferiors as mister and MS (or what they know to be appropriate as far as miss or mrs, so my husband tells me). In other words, they are trained to be respectful!

    She is not even a U.S. senator, but a state senator (not denigrating her accomplishment, but what? did he just roll over and become a Brigadier General? I think not)

    What a weanie she is, and that is putting it nicely and gently!


    Aha! The old sidetrack trick!

    They have learned well from the Mastah.  LOL. 


    Just ignore them, Democrat.  The people with the sense here understand what you posted and why you posted it.  It's amazing that not one of them condemned Ann Coulter for her words, which were just as vile, if not more so.


    Just take a deep breath, know that you will be attacked by the conservatives on the Liberal board because they have no respect for the rules of this forum or for the lives and opinions of others. 


    Keep posting, Democrat.  You're getting through to your intended audience, even if we DO have to wade through stinky piles of S**T on our way to your posts.


    Luckily, your foul tricks won't work this time. Begone, NeoCon.
    You guys have tried this before and the only reason it worked was because a) you had a fresh crop of victims every few months or so as the liberals you didn't like got banned from the board, and b) you know the ins and outs because you yourselves were posting under multiple names repeatedly for a very long time. Your favorite trick was always to accuse others of doing what you yourselves were constantly doing, and you vicously accused a lot of innocent people who had no idea what you were talking about. I believe the Bible calls this false witness. Not that you'd care.

    The liberals don't have to resort to such deceit. They actually say something in their posts and they believe in what they say. They stand by their words.

    It's the one-line slimers who post and run anonymously and try to pump themselves up to look like more than they are by posting under multiple names, agreeing with themselves - they have nothing better to do, no real thoughts to offer, and no real desire to communicate. Hence the anonymous posts they don't want to own. All they are about is tearing down and creating conflict - kind of like the administration they revere.

    So don't try it, NeoCons - your habit of blaming others for the deceit you practice yourselves isn't going to fly anymore. You're busted.
    You're a one-trick-pony, Sam-I-Am.

    Hey, skunko, my husband also, he trained to be a welder, is now working for the government on....sm
    ocean vessels, and has provided for our growing family making $20 an hour with benefits, which we desparately needed here in the NE to live on. Invest a little, get a lot, for 30 years my husband (and I, and I went to college on a govenment sponsored, Pell grant!!!!!!!), have been paying in ooodles of taxes for Uncle Sam.
    The trick is, truffle....you are allowed unlimited...
    posts, along as you support the party line. But if you deviate...katy bar the door! They are so tolerant, these dems. They believe in individual freedoms...and shame if the government infringes on them!! But if THEY want to infringe on them...then that is AAAAA-OKKKK. The Audacity of Deception and Hypocrisy...lol.
    And where did she dig up those names? Twig, Trig, Trick, Track,
    Terrible thing to do to a kid.
    Hey everybody Im a poodle!
    Am I a white one?  With the cute little pom pom haircut and bows?  I mean honestly, I would rather be a poodle than .... say... a bull dog if I have to a dog that is.  RUFF
    Poodle

    Shelly-


    POODLE?? I thought you were a border collie like me - now we can't be friends anymore (LOL)


    Well, since you are apparently my poodle.. sm
    Do you want pink bows or red ones? HAHAHAHA
    Yes, you are a poodle, because you are aping 'M'..nm
    nm
    Is the poodle woofing again????..nm
    nm
    NOBODY IS TALKING TO YOU,, YOU POOR POODLE TO 'M"..nm
    nm
    Shelly just got called a *poor poodle*...ROFL....

    Halliburton and troops: Dirty water, dirty tricks













      MSNBC.com

    Report: Untreated water at U.S. base in Iraq
    Halliburton denies contamination of supply to American soliders, civilians


    The Associated Press

    Updated: 5:42 p.m. ET Jan. 22, 2006



    WASHINGTON - Troops and civilians at a U.S. military base in Iraq were exposed to contaminated water last year and employees for the responsible contractor, Halliburton, couldn’t get their company to inform camp residents, according to interviews and internal company documents.


    Halliburton, the company formerly headed by Vice President Dick Cheney, disputes the allegations about water problems at Camp Junction City, in Ramadi, even though they were made by its own employees and documented in company e-mails.


    “We exposed a base camp population (military and civilian) to a water source that was not treated,” said a July 15, 2005, memo written by William Granger, the official for Halliburton’s KBR subsidiary who was in charge of water quality in Iraq and Kuwait.


    “The level of contamination was roughly 2x the normal contamination of untreated water from the Euphrates River,” Granger wrote in one of several documents. The Associated Press obtained the documents from Senate Democrats who are holding a public inquiry into the allegations Monday.


    Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., who will chair the session, held a number of similar inquiries last year on contracting abuses in Iraq. He said Democrats were acting on their own because they had not been able to persuade Republican committee chairmen to investigate.


    The company’s former water treatment expert at Camp Junction City said that he discovered the problem last March, a statement confirmed by his e-mail the day after he tested the water.


    Bottled water used only for drinking
    While bottled water was available for drinking, the contaminated water was used for virtually everything else, including handwashing, laundry, bathing and making coffee, said water expert Ben Carter of Cedar City, Utah.


    Another former Halliburton employee who worked at the base, Ken May of Louisville, said there were numerous instances of diarrhea and stomach cramps — problems he also suffered.


    A spokeswoman for Halliburton said its own inspection found neither contaminated water nor medical evidence to substantiate reports of illnesses at the base. The company now operates its own water treatment plant there, spokeswoman Melissa Norcross said.


    A military medical unit that visited Camp Ramadi in mid-April found nothing out of the ordinary in terms of water quality, said Marine Corps Maj. Tim Keefe, a military spokesman. Water-quality testing records from May 23 show the water within normal parameters, he said.


    “The allegations appear not to have merit,” Keefe said.


    Halliburton has contracts to provide a number of services to U.S. forces in Iraq and was responsible for the water quality at the base in Ramadi.


    Year-long exposure?
    Granger’s July 15 memo said the exposure had gone on for “possibly a year” and added, “I am not sure if any attempt to notify the exposed population was ever made.”


    The first memo on the problem — written by Carter to Halliburton officials on March 24, 2005 — was an “incident report” from tests Carter performed the previous day.


    “It is my opinion that the water source is without question contaminated with numerous micro-organisms, including Coliform bacteria,” Carter wrote. “There is little doubt that raw sewage is routinely dumped upstream of intake much less than the required 2 mile distance.


    “Therefore, it is my conclusion that chlorination of our water tanks while certainly beneficial is not sufficient protection from parasitic exposure.”


    Carter said he resigned in early April after Halliburton officials did not take any action to inform the camp population.


    The water expert said he told company officials at the base that they would have to notify the military. “They told me it was none of my concern and to keep my mouth shut,” he said.


    ‘They brushed it under the carpet’
    On at least one occasion, Carter said, he spoke to the chief military surgeon at the base, asking him whether he was aware of stomach problems afflicting people. He said the surgeon told him he would look into it.


    “They brushed it under the carpet,” Carter said. “I told everyone, ‘Don’t take showers, use bottled water.”


    A July 14, 2005, memo showed that Halliburton’s public relations department knew of the problem.


    “I don’t want to turn it into a big issue right now,” staff member Jennifer Dellinger wrote in the memo, “but if we end up getting some media calls I want to make sure we have all the facts so we are ready to respond.”


    Halliburton’s performance in Iraq has been criticized in a number of military audits, and congressional Democrats have contended that the Bush administration has favored the company with noncompetitive contracts.


    © 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.




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    Trained chimp? Hardly. But chimp, definitely. nm
    nm