What if it Snows?
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Dave_in_AZ, Mar 19, 2018.
Page 22761 of 24838
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exhausted379, Feedman, homeskillet and 11 others Thank this.
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The definition of confusion is twenty(20) blind lesbians at The Portland Fish Market.Cowboyrich, exhausted379, Feedman and 12 others Thank this.
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New book. Quite interesting.
exhausted379, homeskillet, Sons Hero and 9 others Thank this. -
Paprika is good on Grilled Fish too.....maybe even on Smoked Fish if that's something U doCowboyrich, exhausted379, homeskillet and 8 others Thank this.
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Feedman, homeskillet, Opus and 7 others Thank this.
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Gotta be a on Zamboni that Finlanders operateFeedman, homeskillet, BennysPennys and 7 others Thank this.
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lol thats a gas pumphomeskillet, BennysPennys, broke down plumber and 3 others Thank this.
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Operated by Finlanders????snuffdipper, Cowboyrich, exhausted379 and 11 others Thank this.
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Water heater closet. And HVAC stuff. It’s tight.exhausted379, homeskillet, BennysPennys and 9 others Thank this.
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be sure to check! You may go to shipper or receiver and they be closed for some made up holiday.
“How could you say that!!! Ohh No!!! It’s a day the slaves were freed!!!”
Lies!! I say, read your history.
Dating back to 1865, Juneteenth commemorates the day when 250,000 slaves in the state of Texas, which became the last bastion for slavery during the final days of the Civil War, were declared free by the U.S. Army.
Emancipation Proclamation was signed on January 1, 1863, and Juneteenth, the day enslaved people in Texas were told they were free, was June 19, 1865.
(notice it says Tejas!)
while Juneteenth commemorates the news that enslaved people in Texas were declared free by the U.S. Army on June 19, 1865, it's important to understand that slavery in the U.S. didn't end on that day, and even later, some African Americans remained enslaved. The Emancipation Proclamation, issued earlier, had freed enslaved people in Confederate states, but not in loyal Union states like Delaware, Maryland, Kentucky, and Missouri, nor in Texas until after the war ended. The 13th Amendment, which officially abolished slavery, was ratified later in December 1865.
They don’t teach our history any more, history is painful, though I believe it should be taught, it keeps you from making the same mistakes…Cowboyrich, exhausted379, Feedman and 2 others Thank this.
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
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