RATE THIS PERSIAN GIRL'S ASS (HOLY SHIT--BETTER THAN JULIA'S)
| Very Tactful Vivacious Orchestra Pit | 04/25/12 | | White Electric Selfie Dysfunction | 04/25/12 | | Very Tactful Vivacious Orchestra Pit | 04/25/12 | | White Electric Selfie Dysfunction | 04/25/12 | | Very Tactful Vivacious Orchestra Pit | 04/25/12 | | White Electric Selfie Dysfunction | 04/25/12 | | Very Tactful Vivacious Orchestra Pit | 04/25/12 | | vibrant headpube church building | 04/25/12 | | fear-inspiring center | 04/25/12 | | passionate partner immigrant | 04/28/12 | | Pink Provocative Deer Antler Indian Lodge | 04/25/12 | | brass supple area pozpig | 04/28/12 | | Slate Whorehouse | 06/12/12 | | Lavender theater stage pisswyrm | 04/25/12 | | Pink Provocative Deer Antler Indian Lodge | 04/25/12 | | Very Tactful Vivacious Orchestra Pit | 04/26/12 | | Very Tactful Vivacious Orchestra Pit | 04/28/12 | | Very Tactful Vivacious Orchestra Pit | 05/02/12 | | trip meetinghouse | 04/25/12 | | Very Tactful Vivacious Orchestra Pit | 04/25/12 | | Comical den | 04/25/12 | | Curious citrine corner mediation | 04/25/12 | | Very Tactful Vivacious Orchestra Pit | 04/25/12 | | fear-inspiring center | 04/25/12 | | godawful shivering temple | 04/25/12 | | White Electric Selfie Dysfunction | 04/25/12 | | Very Tactful Vivacious Orchestra Pit | 04/25/12 | | maniacal know-it-all property fat ankles | 04/25/12 | | Very Tactful Vivacious Orchestra Pit | 04/25/12 | | maniacal know-it-all property fat ankles | 04/25/12 | | Very Tactful Vivacious Orchestra Pit | 06/11/12 | | Very Tactful Vivacious Orchestra Pit | 06/28/12 | | pearl razzle-dazzle step-uncle's house | 04/26/12 | | Very Tactful Vivacious Orchestra Pit | 04/26/12 | | pearl razzle-dazzle step-uncle's house | 04/26/12 | | Very Tactful Vivacious Orchestra Pit | 04/26/12 | | maize parlor | 04/26/12 | | free-loading cruise ship | 04/26/12 | | Very Tactful Vivacious Orchestra Pit | 04/26/12 | | House-broken Sandwich Theater | 04/26/12 | | Very Tactful Vivacious Orchestra Pit | 04/26/12 | | House-broken Sandwich Theater | 04/26/12 | | Walnut spectacular stage | 04/26/12 | | Very Tactful Vivacious Orchestra Pit | 04/26/12 | | Walnut spectacular stage | 04/26/12 | | bronze self-absorbed set | 04/26/12 | | razzle slap-happy cuckold principal's office | 04/26/12 | | Buff useless brakes ticket booth | 04/26/12 | | Slippery scourge upon the earth mexican | 04/26/12 | | Unholy toaster locale | 04/26/12 | | Cordovan marvelous hospital nibblets | 04/28/12 | | erotic shrine toilet seat | 04/28/12 | | Sepia wild roast beef stain | 04/28/12 | | Slate Whorehouse | 07/14/12 | | twinkling concupiscible fanboi newt | 05/02/12 | | Very Tactful Vivacious Orchestra Pit | 05/02/12 | | galvanic feces | 07/14/12 | | smoky range | 07/14/12 |
Poast new message in this thread
 |
Date: June 12th, 2012 7:17 PM Author: Slate Whorehouse
imagine that ass and Heide M. Iravani's huge fucking tits!
Maybe we should ask Brian McHugh (Brian Jeffrey McHugh @ Georgetown Medical School) who is ramming Heide Iravani's ass while her funbags swing from side to side
Heide Motaghi Iravani Biography
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1933129&forum_id=2#20875976)
|
Date: April 25th, 2012 8:55 PM Author: godawful shivering temple
What I think of whenever Julia replies to one of these threads:
http://www.quickmeme.com/meme/3oz1vh/
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1933129&forum_id=2#20547844) |
 |
Date: June 28th, 2012 3:51 PM Author: Very Tactful Vivacious Orchestra Pit
Third, contrary to THE CHIEF JUSTICE's contention, our precedent does indeed support “[t]he proposition that Congress may dictate the conduct of an individual today because of prophesied future activity.” Ante, at 26. In Wickard, the Court upheld a penalty the Federal Government imposed on a farmer who grew more wheat than he was permitted to grow under the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1938(AAA). 317 U.S., at 114–115. He could not be penalized, the farmer argued, as he was growing the wheat for home consumption, not for sale on the open market. Id., at 119. The Court rejected this argument. Id., at 127–129. Wheat intended for home consumption, the Court noted, “overhangs the market, and if induced by rising prices, tends to flow into the market and check price increases [intended by the AAA].” Id., at 128.
