New war breaking out as we speak?

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Postby account deleted by request » Sat Jul 29, 2006 2:33 pm

What a great inheritance you will leave to your children. More blood and death . Unless a solution other than murder, bombs and guns is found the cycle of violence will continue "even unto the third and fourth generation" or in the case of the middle east the 30th or 40th generation.
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Postby dawson99 » Sat Jul 29, 2006 2:47 pm

i think thats why he said:

And i shall leave you with a quote:"If you tolarate this,your children will be next..."

no one wants all the death and stuff in the reality of it, just the nutters
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Postby 112-1077774096 » Sat Jul 29, 2006 2:48 pm

REVOL wrote:And i shall leave you with a quote:"If you tolarate this,your children will be next..."

its all very well coming on here quoting manic street preachers lyrics, but do us all a favour, talk about football or funk off.

i really cant believe that you think the UK has suffered just one act of terrorism in the last 60 years, this shows how shallow and uneducated your argument is so there is no point taking you seriously

see ya
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Postby dawson99 » Sat Jul 29, 2006 2:49 pm

peewee, its not just a manic street preachers lyric mate, i think some famous dude said it years ago
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Postby 112-1077774096 » Sat Jul 29, 2006 2:52 pm

dawson99 wrote:peewee, its not just a manic street preachers lyric mate, i think some famous dude said it years ago

yes thanks dawson, i know that, im just making a point how trivial this thread is, arguing on here with jews and arabs wont solve anything and i am really confused why the forum is flooded with them trying to state their case when it doesnt really matter who is right or wrong. no body on this forum can change it and its really boring now
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Postby dawson99 » Sat Jul 29, 2006 2:56 pm

so lets take sides peewee, u be the arabs, i'll be the jews, we'll have a game on one of those dance machines, winner wins the war!!!

u arab scum :angry: :p
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Postby 112-1077774096 » Sat Jul 29, 2006 2:58 pm

do you know how the grand canyon started?

a jew dropped a penny down a rabbit hole
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Postby dawson99 » Sat Jul 29, 2006 2:59 pm

peewee wrote:do you know how the grand canyon started?

a jew dropped a penny down a rabbit hole

really?  :oh:
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Postby 112-1077774096 » Sat Jul 29, 2006 3:00 pm

yeah its a fact    :D
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Postby dawson99 » Sat Jul 29, 2006 3:01 pm

:D

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Postby 112-1077774096 » Sat Jul 29, 2006 3:06 pm

:D


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dana international   :D
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Postby daxy1 » Sat Jul 29, 2006 3:07 pm

REVOL wrote:come on guys,Let's stop this argument...

Sitting in England,Feeling nice about yourself for being a Leftie and supporting the the "freedom fighters" in the middle east against the American-zionist plan to take over the world,and getting :censored: when oil prices rises up,is the easiest thing a man can do...

they don't understand that there are diffrent rules for this match in the middle east.they don't know the history,they still believe The laurence of arbia ferrytales,and they will allways analize this sutuation through theyr'e
european decadente eyes,they will allways mistake between good and bad,right or wrong..they don't speak the language we do...

But let them sit down in theyre lovely homes under the gray european skies,let them drink pints of beer,let them watch football...allow them to shut theyr'e eyes in the impotence way they have allways did when it didn't came to them...when they Left Czechoslovakia in the mercy of Hitler
and his army for the sake of Peace..for the sake of the european comfortness....until the sky will fall upon them again,London will burn,pepole will die and then they will attack Dresden for no cause..destroying cities and killing hundreds of thousands.. RAF  jets passing over The railtracks to auscwitz and ignoring them because this are  "just" jews....

Let them laugh now ...and ignore them,because this are just europeans...they havant tasted the salty taste of death for more than 60 years...they never had the need to fight for theyre lives..they never thought about anyone else when they occupied milions of people,Butcherd them and used up theyre land,and all of that in the of the queen and the country.

who are you to judge us?....

Last summer you have experienced what's it feels like being an Israeli.only youv'e had  it for one day and you lost your mind...we live like this for almost 120 years...

We are the toughsts SOB in the world...we won't back down...not anymore...a jewish blood will never be spilled again without a response...and if you don't like it,just take a look in the mirror...

