I just lost my Global world positioning Sky Satilite signal due to the monsoon rains! I may take a hot bath and listen to the game via the internet. My wife wants to buy a pet dolphin with the money we won, (only $650 American here for an old one) while I want a new salt water reel and a used golf cart.
LOL wrote: Sounds like you're having fun, stay safe there Crocodile Dundee! And be careful of those ladies in the bar with low voices, bwahaahaha
My wife is attached to me at all times right now...Even when I play cards at a 6 Star all inclusive resort nearby she's right there fetching drinks and distracting the compitition.
Hey VL you missed all the smoke from the wildland fires.
Saw the 17 year old on tv who offered his arm to the gator so he wouldn't go after his torso. He wants the gator's head to rest his prosthetic on. Good sense of humor after all that.
bumper sticker - honk if you will pay my mortgage
"The problem with Socialism is that eventually you run out of other people's money." attributed to Margaret Thatcher
"A wise and frugal government, which shall leave men free to regulate their own pursuits of industry and improvement, and shall not take from the mouth of labor the bread it has earned - this is the sum of good government." Thomas Jefferson
"A new version of a bill that targets fake war heroes easily passed the House of Representatives late Monday with a 390-3 vote.
The bill, H.R. 258 also known as the Stolen Valor Act of 2013, is the latest attempt by Congress to push through legislation that would punish people who falsely claim to have won military awards, such as the Congressional Medal of Honor, and profit from those lies.
“The awards, and the men and women who have earned them, in some cases posthumously, are worthy of the utmost respect and sanctity,” said Rep. Joe Heck (R-Nev.), who introduced the bill in January. “ Benefiting from lying about receiving one of these awards is an affront to all who have worn the uniform and especially to those who made the ultimate sacrifice for our country.”
READ: Stolen Valor ‘More Than Just Lying,’ SEAL Watchdog Says
The original iteration of the bill, the Stolen Valor Act of 2005, had been in effect for six years before the Supreme Court ruled it was unconstitutional. At the time the law was written to say it was a crime simply to lie about military service and awards – a broad characterization the Supreme Court said violated a person’s First Amendment right to free speech.