Similar reasoning supported the Court's judgment in Raich, which upheld Congress' authority to regulate marijuana grown for personal use. 545 U.S., at 19. Homegrown marijuana substantially affects the interstate market for marijuana, we observed, for “the high demand in the interstate market will [likely] draw such marijuana into that market.” Ibid.
*50 Our decisions thus acknowledge Congress' authority, under the Commerce Clause, to direct the conduct of an individual today (the farmer in Wickard, stopped from growing excess wheat; the plaintiff in Raich, ordered to cease cultivating marijuana) because of a prophesied future transaction (the eventual sale of that wheat or marijuana in the interstate market). Congress' actions are even more rational in this case, where the future activity (the consumption of medical care) is certain to occur, the sole uncertainty being the time the activity will take place.
Maintaining that the uninsured are not active in the health-care market, THE CHIEF JUSTICE draws an analogy to the car market. An individual “is not ‘active in the car market,’ “ THE CHIEF JUSTICE observes, simply because he or she may someday buy a car. Ante, at 25. The analogy is inapt. The inevitable yet unpredictable need for medical care and the guarantee that emergency care will be provided when required are conditions nonexistent in other markets. That is so of the market for cars, and of the market for broccoli as well. Although an individual might buy a car or a crown of broccoli one day, there is no certainty she will ever do so. And if she eventually wants a car or has a craving for broccoli, she will be obliged to pay at the counter before receiving the vehicle or nourishment. She will get no free ride or food, at the expense of another consumer forced to pay an inflated price. See Thomas More Law Center v. Obama, 651 F.3d 529, 565 (C.A.6 2011) (Sutton, J., concurring in part) (“Regulating how citizens pay for what they already receive (health care), never quite know when they will need, and in the case of severe illnesses or emergencies generally will not be able to afford, has few (if any) parallels in modern life.”). Upholding the minimum coverage provision on the ground that all are participants or will be participants in the health-care market would therefore carry no implication that Congress may justify under the Commerce Clause a mandate to buy other products and services.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1933129&forum_id=2#20977554) |
 |
Date: April 26th, 2012 10:29 AM Author: Very Tactful Vivacious Orchestra Pit
There was two kind of slaves. There was the house negro and the field negro. The house negros, they lived in the house, with master. They dressed pretty good. They ate good, cause they ate his food, what he left. They lived in the attic or the basement, but still they lived near their master, and they loved their master, more than their master loved himself. They would give their life to save their master's house quicker than their master would. . . .
. . . If the master's house caught on fire, the house negro would fight harder to put the blaze out than the master would. If the master got sick, the house negro would say “What's the matter, boss, we sick?”
We sick! He identified himself with his master, more than the master identified with himself. . . . And if you came to the house negro and said, “Let's run away, Let's escape, Let's separate,” the house negro would look at you and say, “Man, you crazy. What you mean, separate? Where is there a better house than this? Where can I wear better clothes than this? Where can I eat better food than this?”
. . . .
On that same plantation, there was the field negro. The field negros, those were the masses. There was always more negros in the field as there were negros in the house. The negro in the field caught hell. He ate leftovers. In the house, they ate high up on the hog. . . .
The field negro was beaten, from morning til night. He lived in a shack, in a hut. He wore old, cast-off clothes. He hated his master. I say, he hated his master. . . . When the house caught on fire, he didn't try to put it out, that field negro prayed for a wind. For a breeze. When the master got *1493 sick, the field negro prayed that he'd died. If someone come to the field negro and said, “Let's separate, let's run.” He didn't say “Where we going?” he said “Any place is better than here.”
-Malcolm X (1964)58
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1933129&forum_id=2#20552029) |
Date: May 2nd, 2012 5:44 PM Author: twinkling concupiscible fanboi newt
"Wreck this."
"I...I can't."
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=1933129&forum_id=2#20598777) |
|
|