And until Mujahidin will strike in every corner of europe and you will wake up to your'e burning London,Just like you did in 1940,then maybe you will see what we mean...

And i shall leave you with a quote:"If you tolarate this,your children will be next..."

think about it while you drink your next pint in the pub...

Shalom(peace).

"in every generation,they are trying to kill us,but the the LORD all mighty will save us..."

Thank God,I'm a jew...

:p

hi mate do you keep a fork in the sugar bowl? ???
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Postby daxy1 » Sat Jul 29, 2006 3:09 pm

dawson99 wrote:so lets take sides peewee, u be the arabs, i'll be the jews, we'll have a game on one of those dance machines, winner wins the war!!!

u arab scum :angry: :p

pmsl @ dawson99... :wwww
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Postby dawson99 » Sat Jul 29, 2006 3:09 pm

maybe he uses a spork!!!

A spork is a hybrid form of cutlery. It is based upon a spoon, with the addition of the tines of a fork (usually three or four). A similar utensil, the splade, also has the serrated edge of a knife. Spork-like utensils have been manufactured since at least the late 1800s; patents for spork-like designs date back to at least 1874 and the word "spork" was registered as a trademark both in the U.S. and the U.K. decades later. Sporks are offered in both re-usable and disposable form and are quite versatile. They are commonly used by fast food restaurants, school cafeterias, and backpackers.

The word spork is a portmanteau word combining the words spoon and fork. The word "spork" appeared in the 1909 supplement to the Century Dictionary, where it was described as a trade name and "a 'portmanteau-word' applied to a long, slender spoon having at the end of the bowl projections resembling the tines of a fork." A variation of the spork is the splade, which in addition to the overall spoon shape and fork tines, has a somewhat sharp edge or blade on one or both sides. Spork and splade are not translatable to any language except English

Originally, the spork was used in Medieval times. It was not then called the 'spork', though, and looks very different from the spork used today. Instead, it was merely an odd combination of a spoon and a fork, a utensil somewhere in-between, where it was commonly used in thick soups. However, the spork was horribly unpopular in the Medieval ages and was not used popularly until the later Victorian ages.

Sporks have been mass-manufactured since at least the late 1800s. The Folgate Silver Plate Company of England manufactured one sometime between 1875 and 1900.

In the United States, various patents for sporks and proto-sporks have been issued over the years. A combined spoon, fork, and knife closely resembling the modern spork was invented by Peter S. Gallucci and issued U.S. Patent 147,119 in February, 1874. Other early patents predating the modern spork include U.S. Patent 904,553, for a "Cutting spoon", granted on November 24, 1908 and U.S. Patent 1,044,869, for a spoon with a tined edge, granted to F. Emmenegger in November of 1912. Many of these inventions predated the use of the term "spork" and thus may be considered proto-sporks. Given this significant prior art, the basic concept of combining aspects of a spoon and fork is well established; more modern patents have limited themselves to the specific implementation and appearance of the spork. These design patents do not prevent anyone from designing and manufacturing their own version of a spork. Examples of modern U.S. design patents for sporks include patent number D247,153 issued in February of 1978 and patent D388,664 issued in January of 1998.

The word spork originated in the early 1900s to describe such devices. According to a December 20, 1952 New York Times article, Hyde W. Ballard of Westtown, Pennsylvania filed an application to register "Spork" as a trademark for a combination spoon and fork made of stainless steel, although there is no longer any record of this application at the United States Patent and Trademark Office. The Van Brode Milling Company subsequently registered SPORK for a combination plastic spoon, fork and knife at the USPTO on October 27, 1970, but abandoned the registration several years later. The word SPORK accompanied by a stylised design is currently registered in the U.S. in relation to hand tools, in the name of a U.K. based individual (reg. no. 2514381).

In the United Kingdom, Plastico Limited originally registered SPORK as a trademark in relation to cutlery with effect from September 18, 1975 (reg. no. 1052291). The registration is now in the name of another company and remains in force. The trademark is also registered in the U.K. in relation to gardening tools in the name of the same U.K. based individual who owns U.S. trademark registration no. 2514381.

