|
Post by BigBruvOfEnglandUK on Oct 25, 2022 8:02:54 GMT
|
|
|
Post by BigBruvOfEnglandUK on Nov 12, 2022 11:10:27 GMT
Looks like Australian men can now get pregnant, m8s.
|
|
brothersteve
Caneguru
He ain't heavy, he's my brother
Posts: 2,450
|
Post by brothersteve on Nov 12, 2022 16:05:28 GMT
Great to hear Australian men have uterus'....like a kangaroo pouch, eh? I hear this is in the US as well. Got get in touch with their feminine side.
|
|
|
Post by BigBruvOfEnglandUK on Nov 15, 2022 9:52:26 GMT
|
|
|
Post by BigBruvOfEnglandUK on Nov 30, 2022 7:45:53 GMT
|
|
|
Post by BigBruvOfEnglandUK on Dec 27, 2022 20:03:05 GMT
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Dec 28, 2022 19:24:46 GMT
I remember people from Britain were paid to emigrate to Australia, you have to pay now?
|
|
|
Post by BigBruvOfEnglandUK on Dec 28, 2022 20:00:41 GMT
When were they paid to emigrate, H m8?
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Dec 28, 2022 20:24:39 GMT
I think it was certain job skills, can't remember now, maybe teachers.
I remember a school friend and his family going coz I thought he sez it was free. ( I read kids were free in the wiki)
Big Brother Movement
|
|
|
Post by johnpetter on Jan 3, 2023 19:40:54 GMT
I'm here, I'm queer, get used to it, m8s.
|
|
denis
Caneguru
Posts: 2,332
|
Post by denis on Jan 20, 2023 5:38:04 GMT
“Far from living hand-to-mouth, the Indians produced a surplus — had they not, the settlers would have starved at Jamestown and Plymout. Far from exhausting themselves scrounging for survival, the impression the Indians left on early English observers like Captain John Smith was that their life was a paradise of all but workless plenty. He thought the settlers might enjoy a three-day workweek featuring the “pretty sport” of fishing. In 1643, the magistrates of Massachusetts Bay received the submission of two Rhode Island sachems. “Giving them to understand upon what terms they must be received under us,” as Governor John Winthrop put it, the Indians were told “Not to do any unnecessary workd on the Lord’s day within the gates of proper towns.” Not to worry, replied the sachems: “It is a small thing for us to rest on that day, for we have not much to do any day, and therefore we will forbear on that day.”
According to one of the Roanoke colonists, to feed one Virginia Indian enough corn for a year required annually 24 hours of work. (Morgan 1975) (Of course the Indians ate more than corn; New England Indians enjoyed an abundant, varied “diet for superb health,” more nutritious and less monotonous than what became standard fare in, say, the back country of the South; or in later industrial tenements”
|
|
|
Post by mr potatohead on Jan 20, 2023 14:30:13 GMT
“Far from living hand-to-mouth, the Indians produced a surplus — had they not, the settlers would have starved at Jamestown and Plymout. Far from exhausting themselves scrounging for survival, the impression the Indians left on early English observers like Captain John Smith was that their life was a paradise of all but workless plenty. He thought the settlers might enjoy a three-day workweek featuring the “pretty sport” of fishing. In 1643, the magistrates of Massachusetts Bay received the submission of two Rhode Island sachems. "Giving them to understand upon what terms they must be received under us,"
as (pompous, arrogant, political, elitist) Governor John Winthrop put it, the Indians were told “Not to do any unnecessary workd on the Lord’s day within the gates of proper towns.” Not to worry, replied the sachems: “It is a small thing for us to rest on that day, for we have not much to do any day, and therefore we will forbear on that day.” According to one of the Roanoke colonists, to feed one Virginia Indian enough corn for a year required annually 24 hours of work. (Morgan 1975) (Of course the Indians ate more than corn; New England Indians enjoyed an abundant, varied “diet for superb health,” more nutritious and less monotonous than what became standard fare in, say, the back country of the South; or in later industrial tenements” That, if not their first mistake, it was a big one. The Indians should have put an arrow between his eyes on the spot. What an arrogant attitude, what an insult in the face of the people who graciously allowed them to settle there!
|
|
|
Post by mr potatohead on Jan 20, 2023 15:41:52 GMT
In fact, please be aware that this is an excellent simplistic example of the basic attitude of corporate law today.
As they ask, needing your permission to oppress and extort you, "Do you UNDER stand (me, my authority - implied)?", i.e. legalese for "Do you stand under my authority over you".
|
|
|
Post by BigBruvOfEnglandUK on Jun 1, 2023 9:20:17 GMT
|
|
brothersteve
Caneguru
He ain't heavy, he's my brother
Posts: 2,450
|
Post by brothersteve on Jun 1, 2023 16:26:31 GMT
Glad to say I'm 'garlic boosted' too!
|
|