2017-09-15 10:35:52 |
"My wedding day"
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Well, Clover Ernest, whatever conspiracy theory you have, that's fine. Continue to believe it, if you like, it's a free country, last I checked. But I don't feed the trolls, no matter how much you beg. |
2017-09-15 10:38:37 |
"The day our family's Rottweiler took me"
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Well, Clover Ernest, whatever conspiracy theory you have, that's fine. Continue to believe it, if you like, it's a free country, last I checked. But I don't feed the trolls, no matter how much you beg. |
2018-05-16 05:35:02 |
"My wedding day"
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@ArchAngelMichael when it comes to Kenny I had a soft spot for him because he had such a crush on me. He would have done anything for me and something in my heart told me to do what I did. Kenny is gone now and I shall never forget him. |
2018-06-19 00:23:12 |
"My Halloween party at the Mortuary"
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@inanismagus well, to answer your question that I just noticed. First of all, my grandfather raped me and took my virginity at my wedding reception, in the storage room over 20 years ago. So you can't count that as consensual incest, now as for the incident with my brother at Halloween night. Even though I was drunk, which is no excuse, yes it was consensual. But at the time it happened, I was not having sex with our family's Rottweiler. The dog raped me about 7 months later, the only ones I was fooling around with excluding our husband, was my Sister Wives Kathy, and Toni, which is also my biological sister. Now me and my sister have been fooling around let's put it this way a long time and I don't consider that incest Anywho I don't see what the big deal is with you, complaining that I have not fooled around with my biological son. |
2018-09-27 03:13:18 |
Screwdrivers and a little 9- ball
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First of all you troll! I never used the phrase, "I got the car off of my uncle!" Furthermore you're the uneducated one that doesn't know the different uses of, "off." Off is used as a verb, adverb, adjective, noun and proposition. Plus, there are thousands of examples of “off of” in the Corpus of Contemporary American English, not just in spoken English, but in magazines, newspapers, and academic journals as well. “Off of” is well-established as standard in American English. Plain “off” may be stylistically preferable in many cases, but it is simply not a rule of English grammar that if a word could be removed it must be removed. Some people seem to think that such a rule exists. It does not. |