In an unsuccessful lawsuit in 1999 where the company Regalzone sought to invalidate Plastico Limited's U.K. registration for SPORK, Justice Neuberger wrote: "I accept that the word Spork involves a clever idea of making a single word by eliding the end of the word spoon and beginning of the word fork. The fact that it is clever and the fact that the meaning of Spork could be said to be obvious once it is explained does not mean that it is obvious what it is. Indeed, I would have thought that if one asked a person in 1975 what a Spork was, he or she would not know. If one then explained what it was and how the word came about, one might then be told that it was obvious or that it was clever."

It is believed that the modern spork, made of disposable plastic, was introduced by the fast-food chain KFC, then known as Kentucky Fried Chicken, for its popular coleslaw side dish, at some point in the early 1970s.

[edit]
Rumors
There are many false rumors about the origin of the spork and the word spork. According to a rumor circulated in the "Spork FAQ", the spork was invented in the 1940s by the United States Army, which introduced them to occupied Japan. This rumor has all the hallmarks of an urban legend. Virtually every reference to the occupied Japan theory misspells General Douglas MacArthur's name as McArthur, lending credence to the notion that all these references have a common origin. Furthermore, in real life the United States Army M-1926 mess kit, which served from 1926 until the 1980s, included a separate knife, fork and spoon. [1] The "Spork FAQ" does have a small amount of truth, though, as sporks became widely known in Japan after the 1940s in the aftermath of World War II. Sporks were adopted as a utensil in addition to chopsticks for school lunches in many school districts as a cost cutting measure and the alternative to buying spoons and forks. This practice went out of favor in the late 1980s because sporks were criticized for introducing bad eating habits.

The Straight Dope reports that a "patent" was issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office for a "combination spoon, fork, and knife" to the Van Brode Milling Company of Clinton, Massachusetts on August 11, 1970. In this case the report should have referred to the publication of a trademark application in the name of this company on this date, rather than the issuing of a patent (see History above).

Another popular Internet rumor describes the spork as the creation of a nameless resource-pressed and inventive German scientist near the end of World War II. Supposedly, the spork was designed for use with field ration kits issued to front line troops. No known historical documents validate this urban legend, but it is clearly wrong. Both the word spork and the utensil predate the war.

Supposedly, the spork existed in the medieval time era (and not being patent until the late 1800's); pertaining to the peasants and lower class from the nobles of its widely spread use for it was fairly easy to craft.
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Postby daxy1 » Sat Jul 29, 2006 3:20 pm

dawson99 wrote:maybe he uses a spork!!!

A spork is a hybrid form of cutlery. It is based upon a spoon, with the addition of the tines of a fork (usually three or four). A similar utensil, the splade, also has the serrated edge of a knife. Spork-like utensils have been manufactured since at least the late 1800s; patents for spork-like designs date back to at least 1874 and the word "spork" was registered as a trademark both in the U.S. and the U.K. decades later. Sporks are offered in both re-usable and disposable form and are quite versatile. They are commonly used by fast food restaurants, school cafeterias, and backpackers.

The word spork is a portmanteau word combining the words spoon and fork. The word "spork" appeared in the 1909 supplement to the Century Dictionary, where it was described as a trade name and "a 'portmanteau-word' applied to a long, slender spoon having at the end of the bowl projections resembling the tines of a fork." A variation of the spork is the splade, which in addition to the overall spoon shape and fork tines, has a somewhat sharp edge or blade on one or both sides. Spork and splade are not translatable to any language except English

Originally, the spork was used in Medieval times. It was not then called the 'spork', though, and looks very different from the spork used today. Instead, it was merely an odd combination of a spoon and a fork, a utensil somewhere in-between, where it was commonly used in thick soups. However, the spork was horribly unpopular in the Medieval ages and was not used popularly until the later Victorian ages.

Sporks have been mass-manufactured since at least the late 1800s. The Folgate Silver Plate Company of England manufactured one sometime between 1875 and 1900.

