Word on the street is you northern boys don't have proper snowballs. In MD, they're made with shaved ice, lots of syrup, and you eat it with a spoon. Not those tooth breaking rocks you get off the ice cream truck.
Word on the street is you northern boys don't have proper snowballs. In MD, they're made with shaved ice, lots of syrup, and you eat it with a spoon. Not those tooth breaking rocks you get off the ice cream truck.
We have Rainbow Popsicles here. I gave them up because of the stares while eating. Made me uncomfortable.
Word on the street is you northern boys don't have proper snowballs. In MD, they're made with shaved ice, lots of syrup, and you eat it with a spoon. Not those tooth breaking rocks you get off the ice cream truck.
I'll put my balls up against yours anytime mate.
oh wait.....nevermind.
Grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, the courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to hide the bodies of the people I killed because they were annoying......
I've been wrong lots of times. Lots of times I've thought I was wrong only to find out that I was right in the beginning.
Re-enactors asked not to display Confederate flag in Lewisburg parade [PA]
The controversy over the display of the Confederate flag in the wake of the killing of nine black church members in Charleston, S.C., has reached the annual Union County Veterans Fourth of July Parade in Lewisburg.
The 18th North Carolina Co. A re-enactors have been asked not to display the Confederate flag if it marches, parade chairman Kevin Bittenbender said Friday. The parade is scheduled to step off at 10 a.m. Saturday.
The decision was made following a discussion by the parade committee's executive board, he said. He understands there will be some opposed to the decision, he said.
Confederate flag supporters rise up to defend embattled symbol
An eight-mile convoy of pickups, motorcycles and cars wound through a central Florida town on Sunday in a show of support for the Confederate flag, as a backlash against its banishment from public landmarks across the South picks up steam.
Horns blared and hundreds of the rebel flags fluttered as more than 1,500 vehicles and some 4,500 people turned out for the "Florida Southern Pride Ride" in Ocala, according to police estimates. Vehicles from states across the South and as far away as California participated.
"That flag has a lot of different meanings to a lot of different people," said David Stone, 38, who organized the event. "It doesn't symbolize hate unless you think it's hate - and that's your problem, not mine.”
<--snip
NAACP wants Confederate flag removed from AL troopers' cruisers http://www.waff.com ^
HUNTSVILLE, AL (WAFF) - It's not hard to find a Confederate flag flying in Alabama, but it may surprise you some of the places you'll find it. The next time you see an Alabama State Trooper, take a close look at their cruisers and a patch they wear on their uniform.
You can find a Confederate flag on every trooper vehicle. You'll also find the flag on a patch that every uniformed Trooper wears.
The Huntsville chapter of the NAACP says it time for it to go, and they plan on taking their fight to Montgomery.
An NAACP spokesperson said now is the perfect time to spark this movement.
"The time is right, and I just think it needs to be," said the Reverend Robert L. Shanklin. "We need to do a clean sweep. The state and local government, anywhere that that's located."
Troopers said they are aware of the controversy, but there's nothing they can do. They explained that any changes to the emblem will have to happen at the state level.
If you have any problems with my posts or signature
Opposition to removal of Confederate memorials at Lee Circle and elsewhere gains steam
Opponents of the proposed removal of Confederate memorials in New Orleans are using social media to organize the fight to keep them where they stand.
What started out as an effort to keep the statue of Robert E. Lee atop his column in Lee Circle, has expanded its mission to include defending all of the statues and monuments dedicated to the Confederacy.
The City Council, at Mayor Mitch Landrieu's request, has begun a formal hearing process that could result in the removal of Lee and monuments dedicated to P.G.T. Beauregard, another Confederate general; Jefferson Davis, the president of the Confederacy; and the Battle of Liberty Place, a bloody confrontation instigated by ex-Confederates who launched a failed coup against Louisiana's Reconstruction government.
Led by Tim Shea Carroll, the "Save our Circle" movement has collected nearly 15,000 signatures on a change.org petition opposing the removals and united 3,465 users in a Facebook group dedicated to the same cause.
-snip-
Carroll said he feared Landrieu, in an effort to curry political plaudits, was opening a door he wouldn't be able to shut. "This is a very slippery slope. It's a dangerous precedent. Where is it gonna end?" he asked
Comment