In the United States, various patents for sporks and proto-sporks have been issued over the years. A combined spoon, fork, and knife closely resembling the modern spork was invented by Peter S. Gallucci and issued U.S. Patent 147,119 in February, 1874. Other early patents predating the modern spork include U.S. Patent 904,553, for a "Cutting spoon", granted on November 24, 1908 and U.S. Patent 1,044,869, for a spoon with a tined edge, granted to F. Emmenegger in November of 1912. Many of these inventions predated the use of the term "spork" and thus may be considered proto-sporks. Given this significant prior art, the basic concept of combining aspects of a spoon and fork is well established; more modern patents have limited themselves to the specific implementation and appearance of the spork. These design patents do not prevent anyone from designing and manufacturing their own version of a spork. Examples of modern U.S. design patents for sporks include patent number D247,153 issued in February of 1978 and patent D388,664 issued in January of 1998.

The word spork originated in the early 1900s to describe such devices. According to a December 20, 1952 New York Times article, Hyde W. Ballard of Westtown, Pennsylvania filed an application to register "Spork" as a trademark for a combination spoon and fork made of stainless steel, although there is no longer any record of this application at the United States Patent and Trademark Office. The Van Brode Milling Company subsequently registered SPORK for a combination plastic spoon, fork and knife at the USPTO on October 27, 1970, but abandoned the registration several years later. The word SPORK accompanied by a stylised design is currently registered in the U.S. in relation to hand tools, in the name of a U.K. based individual (reg. no. 2514381).

In the United Kingdom, Plastico Limited originally registered SPORK as a trademark in relation to cutlery with effect from September 18, 1975 (reg. no. 1052291). The registration is now in the name of another company and remains in force. The trademark is also registered in the U.K. in relation to gardening tools in the name of the same U.K. based individual who owns U.S. trademark registration no. 2514381.

In an unsuccessful lawsuit in 1999 where the company Regalzone sought to invalidate Plastico Limited's U.K. registration for SPORK, Justice Neuberger wrote: "I accept that the word Spork involves a clever idea of making a single word by eliding the end of the word spoon and beginning of the word fork. The fact that it is clever and the fact that the meaning of Spork could be said to be obvious once it is explained does not mean that it is obvious what it is. Indeed, I would have thought that if one asked a person in 1975 what a Spork was, he or she would not know. If one then explained what it was and how the word came about, one might then be told that it was obvious or that it was clever."

It is believed that the modern spork, made of disposable plastic, was introduced by the fast-food chain KFC, then known as Kentucky Fried Chicken, for its popular coleslaw side dish, at some point in the early 1970s.

[edit]
Rumors
There are many false rumors about the origin of the spork and the word spork. According to a rumor circulated in the "Spork FAQ", the spork was invented in the 1940s by the United States Army, which introduced them to occupied Japan. This rumor has all the hallmarks of an urban legend. Virtually every reference to the occupied Japan theory misspells General Douglas MacArthur's name as McArthur, lending credence to the notion that all these references have a common origin. Furthermore, in real life the United States Army M-1926 mess kit, which served from 1926 until the 1980s, included a separate knife, fork and spoon. [1] The "Spork FAQ" does have a small amount of truth, though, as sporks became widely known in Japan after the 1940s in the aftermath of World War II. Sporks were adopted as a utensil in addition to chopsticks for school lunches in many school districts as a cost cutting measure and the alternative to buying spoons and forks. This practice went out of favor in the late 1980s because sporks were criticized for introducing bad eating habits.

The Straight Dope reports that a "patent" was issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office for a "combination spoon, fork, and knife" to the Van Brode Milling Company of Clinton, Massachusetts on August 11, 1970. In this case the report should have referred to the publication of a trademark application in the name of this company on this date, rather than the issuing of a patent (see History above).

Another popular Internet rumor describes the spork as the creation of a nameless resource-pressed and inventive German scientist near the end of World War II. Supposedly, the spork was designed for use with field ration kits issued to front line troops. No known historical documents validate this urban legend, but it is clearly wrong. Both the word spork and the utensil predate the war.

Supposedly, the spork existed in the medieval time era (and not being patent until the late 1800's); pertaining to the peasants and lower class from the nobles of its widely spread use for it was fairly easy to craft.

what was it the wise man once said..... i think yes what about you... :p
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